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Living Vegan: Extending Compassion to All By: Carrie Klaus

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Living Vegan:. Extending Compassion to All By: Carrie Klaus. Living Vegan: Extending Compassion to All. What’s the big deal about honey? Hidden Animal Ingredients. Choosing cruelty free personal care items. Animal skins: Keep them off of your body. What’s the big deal about honey?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Living Vegan:

Living Vegan:Extending Compassion to AllBy: Carrie Klaus

Page 2: Living Vegan:

Living Vegan: Extending Compassion to All

What’s the big deal about honey?Hidden Animal Ingredients.Choosing cruelty free personal care items.Animal skins: Keep them off of your body.

Page 3: Living Vegan:

What’s the big deal about honey?Why honey isn’t vegan

Page 4: Living Vegan:

Why Honey Isn’t Vegan

Veganism = "...a way of living that seeks to exclude, as far as possible and practicable, all forms of exploitation of, and cruelty to, animals for food, clothing and any other purpose.”

- The Vegan Society

Page 5: Living Vegan:

Why Honey Isn’t Vegan

Honeybees are animals from the phylum arthropod.

Arthropods have complex nervous systems and are capable of feeling and responding to pain.

Honeybees have been found to be capable of making decisions and possessing the ability to change those decisions when conditions change. (Gould, J. & Gould, C. 1988 Scientific American Library)

Page 6: Living Vegan:

Factory Farming of Bees

Honeybees are enslaved and exploited.

Page 7: Living Vegan:

Factory Farming of Bees

Honeybees are enslaved and exploited.1. Nearly 2.4 million hives are trucked all over

the country exposing bees to physiological stress, disease, and pesticides.

2. Queens come from commercial suppliers and shipping can be difficult for them.

3. Hives are often split according to what the keeper chooses and not what the queen chooses.

Page 8: Living Vegan:

Factory Farming of Bees

As in all factory farming, profits are put before animal concerns.

Page 9: Living Vegan:

Factory Farming of Bees

As in all factory farming, profits are put before animal concerns.

1. Hives are killed off, using cyanide gas, before winter because it’s cheaper than housing, feeding and providing disease prevention.

2. Hives that aren’t killed off are left to starve to death.

Page 10: Living Vegan:

Factory Farming of Bees

Inherent cruelty when animals are viewed as commodities.

Page 11: Living Vegan:

Factory Farming of Bees

Inherent cruelty when animals are viewed as commodities.

1. Queens wings are clipped to prevent swarming.

2. In nature a queen bee can live more than 5 years. On a factory farm queens are killed in less than 2 years to keep honey production at a maximum.

3. Hives are smoked to prevent aggression and increase honey production.

Page 12: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns With Mass Production of

HoneyColony Collapse Disorder

Page 13: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns With Mass Production of

HoneyColony Collapse Disorder “disorder affecting honeybee colonies that

is characterized by sudden colony death, with a lack of healthy adult bees inside the hive.”

Britannica.com

Page 14: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns with Mass Production of

HoneyColony Collapse Disorder1. Began to see large numbers of honeybee

populations decreasing in 2006 world-wide.2. Some estimates report that between 50%

and 70% of colonies have died.3. This is a problem because a number of our

crops are dependent on pollination by bees.

Page 15: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns With Mass Production of

Honey

“If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man

would only have four years left to live.”

Albert Einstein

Page 16: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns with Mass Production of

HoneyWhile Einstein’s quote may have been an

exaggeration, the loss of pollinators will certainly lead to rising cost of fruits and vegetables that provide our antioxidants and vitamins.

Page 17: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns with Mass Production of

HoneyColony Collapse Disorder: Causes1. Overuse of pesticides.2. Selective Breeding for Industrial use.3. “Pesticides are one factor, working in

conjunction with introduced parasites, viruses, bacteria, and fungi and quite possibly with deteriorating living conditions for bees (poor quality food, too many hours on trucks, etc.). Bees can handle one of these stressors, but not all of them.”

Page 18: Living Vegan:

Other Concerns With Mass Production of

Honey

Despite the dire situation with the loss of colonies, commercial beekeepers

still continue to kill off their hives before winter.

Page 19: Living Vegan:

Other Bee Products

BeeswaxPropolisBee PollenRoyal Jelly

Page 20: Living Vegan:

Hidden Ingredients:There’s WHAT in there???

Page 21: Living Vegan:

Common Hidden Ingredients

CaseinGelatinKeratinLactic acidLanolinWhey

Page 22: Living Vegan:

Is It Vegan?

Page 23: Living Vegan:

Is It Vegan?

Page 24: Living Vegan:

Is It Vegan?

Page 25: Living Vegan:

Is It Vegan?

Page 26: Living Vegan:

Is It Vegan?

Page 27: Living Vegan:

Other Animal Derived Ingredients

Albumen Bone Char Carmine/Cochineal Isinglass Lipase Rennet Stearic Acid Tallow

Page 28: Living Vegan:

Resources

PETA’s list of animal ingredients and their alternatives:

http://www.vegfamily.com/lists/animal-ingredients.htm

Animal Ingredients A to Z – available at Amazon.com

www.barnivore.com

Page 29: Living Vegan:

Cruelty Free Personal CareNot Tested On Animals

Page 30: Living Vegan:

The Draize TestEye Irritancy Test

Page 31: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Performed on rabbits immobilized in stocks.

Page 32: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Performed on rabbits immobilized in stocks.No anesthetic administered.

Page 33: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Performed on rabbits immobilized in stocks.No anesthetic administered.Evaluated for up to 21 days.

Page 34: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Performed on rabbits immobilized in stocks.No anesthetic administered.Evaluated for up to 21 days.Ultimately all animals are killed.

Page 35: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Problems:1. Rabbit eyes differ from human eyes.

Page 36: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Problems:1. Rabbit eyes differ from human eyes.2. Subjective data.

Page 37: Living Vegan:

Draize Test

Alternatives:1. Frozen tissue and cornea cultures2. Human volunteers3. Computer Assays

Page 38: Living Vegan:

Acute Toxicity Test

LD 50 (Lethal Dose 50)

Page 39: Living Vegan:

Acute Toxicity Test

LD 50 (Lethal Dose 50)LC 50 (Lethal Concentration 50)

Page 40: Living Vegan:

Acute Toxicity Test

LD 50 (Lethal Dose 50)LC 50 (Lethal Concentration 50)Fixed Dose Procedure

Page 41: Living Vegan:

Acute Toxicity Test

Problems1. All animals have varying degree of sensitivity

to chemicals.2. Differences in metabolism and absorption.

Page 42: Living Vegan:

There is HOPE

•In the late 1990’s the UK banned animal testing for

cosmetics.•A near total ban was planned for Europe in

2009 (facing opposition from L’Oreal).

•In 2000 CA passed a law limiting animal use in

product testing , making it illegal to use animals

when non-animal alternatives are available.•In 2007 and 2008 NY and

NJ passed similar law.

Page 43: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Page 44: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Generally speaking, the more natural a product, the better the chance it’s cruelty free and vegan.

Page 45: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Generally speaking, the more natural a product, the better the chance it’s cruelty free and vegan.

Look for the Leaping Bunny Logo.

Page 46: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Page 47: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Generally speaking, the more natural a product, the better the chance it’s cruelty free and vegan.

Look for the Leaping Bunny Logo.Look for the Certified Vegan Logo.

Page 48: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Page 49: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Generally speaking, the more natural a product, the better the chance it’s cruelty free and vegan.

Look for the Leaping Bunny Logo.Look for the Certified Vegan Logo.Understand distinctions.

Page 50: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

Generally speaking, the more natural a product, the better the chance it’s cruelty free and vegan.

Look for the Leaping Bunny Logo.Look for the Certified Vegan Logo.Understand Distinctions.When in doubt, check it out.

Page 51: Living Vegan:

What YOU Can Do

www.caringconsumer.com

www.aavs.org

Page 52: Living Vegan:

My favorites:

ArbonneTom’s of MaineSeventh GenerationGiovanni Jason’sNature’s Gate

Page 53: Living Vegan:

Animal Skins:Not For Your Body

Page 54: Living Vegan:

Fur Farms

More than half the fur in America comes from China

85% of industry skins come from fur farms. Industry focused on maximizing profits, not

animal well being.Fed meat by-products not fit for human

consumption.Not protected by humane slaughter laws;

often a gruesome process to keep pelts intact.

Page 55: Living Vegan:

Fur Trapping

Millions of animals killed this way.Types of TrapsOther animals inadvertently killed.

Page 56: Living Vegan:

Leather

By-product of meat industry.Majority from developing countries.Environmental concerns.

Page 57: Living Vegan:

Other Considerations

Snake SkinAlligator SkinWoolCashmereAngoraDown

Page 58: Living Vegan:

Alternatives

Synthetic leatherFaux FurSynthetic Animal SkinsDown AlternativePETA’s Cruelty Free Shopping Guide

Page 59: Living Vegan:

Lasting Change

“Don’t do nothing because you can’t do everything. Do something. Do anything.” –Colleen Patrick-Goudreau

Don’t focus on being perfect.

Page 60: Living Vegan:

Compassion for All

“The whole idea of compassion is based on a keen awareness of the interdependence of all these living beings, which are all a part of one

another, and all involved in one another”

Thomas Merton