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Showing posts with label PETA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PETA. Show all posts

THINK WEARING FUR IS OK? READ THIS FROM PETA

Posted by Fashion Editor at Large

I've long been an advocate of the anti-fur movement. Though increasingly I get the sense that concerns such as PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) are fighting a losing battle against fur-loving fashionistas. I was reassured that they haven't given up the fight today when the below email arrived from Mandy Carter of PETA. The video footage linked below is harrowing but neccessary viewing.

A deluded young sophisticate with her mink fur and a Babycham

Dear Melanie,
I am writing on behalf of PETA UK – an affiliate of PETA US, the largest animal rights organisation in the world, which has more than 2 million members and supporters. As someone who reports on fashion, you play a vital role in keeping your readers informed about all aspects of the fashion trade, including the ethical implications. In an attempt to sell more of its products, the fur industry spreads a great deal of misinformation about conditions for animals raised and killed for their fur. With London Fashion Week approaching, we hope you will allow us to share some information that we believe will be useful in offering your readers a truly balanced account of the fur business.

Most people are aware of some of the suffering that animals endure at the hands of the fur industry, but the reality is often even crueller than the image they hold. The fur industry promotes the idea that European fur farms have higher welfare standards, but animals on these farms suffer fates just as terrifying and agonising as animals elsewhere in the world. Indeed, new video footage captured during an investigation into Swedish fur farms has exposed the horror inflicted on animals in Europe. Please note that this video was not taken on isolated, rogue farms; the footage from Sweden was filmed during visits to 20 per cent of that country's mink farms, while a similarly shocking video was shot at 30 separate farms across Finland.

For the last London Fashion Week, singer Natalie Imbruglia narrated a video for PETA about the fur trade, showing how animals killed for their fur are commonly skinned alive, how mother animals who become caught in traps in the wild often chew off their own limbs in a desperate attempt to return to their babies and how 2 million cats and dogs are killed for their fur every single year in China.

Although these videos are difficult to watch, I implore you to take a few moments to do so, as they will help you provide a more complete portrait of fur industry practices to your readers. As on other farms on which animals endure intensive confinement – often driven mad by isolation and frustration – fur factory farms are designed to maximise profits at the expense of animals' well-being. Because fur farmers care only about preserving the quality of the fur, they use slaughter methods that keep the pelts intact but can result in extreme suffering for the animals. Small animals may be crammed into boxes and poisoned with hot, unfiltered engine exhaust from a truck. Engine exhaust is not always lethal, and some animals wake up while they are being skinned. Larger animals have clamps attached to their bodies or rods forced into their mouths or their anuses, by which they are painfully electrocuted. Gassing and neck-breaking are other common slaughter methods on fur factory farms.

Public opinion polls consistently show that the vast majority of people are strongly opposed to wearing animal fur, and a 2010 survey by the RSPCA showed that 95 per cent of the public say that they would never wear it. The list of stylish women who shun fur include Hollywood A-listers such as Eva Mendes, Kate Winslet and Charlize Theron; first ladies Carla Sarkozy and Michelle Obama; the music industry's biggest stars, including Leona Lewis and Pink; and teen favourites Fearne Cotton and Kelly Osbourne.

Top fashion designers including Stella McCartney, Vivienne Westwood, Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger refuse to use real fur in their collections. And from large department stores such as Harvey Nichols and Selfridges to fashionable High Street retailers such as AllSaints and Topshop, more and more compassionate retailers are implementing fur-free policies.




I have taken the liberty of including some answers to commonly asked questions about fur,

Is vintage fur OK?
Some people have been misguided as to the ethics of vintage fur. All "vintage" means is that the animals were killed long ago, but whether animals suffered and died yesterday or 50 years ago, all fur sends the same unacceptable message: that it is OK to torment animals and rip the skin off their backs in the name of fashion.

 Marlene Dietrich wearing the real deal.

Isn't real fur better for the environment?
Real fur is environmentally unfriendly. Toxic chemicals are used to preserve and process the skins, and waste from processing plants and fur farms poisons rivers and streams. It also takes 20 times as much energy to process a coat made from animal fur as it does one made from fake fur! And fur coats are not biodegradable – they are coated in chemicals to stop them from rotting.

 Topshop do brilliant faux fur (£100)

Is rabbit fur a by-product of the meat industry?
The fur industry likes to tell the public that the rabbit fur used for outerwear, trim and accessories is a by-product of the rabbit-meat industry. The truth is that the rabbit-fur industry demands the thicker pelt of an older animal. Rabbits who are used for meat are usually killed at the tender age of between 10 and 12 weeks; this means the rabbits who are raised and killed for meat are not the same rabbits who are killed for their fur. Our undercover exposé shows how these gentle creatures scream during slaughter.



Isn't fur carrying the "Origin Assured" label OK?
The fur industry's "Origin Assured" (OA) label is a shameless attempt to make consumers feel good about buying an inherently cruel product. The labelling in no way translates into acceptable treatment of animals who are killed for their fur.
In the US, which is one of the countries included on the OA list, not a single humane-slaughter law protects animals on fur farms. This means that after spending their entire lives in tiny wire cages where they often go insane from confinement, animals on these fur farms can have their necks broken, be gassed or have rods forced into their anuses through which they are painfully electrocuted. Compassionate consumers know that the only truly ethical fur is faux.



Don't we have an excuse to wear fur in this cold weather?
This is one of the most ludicrous of all the fur industry's arguments. When mountaineers climb Mount Everest, they don't do it in mink coats! There are countless modern, human-made fibres which are warmer, lighter and more weather-proof than fur. The fact is, some people advocate the killing of millions of animals simply because they like the way it looks. With all the chic, cruelty-free options available, there's no reason to steal animals' skins in order to keep warm.

Woolrich: keeping  Editors snug during cold fashion weeks

Very sincerely yours
Mandy Carter
Special Projects Coordinator
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
Tel +44 (0) 20 7357 9229 ext #244

FASHION 1.........................ANIMAL RIGHTS PROTESTERS - NIL


Posted by the Fashion Editor at Large
Kate Moss

I hate to say it, but the battle betwee the anti-fur camp and the fur-wearing brigade has been won by the fur-wearers. That means Anna Wintour has won. The foxes cowering in a cage somewhere in Norway have lost. The International Fur Trade Federation (IFTF) have triumphed and People for the Ethical treatment of Animals (PETA) have failed.

I came to this conclusion yesterday while reading the Evening Standard letters page when a certain Georgina Langford, the VEGETARIAN events manager for a magazine named Glass, wrote in to say:

"I am both a vegetarian and a vintage fur wearer. Although I do not condone the continued killing of animals for food and fashion, and would never buy a new fur, the pelts for most vintage coats were produced more than 30 years ago. It is surely better to wear these beautiful garments than leave them to moulder in attics, which is akin to throwing away half-eaten steak. Vintage fur coats epitomise winter glamour; fake fur leaves the wearer wanting the real deal. Last year I treated myself to an Arctic fox jacket and during this cold snap it has been worth every penny. To save on heating bills and reduce my carbon footprint, I often wear it indoors."



I have never read such a load of ill-informed, wrong-headedness in my life. How can someone wear fur and be a vegetarian at the same time? I just do not understand it. Stella McCartney needs to have a word with this girl. And because the animal died before she was born, that makes it OK does it? I fear this girl has been bitten by the "fashion dunce" bug, in which a normally bright girl becomes an airhead in the name of being fashionable. Even the caption written by an Evening Standard sub-editor suggesting Ms Langford "epitomise[s] winter glamour" caused my hackles to rise.

Obviously, the reason I am on the subject of fur wearing is due to how this cold snap (another three inches of snow in West London over-night) has revealed the true face of the fur-wearing public in London. It is so much bigger than I EVER imagined. Walking the dog I see old ladies in fur coats. Not rich ladies; locals. In and around town I see young cute fashiony girls in rabbit fur bomber jackets, fox stoles; Arctic fox belted coats, you name it. I can't help thinking the battle is lost.

The British Fur Trade Association estimate that worldwide sales of fur totalled more than $15 billion towards the end of the naughties – marking a decade of continued growth.

It seems the public perception of wearing fur is that it is not just OK to wear fur, it is fashionable to wear fur. Meaning that more and more animals will have to be farmed just for their pelts, with no usable by-products for human consumption.

I know a lot about the fur industry. I have been to a fur farm, and heavily researched the area. This was done in my own attempt to ethically decide for myself whether wearing fur was right or wrong. I then wrote about my quest in the Saturday Telegraph Magazine.

After a great deal of work and thought I came to the conclusion that, as a meat-eater, I would wear the by-products of the animals I do eat. So leather for shoes and bags, feathers for pillows and padded winter coats, wool for sweaters, and sheepskin for boots, hats, gloves.  

That works for me, and I can stand up for my reasons for wearing animals. Georgina Langford's "reasons" for wearing fur are pathetic. The Fashion Junior at Large is also a vegetarian, and would NEVER wear fur. We've just had a long chat about why she DIDN'T/COULDN'T buy a coat with a fur collar at the weekend, and I have asked to to write all about it for us. So look out for that in the next few hours. In the meantime let's ponder those shots of Victoria Beckham and Kate Moss wearing fox.
Victoria Beckham

Photo credits: REX FEATURES
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