Study: Milk Is Very Good For You

In the latest volley in the debate over milk, a long-running Scottish study contradicts other studies that suggest milk consumption might contribute to coronary problems. In fact, the study found that milk drinkers were significantly healthier than non-milk drinkers.

The study followed 5,700 Scottish men for a period of 25 years. The study found that even among men who drank whole milk, there was no increase in the risk of heart disease compared to those who didn\’t drink milk. In fact, heart disease among regular milk drinkers was found to be lower than among non-milk drinkers.

The researchers were quick to emphasize that this applies to moderate milk drinking. Dr. Andy Ness told the BBC, \”We are not talking about people who are drinking pints and pints of milk, but a moderate consumption of about a third of a pint a day. Our study does seem to show that a bit of what you like does seem to do you good.\”

Reading between the lines of the study, however, the clearest implication is that whatever health effects milk has on the body, it is minor compared to other behaviors. For example, their study found that deaths from cancer and strokes were 10 percent lower in the men who were regular milk drinkers than those who weren\’t. But, this was almost certainly attributable to the fact that those who didn\’t drink milk at all were more likely to smoke than those who drank milk regularly.

Also, as is the case with a lot of the studies that show meat consumption or some combination of meat consumption is unhealthy, when people see studies saying a certain food causes an increase or decrease in death rates of 10 percent, they should be extremely skeptical since it is all but impossible to accurately detect such small risk factors in epidemiological studies.

Source:

Milk drinking protects health. The BBC, May 9, 2001.

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On The Horrors of Being a Dairy Cow

Recently going through and weeding out my old e-mail I ran across this lovely tidbit that was sent to an animal rights e-mail list back on May 10, 2001. This is a message from activists who were trying to organize a protest on Mother\’s Day in the Boston, Mass., area. It\’s worth repeating in its entirety (I\’ve left it just as I received it, including the annoying capitalization of every word).

UNHAPPY MOTHER\’S DAY FOR DAIRY COWS:
WHERE ARE THEIR SONS???????\”
DEMO.

When: Sunday, May 13th, 2001 (Mother\’s Day)
Time: 3:15 p.m.
Where: Meet at Government Center T Stop and we will walk over to Fanuiel Hall
Why: MILLIONS OF MOTHER \”Dairy\” COWS ARE CRYING FOR THEIR BABIES WHO WERE
DRAGGED AWAY BY FORCE FROM CRUEL DAIRY INDUSTRY\’S HANDS TO THE VEAL CRATES TO
BE KILLED AT FOUR MONTHS OLD AND EATEN AS \”VEAL\”, \”HAMBURGER\”, \”PET FOODS\”
……..

AND THEN THOSE GREEDY HANDS TURN AROUND TO STEAL MOTHER COWS\’ \”MILK\” WITH
MACHINES TO FEED HUMAN BABIES AND ADULTS FOR PROFITS……..

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Dateline Covers the Howard Baker Controversy

Last night NBC\’s Dateline program featured an in-depth look at the Howard Baker controversy which is a microcosm of the way much of the animal rights movement operates.

Baker is a veterinarian in New Jersey who was accused and convicted of cruelty to animals. Nine months after his conviction, however, an appeals judge acquitted him of all charges. The central question at his original trial and during his appeal was this: can the court trust the word of a People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals\’ activist?

The activist in question was Michelle Rokke who has made a part-time career out of infiltrating business on behalf of PETA. Rokke was the activist who stole thousands of documents from Huntingdon Life Sciences, forcing PETA into a settlement agreement which forbids them from campaigning against HLS (which is why you haven\’t heard anything from PETA about the company).

Rokke claimed she went to work for Baker to obtain experience in working with animals, but witnessed abuse her very first week on the job. Nonetheless she worked for Baker for several years, and in the process secretly recorded hundreds of hours of videotape of Baker treating animals. A 20-minute portion of one of those videotapes was the basis for the animal cruelty charge.

The video shows Baker treating a dalmatian. In the video, Baker is clearly very angry with the animal and says things like, \”I hate rotten dogs! Stop biting me or I\’ll choke you to death!\” He also strikes the animal at least once. Baker testified the dog tried to bite him and he took necessary and proper actions to protect himself and his staff. Rokke testified that Baker savagely hit the dog over the head — off camera — and that she saw him repeatedly abuse other animals in his care. Other people who worked with Baker in his office testified that although Baker used appropriate force to restrain animals that presented a potential threat, they never saw him engage in any sort of abuse.

The bottom line in the trial was whether or not Rokke made a credible witness in her testimony that, off camera, Baker violently attacked the dalmatian and her accusations that this was part of a pattern of behavior she had witnessed for years.

The trial judge, Emory Toth, convicted Baker on 14 counts of animal cruelty saying that he found Rokke an extremely credible witness and didn\’t think that the fact that she was a PETA activist who admitted on the stand that she had lied repeatedly in the past in any way diminished the credibility of her testimony. The appeals court judge, Joyce Munkacsi, made a surprising ruling when she ruled that Rokke lacked credibility. This is surprising since generally a trial court\’s decision about such evidentiary matters is considered the last word unless the appeals court finds that the trial court made a serious error. In her comments announcing her decision to acquit Baker of all charges, Munkacsi said,

The court below chose to accept wholeheartedly all of the accounts of these events as perceived by Rokke. This court respectfully disagrees with the assessment of credibility by the court below, and I cannot find Michelle Rokke to be a credible witness such as to be the reed on which the state has built this case.

After seeing some of Rokke\’s testimony, it\’s difficult to fathom why Toth found Rokke so credible. Consider this exchange between Rokke and Baker\’s attorney,

Attorney: Nowhere in this [employment] application did you tell or did you put down on this sheet that you were a PETA employee at the very time you were seeking employment from Dr. Baker. Is that correct? Yes or no?

Rokke: Yes

Attorney: So you lied on this application?

Rokke: I did not list that PETA was my employer.

Attorney: You lied on this application.

Rokke: I–I didn\’t list PETA on the employment, correct.

[Later Rokke is shown a picture from a PETA magazine accompanying an article about Rokke\'s investigation of pregnant mares used to producer premarin. The photo is cropped closely so that the reader is not aware that he\'s looking at a picture of a male horse rather than a mare.]

Attorney: Do you think that was all misleading, the use of that photograph, carefully cropped so you couldn\’t see whether it was a pregnant mare or a male stallion?

Rokke: I don\’t think it was, because if you have a lot of pregnant mares, you obviously have male horses, so their care and treatment came into play as well.

Later, bringing up her undercover work at HLS, the attorney for Baker asks Rokke whether or not she broke the law in stealing documents from them,

Attorney: Do you think you\’re a criminal because you broke the laws at Huntingdon?

Rokke: Well, I\’m not certain that I\’ve broken the law, to be perfectly honest with you. You know, I\’ve not been held up on trial in a court of law as a criminal, so no, I don\’t think I\’m a criminal.

Attorney: Stealing company records? Stealing client lists? Stealing trade secrets? Disseminating that information?

Rokke: Well, I–I certainly don\’t think of myself as a criminal, no.

Attorney: Because the end justifies the means?

Rokke: I just think the public has a right to know what\’s going on behind those locked doors.

It is bizarre that Toth considered her credible after those exchanges, since whatever else Rokke is, she clearly is adept at interpreting events in the most self-serving manner possible. As the judge who would have heard the HLS case had it not been settled put it, in her testimony in depositions for that case Rokke had \”misrepresented\” and \”rationalized\” her actions to fulfill her mission.

Thankfully Munkacsi saw through the facade. Baker is currently suing Rokke and PETA for defamation and malicious prosecution.

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German Animal Rights Leader on Trial for Fraud

At the beginning of April the former head of a German animal rights foundation, the German and European Animal Relief Organization, was arrested and charged with embezzling more than $45 million in donations which they allegedly laundered through a series of dummy corporations. The alleged fraud took place from 1994-1999.

Wolfgang Ullrich, 57, fled to Thailand when authorities were on his trail, and was extradited back to Germany in February of this year. He had been imprisoned in Thailand for refusing to pay a $1.8 million fine for illegally importing a yacht into that country.

Source:

Former animal rights foundation head goes on trial for alleged fraud. Associated Press, April 2, 2001.

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Peter Singer\’s Last Word on the Bestiality Controversy

After the torrent of criticism that Peter Singer received over his review of Midas Dekkers\’ Dearest Pet, which many people viewed as defending bestiality, Singer finally released a clarification of his comments. Unfortunately, they don\’t seem to have ended the firestorm, since again Singer seems to imply that non-violent sexual contact between human beings and animals may be morally permissible. Here is the entire text of Singer\’s statement which was posted to several animal rights e-mail lists:

I agreed to review Midas Dekkers\’ scholarly study of sexual interaction between humans and animals not because I support such practices, but because I wanted to reflect on what such sexual behavior tells us about the way in which we are like animals, and at the same time to seek to draw such sharp lines between ourselves and other species. I also wanted to suggest that, if our concern is for the welfare of animals, it is only too easy to find practices on every modern factory farm that are a great deal worse, for the animal, than some forms of sexual contact between humans and animals. (Sex, I might remind readers, does not only mean \”intercourse.\”) An objection to all forms of sexual contact between humans and animals, in other words, does not seem to be based on concern for animal welfare, in any obvious sense. Those who wish to sustain such a sweeping objection need to look for other grounds.

I thought my review might provoke some people to think about the issue of why some behavior towards animals is viewed as obviously wrong, while other behavior seems entirely acceptable — killing and eating them, for example, or experimenting on them to test the safety of new cleaning agents. Obviously, sexual acts involving violence or cruelty to animals ought to be prohibited. And there may well be good accounts of why the proscription against all sexual acts with animals — including acts that are neither intrinsically violent or cruel — has outlasted many other prohibitions against non-reproductive sexual acts. But very few people seem to have read the article as raising questions. Many seemed to see no more than the fact that it mentioned sex with animals, and that fact was enough to send them into hysterical abuse, including accusations that I myself was a \”zoophile.\”

Once again, Singer seems to have raised more questions than he\’s answered about his position on this matter.

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PETA Making Waves About Foot-And-Mouth Disease Again

Once again People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is making news by again hoping that |foot and mouth| disease finds its way to the United States. This time around its Bruce Friedrich who sent a letter to officials planning the World Dairy Expo to ask them to cancel the event. In the letter, Friedrich reaffirms PETA\’s belief that the disease would be a godsend for the animal rights movement in the U.S. As is typical with PETA, Friedrich\’s claims are based on lousy logic and misinformation.

According to Friedrich, if animals in the United States came down with foot-and-mouth disease this would spare them from a trip to the slaughter house. In fact U.S. agricultural officials have planned a scorched earth policy for containing a possible outbreak of the disease that would likely make the British reaction seem mild in comparison. Such planning has been kept relatively low key, but a confirmed case of the disease would result in a very thorough and systematic slaughtering of animals in the area of the outbreak to contain the disease.

Friedrich and PETA also seem to be under the impression that a foot-and-mouth outbreak might turn more people into vegetarians. \”I suppose if it happens [an outbreak of foot-and-mouth in the United States], we\’ll write a massive thank you note because it\’ll turn a massive amount of people into vegetarians.\”

The immediate result of a serious outbreak would be a rapid increase in the cost of some meat, especially beef. But past disease outbreaks contradict the view that people would then turn to vegetarianism. Even in the UK, where mad cow disease and foot-and-mouth have garnered plenty of negative attention, people seem to prefer switching to meat they perceive as safe and/or cheap rather than become vegetarians.

Tom Thieding, communications director for the Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation, came closer to the truth when he told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, \”We\’re not worried. We know there are nuts out there and PETA confirms that. We don\’t get too hung up on anything that PETA says anymore.\”

Source:

PETA welcomes foot-and-mouth disease. Meg Jones, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, May 24, 2001.

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Americorps \”Volunteer\” Takes High School Students on Eco-Protest Field Trip

Eight high school students and a 19-year-old Americorps \”volunteer\” were recently arrested for their role in an Earth First! logging protest in Humboldt County during what they had told school officials would be a field trip to look at alternative agriculture methods.

The students are enrolled in an alternative education program, San Francisco Unified School District\’s Urban Pioneer Program, and Americorps worker David Wehrer had arranged a field trip to take the students to a Humboldt Country ranch where they were supposed to learn about organic farming. Instead Wehrer apparently decided to take the children to the anti-logging protest where he managed to evade arrest but his young charges were scooped up along with adult Earth First! protesters.

Wehrer has been charged with 16 criminal charges, including 8 counts of felony child endangerment and 8 counts of misdemeanor contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

Environmentalists are protesting logging by Pacific Lumber Col. in an ongoing controversy over old growth Douglas firs. Prosecutors argue that taking children to the protest constitutes criminal child endangerment, noting that a protester was killed by a falling tree in 1998 at the same site.

\”To use kids as cannon fodder for a cause is an example of completely misplaced values,\” Humboldt County District Attorney Terry Farmer said.

The San Francisco Chronicle didn\’t mention it, but if Wherer was acting in an official capacity as an Americorps volunteer — which he seems to have been doing — he was violating federal law in engaging in political advocacy (this is an ongoing problem with the Americorps program).

Source:

8 students skip school, get busted at protest; 19-year-old volunteer faces felony charges. Mark Martin, San Francisco Chronicle, May 18, 2001.

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Glaxo Defends HLS

GlaxoSmithKline, the largest European drug maker, issued a press release this week defending Huntingdon Life Sciences and promised that it would continue to be a customer of HLS despite the concerted campaign of intimidation by animal rights activists against anyone continuing to do business with HLS.

In its press release, GSK chairman Richard Sykes said, \”It is totally unacceptable that any company conducting its legitimate business within the confines of the law can be undermined by a long-term campaign of violence, intimidation and harassment.\”

Sykes went on to point out that medical progress cannot occur without animal experimentation and that GKS would continue to use HLS as long as it maintained its high standards of animal welfare.

Source:

Glaxo backs beleaguered animal testing lab. Reuters, May 21, 2001.

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Is Great Britain\’s Labour Party Turning Its Back on Animal Rights Activists

Of course the Labour Party isn\’t planning to do anything to resolve the impasse over fox Hunting with hounds until after the upcoming scheduled elections. The Daily Telegraph reports that after the election, however, Labour plans to abandon the ban on such hunting — which it promised to deliver for animal rights activists — and instead go along with a middle-of-the-road proposal to establish a joint committee of the Commons and the Lords to resolve the issues.

In its recent election manifesto, rather than come out and say that it would invoke the Parliament Act to force a ban on fox hunting through over the objections of the Lords, the Labour Party simply said,
\”If the issue continues to be blocked [by the House of Lords], we will look at how the disagreement can be resolved.\”

According to the Daily Telegraph,

The Labour manifesto signals the Government coming off the fence towards a more partisan view: that the sport should remain as long as it is regulated. The wording went through several drafts and only a handful of the most senior Labour figures knew what the final version of the manifesto would say.

It will be very interesting to see how animal rights activists react to this latest twist. Where 18 months or so ago it looked like the activists had Labour on their side, the extreme reaction involving Huntingdon Life Sciences and other issues seems to have begun to pull Labour away from its former flirtation with the animal rights community. A concerted backlash against Labour by activists upset over its sudden change of heart on fox hunting could go a long way to making such a break permanent.

Source:

Labour moves away from fox hunting ban. David Cracknell, The Daily Telegraph (UK), May 20, 2001

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PETA Claims It Is Distributing \”Bloody Crown\” at Burger King

During its campaign against McDonald\’s, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals threatened to show up at McDonald\’s restaurants and give children what it called \”Unhappy Meals,\” complete with plastic animals missing limbs and a cartoon of Ronald McDonald holding a bloody butcher knife. Now it is using the same tactic against Burger King, threatening to distribute a rather tasteless parody of a Burger King toy. According to a PETA press release:

Kids lured to Burger King by the free toy crown bestowed on young burger buyers will have plenty of food for thought when they receive PETA\’s new promotional handout: a \”blood-soaked\” crown with golden points impaling pigs and cows. Below each skewered animal are factoids about how animals suffer on Burger King\’s factory farms and a slogan that asks, \”How Much Cruelty Can You Stomach?\” The PETA crowns make their debut in Los Angeles on May 8 and then will appear at Burger Kings across the country.

As with the \”Unhappy Meals,\” if anyone manages to obtain one of these \”bloody crowns\” I\’d be more than willing to buy one.

Source:

Kids Get Bloody Crown At Burger King. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Press Release, May 11, 2001.

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