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  4. Hans Ruesch, 1913 - 2007

Hans Ruesch, 1913 - 2007

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  • K KaRl

    Did you give some of your blood to mosquitos before expelling them or did you condemn them to starve in the wildness?

    Fred_Smith wrote:

    it would not invalidate the whole argument.

    Or course it would. This is anthropomorphism, and this is so close from a psychological condition.

    Fred_Smith wrote:

    How is inducing a cancer in a rat in a laboratory in any way scientifically comparable to a cancer that grows due to environmental and/or dietry and/or genetic factors in man? It is a nonsense.

    As using mice to produce human ears[^]...


    When they kick at your front door How you gonna come? With your hands on your head Or on the trigger of your gun?

    Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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    Fred_Smith
    wrote on last edited by
    #26

    K(arl) wrote:

    This is anthropomorphism

    No Karl, it is precicely NOT this, if you've read anything I've said in this thread. If anything, it is the vivisectors who could be accused of anthropomorphism - they are the ones who think animal and human characteristics / biology / physiology can be equated. I am arguong just the opposite.

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    • T TClarke

      Fred_Smith wrote:

      And bear in mind that everything you've read has come from sources funded by the very people who stand to benefit from such research.

      In other words, are you saying that using animals in medical research is profitable? Surely, that means the research is useful for coming up with medical solutions.

      Cheers Tom Philosophy: The art of never getting beyond the concept of life.
      Religion: Morality taking credit for the work of luck.
      "The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." - Marcus Aurelius

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      Fred_Smith
      wrote on last edited by
      #27

      TClarke wrote:

      Surely, that means the research is useful for coming up with medical solutions.

      If only... all it means is that the well of human gullibility is bottomless, as they feed on our depserate desire to find cures for illnesses, and even death itself... people will do anything, believe anything, sacrifice anything, if a man in white coat stands up and promises them he will find a cure for some dread disease... They might do better to wonder wbout where such diseases come from. As far back as 1961 (and you can believe it's even worse now) the following was written: "When will [people] realise that there ar too many drugs? No fewer than 150,000 preparations are now in use. About 15,000 new mixes and dosages hit the market each year, while about 12,000 die off. We simply don't have enough diseases to go round! At the moment the most helpful contribution is the new drug is to counteract the untoward effects of other new drugs." (Dr Modell, Cornell University, writing in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics) From personal experience, I remember when my father was dyting of cancer, adn was on about a dozen wdifferent pills each day - over half of which were given to counteract the side effects of others. He still died, of course.

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      • F Fred_Smith

        Hans Ruesch, the father of the genuine scientific anti-vivisection movement, died on Monday 27th August 2007, aged 94. Author of the books Slaughter of the Innocent, and its follow-up The Naked Empress, Hans was the scourge of both the vivisection industry, and the phoney, infiltrator-led, so-called "anti-vivisection" movement whose continued purpose is to mount pretend anti-vivisection campaigns deliberately designed to go nowhere, whilst relieving sincere, but often naive animal rights people of their money. He will be sadly missed by those who genuinely care about the torture of *millions upon millions* (sic) of animals, the bad science and the bad medicine that vivisection is responsible for. For those that cling to the false belief that their or their children's lives might one day be dependent upon this abhorrent practice, or who are interested in reading a well-researched, well-written, fully annotated debunking of the vivisection myth, I cannot recomment highly enough his seminal work "Slaugter of the Innocent". This is not the ranbling rantings of an emotionally scarred immature idealist, as many people see those in the animal rights movement, but an intelligent scientific argument by a man who spent years researching his subject. What he reveals in his books will make your hair stand on end - and I am not just referring to the almost unbelievable abuse that goes on in vivisection laboratories worldwide, but also the sheer scale of the bad science involved, all to feed the monetary greed of the pharmaceutical companies that sponsor it, and to satisfy the depserate need for reassurance that the general public (that's you...) demands from the medical industry; that it will cure you of your ailments. Have your eyes opened, and read this book. Slaughter of the Inocent, on Amazom.com[^] Fred

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        Red Stateler
        wrote on last edited by
        #28

        Lobster is best when boiled alive.

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        • R Red Stateler

          Lobster is best when boiled alive.

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          Jorgen Sigvardsson
          wrote on last edited by
          #29

          Actually, all crustaceans tastes like shit if they're not boiled alive. At least the lobster/craw fish/crab families - not sure about shrimps. The only consolation is that they die fairly instantly.

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          • K KaRl

            I will care about animal rights when all of my human fellows will be able to exert their inalienable ones. I've got no moral problem to sacrifice one thousand dogs if it can save one human being. Our world is going crazy: when an animal is found there are refuges to take care of it, but men can continue to die each winter lying on our pavements.


            Change of fashion is the tax levied by the industry of the poor on the vanity of the rich Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #30

            K(arl) wrote:

            inalienable

            What rights are inherent Karl?

            K(arl) wrote:

            animal rights

            Is more about freeing you from being a victimiser, than freeing the animal from being a victim.

            K(arl) wrote:

            I've got no moral problem to sacrifice one thousand dogs if it can save one human being.

            I have. A lot of people are scum. A lot of people get themselves into a situation through choice. An animal IS an innocent.

            K(arl) wrote:

            but men can continue to die each winter lying on our pavements.

            Normally because they wont go to a refuge.

            Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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            • F Fred_Smith

              K(arl) wrote:

              This is anthropomorphism

              No Karl, it is precicely NOT this, if you've read anything I've said in this thread. If anything, it is the vivisectors who could be accused of anthropomorphism - they are the ones who think animal and human characteristics / biology / physiology can be equated. I am arguong just the opposite.

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              K Offline
              KaRl
              wrote on last edited by
              #31

              From my POV, Anthropomorphism lies in considering animals as entities having rights in our human society.


              Change of fashion is the tax levied by the industry of the poor on the vanity of the rich Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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              • R R Giskard Reventlov

                Well said.

                home
                tastier than delicious

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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #32

                Bollocks, that was a load of crap.

                Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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                • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                  Actually, all crustaceans tastes like shit if they're not boiled alive. At least the lobster/craw fish/crab families - not sure about shrimps. The only consolation is that they die fairly instantly.

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                  Red Stateler
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #33

                  Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:

                  The only consolation is that they die fairly instantly.

                  My only consolation is that I can hear them scream.

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                  • K KaRl

                    I will care about animal rights when all of my human fellows will be able to exert their inalienable ones. I've got no moral problem to sacrifice one thousand dogs if it can save one human being. Our world is going crazy: when an animal is found there are refuges to take care of it, but men can continue to die each winter lying on our pavements.


                    Change of fashion is the tax levied by the industry of the poor on the vanity of the rich Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                    Jorgen Sigvardsson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #34

                    K(arl) wrote:

                    Our world is going crazy: when an animal is found there are refuges to take care of it, but men can continue to die each winter lying on our pavements.

                    Women die on pavements too...

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                    • R Red Stateler

                      Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:

                      The only consolation is that they die fairly instantly.

                      My only consolation is that I can hear them scream.

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                      Jorgen Sigvardsson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #35

                      I bet you can, Doolittle Jr.

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                      • F Fred_Smith

                        There are no end of charities and other organisations dedicated to human suffering in all it's guises, and that's fine and good. The fact that they haven't got a great record of stopping all human suffering is no excuse to ignore that of animals. And please, the real point of HR's book is not animal suffering, valid though that is. It is also about the bad science that is vivisection. There is good eveidence to suggest, if you read the book, that vivisection has done more to hinder medical science than advance it, through false and misleading results.

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                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #36

                        Fred_Smith wrote:

                        they haven't got a great record of stopping all human suffering is no excuse to ignore that of animals

                        Human suffering is CAUSED by humans. We are almost incapable of solving mans problems. We are too close to the problem to solve it. With animals though we can easially be compassionate but distanced from their nature. Makes it easy, a lot easier then to care for people.

                        Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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                        • L Lost User

                          K(arl) wrote:

                          inalienable

                          What rights are inherent Karl?

                          K(arl) wrote:

                          animal rights

                          Is more about freeing you from being a victimiser, than freeing the animal from being a victim.

                          K(arl) wrote:

                          I've got no moral problem to sacrifice one thousand dogs if it can save one human being.

                          I have. A lot of people are scum. A lot of people get themselves into a situation through choice. An animal IS an innocent.

                          K(arl) wrote:

                          but men can continue to die each winter lying on our pavements.

                          Normally because they wont go to a refuge.

                          Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

                          K Offline
                          K Offline
                          KaRl
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #37

                          fat_boy wrote:

                          What rights are inherent Karl?

                          Universal Declaration of Human Rights[^]

                          fat_boy wrote:

                          Is more about freeing you from being a victimiser

                          The crime lies in your eyes, not mine.

                          fat_boy wrote:

                          I have. A lot of people are scum. A lot of people get themselves into a situation through choice. An animal IS an innocent.

                          And there we go with the psychological condition...


                          Change of fashion is the tax levied by the industry of the poor on the vanity of the rich Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                          • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                            K(arl) wrote:

                            Our world is going crazy: when an animal is found there are refuges to take care of it, but men can continue to die each winter lying on our pavements.

                            Women die on pavements too...

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                            K Offline
                            KaRl
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #38

                            True. I use 'men' as 'human beings' - it's a gallicism, not a display of misogyny - this time :)


                            The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                            • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                              Bah, give him a break. He is doing less harm to other living organisms. What is wrong with that?

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                              Ryan Roberts
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #39

                              Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:

                              What is wrong with that?

                              A concern for mosquitoes and protozoa as 'beings' is not only an absurd but also a fundamentally anti human philosophy. Animals are a means to an end - and the end is Man. An individual exhibiting such a level of anthropomorphism is an amusing oddity, the problem is that this idiocy is spreading to policy.

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                              • K KaRl

                                fat_boy wrote:

                                What rights are inherent Karl?

                                Universal Declaration of Human Rights[^]

                                fat_boy wrote:

                                Is more about freeing you from being a victimiser

                                The crime lies in your eyes, not mine.

                                fat_boy wrote:

                                I have. A lot of people are scum. A lot of people get themselves into a situation through choice. An animal IS an innocent.

                                And there we go with the psychological condition...


                                Change of fashion is the tax levied by the industry of the poor on the vanity of the rich Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                                Lost User
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #40

                                K(arl) wrote:

                                What rights are inherent Karl? Universal Declaration of Human Rights[^]

                                I was expecting a little thought from you rather than a reguritation of someone leses, but even the UDHR is a fantasy: 1) ...people. They are endowed with reason and conscience' Yeah, sure, I see lots of evidence of that all around me. And so it goes on. Tell me Karl, really, what rights do we have?

                                Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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                                • L Lost User

                                  K(arl) wrote:

                                  What rights are inherent Karl? Universal Declaration of Human Rights[^]

                                  I was expecting a little thought from you rather than a reguritation of someone leses, but even the UDHR is a fantasy: 1) ...people. They are endowed with reason and conscience' Yeah, sure, I see lots of evidence of that all around me. And so it goes on. Tell me Karl, really, what rights do we have?

                                  Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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                                  R Offline
                                  Red Stateler
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #41

                                  fat_boy wrote:

                                  I was expecting a little thought from you rather than a reguritation of someone leses, but even the UDHR is a fantasy

                                  fat_boy wrote:

                                  And so it goes on. Tell me Karl, really, what rights do we have?

                                  Karl is a Marxist, so his concepts of rights are inherently derived from the state... i.e., they're whatever his state tells them they are. It's funny what a cheap (but wordier!) bite off of the Bill of Rights the UDHR is.

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                                  • L Lost User

                                    K(arl) wrote:

                                    What rights are inherent Karl? Universal Declaration of Human Rights[^]

                                    I was expecting a little thought from you rather than a reguritation of someone leses, but even the UDHR is a fantasy: 1) ...people. They are endowed with reason and conscience' Yeah, sure, I see lots of evidence of that all around me. And so it goes on. Tell me Karl, really, what rights do we have?

                                    Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

                                    K Offline
                                    K Offline
                                    KaRl
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #42

                                    fat_boy wrote:

                                    UDHR is a fantasy

                                    No, it's a concept.


                                    Jouir et faire jouir sans faire de mal ni à toi ni à personne, voilà je crois le fondement de toute morale Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                                    • R Ryan Roberts

                                      Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:

                                      What is wrong with that?

                                      A concern for mosquitoes and protozoa as 'beings' is not only an absurd but also a fundamentally anti human philosophy. Animals are a means to an end - and the end is Man. An individual exhibiting such a level of anthropomorphism is an amusing oddity, the problem is that this idiocy is spreading to policy.

                                      J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      Jorgen Sigvardsson
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #43

                                      Ryan Roberts wrote:

                                      the problem is that this idiocy is spreading to policy.

                                      No, I don't think so. Policy is defined by the masses (although through a ruling elite). It will take a lot before such policies are established. I fear religious people and their wet policy dreams far more than any mosquito lover...

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                                      • R Red Stateler

                                        fat_boy wrote:

                                        I was expecting a little thought from you rather than a reguritation of someone leses, but even the UDHR is a fantasy

                                        fat_boy wrote:

                                        And so it goes on. Tell me Karl, really, what rights do we have?

                                        Karl is a Marxist, so his concepts of rights are inherently derived from the state... i.e., they're whatever his state tells them they are. It's funny what a cheap (but wordier!) bite off of the Bill of Rights the UDHR is.

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                                        Lost User
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #44

                                        In this respect you could be right. And, I you would probably agree with me that the only 'unalienable rights' we have are those we are prepared to fight for. Its a big fist and a big arm that gives a person rights. Take that away and he has nothing.

                                        Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

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                                        • K KaRl

                                          fat_boy wrote:

                                          UDHR is a fantasy

                                          No, it's a concept.


                                          Jouir et faire jouir sans faire de mal ni à toi ni à personne, voilà je crois le fondement de toute morale Fold with us! ¤ flickr

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                                          L Offline
                                          Lost User
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #45

                                          I want you to tell me what you really think an individual has the right to when born?

                                          Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception

                                          K 1 Reply Last reply
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