Under law slaughtered cattle and hog first must be “stunned” so they are insensible to pain. This is usually done with a blow to the head or an electric shock. But on most plants this stunning doesn’t always work properly, with cruel consequences for the animals. The animal is lifted and hung upside down still conscious, the animal kicks trying to escape.
A sharp knife is then taken to the neck and cut deeply in. The blood drains, causing death through exsanguinations.
Chickens and pigs are subjected to scalding water to remove their feathers and hair. A significant proportion of animals are burnt before going unconscious
How would you feel if the only purpose of your life was to test if something was safe for humans to use?
Right now, millions of mice, rats, rabbits, primates, cats, dogs, and other animals are locked inside cold, barren cages in laboratories across the country. They languish in pain, ache with loneliness, and long to roam free and use their minds. Instead, all they can do is sit and wait in fear of the next terrifying and painful procedure that will be performed on them. Some of the tests include, a powdered or liquid substance dropped into the animals eyes. During this test, the animal's eyes are held open with clips. Many animals break their necks as they struggle to escape.
Other tests include that the animals are poisoned and killed to test the safety of new chemicals, food additives, household cleaning products and cosmetics. They are force-fed substances, have chemicals rubbed into their skin, and are made to inhale smoke or toxic fumes. In an European laboratory an animal dies every 3 seconds.
Each year roughly 10 million animals are trapped in the wild so that they can be skinned and turned into fur coats.
The initial closing