Fur Company Canada Goose Under Siege
An Animal Rights Article from All-Creatures.org
FROM
TheirTurn.net
November 2016
Tell Global Retailer Canada Goose to Stop Using Inhumane Fur and Down in Its
Jackets!

During the four days after Canada Goose opened its first retail store in
the United States, animal rights activists staged massive protests at the
entrance, disrupting business by protesting; dissuading shoppers from
entering; and shaming those who purchased coats after seeing images of geese
and coyotes being terrorized and killed for their feathers and fur.
In this
six minute video, Canadian journalist Zach Ruiter captured some of the
dramatic encounters between the protesters and Canada Goose customers on the
day of the store’s grand opening in New York City.


TheirTurn, which also reported from the grand opening, interviewed actor and
comedian Dave Hill, who stopped by with his dog Lucy to lend his support. In
addition to criticizing the Canada Goose for engaging in “mass slaughter”
while masquerading as a “mom and pop” business, Hill contemplated asking the
company, which uses wild dog (coyote) fur, if it would make a coat using
Lucy’s fur.
In October, activists with PETA and Direct Action Everywhere (DxE) staged an
in-store disruption on the opening day of its first retail store. According
to PETA, “25 chanting, poster-wielding PETA supporters and DxE activists
descended on the grand opening of Canada Goose’s first-ever brick-and-mortar
store in Toronto. Less than a minute after protesters entered the
building—where they were immediately locked in by security personnel—the
company’s CEO, Dani Reiss, fled to the back of the store.”
Canada Goose is being targeted by animal rights activists because the
company sells winter coats stuffed with feathers plucked out of the bodies
of geese and lined with the fur of coyotes who are captured in steel leg
hold traps. Advocates say that coyotes attempt to chew off their trapped
limbs to escape and oftentimes starve to death while waiting for the trapper
to shoot them.
The red and blue Canada Goose badge on the coats has become a status symbol
in urban areas. Activists are working to ensure that customers, some of whom
don’t realize they are wearing real fur, know that they’re wearing a “badge
of terror.”
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