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Old 03-07-2006, 10:21 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
 
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Default Appalling cruelty

----- Original Message -----
From: "SPEAK"
To:
Sent: Monday, June 26, 2006 3:33 PM
Subject: [HuntingdonSucks] SPEAK Action Alert - Remembering George

02, 2006 7:03 PM
Subject: Fw: [HuntingdonSucks] SPEAK Action Alert - Remembering
George
Remembering George

Meet Carfax Tower 12 noon 22nd July

http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.sr...=newsearch.srf

SPEAK has received information from a source working in the dept of
Experimental Psychology detailing yet again the appalling abuse being
suffered by a primate inside Oxford University. Our source has told us
that a macaque monkey was imprisoned for several years and was forced to
undergo a variety of experiments that included invasive brain surgery.

The information we are told was recited to a group of people by the
researcher himself. What is of interest is the fact that the researcher in
question was the same man that was investigated by the police for cruelty
to a monkey he was experimenting on.

We have been told that the researcher took great satisfaction in detailing
the injuries he caused to the monkey he was experimenting on. He told his
audience that they had named the monkey 'George', and then went on to
detail the types of injuries he had personally inflicted on this poor
innocent creature. At one point George's eyes had extensive injuries
caused to them, creating lesions for the purpose of the experiment. The
account told by the vivisector is even more obscene when one takes into
account that the vivisector then started to laugh as he went on with his
story, telling the assembled group that after having blinded (we don't
know if he was totally or partially blinded) George, part of the
experiment then included taking George out into the university park.
George wasn't able to see what we can see: if he could see at all it would
only have been partial.

George was almost certainly a wild caught macaque. Once he would have been
roaming free in the tundra of Tanzania, or on the sugar plantations of
Mauritius or in the jungles of Indonesia and China. He was taken from his
homeland and forced to endure the most appalling cruelty. The next time he
experienced fresh air, he was blind and tethered. His life ended at the
hands of someone who can only be described as a monster; there are no
other words to describe such a depraved individual.

Vivisectors like to talk about how much they care about the animals they
torture and eventually kill. Such pronouncements are just that, these
people care about nothing but themselves.

George died alone, blind, afraid and imprisoned in a barren cage; a cage
hardly big enough for him to stand up in - a far cry from the life he
experienced in his homeland: free, jumping from tree to tree, interacting
with his own kind. Death was probably the only kind act George had ever
received at the hands of his human tormentors.

Vivisection is allowed to continue because the majority of the public are
hidden from the truth. The vivisection industry suppresses it, the
Government hide it, the media lie about it and the police protect the
interests of the abusers. Now that is about to change!

Join us in Oxford on the 22nd July. Its time to take control and let the
public know the truth - Let's remember George, but just as importantly,
let's tell the Oxford public about George. Let's not let his pain and
suffering have been for nothing. We can't bring George back. We can't
lessen the torment, the fear and the suffering he experienced imprisoned
inside Oxford University, but we can all join together on the 22nd July in
the centre of Oxford and shout his name.

To the vivisector that laughed as he detailed the torment he inflicted on
George - George is but another statistic, another item to add to his
latest research paper. To us, George was an individual, an individual
capable of experiencing pain, an individual capable of emotion - let's
make sure he is never forgotten.

The demonstration in Oxford won't follow the format of others, it's not
about marching from A to Z, mostly through the back streets, it's about
being visible, it's about interacting with the public that have been lied
to for so long. Let's be imaginative: bring banners, posters, organise
street theatre. As a movement, let's come together and really make a
difference. SPEAK will of course be supplying thousands of leaflets
'Remembering George' so that they can be distributed to the public. Let's
make this a day that the vivisectors holed up inside Oxford University
never forget.

Now is OUR time to be fighting back against the lies peddled by the
university and their friends that hold key positions in society. It's
about all of US taking control, it's about holding our heads high and
being proud of the compassionate message we have to tell. Let's remember
George and let's make sure the vivisectors that are paid with money and
accolades to butcher, maim and inflict the most appalling suffering on
sentient creatures are never allowed to forget him. It's time to expose
the real extremists.

See you on the 22nd July in Oxford.





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www.roots-of-blood.org.uk
www.killhunting.org
www.con-servation.org.uk
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