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Please help stop this measure NOW!
Don’t let the U.S. federal government tar animal advocacy
with the taint of terrorism!
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Animal Issues and Resources |
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Vote with your
dollar! Buy cosmetics from companies that don't use animal testing!
Buy
supplements from companies that don't use animal testing!
Horrors of Animal Testing Video - Grouper
Animal Testing Ban
for Cosmetics to be upheld rules EU court
Bausch & Lomb
contributing $1,267,750 to find replacement for Driaze test.
Boycott OHSU
Learn More:
Animal Testing: The Animal Rights Debate
Lethal Laws: Animal Testing, Human Health, and Environmental Policy
Animal Experimentation and Testing: A Pro/Con Issue (Hot Pro/Con Issues)
Other books of interest
Animal Testing and Consumer Products
Victims of Vanity: Animal Testing of Cosmetics and Household Products and How to Stop It
Animal Testing Alternatives in Health Sciences: Index of New Information With Authors, Subjects and Bibliography
Long-Term Animal Studies: Their Predictive Value for Man (Cmrx Workshop Series)
U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Office of Migratory Bird Management, BACKYARD BIRD
FEEDING
To be a haven for wildlife, your yard must provide the basic needs of the
animals: cover, water, and food.
YouTube - Steve Irwin:
How I'd Like to be Remembered |
Buy From Companies that Don't use Animal
Testing
Support Cruelty Free Companies
Most people would never consider harming an animal yet many don't
realize that commonly purchased products such as nail polish remover,
shampoo, or toilet bowl cleaner are produced by companies who torture
and/or kill innocent animals in the making of their product. Dogs,
rabbits, guinea pigs and others, are
routinely used in painful and unnecessary tests for which there are
alternative,
more effective tests available.
Cruel and
ineffective tests
According to the
Physician's Committee for Responsible Medicine, 80%-90% of the animals
(mice, rats and birds) used in testing are not covered by the Federal
Animal Welfare Act which means that they often do not receive humane
treatment and are made to suffer considerable pain and discomfort during
the course of experiments. In addition, the act does not provide for
adequate pain relief even for the animals that are covered. Animals
may be burned, maimed, and killed without anesthesia.
Two commonly used tests for determining the
safety of products are LD50 and the Draize
test. LD50 is used to determine toxicity and named for lethal dose
50%. LD50 calls for force feeding animals enough
of a substance to kill
50% of a test group. The 50% that don't die are ill and/or near death and are killed and autopsied. The Draize
test is used to measure eye irritation and typically uses rabbits. A substance is dropped into their eyes so that the resulting damage can be
observed. The rabbits are held in stocks so that they can't move and their
eyes are forcibly held open. These tests can go on for days, weeks or
months while innocent animals are subjected to horrific pain, typically
without pain killer or other humane interventions.
The irony is that
most of these tests have never been scientifically proven to be valid.
In fact, many scientists argue that these tests are not appropriate for
determining responses in humans and there are
scores of results
to support their argument. According to
WorldAnimal.net,
the Draize test accurately reflects human
experience less than 50% of the time.
The Physicians Comittee for Responsible Medicine
states that LD50 is highly unreliable and has little relevance for human
toxicity while in vitro tests (meaning tests conducted in a test tube or
petri dish), using human cells have been shown to be
more accurate.
Animal testing for cosmetics and
household products is
not required by law
In the US and many other countries, the cosmetics and household product
industries are not required by law to test their products on animals but
continue to do so. Some think they continue this horrific practice in order to
limit their liability in case of lawsuits.
According to
CNN.com,
Britain, Germany, Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands have already banned
cosmetics tests on animals and the European Parliament has passed a law
banning the testing of cosmetics on animals which will take effect in
2009.
Every dollar is a vote!
As consumers we have a powerful tool, we can vote with our dollars,
encouraging companies to develop and utilize alternative testing methods
or continue their cruel and inhumane practices. Consumers who have
refused to buy from companies that employ unnecessary animal testing have
already made a big difference. Because of these conscientious individuals
there are many companies who do not use animal testing.
We recommend products from companies that do not use animal testing.
At
Web Shop Emporium, we check every manufacturer of our listed
cruelty free cosmetics and
cruelty free supplements to ensure that they do not use
animal testing. We will not list any products that are manufactured
by a company that does animal testing not required by law. If you
notice any discrepancy with this policy, please notify us by clicking
here.
Tips on how to find cruelty free products
First, check our
Animal Testing Free Cosmetics
and
Animal Testing Free Supplements
pages where you will find a list of brands. If the brand is
listed on these pages, then we have determined that they do not test
on animals unless it is required by law. If you do not find the
brand you are wondering about, read on for tips on how to find out if a
company uses animal testing.
Finding a label with the words "Cruelty Free"
or "Not tested on animals" is no guarantee that the product ingredients
are not tested on animals. According to the
FDA, there are
no legal definitions for these phrases. Companies are free to
use these designations to mean anything that they choose. Some
manufacturers will
state that they don't use animal testing on their products but they fail
to mention that they test
individual ingredients so you must
be specific in asking if they currently test products and/or ingredients.
You should also ask if they hire anyone else to do animal testing for them
or if they donate products for animal testing.
Just because a company has a product that states "Not tested on
animals" does not mean that they don't conduct animal tests on other
products/brands that they manufacture. Note: Most if not all of the
ingredients that have been around for awhile have been tested on animals.
What you want to ensure is that the company does not currently use animal
testing on products or ingredients unless required by law.
If you are trying to determine the animal testing status for a product that you already use,
first check the manufacturer in the links below to determine if they are
on one of the lists. If they are, then we have already either found
the company on the PETA website or we have personally called the company
to determine whether they test on animals. If they are not on the
list of brands, check the product label for a phone number or website. If
that yields no results, look for the manufacturer on the world wide web by
doing a search in a search engine like
www.google.com
or
www.yahoo.com. You can also try entering www.manufacturername.com
in a search engine or in your browser as a URL (address). With the information found
on the manufacturer website (and there are very
few that don't have a website), you can e-mail, write or call them to ask
specifics about their animal testing policies.
See who does and does not use animal testing
CaringConsumer.com
PETA - People for Ethical Treatment of Animals
PETA's criteria is that the company only conduct
animal testing if it is required by law. They have to meet other
requirements as well, such as the company cannot buy raw materials from
manufacturers that use animal testing etc.
In Defense of Animals
National Anti-Vivisection Society
(NAV)
(Quote received in an e-mail from NAV on July 18, 2004.)
"If the company test on animals at all, whether
required by law or not, we (NAV) give them a "tester" rating. This may
change this year when we print our 12th edition. We may have a symbol for
those companies who only test when they are required by law.."
New England Anti-Vivisection Society Cruelty Free list
of companies
For further research:
Altweb-Alternatives to animal testing
AnimalLaw.com
IDA - In Defense of
Animals
Johns Hopkin's Center for Alternative's to animal
testing
National Anti-Vivisection Society
PETA - People for the ethical treatment of
animals
The
Humane Society of the United States - An overview of animal testing issues
StopAnimalTests.com > Consumer Product Companies
Animal Testing Note:
Web Shop Emporium occasionally lists references to studies that have been
conducted on animals. We do not condone testing on animals, and in fact we
encourage everyone to vote for no animal testing with their dollar by
supporting companies that don't use animal testing.
We always look for alternative test methods before we list an animal
study. We subscribe to the position of
many, including
The
Physician's Committee for Responsible Medicine,
that there are other, more effective means of ensuring the safety and
efficacy of medications and other products That said, we feel it
is a useless waste of the animal's lives to ignore the health information that
has been obtained in the past. As more companies develop
alternative, more effective ways of testing, we hope that animal studies
will become a thing of the past and more effective tests will replace
them.
In an effort to help end animal testing, we only list cosmetics and
supplements that have been produced by companies that do not use animal
testing in their ingredients or products unless it is required by law.
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they may not ship to your country. Check individual web sites
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Purchase salicylate free products on-line by choosing the
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