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Salmonella

Would you like it poached, fried or scrambled?

1080 - The Real Killer

Tasmania continues its use of 1080 poison baits to "eradicate" foxes. On the State Government's own data, in the last five years, more than 140,000 of these poison baits have been laid across various lands where the authorities believe foxes might exist.

Mardi Gras 2008 Photos

To keep the momentum of the Dairy campaign going this year's Mardi Gras float was called "Don't Be A Dairy Devil - Be a Soybean Queen."

Our big appetite for eggs

The RSPCA is endorsing a range of eggs which Animal Liberation says are laid by chickens kept in inhumane conditions.

Mardis Gras 2007 Photos

Photos from the Animal Lib members and float that made such an impact at Mardi Gras 2007.

Wollongong Gig

Check out the photos! Monstrous Blues, The Watt Riot, The Thaw, Dark Side of the Womb, Frank & the Steins

Christmas Party 2006

Date Posted: 20 Dec 2006
2006 was a great year for promoting our factory farmed friends to the front of the headlines. Chickens lead the way, followed closely behind by the little (bloomin huge) oinkers. What we are hoping for in 2007 is for Animal Liberation to outstrip 2006 in a big way. We have an extremely successful and motivated bunch of volunteers willing to donate their time and effort into making the world (at least Sydney) a happier place for animals.

Vanstone faces accusations of animal cruelty over her share in piggery

Date Posted: 15 Nov 2006
A PIGGERY part-owned by the Immigration Minister, Amanda Vanstone, is breaching industry guidelines by keeping pigs in cramped conditions, animal welfare activists allege.

World Vegan Day 2006

Date Posted: 10 Nov 2006
Got off to a flying start, Jodi and Angie set up the outdoor BBQ in the middle of Wynyard Park (permission granted of course!) along with an Animal Liberation stall. A plethora of volunteers turned up one by one which was amazing to see.

Streaker protests against Cup

Date Posted: 07 Nov 2006
A STREAKING animal liberationist has been ejected from Sydney's Randwick racecourse and will face court for offensive behaviour. The woman, in her 30s, ran naked across the racecourse at 2pm "in some sort of anti-horse racing protest", Maroubra Police Inspector Eddie Bosch said.

The Dean of Newcastle (NSW) speaks out for animals

Date Posted: 08 Oct 2006
At the annual Thanksgiving for Creation service held in Christ Church Cathedral, Newcastle, on Sunday, 8th October, 2006, the Address was given by the Dean of Newcastle, The Very Rev'd Graeme R. Lawrence OAM. The position of leadership the Dean holds in the Anglican Church in Australia makes his remarks all the more valuable to those of us fighting the animals' cause.

Australia mourns Peter Brock

Date Posted: 16 Sep 2006
Australia is mourning the loss of Peter Brock, the champion racing driver. Not well-known was his vegetarianism/veganism, due to his respect of the lives of other beings as well as his desire for the good health of his body. He preferred to live the "quiet example" vegetarian lifestyle, and it certainly was quite an example.

City to Surf 2006 - Team Vegan

Date Posted: 13 Aug 2006
The 2006 City to Surf sported a new team this year, amongst all the people from all walks of life who had decided to have a go, there was Team Vegan!!

Live Exports

Date Posted: 6 Jun 2006
Elders is not only involved in the Live Export market, but is clearly proud enough of its involvement to broadcast it to the world through its website. It was for this reason that Animal Liberation rallied outside Elders Real Estate agency at Neutral Bay on Saturday the 25th March, our aim was to highlight to the Australian public the companies who are profiting from this abhorrent trade. Other animal organisations held their own protests on the same day in a national day of action against Live Exports.

Live Export Company Charged with Animal Cruelty

Date Posted: 10 Nov 2005
West Australian Police acting on behalf of the West Australian Government and the Office of the WA State Solicitor have laid animal cruelty charges against a leading WA live export company for breaching the WA Animal Welfare Act.

Australia Post and their Ludicrous New Stamp Collection

Date Posted: 25 Oct 2005
Australia Post has just released a selection of collectable stamps entitled "Down on the Farm". There's no two ways about it -- the pictures are absolutely adorable. But is it covered by 'Truth in Advertising' legislation? However adorable, the images are exactly how the agricultural sector want the population to view what goes on: animals having fun!

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For Whom The Bell Tolls -
the Don Barnes interview

He once experimented on primates; irradiating them as part of US airfore nuclear research. Now Don Barnes is one of the finest voices in the anti-vivisection movement. He was dismissed from the Brooks Airforce Base for refusing to conduct a particularly odious experiment. Today he is based in Texas and works for the Animal Protection Institute in Sacramento, California.

So what makes this man tick? We're about to find out.

Interview by Claudette Vaughan, January 2000.

CLAUDETTE: Don, you're presently executive director of Voice For Animals Inc, on a voluntary basis. What does this entail?

DON: My duties range from the protection of wildlife to helping domestic animals survive in urban settings. I write, do radio and television interviews and stories, take legal action against those who abuse other animals, and mount protests and rallies against circuses, rodeos, laboratories, factory farms, and fur shops. I help local sanctuaries rescue skunks, opossum, raccoons, coyotes, snakes, and birds. I contact local, state and federal representatives seeking their support or criticising their positions on various issues.

CLAUDETTE: You had been an experimenter for about a decade when you walked into the lab to witness one of your technicians holding a monkey, about to smack it in the face. Was this event revelatory in nature? Were you immediately faced with a rational, moral dilemma or was this just the final straw?

DON: The incident with the technician was not a turning point in my life, but it eventually served to underscore my budding conversion to animal rights activism. After I had read Peter Singer's book, Animal Liberation, and had began to shed the conditioned ethical blindness syndrome, I could look back at incidents such as this and wonder at my own confusion. I could punish that technician for intending to strike a monkey in the face, but had I ordered him to bolt the monkey into a metal chair and deliver hundreds – if not thousands – of electric shocks to that same monkey, I would be justified as I was doing it in the name of science.

While the technician's obvious intent cannot be justified under any conditions, I can understand it better than I understand wielding the hard, deliberate, calculating axe of science. At least his crime was one of passion rather than unimpassioned observation.

CLAUDETTE: What do you mean by "conditioned ethical blindness?"

DON: This is my term for what Lifton called "doubling" in his book, The Nazi Doctors. I was literally conditioned to exclude other animals from my sphere of moral concern. I was taught that to empathiise with or to anthropomorphise the behaviour or responses of non-human animals was ascientific – that is, I could not be a good scientist unless I held myself in total judgemental reserve, observing, not feeling. I have come to believe that this is the key to understanding the vivisector. I do not believe that the vast majority of vivisectors to be sadistic; I believe them to be victims of conditioned ethical blindness, or ignorance reinforced by society and by religion and by science.

Less than 200 years ago, humans were sold into slavery in this country. They were seen as "subhuman" and treated like commodities. The analogy is clear: non-human animals are seen as objects, defined as being subhumans without souls, expendable, not to be included in one's sphere of morality. Richard Ryder saw this clearly in his coining of the term "speciesistic", referring to the arbitrary separation of human and nonhuman.

CLAUDETTE: The anti-vivisection lobby has fought for years to inform the public about the spurious arguments put forth by vivisectors who want animal research to continue. From both a moral and a health perspective these arguments have virtually gotten us nowhere. Is there an answer?

DON: Somehow, I don't think you will agree with me but I don't believe vivisection is fraud. I think it's ignorance: a blind faith in a scientific method which simply cannot find the differences or commonalities between species – a faulty experimental design. I cannot believe that most vivisectors know that their work will be spurious; on the contrary, I am convinced that they – like myself in the past – believe that what they are doing is important to the only species they define as important – the human.

Further I believe that vivisection is a moral issue. I might get upset at paying $600.00 tax money to the airforce for a toilet seat, but I don't feel the anger, the angst, the fury that I feel when I think about causing stress, pain, suffering, and death to other sentient creatures. It is not anger about getting ripped off, it's anger at the cruelty and inhumanity of men.

I am also convinced that our diet is a moral issue. I am an ethical vegan, not because I am so concerned about my own health that I refuse to eat the {unhealthy} flesh of other animals, but because I don't think it's moral to eat the flesh of other animals. Sometimes I argue that veganism is a healthier way of life, not just for the individual, but for the environment, and especially for the non-humans who will be raised and eaten merely for food. Again, we are faced with arbitrary criteria. For example, we Americans cringe at the idea of eating a dog or a cat but we have no problem killing and eating "food" animals. I see no difference between eating a dog and eating a pig.

CLAUDETTE: Vivisection is still so secretive, it's legal, it's physically difficult to get in and get footage of animal abuse, and the conditioning of the public has been thorough. What tactics can be used to expose the erroneous belief that experiments on non-humans contribute to public health?

DON: The biomedical profession has come to rely on non-human animals as subjects. It is an institution; a bureaucracy in its own right. They have no idea what they would do if they were forced to empty the cages in their labs. On the other hand, we are convinced that this is exactly what they must do in order to finally understand enough about human physiology, psychology etc to help humans. Trouble is, we're fighting an industry; we cannot expect rapid changes from such vested interests. We are slowly recruiting more and more individuals from the ranks of medicine, veterinary medicine and other scientific fields with whom to refute the trite assertions of the vivisection industry. You say our arguments have not worked; well, their science has not worked either, and more and more scientists are beginning to recognise that.

CLAUDETTE: There are three ways to win any conflict: conversion, accommodation, or coercion. What in your opinion is the best way to instigate mass change from within the vivisection community?

DON: If I knew how to stop vivisection, every laboratory cage in the world would be empty today and would have been empty yesterday. I am frustrated as well, but I cannot believe that we can rely on dishonest arguments and mud-slinging without justification. I realise that there are many more commonalities between species than there are differences, and would not be surprised to find even more commonalities as we delve into the genetic manipulation of life forms as even a single drug turns out to have common effects across species, the argument that interspecies extrapolation never works is shot to hell.

Do I think we should study other animals to understand humans? No. Never. Nor do I think we should use other humans in invasive experiments even if it means helping more humans in the future.

CLAUDETTE: Do you see the Animal Liberation Front as taking practical action to ameliorate the plight of laboratory animals or do you prefer the techniques of strategic non-violence?

DON: I have no problem with the ALF in their liberation of suffering beings. I do have a problem with violence towards species, including humans, for I don't believe we can argue that the end justifies the means any more than the vivisectors do.

CLAUDETTE: Is it a waste of time to lobby governments? Do you see change coming from this direction?

DON: I came to Australia in 1990 to testify before a Senate Select Committee with Peter Singer and Richard Ryder. We were desperately trying to limit the growth of the vivisection industry. Did we fail? Perhaps. But perhaps we detailed the escalation of the industry for a time, thereby saving countless numbers of sentient beings from pain and suffering and death. I would come over again tomorrow to argue the case if I could. Just this morning, I wrote several letters for several signatures to lobby our US Senators to ban the stell-jawed trap in our National Refuges. I hope we can win this one as it make a difference to thousands of innocent animals who will be caught in these cruel devices.

CLAUDETTE: Gary Francione once said that those who push for abolition of vivisection by compromise – moving forward in tiny steps such as asking for longer chains for the slaves (non humans), asking for improved facilities etc – are playing into the hands of the opposition by being conciliatory. What is your opinion of that?

DON: I think Gary Francione has something important to say when he insists that our goal must be abolition, not reform. At the same time, I remember Gary helping to save a dog in Israel and helping to transport that dog to the US for its safety, while simultaneously a couple of us were arranging the same trip for a cat. We do what we must for the individual animal as well as for the "universe of pain and suffering", as Henry Spira often described the status of non-human animals.

My partner and I rescued a feral male cat the other day who had been hit by a car a few days earlier. The bones were sticking through the skin on his leg and maggots had infested the wound. We spent over $1300 to save this cat. He died. In retrospect, that money could have spayed and neutered many other cats or been used to find good adoptive homes for them. Did we make a foolish decision to try and save the life of this feral tom who almost certainly would have had differculty surviving with just three legs? I'll leave that question to your readers. Frankly, I'm not sure what I'll do when faced with the same situation today or tommorrow or next week.


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