Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Help Your Health by Leaving Cows Alone

Cows are gentle, social animals. Each cow has the ability to recognize more than 100 other cows, and they form close friendships with members of their herd. Researchers report that cows grieve when their friends or family members die.

Eating beef products, which are loaded with artery-clogging cholesterol and saturated fat, is a good way to increase both your waistline and your chances of developing impotence and diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, osteoporosis, Alzheimer's disease, and asthma. Research has shown that vegetarians are 50 percent less likely to develop heart disease than are meat-eaters, and they have 40 percent of the cancer rate of meat-eaters.

Plus, meat-eaters are nine times more likely to be obese than vegans are. Every time you eat animal-derived products, you're also ingesting bacteria, antibiotics, dioxins, hormones, and a host of other substances, some toxic, that can accumulate in your body and remain there for years.

Monday, 22 October 2012

The Hidden Lives of Cows

Cows are as diverse as cats, dogs, and people: Some are bright; others are slow learners. Some are bold and adventurous; others are shy and timid. Some are friendly and considerate; others are bossy and devious.

According to research, cows are generally very intelligent animals who can remember things for a long time. Animal behaviorists have found that cows interact in socially complex ways, developing friendships over time and sometimes holding grudges against other cows which treat them badly.

These gentle giants mourn the deaths of and even separation from those they love, even shedding tears over their loss. The mother-calf bond is particularly strong, and there are countless reports of mother cows who continue to frantically call and search for their babies after the calves have been taken away and sold to veal or beef farms.

Brainy Bovines
Research has shown that cows clearly understand cause-and-effect relationships—a sure sign of advanced cognitive abilities. For example, cows can learn how to push a lever to operate a drinking fountain when they're thirsty or to press a button with their heads to release grain when they're hungry. Researchers have found that not only can cows figure out problems, they also, like humans, enjoy the intellectual challenge and get excited when they find a solution.  

Pecking orders aren’t just for chickens
A herd of cows is very much like a pack of wolves, with alpha animals and complex social dynamics. Each cow can recognize more than 100 members of the herd, and social relationships are very important to them. Cows will consistently choose leaders for their intelligence, inquisitiveness, self-confidence, experience, and good social skills, while bullying, selfishness, size, and strength are not recognized as suitable leadership qualities.

Raising cows in unnatural conditions, such as crowded feedlots, is very stressful to them because it upsets their hierarchy. University of Saskatchewan researcher Jon Watts notes that cows who are kept in groups of more than 200 on commercial feedlots become stressed and constantly fight for dominance. (Feedlots in America hold thousands of cows at a time.)   

Cow don’t want to die
Like all animals, cows value their lives and don't want to die. Stories abound of cows which have gone to extraordinary lengths to fight for their lives.

A cow named Suzie was about to be loaded onto a freighter bound for Venezuela when she turned around, ran back down the gangplank, and leaped into the river. Even though she was pregnant (or perhaps because she was pregnant), she managed to swim all the way across the river, eluding capture for several days. She was rescued by PETA  (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals)  and sent to a sanctuary.

When workers at a slaughterhouse in Massachusetts went on break, Emily the cow made a break of her own. She took a tremendous leap over a 5-foot gate and escaped into the woods, surviving for several weeks during New England's snowiest winter in a decade, cleverly refusing to touch the hay put out to lure her back to the slaughterhouse.

When she was eventually caught by the owners of a nearby sanctuary, public outcry demanded that the slaughterhouse allow the sanctuary to buy her for one dollar. Emily lived out the rest of her life in Massachusetts until she died of cancer in 2004. Her life is a testament to the fact that eating meat means eating animals who don't want to die.

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Cattle are killed in an inhumane way in Sri Lanka

 
If you see how these innocent animals are slaughtered the suffering that they undergo, you will never eat meat. Unfortunately, I saw this horrible sight. Some butchers, do not spare even pregnant cows. In many of the foreign countries cattle are killed in a humane way. They tranquillise the animal so that the poor animal will not feel the pain of death. Some methods they adopt are (a) To use captive bolt pistol. (b) Stunning electrically.

If Sri Lankans cannot abstain from beef eating, it is proper, they use some kind of drug or injection, so that the poor animal will not suffer the pain of death. It would be far better, if we can totally give up eating beef, which will bring much relief to an animal that has befriended man throughout life.

In Sri Lanka, cattle are transported in lorries and trains to slaughter houses. Most of these innocent animals come from the Dry Zone. They are not fed for days before they face the "Guillotine". Like our Public Transport system, the cattle are transported jam-packed. In transit, the weak fall down, some are trampled to death. In the slaughter house, the year of death, surrounds them. They keep their heads down. They hear the screams, long piercing cry of fear of the cattle that are mercilessly slaughtered ahead of them.

They pass loose motions and urinate, when they are taken to the slaughter house. It is a concrete floor. Iron rings are embedded into it. The animal is pulled towards the ring. His head, virtually touches the floor. Verbally, they cannot express their feelings or sentiments. Tears flow, blood and mucus is spread all over.

They tie the four feet of the animal with a lasso. When they try to pull the animal down, the animal loses his balance. He falls on the concrete floor. It groans for life, fear of death and the tongue protrudes out. The men who handle the gruesome act, tighten the animal's legs into one bundle. Helpless, the poor animal, lying on the ground, the neck turned up and with a sharp knife, the "Air Passage is severed. Added to all these, the butchers enjoy themselves in performing this cruel act.
 
Sri Lanka is known as the "Dharmadivpa". We must all get together and put a stop to this inhuman slaughtering of cattle in Sri Lanka. It is heartening to note that the former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga (1994-2005) had instructed to stop the slaughter of cattle during the Vesak Week. That was undoubtedly, quite a salutary gesture. In the wake of the President's decree, I earnestly hope that parliamentarians will agitate to bring legislation to stop this inhuman slaughter of cattle in Sri Lanka.
   

To kill cow means to end human civilization



Cows are the mothers of all creatures. Cows are verily the mothers of the 330 million of demigods that administrate creation in the material existence throughout all the universes. Cows are the goddesses of the gods and the refuge of all auspiciousness. Cows bestow every kind of happiness and for these reason they always are worshippable. Cows are the support of all the worlds for by their milk they nourish terrestrials beings and by their ghee offered in sacrifice they nourish the denizens of the celestial realms. Nothing superior to cows. 

Cow is responsible for supplying around 90 percent of the dairy needs of the world population. A cow produces around 200,000 glasses of milk in her lifetime.So please Save the cow, save the nation, save the world”. 
Protect the Cow and get protected. The wise ones work for the growth, nourishment and the protection of the Cows. As many cows one protects so much protection comes back to him. 

Objectives of this noble cause 
1) To prevent cruelty and slaughter of cows through positive action. 
2) To retrieve the rare breed cattle from extinction and conserve them for future 

    generations. 
3)To promote cow centered organic agriculture. 
4)To restore love,dignity and respect to cows 
5)To create awareness among people 
Please invite your friends to this noble cause. 
Thanks

Saturday, 13 October 2012

Kindness to Animals




 
There cannot be kindness to animals without refraining from eating their flesh. Eating animal flesh helps and encourages the slaughter of animals. Eating one or a few types of animals is as bad as eating any animal. No human dies of not eating animal flesh. No human weakens physically or mentally by not eating animal flesh.

No mental or spiritual advancement is ever possible with the guilt of enc
ouraging the slaughter of animals lingering in one’s mind. Kindness towards one animal, and eating the flesh of another, does not make any sense. Who are we fooling but ourselves.

Will flesh-eaters ever realize the violence that is ingrained in them. Observe them with care - cows, pigs, goats, sheep, chicken and fish are as innocent and lovable as your own pet. Eating their flesh is as bad as eating your pet’s flesh. Why do you wash the blood off when preparing the flesh you eat. Isn’t it a waste? Why not make a drink out of it.

When your mother ceased having milk to feed you, it was cow’s milk that you had to grow and live. You grow up and begin to eat its flesh. Is that your form of gratitude for your substitute “mother”?.

No sensible person should respect flesh-eaters. They support killing. How can anyone respect killers. They cannot hope to get the respect even from animals. Eating animals flesh, how can they expect respect from animals – they are worse than animals. If animals can talk, “don’t kill us” will be the first words they will utter. Their first question will be “why do you eat our flesh?” – we don’t eat yours!.

An end to inhumane cattle slaughter
Recently, one of the Sinhala dailies, reported an inhuman act performed on a cattle that had met with a train accident. A Buddhist monk and some villagers, treated this innocent animal with the help of a veterinary surgeon. He was fast recovering. One morning, they found, someone had mercilessly removed a hind leg and the animal was in a pool of blood, in severe pain.

In the Indo-Aryan culture, cattle occupy a very significant place. The cow is like a mother. The bull and the buffalo provide bread and butter to all of us. We consume her milk daily. Cattle are so close to our day-to-day life and they serve us in numerous ways.
According to some statistics, about 1,500-2,000 cattle are inhumanely slaughtered daily, in Sri Lanka. Specially, as Buddhists, who are a majority in Sri Lanka, we utter the Five Precepts daily, but, should we not ask ourselves, whether, we truly, observe the First Precept, which is to abstain from killing.

It is very unfortunate, in the Dharmadivpa, cattle are slaughtered and tortured in a very inhuman manner. It is a horrible, horrendous sight to watch. This is a sight you will never ever want to witness.