Help All Animals Every Day and We Help Save the Environment Too!
I got these wonderful click links from Lotus' page -
Please click these every day to help!
" Help us preserve the world's dwindling rain forests, essential to create oxygen and maintain a balanced ecology. Every click helps the Nature Conservancy save square feet of this precious natural habitat! "- Also includes buttons for the American Prairie & Marine Wetlands.![]()
"More than 319,000 harp seals will be clubbed or shot to death this year in Canada. Each click will support IFAW's TV campaign to build public pressure against this cruel and inhumane hunt."![]()
"Saving the oceans is not only about saving species, but about protecting the health of the entire planet. Help Oceana save dolphins, whales and sea otters as well as help keep pollutants out of the oceans with a free click now!"![]()
"Big cats, including tigers, snow leopards and jaguars are in danger of extinction. Click free to help the Wildlife Conservation Society protect big cat territory now!"![]()
" Chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas and other primates are threatened with extinction. Support the Jane Goodall Institute with your free click today. "![]()
" Millions of domestic animals are starving or killed each year due to neglect. Please help support the The Humane Society of the United States' efforts to help pets in need with your free click! "![]()
Help a local animal sanctuary feed the animals and continue to educate the public. Below is the email reply from Ann to Anna. Just email her at animals@threeringranch.org and provide your address and she'll mail you the addressed baggies to put the ink cartridges in to send to them instead of throwing them away.!
This is from Jen's excellent pod, Honor All Beings!
Please help our Horses!
Help ban horse-drawn carriages
Jen said Oct 20, 2006, 12:24 PM:
If you are motivated to help free horses from the danger of pulling a carriage alongside motorized vehicles in traffic, check out the Coalition to Ban Horse-Drawn Carriages http://www.banhdc.org/.
More information can be found below.
Pulling the Reins on the Horse-Drawn Carriage Industry
by Edita Birnkrant | Fall 2006
The sight of a horse-drawn carriage weaving its way in and out of Midtown traffic, amidst blaring horns, aggressive cabs and trucks, swerving bicycle riders and throngs of pedestrians, is, to New Yorkers, just another part of the urban landscape. The horses, pulling their antiquated carriages, are a beloved New York City tradition, some will say. Others insist that there is nothing more romantic than taking a moonlight carriage ride through Central Park with someone you love, while savoring the clip-clop of the horse's hooves on the pavement.
But every exploitative industry and practice in society exists with a wall of illusion before it.
In January 2006, Friends of Animals helped found a coalition whose goal is enacting legislation to ban horse-drawn carriages in New York City. The Coalition to Ban Horse-Drawn Carriages has drafted legislation to effectively phase out this industry, and seeks to have current horses adopted to protect them from kill auctions. The immediate necessity of such a coalition was evident on Jan. 2nd, 2006, when a horse and driver were on their way back to the stables, but the horse panicked, ran out of control, and crashed into a car on 50th Street and 9th Avenue.
The horse, Spotty was badly injured and later had to be killed. The driver, who had been thrown from the carriage, was critically injured as were two passengers in the car.
Many accidents have involved horse-drawn carriages over the years. In several of them, the horses were frightened by a loud, sudden noise - typical of New York City. The natural instinct of horses is to run when they are frightened, often unpredictably, by something that startles them. The incident involving Spotty received particular attention, due to its severity. Friends of Animals and other Coalition founders knew that the time was right to get the effort for a complete ban on the industry out to the public, and to seek support from New York City Council members.
Two more carriage disasters followed the January incident. On April 28th, in Central Park, a startled horse bolted into a 71-year old bicyclist-who sustained serious injuries as a result. Just one week later, on May 5th, a frightened horse collided with a moving car on 11th Avenue. The car overturned, its driver ending up in the hospital, and the horse sustained injuries.
By this time, the Coalition had received significant media attention, including cover stories in both Newsday and AM NY, quotes in the Daily News, the New York Post, and the New York Sun, in addition to my live radio interview as spokesperson of the Coalition, by Ellis Henican and Lynne White on 710 WOR Radio.
Our message is simple: Horses are not commercial vehicles.
The Coalition has been urging the public to boycott carriage horses until they are officially disallowed.
On Saturdays, Coalition members and supporters have been gathering at Central Park South, where the carriages are gathered to pick up passengers. We're engaged in an outreach effort to educate the public on the exploitation of the horses, in addition to the public safety risks the carriages pose. We have obtained endorsements from tourists and from New York City residents on petitions, to be delivered to the City Council and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, urging legislation that would ban horse-drawn carriages in New York City. We have also been distributing the informative ‘What's Wrong With Horse-Drawn Carriages in NYC' flyers to sustain the boycott and advise people how to advance the effort to enact a ban.
Many cities have ended the tradition of animal-drawn vehicles. Here is an inspiring list of the enlightened cities that have banned horse-drawn carriages:
Florida: Kenneth City, Key West, Deerfield Beach, Palm Beach, Panama City Beach, Pompano Beach, Treasure Island
Mississippi: Biloxi
Nevada: Las Vegas, Reno
New Jersey: Camden
South Carolina: Broadway at the Beach
Other cities that have banned horse-drawn carriages include Toronto, Canada; Beijing, China; Paris, France; and London and Oxford, England.
Action You Can Take
The presence of horse-drawn carriages in New York City sends a disturbing message that other animals are mere objects of entertainment for tourists. The positive response we've received from the public during our outreach efforts proves that not only is New York City ready to abolish this exploitative industry-it's long past due.
1. Boycott the Carriage Horse Industry. Educate friends and family to the reality of this industry.
2. Contact NYC Mayor Bloomberg at http://www.nyc.gov/ or call 311 and leave a message of strong support for the effort to end New York's horse-drawn carriage industry.
3. New Yorkers should contact their City Council member at: http://www.nyccouncil.info/ and ask them to support legislation that will end the horse-drawn carriage industry.
4. If you use the Internet, visit http://www.banhdc.org/ to find out about the Coalition to Ban Horse-Drawn Carriages, and to get involved.
Help Dogs and Cats Now!
The federal Dog and Cat Fur Prohibition Enforcement Act, H.R. 891
kathleen said Tuesday, 12:16 PM:
The federal Dog and Cat Fur Prohibition Enforcement Act, H.R. 891, would require that all apparel containing any quantity of fur is accurately labeled-regardless of the fur's monetary value-and also ban completely the sale and import of fur from raccoon dogs, members of the dog family native to China killed in large numbers for their fur.
Under current law, products containing quantities of fur valued under $150 can be sold in American stores without accurate labels. Consumers with ethical objections or allergies to fur may think a lack of a label means that they're buying "faux" fur-but sadly, this is not always true.
What You Can Do
Please visit the ASPCA Advocacy Center today, where you can email a letter to your representative urging him or her support and cosponsor the Dog and Cat Fur Prohibition Enforcement Act. You'll also find additional information about how this Act will change current labeling laws for the better.
Thank you for supporting the ASPCA.

Help




Thank you for this great post. We all inhabit the same earth. We must help animals survive.
We're all animals - people sometimes forget that we are animals too.
We're all alike - feel, dream, think, hope for a better future and just want to live well today.
Since we're the ones polluting, felling trees, ruining their habitat - common decency tells us that we're responsible for them - and especially since we are the only animals who CAN save all the others - We are all Noah, and the Planet is the Ark.
Let's save everyone!