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Government’s Review Of Public Comments Continues

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Government’s Review Of Public Comments Continues

The deadline for public comment submissions on the draft live export regulations

was the 25th of August, and despite having followed up with the Department of Agriculture, we still have no clarity on when their review of the public comments will be complete.

While we wait, we continue to spread the message of the atrocities which these animals suffer during these perilous journeys. The more of the public who know the truth about this terrible practice, the louder our call to BAN this barbaric trade will be heard.

In recognition of the sentience of these beings who are traded as commodities, we mark days to honour and celebrate their lives and to raise awareness of the mistreatment they suffer.

Look out for posts about these days on our social media pages, and please share with your networks to create awareness.

TOGETHER we CAN STOP LIVE EXPORTS and create a KINDER world for animals.

Source: Stop Live Export SA

South Africa Sets Legal Lion Bone Exports Quota To Zero

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South Africa Sets Legal Lion Bone Exports Quota To Zero

South Africa’s Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) has announced that it will not allow any legal exports of lion bones or derivatives, effectively setting the quota at zero for 2025.

This is a decision that sends a powerful signal to the captive lion breeding industry.

What the change means

The lion bone export quota determines how many lion skeletons (or parts) may be legally exported from South Africa in a given year. With the quota now set to zero, no commercial exports will be permitted under the law.

Lion bones are in demand for use in traditional medicine markets in China and Southeast Asia. Allowing legal trade can serve as a cover or incentive for illegal trade in wild-sourced lion bones or related parts. This change, therefore, is intended to cut off that potential legal pathway.

Advocacy, evidence, and pressure

This decision follows sustained advocacy and research. There has been evidence documented for years that links captive lion breeding, welfare abuses, and the illegal big cat bone trade.

Our report, Putting a stop to cruelty, lays out evidence that the industry is deeply problematic for animal welfare, conservation integrity, and public health.

“South Africa’s Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment has sent a strong message to the captive lion breeding industry by setting the export quota for lion bones to zero.

This decision stands firm against industry pressure and marks a vital step toward ending the exploitation of lions in South Africa.

While this is a victory for lions and a decisive step toward closing the cruel captive lion breeding industry, the work is not yet over.

The next step must be for the South African government to mandate a full and compulsory end to commercial captive lion breeding, and ensure that existing lion bone stockpiles are managed and responsibly disposed of as part of this phase-out.”

– Angie Elwin, representing World Animal Protection
Next steps and ongoing risks

While this zero export quota is a huge win, it’s not the end of the illegal wildlife trade.

The captive lion breeding industry remains active in South Africa. To prevent loopholes or covert trade, we encourage the government to now legislate a full ban on commercial captive lion breeding.

It is also crucial that existing stockpiles of lion bone or skeletons be accounted for and disposed of responsibly, so they cannot enter illegal markets.

We will continue to monitor this policy shift and advocate for its full implementation, enforcement, and expansion toward a permanent end of captive lion exploitation.

Source: World Animal Protection

Michael Kors: Protecting Lambs Is Not A Luxury

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Michael Kors: Protecting Lambs Is Not A Luxury

Michael Kors is failing lambs – and failing consumers. In a new FOUR PAWS investigation, detailed in the report Behind the Wool: Transparency on Live Lamb Cutting in Fashion, the luxury fashion brand ranks worst among 100+ brands for transparency and action on live lamb cutting (LLC is also known as mulesing) – a brutal and outdated mutilation found in half of global wool in fashion. 

It’s time for Michael Kors to commit to wool free from live lamb cutting.

What is live lamb cutting (LLC)?

Every year, 10 million lambs suffer excruciating pain due to LLC. LLC is a practice where lambs as young as two weeks old have skin, bigger than the palm of your hand, and flesh cut from around their tails and genitals, without adequate pain relief. Despite effective alternatives, the fashion industry continues to source wool from this cruelty.

FOUR PAWS’ latest report reveals:

  • 67% of brands lack transparency on wool’s biggest issue: LLC – either in their sourcing policies, product labelling, or both 
  • 84% oppose LLC, but only 33% disclose LLC-free certifications at the product level leaving most consumers unable to make informed decisions 
  • Michael Kors scored zero for transparency, certification and commitment
About the report

In 2025, FOUR PAWS investigated 102 brands in eleven countries through in-store visits and online research to assess: 

  • Wool sourcing policies and 
  • Product labelling transparency 
  • Commitment to excluding LLC wool
Michael Kors: Luxury without accountability

Michael Kors, the iconic American fashion brand founded in 1981 in New York by designer Michael David Kors, has grown into a global powerhouse with over 1,000 stores and $3B in annual revenue, but when it comes to animal welfare, the brand is falling behind. Known for its luxury apparel and accessories, the brand is selling large volumes of wool items. Despite its scale and influence, Michael Kors has no policy on live lamb cutting (LLC) – the most severe and outdated routine mutilation of lambs in the wool industry. This is alarming given that LLC is involved in over half of global wool production. Without action, brands like Michael Kors risk enabling cruelty in their supply chains.

While competitors like Burberry and Calvin Klein are committed to use only certified LLC-free wool, Michael Kors remains silent and resistant to change. It’s time for Michael Kors to take responsibility and commit to wool free from live lamb cutting.

Take action: Tell Michael Kors to protect lambs

Michael Kors has ignored FOUR PAWS’ outreach, failed to disclose measures in their wool sourcing policy, and has not committed to certified LLC-free wool. This lack of action places the brand at the bottom of the industry when it comes to animal welfare.

Source: Four Paws

Americans love grizzly bears—so why do elected officials keep failing to protect them?

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Americans Love Grizzly Bears — So Why Do Elected Officials Keep ailing To Protect Them?

Most Americans value grizzly bears and want them federally protected, a 2025 survey shows. Across the U.S., 85% of Americans support maintaining safeguards for grizzly bears under the Endangered Species Act. Conservatives, rural residents, hunters and ranchers support maintaining endangered species protections by supermajorities: the rural residents of Idaho, Montana and Wyoming by 78%, conservative Americans by 81%, hunters by 82%, and farmers/ranchers by 81%.

With so much favor, some even consider the grizzly the Great American Bear. And yet, the clear meaning of the survey results—which were published earlier this year by Dr. John Vucetich, distinguished professor at Michigan Technological University, and Dr. Jeremy Bruskotter, professor at Ohio State University—are directly undermined by the harmful actions some lawmakers have taken in regard to grizzlies. They are determined to strip federal protections from grizzly bears and hand off their management to states like Idaho and Wyoming, which have terrible track records when it comes to coexistence. In advancing these reckless policies, elected officials are ignoring the explicit will of substantial majorities who want grizzly bears protected. 

There are several looming threats to grizzly bears at this moment, and this is a good time for all of us to speak out in support of protecting these animals:

  • In July, the House Natural Resources Committee greenlit the Grizzly Bear State Management Act (H.R. 281) for a full House vote in the future. This bill, and its Senate counterpart, would direct the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to delist the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem grizzly bear and also block judicial review of this action, a move that would strip Americans of their right to hold that decision accountable in federal courts. We’re also fighting to overcome an attempt to delist grizzlies in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem through a policy rider in the FY26 House Interior bill (H.R. 4754).
  • Under the last administration, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had proposed a rule maintaining Endangered Species Act protections for grizzly bears living in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Continental Divide ecosystems. However, it also proposed granting ranchers and state and federal agents increased flexibility to kill grizzly bears—and the finalization of this rule could mean even more bear deaths.
  • The current U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service director has reportedly indicated that transferring management of grizzly bears from the federal agency over to individual states is a priority, suggesting that delisting grizzlies from federal protections could be on the horizon.

All of this could not come at a worse time. This year, ranchers and state and federal agents killed Yellowstone-area grizzly bears in record numbers, and for the second year in a row. As of September 22, we know at least 63 bears were killed in 2025.

Then the government shutdown stopped the release of new data, even as grizzly bears enter their deadliest time of year, when many leave the safe confines of national parks to forage for food to survive wintertime hibernation. Outside of the safe zones afforded by national parks, bears face armed hunters and ranchers. From the 63 dead bears, we know this:

  • The biggest category (28%) of bears were killed to “protect” farm animals. Very few farm animals (less than 1% of states’ cow and sheep) are killed by all carnivores put together, bears included;
  • 19% were killed as perceived threats when they came into human-dominated areas,
  • Of the total dead, eight (12%) were adult females, which is a significant conservation and ethical concern, especially if they had dependent cubs.

Killing bears does little to stop conflicts—but removing bear attractants does. Ranchers, landowners and recreationists can employ a wide range of tools to prevent conflicts with bears. Homeowners can bear-proof their garbage and take down bird feeders and farmers can put electric fences around vulnerable areas. Hikers and elk hunters can carry bear spray.

Without intervention, these developments could set the stage for extinction if trophy hunting of grizzlies is permitted. It would be a devastating outcome—and not just for bears and bear lovers.

Even those who do not consider themselves bear lovers can see reason for protecting these animals: Grizzly bears, as well as other charismatic species, like black bears and wolves, greatly benefit the economies of the Yellowstone-area states. A new economic analysis published by the National Park Service and the U.S. Geological Survey suggests that in Yellowstone, grizzly bear sightings are valued at $6.9 million annually. The analysis also indicates that each grizzly bear viewing was worth about $16 per visitor and that one grizzly bear contributes $46,000 per year to Yellowstone-area economies.

A University of Montana economic study shows that in 2023 and 2024 the average total spending by tourists amounted to $5.28 billion, with Yellowstone and Glacier-area counties receiving the largest share of tourism revenues. 

If states are granted the authority to manage grizzly bears, we know what fate awaits them based upon black bears’ treatment: an institutionalization of trophy hunting—year after year—with some of the cruelest methods imaginable, including hounding and baiting (which sometimes takes place during the springtime, when bears are just emerging from hibernation and are weak and most vulnerable).

It’s no wonder people care so much about bears—they are fascinating animals who feel deeply and are devoted to their families; they offer tremendous social and practical value to our wild ecosystems and national parks.

It is time to confront and stop the callous disregard of lawmakers who privilege the values of the small special interest groups who want to kill bears and other animals for trophies and bragging rights. We must all work together to protect grizzly bears from extinction.

Authors: Kitty Block and Sara Amundson

Source: Humane World For Animals

‘What I saw as a worker at a monkey breeding facility for animal testing and research’

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‘What I saw as a worker at a monkey breeding facility for animal testing and research’

For more than two decades, Kathleen Conlee, our vice president of Animal Research Issues in the U.S., has been working to end the use of animals in testing and research. But before she became an advocate for animal protection, she worked at a breeding facility that supplied primates to laboratories for research and testing. In this guest blog, I’ve invited her to tell us more about how this shaped her perspective and what life is like for animals inside these places. 

It all started when I was in class as an undergrad and heard people talking about feeding fig bars to monkeys. Before I knew it, I was studying rhesus monkeys in a lab on campus, and I was so fascinated by them. I wanted to spend my days learning about and working with primates.

But when I visited a facility that had monkeys living in small, barren cages, and I saw how they trained the animals to sit in a restraint chair for procedures to serve some scientific inquiry, I couldn’t picture myself doing that directly. At the time, though, I still wanted to work with primates and believed primate research was important for human health; seeking another avenue, I ultimately landed at a monkey breeding facility in South Carolina within weeks of graduating college.

The company I worked for had thousands of monkeys, mostly macaques, that they would breed and sell to research laboratories. I thought animal testing and research was necessary, but I also felt that the animals needed someone to look out for them. Over several years, I saw how millions of dollars in government grants were funneled in to support a system that inflicted terrible suffering on animals. I stopped believing that this was the best we could be doing for human health. Still, I stayed because I became fearful of what would happen to the monkeys if I left.

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Kathleen Conlee at the facility where she worked with primates used in animal testing.

The goal at this facility was to make sure the animals produced as many babies as possible. I remember being proud that I reduced the infant death rate and could identify thousands of individual monkeys and their family members. I didn’t think about the fact that while I was preventing their death as infants, I was ultimately sending those animals to a life of prolonged suffering. I was handed lists of numbers and told to pick which animals would be sent out next, filling orders as if they were a product.

We would sometimes receive monkeys from laboratories, and some of them suffered from severe psychological trauma. One, a rhesus macaque named Able, was terrified of anything but his “chow” biscuits and would mutilate himself—tearing his skin—when given anything new, even something as delicious as an apple or banana.

Laboratories with breeding colonies will often share images of monkeys in large social groups in big enclosures. These images are good optics for those who understand that primates are extremely social and need room to play. But there is a lot that is deliberately hidden. Some animals are stuck in small cages for quarantine or particular research protocols—a terrible cruelty for social creatures—or ripped from their families. The company would do “processing” during which the members of each group would be tattooed on their faces and chests, given physical exams and either returned to their group or pulled out for a shipment to another lab. The youngsters, who the day before were bonding with their family, would be put in a small cage and prepped for shipping. Mothers would wake up looking for them, crying out. You could hear the youngsters from a building across the property returning their calls. I can still hear their mournful cries—those will haunt me forever.

While I worked at the facility, I tried to improve the conditions for the monkeys in my care, such as incorporating an environmental enrichment program, adding fresh fruits and vegetables to their diet (they were only receiving “chow” biscuits each day), requiring a physical and behavioral assessment of each of the thousands of individuals every day and ensuring prompt medical or behavioral treatment when needed, and eliminating the use of facial tattoos. The company was ultimately caught illegally importing monkeys captured from the wild—I will never forget how terrified those animals seemed in confinement. I finally decided I just couldn’t do it anymore. 

I then went to work for a great ape sanctuary, which was an amazing experience. But I still felt I had to do more for those animals who had not yet been rescued, for those countless others I left behind in the system. Thankfully, Humane World for Animals, when it was still called the Humane Society of the United States, took a chance on me. I remember in my first year at the organization, I read a paper about a painful dental experiment; I realized the macaques came from the lab where I had worked and from the very time when I worked there. I had helped raise them—for that. That was just one group of many—what did the other animals endure because of what I had done? It was painful to consider this, but I felt immensely relieved that I was at last in the right place, doing something to fix it. 

I have been working for more than 20 years to move society away from using animals in harmful research and testing and toward the use of non-animal methods that are more effective and relevant to humans. To this day, I still care about human health AND animals. The good news is that choosing one doesn’t mean hurting the other and, in fact, investing in non-animal methods will ultimately benefit both. Non-animal methods that use human cells or are based on human data can more accurately and effectively predict how the human body will respond to drugs, chemicals and treatments.  

I’m proud of the work my team at Humane World for Animals has accomplished: ending chimpanzee research in the United States, securing a commitment by the Environmental Protection Agency to end mammalian testing, passing state laws that prohibit the sale of animal-tested cosmetics, getting 32 dogs who were being used in a pesticide test released from a lab into loving homes, and so much more. 

I still have nightmares about the facility where I worked. In them, I am trying desperately to go back there to help the animals, to make sure they are safe, but every nightmare involves some impossible obstacle. I am relieved when I wake up that I don’t work there anymore but I also face the reality of how much more there is to do in real life. It can feel like an endless sprint. When we have a victory and I think, “okay, maybe I’ve done enough to pay my dues,” the thought doesn’t last. And I don’t think it should. The victories won’t be enough until the day when no more animals suffer in labs. It will take all of us to make that happen. 

Kathleen Conlee is vice president of Animal Research Issues at Humane World for Animals in the U.S.

Source: Humane World For Animals

No Future For Factory Farming

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No Future For Factory Farming

Factory farming is a global problem that requires a global solution

Every year, factory farming condemns billions of animals to lives of cruelty and suffering for a fast profit.

Farm animals experience relentless suffering at the hands of factory farming – trapped in cages, mutilated, and pumped full of antibiotics to stay alive.

The problem will get worse before it gets better.

The rapid growth in demand for cheap meat and dairy means large increases are expected globally including in Africa, Asia and Latin America in the imminent future.

At World Animal Protection, we work tirelessly to ensure farmed animals live good lives by transforming the global food system and attitudes towards farm animal welfare.

A moratorium on factory farms is urgently needed to safeguard farm animal welfare, our climate, health and the environment.

Wild animal habitats

Cruel factory farming is destroying wild animal habitats to grow crops to feed farmed animals, this is having a devastating impact by:

  • Killing wildlife
  • Worsening the climate crisis
  • Poisoning our rivers
  • Creating superbugs and diseases that can transfer to humans

We believe that the welfare, treatment and attitude towards farmed animals’ lives across the world must change. Forever.

Farm animal welfare focus: Stopping the destructive animal feed trade

Cruel factory farming relies on a global trade in crops to feed farmed animals. Tropical forests are destroyed to make way for crops destined for factory farms around the world.

The special dietary needs of factory-farmed animals bred for profit drive the global trade in destructive animal feed.

Almost 80% of the world’s soybean crop is fed to farmed animals, not people. Pesticides are also used extensively, contaminating rivers and killing people and wild animals.

A moratorium on factory farming and a shift in farm animal welfare legislation would:

  • Free up land for communities to grow food for people
  • Support global food security and address the climate crisis
  • Relieve growing pressure on wild animal habitats and give wildlife a fighting chance

Factory farming is putting an extreme risk on public health and the planet’s future. Click the link below to read more in our latest report: Five worst health impacts of factory farming

Factory-farmed animal treatment

Animals in factory farms are bred to grow fast, have large litters, lay high numbers of eggs, or produce a maximum amount of milk. This causes great suffering over their short lifetimes.

Chickens are bred to reach their slaughter weight about twice as quickly as 40 years ago, and their legs cannot keep pace with the rapid body growth. As a result, many chickens suffer from painful, sometimes crippling leg disorders.

Ending irresponsible antibiotic use in farming

Three-quarters of the world’s antibiotics are used in animals, most on factory farms to stop stressed animals from getting sick. Antibiotic overuse causes superbugs to emerge. These can escape from farms via workers, into the food chain and our environment and waterways.

Already, the superbug crisis is responsible for 1.27 million deaths every year due to antibiotics no longer being effective.

The same low farm animal welfare conditions that give rise to superbugs can also cause diseases like bird flu or swine flu to emerge from factory farms and transfer to humans.

A moratorium and shift in farm animal welfare legislation on factory farming is the most effective way to safeguard public health and our environment.

This will lead to fewer farmed animals living in high welfare conditions, and no longer being subjected to harmful antibiotics.

Putting a stop to the future of factory farming

We protect the welfare of farmed animals by raising awareness of the harmful host of activities that are causing them to suffer.

The safeguarding of farm animal welfare is paramount. We must put an end to the devastation caused by factory farming to ensure farmed animals live better lives, we achieve this through raising awareness of:

  • The animal feed trade: The spike in cruel factory farming growth has a devastating impact on farmed and wild animals. There’s no bigger threat to the world’s animals, farmed and wild, than the expansion of factory farming
  • Improving animal welfare on farms: We work with the food industry to improve animal welfare and keep animals in an environment where they can benefit from a life worth living
  • Meat reduction: Encouraging less consumption of animal products to reduce animal suffering and protect our planet
  • Sustainable finance: A shift in attitude from fuelling destructive factory farming to investment in humane and sustainable systems
  • Promoting humane slaughter of farmed animals: To reduce animal cruelty and suffering

We are taking strides towards tackling the global problem with a global solution by:

  • Proactive campaigning to help safeguard farm animals and encourage a global food system shift
  • Producing and distributing animals in the wild and animals in farming reports
  • Forming strategic alliances with like-minded supporters that want change
  • Developing and building the case for humane sustainable alternatives
  • Raising awareness and knowledge of animal cruelty and protection
  • Ending the commercial exploitation of wildlife and farm animals

Our ambition

Factory farming and animal cruelty caused by current global food systems must end. For good.

Through shifting attitudes, safeguarding the way farm animals are treated, and implementing sustainable investment and practices, we can protect farm animals ensuring they live better lives as well as protecting our planet.

Are you ready to take action?

Join our mission and change the way the world works through people’s power. Take action today and support our efforts to stop farm animal cruelty and suffering. Forever.

Find out how you can get involved

Take Action

Source: World Animal Protection

No License to Kill: NSPCA Rejects Fresh Push for Dog Hunting and Greyhound Racing

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No License to Kill: NSPCA Rejects Fresh Push for Dog Hunting and Greyhound Racing

The National Council of SPCAs (NSPCA) has again slammed fresh attempts to legalise the cruel “sports” of hunting with dogs and greyhound racing. A memorandum recently submitted to the Presidency by the Amaphisi Hunters’ Association (AHA) proposes the legalisation of both.

The NSPCA has firmly opposed greyhound racing and hunting with dogs for decades. For over 32 years, the NSPCA has collated extensive evidence demonstrating the abuse, neglect, and cruelty inherent in these activities. Since dog racing was banned in 1949, multiple court cases, commissions, and draft policies – from a 2003 Free State High Court ruling to a 2014 Department of Trade and Industry review – have all rejected attempts to resurrect it.

Now, yet again, calls for the legalisation of these exploitative practices have resurfaced. In August 2025, the AHA demanded revisions to a wide range of laws, including environmental and animal welfare legislation such as the National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act 10 of 2004 (NEMBA) and the Animals Protection Act 71 of 1962 (APA), respectively. Alongside the South African Dog Racing Association (SADRA) and GFA, the AHA argues for legalisation on the grounds of economic benefit, job creation, and the promotion of culture and tradition.

These claims hide a harsher truth: a small, elite group profits while dogs pay the price. The AHA even went as far as to propose that it should become the sole legally authorised body for hunting with dogs, with exclusive rights to both hunt with dogs on state-owned land and breed hunting dogs, all of which is to supposedly be funded by the greyhound racing industry.

The NSPCA fully respects cultural practices and economic opportunities that protect both people and animals and do not involve cruelty. Our opposition is to practices that deliberately inflict suffering.

The association attempts to allay animal welfare concerns by suggesting that when hunting, dogs would remain restrained until a “target” is identified, that hunting seasons would be regulated, and that only a select number of licenses to hunt would be issued annually. It further calls for organisations such as the NSPCA, which they term “unauthorised”, to immediately cease their “harassment.”

Cruelty is inherent in these practices. Dogs used for racing and hunting are frequently deprived of adequate food, water, shelter, and veterinary treatment. These activities contribute to overbreeding and overpopulation, and they contravene the APA, which prohibits baiting or inciting one animal to attack another. The dogs used in hunting will decimate the prey species, leading to the depletion of our natural fauna.

It is not only the dogs that suffer: the prey animals often endure the worst cruelty. Frequently, the dogs do not kill instantly, leaving the targeted animal to experience prolonged pain before being killed – sometimes by brutal beating.

“We cannot use the facade of tradition and job creation to justify what is ultimately the deliberate and cruel commodification and exploitation of animals,” says Grace de Lange, the NSPCA’s Chief Operations Officer. “These lucrative activities only benefit the human patrons. The welfare of the dogs and the preservation of the prey species are at significant risk.”

The NSPCA has submitted an urgent letter to the Office of the Presidency, and the Department of Agriculture, strongly opposing the application by the AHA to legalise these unethical and inhumane practices, which are in direct conflict with South Africa’s animal protection laws and the NSPCA’s legal mandate to prevent cruelty. This mandate is not a matter of opinion: the NSPCA is fulfilling its statutory duty under the Animals Protection Act 71 of 1962 (APA) to investigate, prevent and act against cruelty to animals.

We call on all South Africans to stand with the NSPCA in rejecting these attempts to legalise cruelty and to support the protection and welfare of the dogs and the wild animals they are forced to hunt.

Source: NSPCA

Could the Fight Against Animal Testing Help Farm Animals? Some Advocates Are Shifting Tactics

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Credit: Roger Kingbird / We Animals

Could the Fight Against Animal Testing Help Farm Animals? Some Advocates Are Shifting Tactics

To win over conservative lawmakers, some animal rights advocates are stressing spending cuts in their pitch.

Animal advocates have long lobbied for policies to reduce the number of animals used in lab research. But the movement has found particular success in the second Trump administration with a strategy that highlights economic savings as well as the plight of animals. The National Institutes of Health has spent $5.5 billion each year on animal testing and research, so there are potentially billions at stake. In recent months, the National Institutes of Health, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Food and Drug Administration have all announced policies to reduce reliance on animal testing in lab research. Some animal advocates tell Sentient that they believe the strategy — highlighting cost-cutting — could work for farm animal welfare too, though not everyone agrees.

The Movement to Reduce Lab Research on Animals

The push to reduce the number of animals used for scientific tests and experiments is several decades in the making. The strategy of reduction touted by federal agencies today, known as “reduce, refine and replace,” dates at least as far back as 1959, outlined in a book on how to make lab testing more humane.

Two groups working on this issue are Humane World For Animals (formerly Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International) and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA.

Sara Amundson, president of Humane World Action Fund, says making the case on a variety of fronts, including costs, has been key to success. “No one thing was going to create that tipping point, but the amalgamation of, ‘How do you work with industry? How do you ensure there’s funding for non animal methods and strategies? How do you change the law to actually require the uptake of these non animal methods?’” All of these helped, Amundson says.

Amundson is well-practiced at pitching “stakeholders who may not actually care about animal suffering.” She says the key is knowing your audience, “then what messages are going to actually move them.”

Another more controversial group, White Coat Waste, has also been working on these issues. “We were DOGE before DOGE was a thing,” Justin Goodman, senior vice president of advocacy and public policy for White Coat Waste tells Sentient, referring to the Department of Government Efficiency.

Not everyone is a fan of White Coat Waste’s more recent tactics. An early donor to the group, Jim Greenbaum, recently criticized them for what he described as a “smear campaign” against an NIH official. The New York Times described the group’s founder as a “conservative activist who previously worked on campaigns to defund Planned Parenthood and to end the Affordable Care Act.”

Under the first Trump administration, White Coat Waste and the Humane World Action Fund under Amundson were both part of a wider effort to secure federal agency pledges to phase out animal testing on dogs, rabbits and other mammals by 2035, along with commitments to retire animals used in experiments. The momentum slowed under President Biden, but under Trump 2.0, the effort to end federally funded animal testing has once again moved forward.

In May 2025, the National Institutes of Health “terminated funding at Harvard University for studies that included sewing the eyes of young monkeys shut,” the agency stated via X. In a statement, PETA says this decision came after 31 months of the group’s relentless campaigning.

One Republican supporter, Congressman Earl “Buddy” Carter, told Sentient in an email that he supports “EPA, FDA, and NIH in replacing animal testing with innovative 21st-century science.” Carter embraces a number of arguments against animal testing, including reducing government spending.

The Office of Health and Human Services also tells Sentient via email that Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “has consistently raised concerns about outdated and unnecessary animal testing practices and supports efforts to modernize research while safeguarding public health.”

Can the Strategy Work for Farm Animals?

Delcianna Winders, associate professor of law, and the Director of the Animal Law and Policy Institute at Vermont Law School is one of a number of farm animal advocates looking to apply this tactic to farm animals. Winders argues the same approach to cost cutting can also be applied to the billions of dollars doled out by the USDA in the form of farm subsidies.

“It is very explicitly identified in Project 2025 roadmap,” Winders tells Sentient, calling the subsidies “low hanging fruit if you want to cut wasteful spending.”

Amundson, from Humane World for Animals, agrees, calling the idea to expand the movement’s strategy “the perfect continuum.”

Kathy Guillermo, senior vice president, laboratory investigations with PETA, expressed a similar take, writing to Sentient that “Subsidizing the production of dairy, eggs, and meat is undoubtedly a waste that harms animals and humans,” adding, “It should end.”

Subsidies are a rather nebulous category of government financial support, the contours of which have long been debated. Still, Winders argues that these payouts create an economic system that is “not a free market,” but one that creates an “uneven playing field.” Winders hopes to test whether reducing government funding for industrial animal agriculture might eventually reduce the number of animals being farmed too.

There are plenty of subsidies in the mix. The recent megabill came with a number of payouts to industrial animal agriculture and crop growers, including market protections and payouts to farmers for specific flock or herd losses. Sentient also reported in January 2025 that USDA researchers found egg industry bailouts for avian flu could also be hindering farmers from taking steps to improve their security protocols.

Goodman also sees the parallels between spending on animal testing and USDA subsidies, parallels that should appeal to lawmakers and officials strongly committed to reducing government spending, regardless of the recipient. “Taxpayer funding for advertising programs for industry” referring to check-off programs, also targeted in Project 2025, is one such example, Goodman says. “On paper those are things that should be on the chopping block.”

But Goodman doesn’t think the strategy can work in practice. “It’s much easier for people to oppose animal testing,” he says, as it’s rare to find a lawmaker of either party willing to take on the largest agricultural lobbies.

There is another factor that helped boost the case against animal testing that doesn’t transfer. The current administration “is particularly hostile towards the scientific community and is hostile towards public health agencies” Goodman says.

The same hostility is not directed toward agriculture and farmers. Farmers have not experienced the same kind of backlash that scientists have in recent years — although longtime opponents of pesticide use and genetically engineered crops do criticize global agriculture conglomerates and the farmers who work with or for them, and many of those voices are also opponents of animal testing and vaccines. Still, Goodman argues that, for most lawmakers, “farmers have a very good public image.”

Sentient asked Representative Carter and Secretary Kennedy, who has advocated for reforming farming policy, about the prospects for similar spending cuts at USDA for wasteful farm subsidies. Kennedy’s office responded that they “defer to USDA on questions regarding their funding,” and Carter’s office did not comment.

Some Advocates Look to Spending in Wildlife and Conservation

One strategy that may help bridge the gap for policy makers between animals used in research and farm animals, Chris Green, executive director of the Animal Legal Defense Fund, tells Sentient in an email, is the “USDA’s taxpayer-funded Wildlife Services, which slaughtered nearly 2 million wild animals last year –– many at the behest of the agricultural industry.”

While the department kills animals for a variety of reasons, “one of the primary purposes of Wildlife Services is to kill animals on behalf of the meat and dairy industries,” reported Vox in May. “Coyotes, European starlings, feral hogs, and pigeons — accounted for over 75 percent of the carnage,” it states, all of which, “come into conflict with animal agriculture.”

Another first step: Winders has created a clinic to better track USDA spending. Her hope is the research will help lay the groundwork for appealing to lawmakers interested in cutting costs. “Students in the Farmed Animal Advocacy Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School are working to produce a first-of-its-kind directory of these many subsidies,” she says, “because understanding the lay of the land in all its complexity is the first step” to challenging the kinds of government spending she characterizes as “colossal” and “harmful.”

Winders believes there could be opportunities to redirect some spending in better directions too. The Trump administration has shown willingness to fund some alternatives to animal testing, Winders says, so why not invest more in research and development of meat alternatives, including cultivated meat. Plant-based meat and cultivated proteins have received only a tiny amount of public funding to date (though the same can be said for many kinds of cutting-edge agriculture research, which tends to be publicly underfunded as compared to other sectors).

Tackling spending as a way to improve farm animal welfare may be a steep challenge, Winders concedes. “Removing these subsidies would be monumental,” she says, but still, she hopes for a shift in where the money goes, “to things that are more beneficial to society.”

Source: World Federation For Animals

Woolrich: Still Ignoring Animal Cruelty

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© FOUR PAWS | Fred Dott

Woolrich: Still Ignoring Animal Cruelty

The last big outdoor brand to sell fur from raccoon dogs and other species – Will Woolrich’s Arctic Parkas soon be without animal fur?

Woolrich is one of the last international fashion brands without a fur-free policy even though most of its competitors – including Canada Goose, The North Face, Parajumpers, Patagonia, Fjällräven, MAMMUT, Jack Wolfskin and Napapijri – are already or have gone fur-free. Fur production is cruel to animals, bad for the environment, a risk to public health and completely unnecessary since quality alternatives are available.

URGE WOOLRICH TO GO FUR FREE

While the Italian brand offers a wide range of clothing, their parkas are the only items with fur. They use fur from raccoon dogs, coyotes and foxes as trim for the hoods of their parkas – even for children’s jackets. Woolrich purchases most fur from Finnish auction house Saga Furs, which prides itself with only selling fur coming from certified farms. But the voluntary certification scheme of the European fur industry (WelFur) is designed around the cruel cage system that we all know. Animals on Saga certified fur farms endure a short life in tiny wire mesh cages without opportunities to fulfil their basic needs. Only to be inhumanely killed after a few months and end up as trim on a Woolrich parka.  

And it’s not just farms. In North America, wild animals like coyotes are caught in brutal traps that rarely cause immediate death and result in immense pain and stress before the animals are killed by either drowning, suffocation or bludgeoning.  

The cruel devices do not discriminate. Pets, deer and countless other animals are often maimed or killed simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time and many suffer for days without food or water before dying.

The truth is simple: every fur product is rooted in animal suffering.  

While Woolrich emphasises its sustainability efforts, they fail to address the environmental impact of using animal fur for fashion. While the fur industry try to position fur as a sustainable product, in truth the practice has a severe impact on our environment, especially on ecosystems close to fur farms. Keeping thousands of animals on fur farms requires many resources: water, feed, and energy. The accumulating animal waste often drains into local soil and waterways, polluting both. 

But there’s also good news – fashion is evolving. More and more iconic brands and retailers are embracing cruelty-free style by going fur-free. You don’t need fur to make a statement – your values are your boldest accessory.

 

Warriors Against Dog Fighting

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Warriors Against Dogfighting

Dog fighting and the barbaric cruelty and immense suffering involved in this criminal activity receive our focused attention. In striving to address this growing crime, a multi-disciplinary approach has been adopted which encompasses taking action against perpetrators, rescuing the animal victims who suffer severe injuries and trauma and empowering affected communities through awareness campaigns and the distribution of literature.

Our Special Projects Unit is committed to bringing those involved to justice and to vigorously pursuing all who partake in or support dog fighting.

Join as a warrior against dog fighting and help stamp out abusive cruelty to animals.

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Source: SPCA