Guerilla Monk (Pomarańczowa Alternatywa)

Pomarańczowa Alternatywa Istnie!

Archive for July, 2008

“The Dark Knight” supports the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society!

without comments

Here are a few pictures of Christian Bale,”The Dark Knight”,yesterday in Europe heading to Japan (the land of whale killers) for the Dark Knight Premiere.Notice the Sea Shepherd shirt!

Written by guerillamonk

July 28th, 2008 at 12:21 pm

The Guinness Book of Records has also dropped listings of heaviest animals because of fears that owners were deliberately overfeeding pets to qualify.

without comments

Junk food diet fuels epidemic of pet obesity

Calls for owners to face prosecution for cruelty as number of overweight animals hits half a million

Overweight pet cat

Too many fatty treats can prove fatal for much-loved pets as they become grossly overweight. Photograph: Rex Features

Pet owners in Britain are feeding their animals an astonishing diet of junk food, including scones, chocolate, pizza and burgers, a charity has revealed.

The People’s Dispensary for Sick Animals warned that the trend is fuelling an epidemic of over-sized pets, ranging from dogs and cats to hamsters, gerbils, rats, rabbits and budgies. The charity estimated that over the past year alone there has been a 10 per cent rise in the number of overweight animals - weighing in at half a million pets.

Animals that pile on the pounds are increasingly suffering from diseases associated with obesity in humans: from poor energy levels and breathing problems to painful and sometimes fatal illnesses such as arthritis, asthma, diabetes, liver and heart disease and breeding problems. The huge rise in health problems has led to growing calls for pet owners to face prosecution for cruelty if a fat animal is not made to slim down.

Some of the most common problems are fatty and sugary human treats such as cheese, chips, scones and avocado, according to Sean Wensley, the PDSA’s senior veterinary surgeon. ‘Others that have been mentioned are crisps, curry, pizza, ice cream, cake and sweets,’ he added.

Wensley argued that pets were often being fed by several different family members with people underestimating how big a ’small’ treat should be for a smaller-than-human animal: ‘A single biscuit is like a packet of biscuits, or a single crisp is like a packet of crisps.’

Some foods also contain substances that are safe for humans but dangerous for animals: chocolate has a stimulant called theobromine, which can cause heart failure in dogs and avocados contain persin, which can cause heart failure in small rodents and stomach upsets for cats and dogs. The PDSA said that pet owners were ‘literally killing their pets with their kindness’.

Last year two brothers were convicted of causing unnecessary suffering after allowing their pet labrador to become ‘grossly’ overweight. The RSPCA took Rusty away from Derek Benton, 62, and his 53-year-old brother, David, after finding that he weighed 74.2kg. The dog has since lost more than 30kg and been returned to his owners.

In a previous case RSPCA inspectors found a dog so grossly fat that it could not move out of its own urine. The owner, a pensioner, was banned from keeping pets for life after admitting cruelty for overfeeding his dog with a diet that included cooked English breakfasts. Then there was a 10-year-old cat called Ginger that was so fat she could not get through a cat-flap.

The Guinness Book of Records has also dropped listings of heaviest animals because of fears that owners were deliberately overfeeding pets to qualify.

Helen Briggs, a senior press officer at the RSPCA, said the charity estimated that half of all cats and dogs were fat - a problem so widespread that many owners did not even appreciate it was a problem because they thought it had become the norm. ‘Overweight animals tend to be made objects of fun, but it’s a serious animal welfare issue,’ said Briggs.

According to the PDSA, owners who think their animal is overweight should take their pet to the vet for a check-up in case there is a medical problem and seek advice on a diet and more exercise.

Wensley said that the best treats for animals involved attention - from a walk in the park for a dog to playing with a cat. If owners really wanted to treat their pets with food, they should reduce their main meal by the same amount, he added.

The PDSA is running the fourth year of its Pet Fit Club, which gives owners of overweight pets a chance to go on a 100-day ‘diet and fitness programme’ - with prizes as an incentive for the owners if not the dieters.

How to tell if your tabby’s a fatty

· You should be able to feel the ribs and spine ‘readily’, but they should not be prominent or stand out.

· Check for an obvious fat pad at the base of the tail where it meets the body - a bad sign.

· A ‘waist’ should be visible and the abdomen should taper gently towards the pelvis, rather than sag.

· Cats should not have a sagging underside.

· Make sure rabbits don’t have a bulging dewlap under the chin, which shows they are overweight and means they cannot groom themselves.

Written by guerillamonk

July 27th, 2008 at 8:31 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Lina Newhouser, CommonDreams.org Co-Founder, 1951-2008

without comments

Lina Newhouser, CommonDreams.org Co-Founder, 1951-2008

CAPE ELIZABETH, Maine — Lina Jeanne Newhouser, 56, of Seal Cove Lane, died at her home Friday evening from complications following an April stem-cell transplant as part of the treatment in her defiant 3-year stand against non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Lina wrote of her long struggle on her blog - www.tellthebees.orglina2002 1

Lina was an artist, a political activist, an organic farmer, a businesswoman and a proud, loving mom.

Lina was born in Grand Junction, Colorado the daughter of John and Charlotte Newhouser. But she considered her beloved New Orleans home - where she was raised and graduated from high school. Lina graduated from Southwestern College in Memphis, Tenn. She also lived and studied in Munich, Germany for two years..

After college Lina became a community organizer with ACORN: the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, working in Texas, Little Rock, Ark., and Bridgeport, Conn. In 1980 she worked on the national staff of the Citizens Party, trying to elect Barry Commoner President as a vehicle for starting a third party in the US. She met and worked with both of her future husbands on the Citizens Party staff. Lina then was off to New York City for a job as co-director of Media Network that combined her two passions, art and politics, in a project using independently produced films as organizing and educational tools in NYC’s working class neighborhoods.

In 1984, Lina and her first husband Bert DeLeeuw moved to Belize where Lina painted for a year. Lina and Bert moved back to the US and bought a 200-acre old farm in the mountains of central Pennsylvania. Over 5 seasons Lina & Bert turned Blue Moon Farm into a successful organic vegetable and flower farm. Bert was killed in 1990 when their daughter Chloe was just 6-months old and Lina soon sold the farm.

In 1991 Chloe and Lina moved to Kentucky for Lina to work at Appalshop, an arts and education center based in the eastern coal region of the state. Lina was the Asst Director of  The American Festival Project at Appalshop, work she continued after her 1993 move to Maine when she and Craig married. Moriah was born in 1995.

Since 1996 Lina has worked as International Program Director for Transformit, a small, extraordinary firm that designs, builds, rents and sells sculptural structures out of fabric for the special event, trade show, architectural and retail markets. She loved her work (and her co-workers) at Transformit which combined her skills at art, organizing and working with people - and allowed her to travel a lot and put her German, French and Italian language skills to good use.

In the 1980’s Lina served for a time as the national president of the Alliance for Cultural Democracy, a national activist arts organization that flourished from 1982 to 1994. She currently serves on the Cape Elizabeth Arts Commission.

In 1997, Lina, and her husband Craig Brown, co-founded CommonDreams.org, the popular online news & views website for the progressive community.

Lina is survived by her husband, Craig Brown; daughters Chloe May DeLeeuw Brown and Moriah Brown, all of Cape Elizabeth; her brother John Newhouser and his wife, Teri of Houston, Texas; her brother Mark Newhouser and his wife Joan MacDonald of Glen Ellen, Calif. And her mothers-in-law Evelyn DeLeeuw of Green Pond, New Jersey; and Ruth Brown of Cape Elizabeth; and many in-laws, nieces and nephews and a wide circle of friends all over the world.

A celebration of Lina’s life will be held in the near future.

Lina’s family has requested that memorial donations in her honor be made to CODEPINK: Women for Peace

Written by guerillamonk

July 23rd, 2008 at 10:00 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Rights Group Hails Video As New Weapon Against Israeli Army

without comments

Rights Group Hails Video As New Weapon Against Israeli Army

by Rory McCarthy

JERUSALEM - Israel’s defence minister, Ehud Barak, yesterday promised an inquiry after video footage showed an Israeli soldier shooting baton rounds at a Palestinian detainee who was blindfolded and cuffed.”The Israeli military will investigate the incident, learn its lessons and hold those responsible to account,” he told MPs from his Labour party. “Warriors do not behave like this.”

The advocate general, Brigadier General Avichai Mendelblit, is said to have ordered a military police inquiry after he saw the footage released on Sunday by the Israeli human rights group, B’Tselem. The incident happened on July 7 in Nil’in village. Several other soldiers were present, including a lieutenant colonel who was holding the arm of the Palestinian man.

The man shot, Ashraf Abu Rahma, 27, was treated for an injury to his toe and was then released.

It was the latest incident in which video footage has been used to highlight violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. B’Tselem has been running a project since January last year in which it has given out around 100 video cameras to Palestinians to allow them to film human rights abuses in the West Bank. The Nil’in footage was filmed on a private camera by a 17-year-old girl who lives in the village. B’Tselem has now given her one of its cameras as part of its Shooting Back project.

Sarit Michaeli, spokeswoman for B’Tselem, said the footage was intended as much for an Israeli audience as for an international one. She said spoken or written testimony from Palestinians involved in such cases was often given little weight in official police or military investigations into apparent abuses, but video footage was much more powerful.

“I see no better way of encouraging accountability among members of the security forces,” said Michaeli.

© 2008 The Guardian

Written by guerillamonk

July 23rd, 2008 at 9:59 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Vivisection: Scientists Use 6% More Animals For Research

without comments

Vivisection: Scientists Use 6% More Animals For Research

by James Randerson

The number of scientific procedures carried out on animals rose by 6% last year to just over 3.2m. The vast majority (83%) used rodents, while the number of procedures that involved monkeys was down 6% with 3,125 monkeys being used in total.0721 06 1

The overall increase is due largely to the continued trend for researchers to use more genetically modified mice and fish in experiments. Creating GM animals involves two steps of breeding and these animals are counted in the figures as having undergone a scientific “procedure”. In 2007, 1.15m GM animals were used, a rise of 11% on the previous year. Over a third of all procedures in 2007 were breeding animals.

“As the volume of medical research increases, which we all want to see, then the overall volume of legitimate and useful animal experiments will increase despite steps taken to minimise their use,” said Liberal Democrat MP Dr Evan Harris, who is a strong supporter of the regulated use of animals in scientific research. He welcomed the use of more GM animals because he said this was a refinement that would make animal use more relevant to human diseases.

Iain Simpson of the Oxford group Pro-Test agreed: “We view the increase in the use of transgenic animals used as especially positive as it shows that academics are continuing to use innovative new methods to find cures for life threatening diseases.”

The figures, which were released by the Home Office this morning, show that 83% of procedures used rats, mice and other rodents, 10% used fish and 4% used birds.

The number of procedures carried out on dogs was up 600 (9%) while the number carried out on cats dropped by 216 (41%) and the number of cattle procedures was down 2000 (39%). Genetically normal animals were used in 1.73 million regulated procedures (54% of the total), up 5% on the 2006 figures.

The total number of animals used was 3.125m, an increase of 6%.

Home Office minister Meg Hillier said: “As the regulator we ensure that a proper balance between animal welfare and scientific advancement is maintained; and that the regulatory system is effective, efficient and impartial … Advances with non-animal test methods continue to be made, but at present licensed animal use remains essential to develop improved health-care technologies.”

Groups who oppose animal testing condemned the figures, pointing out that they represented an increase of 21% in animal experiments since Labour came to power.

“In 1997 animal welfare tokenism may well have been a vote winner for Labour. But it has resulted in an eleven year record of failure that has now seen the number of animals dying in British laboratories reach three million for the first time in 16 years,” said Wendy Higgins of the Dr Hadwen Trust. “If the government doesn’t take urgent action to implement a clear strategy to replace animals with advanced techniques, Labour’s legacy for lab animals will be an appalling failure.”

She said that 0.00002% of Britain’s science budget was spent on government funding of non-animal replacements.

Michelle Thew, chief executive of the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection, said: “It is a national disgrace that the number of animals subjected to experiments has massively risen under this government. Despite clear public concern on this issue, the government has made no attempt to take the necessary action and develop a clear policy on getting the numbers down. The UK should be leading the way in reducing animal testing, but these latest statistics show there is a long way to go.”

© 2008 The Guardian

Written by guerillamonk

July 23rd, 2008 at 9:55 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Israeli Soldier Firing Rubber Bullet at Palestinian at Close Range

without comments

Inquiry Launched After Film Shows Israeli Soldier Firing Rubber Bullet at Palestinian at Close Range

by Rory McCarthy

JERUSALEM -  An Israeli human rights group released video footage last night showing an Israeli soldier firing a rubber-coated bullet at close range at a Palestinian man who had already been detained, blindfolded and cuffed.

The Palestinian, who had been involved in a demonstration in the occupied West Bank village of Nil’in on July 7, was injured in the toe by the shooting. He was treated by army medics and released, according to the rights group, B’Tselem.

The video clip, which is just over a minute long, was filmed by a 14-year-old Palestinian girl from her home in the village and passed on to B’Tselem.

It begins by showing the Palestinian, named as Ashraf Abu Rahma, 27, at the demonstration where he waved a Palestinian flag and gave a V for victory sign. The video then cuts to show Abu Rahma sitting on a road blindfolded, with his hands cuffed by a plastic tie and surrounded by Israeli soldiers and military vehicles.He is then shown standing at the back of a military vehicle next to an Israeli army officer, identified by B’Tselem as a lieutenant colonel, who is holding Abu Rahma by his right arm.Moments later another Israeli soldier standing less than two metres away raises his rifle to his shoulder, takes aim and, without any apparent provocation, fires directly towards the feet of Abu Rahma. The video briefly stops and restarts with Abu Rahma lying on the floor in the same spot while an Israeli soldier inspects his lower legs. At least six other uniformed Israeli soldiers are standing nearby, looking on. 

B’Tselem said it passed a copy of the footage to the commander of the Israeli military police investigation unit and called for an immediate military investigation.

“B’Tselem demanded that the involvement of the lieutenant colonel who was holding the detainee is investigated,” it said. “B’Tselem stressed that members of the security forces are obligated to report unlawful acts. It is even more serious if a high-ranking officer participates in such a whitewash.”0721 04 1 2

Last night, the Israel Defence Force said an investigation had been ordered: “This was a serious incident in stark violation of the IDF’s rules of conduct and safety.”

It described Abu Rahma as a “rioter” and said he had been “arrested for taking part in a violent riot” near Nil’in.

It said he was allowed home after being examined by a military doctor who found he had been “very lightly wounded with swelling of a toe on his right foot”. It added: “The injury was sustained when an IDF soldier fired an anti-riot weapon in close proximity to the detained Palestinian man.”

The village of Nil’in is one of the latest to demonstrate against the construction of Israel’s West Bank barrier which has cut off the community from a large area of its farmland and protects Jewish settlements built inside the occupied West Bank. All settlements on occupied territory are illegal under international law.

Although demonstrations like those at Nil’in are intended by organisers to be non-violent, they have involved Palestinians throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. The Israeli military often fires tear-gas and rubber-coated bullets at the demonstrators.

In January last year, B’Tselem began to give more than 100 video cameras to Palestinians who live near settlements, Israeli military bases or at the scenes of frequent Israeli military incursions in the West Bank as part of a project, called Shooting Back, to expose human rights violations.

Last month Israeli police arrested two Jewish settlers after footage from one of B’Tselem’s cameras showed four masked settlers severely beating a group of Palestinian shepherds near the village of Khirbet Susiya in the southern West Bank.

© 2008 The Guardia

Written by guerillamonk

July 23rd, 2008 at 9:54 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Followers pay last respects to outlawed Vietnamese Buddhist monk

without comments

Followers pay last respects to outlawed Vietnamese Buddhist monk

DPA , Jul 7, 2008

Hanoi, Vietnam — Followers of an outlawed Buddhist group in Vietnam were permitted to pay their respects on Monday to their former leader who died over the weekend while under house arrest, according to Vietnamese authorities.

Members of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam were allowed to enter the Nguyen Thieu Monastery in Tuy Phuoc since Monday morning.

The Most Venerable Thich Huyen Quang had been under house arrest since 2003 after he and his deputy Thich Quang Do, 79, attempted to hold a nationwide congress of the sect’s monks.

Quang’s funeral began Monday at the monastery where he died on Saturday at 87 years old. The official ceremony is planned for Friday, according to Binh Dinh provincial chairman Vu Hoang Ha.

Quang was treated at the provincial general hospital but returned to the monastery on Friday, and died one day later due to major organ failure.

Thich Huyen Quang was born in 1920 in An Nhon district, Binh Dinh province. The International Buddhist Information Bureau noted that he was one of Vietnam’s most loved and respected spiritual leaders.

“He was also a determined opponent of tyranny in all its forms,” the bureau said in a statement.

“For his uncompromising determination to stand firm, he paid a high price, spending over half his life in prison, internal exile or under house arrest under a succession of political regimes.”

Quang was the fourth Supreme Patriarch of the outlawed sect, a spiritual movement that grew out of Buddhist groups that were active in the former South Vietnam before it was defeated and reunified with North Vietnam in 1975.

The Vietnamese government does not recognize the sect because its members refuse to accept government control over their affairs.

Written by guerillamonk

July 10th, 2008 at 10:00 pm

Posted in Uncategorized