Other Fur Bearing Animals Impact on our Environment
"When
you
go on the sort of expeditions I do, warmth is very important. I never use fur. There are many
more suitable, practical and warmer man-made alternatives available." Sir
Chris Bonington, CBE, Mountaineer
Fur does not belong in the 21st century. Our ancestors
wore animal skins in the stone age. They had to because there was nothing
else to wear. Dog carts were an old tradition too, as was the slavery of
black people and Chinese foot binding. But society progresses and adjusts
its ethical standards. Even polar expeditions don't use fur coats anymore,
because there are better, less expensive, warmer and lighter alternatives
available.
There is no reasonable doubt that
very few British consumers would knowingly wear cat or dog fur. But as weknow the fur is
often disguised with phoney labelling and rarely is there a description
on fur trimming or it is described as "other fur",furs are bleached and
dyed to make them resemble more expensive fur.And that process uses
carcinogens such as benzene. The environmental impact is significant even
in well-regulated countries such as Denmark and Finland and even more so in
the generally less regulated developing world.
Under the World Bank's
industrial pollution protection system-IPPS-fur dressing and dyeing rank
among the worst five industries for toxic metal pollution. Some products
used in the process are banned in the European Union-for example, arsenic,
which is a multiple carcinogen. In practice, furs are not biodegradable
despite being natural products because the chemicals, including the
carcinogens, needed to preserve the coat are not degradable and so add to
the issues surrounding landfill sites when coats are discarded.
Other
Fur Bearing Animals
The needless
killing and suffering is unacceptable
and unbearable also for the millions of other animals
that are killed each year for
their fur, and their pain must be realised too, the fox, mink, racoon, and more than a dozen other species reared
on factory farms that cause them to go mad and mutilate themselves and each
other, by the gassing, lethal injection, neck-breaking and anal
electrocution, or caught in vicious leghold traps and left to starve,
freeze, drown, be beaten to death or gnaw off their own limbs in a futile
attempt to escape. This is the reality of the fur trade - they
do not care
about the suffering of
innocent animals. They do not care about the
impact their industry has on our environment. Those in the fur trade
have no conscience they are governed by greed and selfishness,all they care about is money.Fur should be where
it really does belong - history!
The use of cheap real fur is
commonly used in fur trim: people need to be wary. A
coat with a fur-trim collar or hood is much more likely to be genuine fur
than fake.
And that
stuffed toy cat or dog might well be made out of
real dog or cat fur, sales people in their ignorance often simply claim it
must be fake if its cheap. Avoiding the purchase of any fur items is the
best precaution.
Here are a few simple steps that
consumers may take to distinguish between real and fake fur, according to
Animal World Net:
TEST FOR REAL OR FAKE FUR
REAL
FAKE
1.
Feel:
Feel
the difference
by
rolling the hairs
between finger
and thumb...
Feels smooth and soft, easily rolls between the finger.
Feels coarse.
.2.
LOOK:
collars
of longhaired
fur - blow
on the
hairs so
they divide...
Often made up of several layers of thin, almost curly hairs which form a
dense under-wool, through which the longer hairs stick out. The base is
leather.
Simpler in structure, individual hairs are often the same length and
even in colour.
.3.
PINCH
WITH
A PIN:
through
the base...
The
leather resists, pin is hard to push through.
Pin
easily goes through the base.
4.
BURN
TEST:
(pull,
very carefully)a few
hairs from
the fur
andholdthemtoa
flame...
Singes like a human hair and smells similar.
Melts like plastic and smells like burnt plastic. Forms small plastics
balls at the ends that feel hard between finger and thumb