Jen B., a volunteer for the Mother’s Comfort Project, participated in our April sewing session. She had a great time and then came along with us for the delivery on June 6th, just this past Saturday.
Having experienced this great Rational Animal project from the inside out, she had these kind words to say about it:
“Thanks so much for letting me come with you to the shelter this past weekend. I really felt good about the experience and would like to continue being involved in the Mother’s Comfort Project.
I have always been an animal lover, so when I saw an article in Time Out New York about the Mother’s Comfort Project, I thought that would be a good way to help. I had never volunteered before. Making the beds was a great experience, and it made me want to help distribute them as well. I had never been to a city shelter before, and I think my perception was that the animals would be sick or aggressive, it would be depressing, etc. When I got there, I was amazed to see how many GREAT, affectionate animals there were. The dogs came to the front of their cages and wagged their tails when we walked by, and the cats started meowing as soon as we walked in. They also weren’t all strays as I assumed, there were animals whose owners had passed away, or whose owners simply decided they no longer wanted to have or pay for an animal.
Whether they were strays or owner surrenders, they just seemed to be looking for some love and attention. Unfortunately there were a lot of them, and the shelter had its hands full, so it made our job even more worthwhile. The animals are held in cold steel cages, and something as small as a bed, toy, or pat on the head really does make a difference in their quality of lives. I can vouch for this first-hand.
I think we can all find excuses and reasons NOT to get involved, but I can truly say that I am so happy that I chose to follow through and do it, because the feeling you get back outweighs the excuses tenfold. Mother’s Comfort is making a direct impact, and these animals really do deserve it.”
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Thanks, Jen!! We appreciate our volunteers’ work for our projects. As we all strive to help animals and empower more people to be aware, educated, and make informed decisions. We know this contributes to prevention — which is key. We seek to prevent some of the problems we deal with in the animal rescue and awareness realm, such as the high incidents of owner surrender and breed/puppy shop buys, as well as cruelty in dog fighting and general neglect.
It’s so great to hear one of our volunteers express that she feels she is making a difference.
We feel we are — and we will not give up!
It disappointed me the first time though. It shed and bled like maaaaaaad during washing and makeup application. It annoyed me more whenever I picked the hairs off of my face. I gave it a chance though, I kept using it with a firm belief that the shedding will lessen to a tolerable degree… but during the fifth washing, it shed a large clump of hair. I stared at the drain it went into for a while and wondered if it was my fault. I wasn’t tugging the hairs or anything. I wasn’t even rough in any way. When it dried, it looked weird coz it lost a big clump of hair somewhere near the side. I gave up on it after that — thinking that all the Charm flat tops were like that — it turned out that it was a defect.
The second flat top I received was waaaaaaaay better. It did shed a few hairs but not as bad as the first one. I was told that animal hair really sheds. I’ve been using the second flat top for almost two months, I think. It’s been great and it doesn’t shed on my face but it sheds one or two during washing.
I like the thick handle coz it gives great control but I’m not very fond of pink. The color will grow on me someday.
Everyday Minerals flat top (550php from organice07): this brush is suuuper soft. I can’t deny that. It hasn’t shed a single hair since I received it. It’s slightly smaller than the Charm flat top that’s why gripping it needed some adjusting since I was used to the Charm’s thick handle. I think I tend to use more product with the EDM flat top though. Now I know why it’s one of the favorites of MMU users.

P.S. I really miss blogging. My parents, siblings and I traveled to the province and stayed there for almost a week. Blogging was impossible (due to the slow internet connection) but I’m back in Baguio now and I’m definitely enjoying the summer bumming around.
It is not a difficult one to make the home based raw food for your dog with the things that you have already purchased from the market. Here are some suggestion to make the home based dog food.
- When you are prepared to make home based for your dog, then it would be better to prepare the item in huge amount. You can keep the same into freeze and give the same again future.
- When have made a large amount of dog food, please keep the food into zip lock bag and freeze it. It will keep your dog food fresh and better one.
- When you have several zip lock bag with you, then you can use it with different mixes and use it for future food for your dog. Actually this tricks is for rotate the different food habit and avoid the same taste.
- Dogs are good lover of internal organs of animals. Offal is the ideal one and it will give your dog proper nutrients. So try to mix this offal into daily food items.
- Do you know what type of food habit will give the proper diet for your dog? No other than fruits and vegetables. What you are preparing for your dog food at home, please mix up with chopped or pureed vegetable to this food item.
- Do you know what are the good source of calcium for your dog? eggshells. Yes. So please try to mix eggshells next time when you make homemade raw food for your dog.
So? making homemade raw food for your dog is neither a headache nor a difficult one. The above mentioned tips and suggestion will definitely help you a lot.
Got a message the other day…”My friend Katie is Jewish and said that Kosher meat is all regulated by the rabbis and humanely slaughtered”
KOSHER HUMANE?
So I checked with my friend who works at Farm Sanctuary and is covering the farm industry day in and day out as part of her job. She is a savvy one too, who knows fact from exaggeration and the ineffectiveness of the latter. I also looked up the definition of “kosher“, and it seems rather open to interpretation, as methods for 21st century slaughter are derived from the descriptions of what is “clean” and “unclean” meat. The Torah states which animals Jews can and cannot eat, and beef, chicken, and fish, of course are permitted, and pork is not. Methods of slaughter are very specific, however, which is problematic in the context of the business of churning out animal product for profit. Since the Kosher meat we typically find in grocery stores is from large-scale meat plants and slaughter houses, the chances that such specific, fine-tuned instructions are followed to the tee and are also overseen by the appropriate entities is unlikely.
In America, therefore, Kosher meat is some of the cruelest meat available. Despite the intentions in some scripture to make the process a certain way, which some may deem humane, given the economy of America when it comes to our mass consumption of meat products and the profit opportunities in meat processing, the intentions are often lost and cast aside. That said, however, I understand the intent behind the Kosher slaughter laws, but in practice the one instrument, one slice method is actually very brutal. They are not shocked with a head bolt to render them senseless, which is what is supposed to happen on factory farms. So Kosher farm workers have to develop other methods of how to make death quick for animals like cows and chickens. The laws governing how animals are slaughtered is that it should be quick, with a sharp knife to slit the throat and esophagus.
Despite the humane intention and spirit of the Jewish dietary laws, there are no standards to ensure that Kosher slaughter is any less cruel than conventional slaughter. The problem is that like most slaughterhouses, profit is maximized. Which means that as many animals are killed as quickly as possible. This is what leads all slaughterhouses to be brutal, because if they miss (it is, after all, a two thousand pound animal, writhing in fear for its imminent death) then they don’t do over. It continues on the chain.
MEAT CRUELTY
Even if Kosher slaughter sometimes is more effective at rendering the animal senseless quickly (there is still pain involved), it doesn’t change the fact that all animal agriculture in this country exists with cruelty. The feedlots, the unnatural diet, the constant cycles of impregnation, the environmental disaster, the warehouses of factory farms, the neglect of illness and injury, the downed animals left to suffer. Animals are commodities and are treated as such every day, in every part of the world, by people of every religion.
GREED AND VIOLATIONS IN FOOD INDUSTRIES AND BEYOND
And managers of meat and meatpacking plants, Kosher or not, can equally succumb to greed as well. Late last year, an Iowa plant, Agriprocessors, Inc., was raided for hiring children, undocumented workers, and for dangerous work environments — it was a Kosher plant. This facility was documented for seven weeks by a PETA investigator, and the atrocities against the cattle they slaughtered one after another, in bulk quantity, day in and day out, are gut-wrenching. Check out the Rabbis overseeing this type of slaughter (read quotes from rabbis and video on left side), and let me know if you think what they do is humane.
Bear in mind that no organization or business other than an animal or other rights org will distribute video like this. PETA, the Humane Society, WSPA, and others like them shoot the undercover footage at factory farms. At animal testing labs, like the one of the New Iberia Research place in Louisiana, the Humane Society footage was shot by an HSUS person who worked at the lab undercover. There’s a reason why these images aren’t disseminated freely by the businesses and people in them. You can also bet that when one bit of footage comes out, there is the same activity going on behind closed doors all over the country. It’s not easy to do these investigations, let alone actually prove the violations of various sorts. That said, we actually don’t know the extent to which the AWA and municipal animal protection laws are egregiously violated. Like with illegal hand gun possession, drug rings, and muggings, we only know about it when perpetrators are caught and charged.
COMPASSION FOR ANIMALS IS IN THE HEART OF THE CULTURE
Jewish culture widely expresses compassion for animals and animal life, in the phrase tsa’ar ba’alei chaim. It is not surprising then that prominent Jews who were also vegetarian spoke about it and about the humane issues behind it.
Jewish leaders, such as Yiddish writer Isaac Bashevis Singer (1904-91),winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978, who witnessed slaughter in Poland at a very young age, which is when he decided to never eat meat, including fish, ever again, advocated for vegetarian diets but even moreso for humane treatment of animals. He has also unofficially been quoted as saying, “There will never be any peace in the world as long as we eat animals.”
Albert Einstein migrated to a vegetarian diet toward the last years of his life, which he remarks on in a letter written to Hans Muehsam, and dated March 30, 1954, which was about 1 year before Einstein died: “So I am living without fats, without meat, without fish, but am feeling quite well this way. It always seems to me that man was not born to be a carnivore.” He has also unofficially been quoted as saying, “If a man aspires towards a righteous life, his first act of abstinence is from injury to animals.”
This is a great site for exploring Jewish culture’s possible advocacy for vegetarianism: http://www.jewishveg.com/. Any scripture or holy literature is open to interpretation, so neither meat-eating or meat-avoiding is the hard and fast dietary rule in Judaism, among many other religions.
