Mark Hawthorne,
Striking
at the Roots
March 2018
Last month, as Black Panther was breaking box office records and teenage activists were shaming the NRA, calls for animal testing bans were also making headlines around the world.
Last month, as Black Panther was breaking box office records and teenage
activists were shaming the NRA, calls for animal testing bans were also
making headlines around the world.
First, the California Cruelty-Free Cosmetics Act entered the state
legislature. If passed as is, the bill will ban the sale of animal-tested
hygiene or beauty products such as makeup, shampoos, and deodorants
throughout California by 2020. It would also encourage manufacturers across
the country to stop selling animal–tested products. The bill will bring
California law in line with regulations in nearly 40 countries―including the
European Union, India, Israel, New Zealand, Taiwan, and Turkey―that already
prohibit the sale of new animal-tested cosmetics. (The California bill
follows anti-animal-testing legislation proposed in Hawaii in January.)
Also last month, Members of the European Parliament from the EU’s
Environment Committee called for a worldwide ban on the use of animals for
cosmetics testing. The EU’s ban on animal-tested cosmetics went into effect
in 2013, and the MEPs pointed out that this has not prevented the EU
cosmetics industry from thriving and providing some 2 million jobs.
Although the U.S. government currently mandates that the toxicity of
drugs be tested on animals and shown to be safe, analyzing the toxicity of
household products like cosmetics and detergents on animals is not legally
required. Yet the FDA and other agencies encourage manufacturers to conduct
whatever toxicological tests they believe are appropriate to substantiate
the safety of their products. Thus, every year companies subject millions of
conscious animals to an extensive range of gruesome “safety tests” in which
corrosive chemicals are dripped into their eyes, toxic compounds already
known to be fatal to humans are pumped into their stomachs, caustic
irritants are rubbed into their skin, or some other unspeakable torture
results in a painful death.
Sadly, the abuse of animals in the name of product safety goes well beyond
the substances being tested. The same kind of frustration we see among
animal agriculture and slaughterhouse workers—who often react to the extreme
stress of their jobs by lashing out at animals—is evident among lab
technicians, who may be entirely desensitized to the pain and distress of
animal victims. These test lab workers have been known to beat animals, who
are routinely left to languish in filthy cages between experiments and
denied even the slightest kindness.
Fortunately, a growing number of companies have abandoned animal testing in
favor of humane alternatives, and many organizations are campaigning against
the use of animals as test subjects.
What You Can Do:
1. Don’t buy products tested on animals. Look for the
Leaping Bunny logo and download the app on your smartphone.
2. Then … Support companies such as The Body Shop, Dr. Bronner’s, and Kiss
My Face that sell products not tested on animals. (Here’s a list
of vegan makeup brands and here’s one of
drug store brands.) [NOTE from All-Creatures.org: Please visit
Some Cruelty-Free Shopping and Other Vegan Resources]
3. Urge your legislators to support the Humane Cosmetics Act (H.R. 2790),
which would end the manufacture and sale of animal-tested cosmetics in the
U.S. [Find and contact your United States Congressional Representative
Find and contact your United States Senators]
4. Contact companies you like and ask if they test on animals or use animal
ingredients. If they do, tell them you oppose any animal testing and the use
of animal ingredients.
5. Sign and share the global
Forever Against Animal Testing petition, which will be presented to the
United Nations when 8 million signatures have been collected.
6. Raise awareness. Wear t-shirts, stickers, and buttons that tell people
you don’t support animal testing. You’ll find them at sites such as Café
Press, Etsy, and Zazzle, as well as from vegan companies like
Herbivore and
Meaningful Paws.
7. Share this post with your family and friends and ask them to take action,
too!
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