NO WAY-Pro-animal testing posters
Posted by AshleyKimball on Sep 10, 2007 · Member since Nov 2006 · 536 posts
So I was walking around my university's science building, when I entered a hall full of PRO ANIMAL TESTING POSTERS. >:(
WTF? I'm going to take pictures of them tomorrow and post them. I'm awfully tempted to go all peta on them and slather them in paint........
What if you asked if you could post the PETA-type, no animal testing, posters up since they have theirs up. If they said "no" then you could ask if they would be fair and remove the pro- animal testing posters then. If they refused that I would contact PETA and see if it might be worth pursuing ( start by threatening) legal means then. ???
I'm sorry to go off topic, for one second, but are your comments "in theory" only? I mean about being "cool" with people, even your family dying and suffering from disease, etc. Is that only in theory, i.e. you have had no real experience with this in your life.
My grandmother was diagnosed with breast cancer 6 years ago, my mom with MS 10 years ago, my boyfriend had lymphoma 6 years ago. When you're around the people you love more than anything in the world, and you see them dying, struggling to live through chemo, having parts of their body amputated, or just struggling to get their muscles to move in order to walk and get to where they want to be ... you won't be so "cool" with that. In fact, you'll drop down on your knees and thank every single doctor who helped save their lives.
Suffering and death my be natural. But, the world has moved on. We no longer live in caves or huts, wondering where our next bite of food will come from, women no longer die from childbirth at an astonishing rate, we no longer die from diseases that used to ravage us, etc.
As an ecologist and biologist I SEE the bad we have caused, but I also see all the good. So, if I were you, I wouldn't throw out the baby with the bathwater, so to speak.
Life is beautiful - wanting to prolong it is the most natural thing in the world.
I'm done with the off topic post. :)
In regards to your situation - I'd leave it alone, personally. They won't listen to you - especially, if that poster is up there. I've been there. I majored in biology, got my masters in it. Spent time around people who researched/tested on animals on a daily basis. Their side of the story makes a strong case, i.e. in America they can't test on anything else. If they hope to have their research published or approved or eventually used by the public, they must do the animal testing.
The most you can do is put up a poster next to theirs.
But, if you really want to change the whole animal testing thing - aim letters and petitions at the government.
I do have hope that in the future (hopefully soon!) there will be, although replacing an animal with a computer is and will be extremely difficult.
FIREFIGHTRESS: I was strictly speaking in an evolutionary sense natural selection, and by no means, am I implying that some people are more worthy of life than others. Mental retardation, schizophrenia and diabetes run in my family and I do not believe that I am less worthy of life than anyone else.
Cancer and viruses are seen in animals, and it is natural in the sense that it can arise spontaneously or can be contracted (not in the case of cancer, of course). Mutations are natural, and a struggle for survival is also natural but that doesn't justify the suffering of humans and animals if we can help it.
Wow, Ecstatic! I don't have anything to add at this point, but I love everything you have said concerning this topic... I think you offer a great perspective, ask good questions & you've raised points that I never would have considered! :)
I'm sorry to go off topic, for one second, but are your comments "in theory" only? I mean about being "cool" with people, even your family dying and suffering from disease, etc. Is that only in theory, i.e. you have had no real experience with this in your life.
Yes I have. I dont feel the need to list them, theres many. Yes atrophy and death from cancer is included. Disease, death, suffering, I have seen it in close family members and friends. My ideas developed before their sufferings, and have not waivered/changed. lol, I can walk the walk.
I believe that animal testing is a necessary evil, but it can be done while preserving the animal's dignity. There is pretty much no way of replicating the interaction of biological systems in a living/breathing model on a computer (one of PETA's suggestions).
I would have to disagree with that (that it is a necessary evil). The PCRM has developed many many teaching methods that can be performed without harming an animal. Being physicians, they walk the walk and talk the talk when it comes to this issue. I do not value my life more then an animals. It's why I'm vegan. Many don't agree with that train of thought...but it the way I choose to live my life...hopefully on the same level as animals. Just because I can out think a cow, goat, pig or monkey, it does not mean my life is worth any more then hers or his.
PCRM link again regarding Medical School Animal Testing and the methods they have developed that eliminate the need for it:
http://www.pcrm.org/resch/meded/
I checked it out, and it's mostly about medical education rather than medical testing. The section on medical testing suggests that in vitro and in silico testing is as good or better, but it only provides a comparison to rats. The FDA requires a non-rodent model also. Maybe the FDA should require more non-rodent models... but that would make testing extremely expensive... in turn pushing up drug costs.
The idea that a computer model would satisfy testing is a little outrageous, because it assumes that scientists know everything (or almost everything) that is going on in the body... otherwise, he/she wouldn't be able to program a particular set of reactions that forms the basis of the computer simulation. This can't replicate the complex interaction of organ systems. There are always unforeseen effects (i.e. side effects and off-label drug uses).
Firefightress, I don't mean to single you out... but I've seen the diet argument before (PETA pitches it), and I have to say that it seems a bit unfair. It's true that we would be healthier if we all ate well (obesity is one of the leading causes of preventable death), but that suggests that a lot of disease is by choice. Choosing to eat poorly leads to disease... and it's the patient's own fault that he got sick. That is unfair to those individuals who have suffered a confluence of circumstances beyond their control - gamma rays, some environmental factors, genetics, socioeconomic status leading to poor education. We need to continue testing on animals in order to develop drugs AND educate people to have better diets.
I am totally against animal testing, but am also paid human testing too, because it would rely too much on the poor and the desperate. But I don't have the power to change all people's opinions, nor would I choose to.
My friends, family and I have all benefited from the work done by animal testing, but I would rather have not. We have gained longer life, yet we all still die in the end. I love life, and would rather have a long one, but I do not fear it being shortened, even while suffering bitter pain. To me, even the worst parts of life hold beauty.
I checked it out, and it's mostly about medical education rather than medical testing. The section on medical testing suggests that in vitro and in silico testing is as good or better, but it only provides a comparison to rats. The FDA requires a non-rodent model also. Maybe the FDA should require more non-rodent models... but that would make testing extremely expensive... in turn pushing up drug costs.
The idea that a computer model would satisfy testing is a little outrageous, because it assumes that scientists know everything (or almost everything) that is going on in the body... otherwise, he/she wouldn't be able to program a particular set of reactions that forms the basis of the computer simulation. This can't replicate the complex interaction of organ systems. There are always unforeseen effects (i.e. side effects and off-label drug uses).
You said:
The idea that a computer model would satisfy testing is a little outrageous, because it assumes that scientists know everything (or almost everything) that is going on in the body... otherwise, he/she wouldn't be able to program a particular set of reactions that forms the basis of the computer simulation. This can't replicate the complex interaction of organ systems. There are always unforeseen effects (i.e. side effects and off-label drug uses).
But what you left out was this very important fact:
Do you think that testing a drug on a rat, bunny, dog, etc....can replicate the response that a human will have? In the majority of the tests performed...a human does not have the same reaction to a drug as another species. That is a fact. Look at Vioxx...I'm sure I can research hundreds if not thousands of drugs that have had one result on a rat, or a dog...etc...that performed very differently for a human...most often with dire consequences for the human.
You also did not address the fact that many of the tests conducted on laboratory animals are done over and over with the same results....results that are known by professors before the actual testing. Do you think those tests should still be done? Can the educator not tell the the final results to his/her students before subjecting animals to more cruelty?
A big point that the PCRM makes is that these test results in laboratory animals do NOT have the same results in humans.
Who are we? Why do many think that other living creatures are disposable to advance our own lives? You may not agree with my point of view...but I do not think we as humans have the right to cruelly test other living beings to advance our own lives.
You stated that the animals you worked on.... or had witnessed.... that were going through testing were treated humanly....an animal living it's life in a cage or crate is not living a humane life :-\ ....nor is it normal for the animal. No matter the test....it's not natural, nor humane for the animal being tested.....in ALL cases involved. Animal testing has for the most part been a complete failure. It's not until certain procedures or drugs are tested on humans that we know the real results. Sad that so many suffer for results so far from being helpful to us humans........ :'(
Besides reading and researching the subject myself....my ex-wife's grandfather (whom she was raised by along with her grandmother...a former professor at Columbia University) was a highly noted pathologist from NYC....
One who ran one of the premier cancer study clinics in the world. He has been published over and over and his work is still taught to this very day by medical institutions around the world. My own brother is a highly respected surgeon who is in the same field as an uncle of mine...he who is probably one of the most respected in his field (he teaches as well...they both do). They also both agree that the studies they have done in the past.....on lab animals (which they no longer do)....produced very different results in humans. Why testing of animals continues....who knows....but you must admit...a lab rat....a dog....or a pig....is NOT a human...nor will the results of testing a drug on any of them over and over produce the same exact results in a human. Testing drugs on human cells and tissues produce far better results over the long run....or so I've been told... ;)
There was a really long discussion a while ago about vegans and animal testing on veganforum.com that you might want to check out.
A quote from it "More importantly, my husband is a physician who is in academic medicine. He is a Board Certified Internist/Endocrinologist. My husband never participated in animal dissection or animal experimentation. He is published in many Academic Medicine journals; and has contributed to a chapter in an Endocrinology Medical Textbook. He constantly conducts research studies, and never uses animal models. He uses computer models, human cell and blood cultures, and human volunteers."
"Vivisection is barbaric, useless, and a hindrance to scientific progress." Dr. Werner Hartinger, 1988
But what you left out was this very important fact:
Do you think that testing a drug on a rat, bunny, dog, etc....can replicate the response that a human will have? In the majority of the tests performed...a human does not have the same reaction to a drug as another species. That is a fact. Look at Vioxx...I'm sure I can research hundreds if not thousands of drugs that have had one result on a rat, or a dog...etc...that performed very differently for a human...most often with dire consequences for the human.
You also did not address the fact that many of the tests conducted on laboratory animals are done over and over with the same results....results that are known by professors before the actual testing. Do you think those tests should still be done? Can the educator not tell the the final results to his/her students before subjecting animals to more cruelty?
A big point that the PCRM makes is that these test results in laboratory animals do NOT have the same results in humans.
Who are we? Why do many think that other living creatures are disposable to advance our own lives? You may not agree with my point of view...but I do not think we as humans have the right to cruelty test other living beings to advance our own lives.
You stated that the animals you worked on.... or had witnessed.... that were going through testing were treated humanly....an animal leaving it's life in a cage or crate is not living a humane life :-\ ....nor is it normal for the animal. No matter the test....it's not natural, nor humane for the animal being tested.....in ALL cases involved. Animal testing has for the most part been a complete failure. It's not until certain procedures or drugs are tested on humans that we know the real results. Sad that so many suffer for results so far from being helpful to us humans........ :'(
Besides reading myself....my ex-wife's grandfather (whom she was raised by) was a highly noted pathologist
who ran one of the premier cancer study clinics in the world. My own brother is a highly respected surgeon who is in the same field as an uncle of mine....who is probably one of the most respected in his field (he teaches as well). They both agree that the studies they have done in the past.....on lab animals (which they no longer do)....produced very different results in humans. Why testing of animals continues....who knows....but you must admit...a lab rat....a dog....or a pig....is NOT a human...nor will the results of testing a drug on any of them over and over produce the same exact results in a human. Testing drugs on human cells and tissues produce far better results over the long run....or so I've been told... ;)
You bring up a ton of good points.
I have to point out, though... that animal testing isn't the be-all-end-all. There are a lot of drugs eliminated in preclinical trials. Then another huge batch eliminated in Phase I and Phase II clinical trials. I've read about a University of Pittsburgh researcher who tries to get 3 drugs into preclinical trials per year just to get one drug to the market in 10 years. There's just a huge elimination process... only PART of which is animal testing. It's just a stepping stone to human testing... precisely because a pig is not a human. That's why every drug requires clinical trials too.
As for the tests that are repeated... do you mean in medical education? It might not be necessary, but you have to think about forms of knowledge. Plato's analogy of the divided line is a great way of envisioning this (I had to brush up a bit at MIT's Internet Classics Archive): "let there be four faculties in the soul-reason answering to the highest, understanding to the second, faith (or conviction) to the third, and perception of shadows to the last." It is possible to argue that not performing some of these experiments would result in the lower forms of understanding. However, I do agree that some of it is a little excessive. I have performed a number of dissections that I believe were pretty useless...
Are you sure that all animal testing has been a complete failure? All of them went through preclinical trials AND clinical trials in humans. Your example of vioxx isn't a failure of animal testing... it's a failure of human testing too. Vioxx went through clinical trials just like any other drug. In order to determine the longterm effects, you'd have to do longitudinal studies over several years - which is problematic due to the drug patent situation (drug patents don't last long enough for pharmaceuticals to find value in long term studies). It's really really horrible and depressing, but there has to be an economic incentive. You can't just trust people to be altruistic. :(
We also have a lot of drugs that never made it to clinical trials, because they failed in animal models. I mean... I can bring up examples for my side of the argument too: the researcher whose lab I worked in is a well-respected immunologist and transplantation surgeon. His opinion is that animal models (especially primate models) are an absolute necessity in his research trying to determine a protocol for longterm graft survival. On top of that we have antibiotics... and treatments/vaccinations for diseases that 50 years ago would have been fatal.
Animal testing is definitely not the be-all-end-all. It's just a stepping stone.
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All the posters are incased in a frame type thing (as is every poster in the building). Urg the glare on some of them made the pictures completely unreadable. Every poster has a sticker that reads:With our Compliments, the Ohio Scientific Education and Research Society. Most of the other posters in the building don't have stickers indicating their sponser/origin.....which is curious to me why these would. Are we getting money from them? I dont know, my brain just makes an automatic connection: Random sketchy posters marked with sponsers-----> we must be getting money from these people.
Would contacting this company make sense? I mean they put their freaking p.o. box address on all the posters!
Heh, we had similar ones up in our biology building.
You can contact them for your own peace of mind ... but, as I said, it won't help. Some people in my classes made a big deal of such posters too, even did a little "protest" in front of them (not too many people showed up for that hence my quotations).
Honestly, you're up against 1. potential funding of your science laboratories, 2. government laws which won't be changed, 3. companies and universities who must follow those laws in order to be a. funded, b. published, c. have a chance at actually getting a clinical trial.
Plus, it's not like the posters lie. What they say is true. They just don't mention that there are other ways to do it, that a small number of other countries do things differently.
But, as I said, in this case ... it's the government that has to change it's rigid laws on animal testing before clincal trials with humans. Before that happens, NO amount of protests in front of science buildings or research stations will help. Neither will calling private companies. Call the government, lol.
"Before that happens, NO amount of protests in front of science buildings or research stations will help."
I don't agree with this statement, even if you are trying to change government policy from a seemingly remote college campus. Word gets back to people no matter how far, and if others see you standing up for something, even if they don't agree with it, it may make them think about how things could be different. Every little bit helps.
I believe that animal testing is a necessary evil, but it can be done while preserving the animal's dignity. There is pretty much no way of replicating the interaction of biological systems in a living/breathing model on a computer (one of PETA's suggestions).
I would have to disagree with that (that it is a necessary evil). The PCRM has developed many many teaching methods that can be performed without harming an animal. Being physicians, they walk the walk and talk the talk when it comes to this issue. I do not value my life more then an animals. It's why I'm vegan. Many don't agree with that train of thought...but it the way I choose to live my life...hopefully on the same level as animals. Just because I can out think a cow, goat, pig or monkey, it does not mean my life is worth any more then hers or his.
PCRM link again regarding Medical School Animal Testing and the methods they have developed that eliminate the need for it:
http://www.pcrm.org/resch/meded/
Well, I think we should test on poor people, homeless people and people of inferior races...you know...because testing is so necessary... ::)
I believe that animal testing is a necessary evil, but it can be done while preserving the animal's dignity. There is pretty much no way of replicating the interaction of biological systems in a living/breathing model on a computer (one of PETA's suggestions).
I would have to disagree with that (that it is a necessary evil). The PCRM has developed many many teaching methods that can be performed without harming an animal. Being physicians, they walk the walk and talk the talk when it comes to this issue. I do not value my life more then an animals. It's why I'm vegan. Many don't agree with that train of thought...but it the way I choose to live my life...hopefully on the same level as animals. Just because I can out think a cow, goat, pig or monkey, it does not mean my life is worth any more then hers or his.
PCRM link again regarding Medical School Animal Testing and the methods they have developed that eliminate the need for it:
http://www.pcrm.org/resch/meded/
Well, I think we should test on poor people, homeless people and people of inferior races...you know...because testing is so necessary... ::)
You can start on me! I'm part American Indian, only, is there any sort of testing on how to make humans fly without support?
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