Category Archive | Extremism
January 27, 2006 | Friday
Influx of violent members for SPEAK
By
Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
If you were wondering whether the supporters of Save The Newchurch Guinea Pigs were ready to hang up their hats, then think again - they’ve decided to throw their lot in with SPEAK, campaigning against Oxford University.
Now this wouldn’t be a matter for concern if SNGP had been a law-abiding, peaceful campaign; but the thought of body-snatching fanatics, whose tactics included hate mail, malicious phone calls, hoax bombs and arson attacks, finding another cause is disturbing as far as I’m concerned.
Bearing this in mind, you’d think that an organisation claiming to advocate only peaceful protest would have qualms about accepting ‘all their [SNGP’s] resources’ but apparently not. SPEAK/ SNGP’s announcement shows that they are welcoming this addition with open arms.
This is another indication that SPEAK is not the legal campaign it claims to be. For previous warning signs see blog entry Arrested SPEAK protestors were not local and the words of SPEAK’s spokesman, Mel Broughton, reported in the Oxford Mail after a demo in January.
January 19, 2006 | Thursday
Arrested SPEAK protestors were not local
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Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
Well, looks like none of the five SPEAK protestors arrested at Saturday’s demo were even from Oxford!
The five arrested for breaches of public order were released on bail until Thursday, January 26. They are barred from entering Oxford. Two are from Essex and others from Northampton, London and Kent.
The Oxford Mail, 16th January 2006
This suggests several things, including:
1. SPEAK is having trouble finding support amongst locals and is having to bus supporters in an attempt to increase numbers.
2. Since those arrested were presumably making trouble, SPEAK is deliberately bussing in people who escalate protest beyond what is expected of peaceful demonstrators.
The latter is very possible when you consider that some of the protestors felt the need to cover their faces (why would any law-abiding citizen feel the need to do so if they are merely exercising their democratic voice in a legal manner?), and when you consider the threatening words at the protest from Mel Broughton, spokesman for SPEAK;
Now it is time to fight. We must take this chance, we must do what is necessary… The time has come for fighting, not talking… You have got every opportunity to enter this city any time of day or night and they won’t stop you. They are going to have to worry about what will happen next.
The Oxford Mail, 16th January 2006
The final comment ‘they are going to have to worry about what will happen next’ perturbs me, following as it does a literal call-to-arms. This doesn’t sit well with the idea of a peaceful organisation, which SPEAK claims to be.
January 18, 2006 | Wednesday
Yet more protests and bleating
This weekend saw yet another weekend of protests from our friends at SPEAK. Not just two demonstrations on Saturday and Sunday, but a rally in the town hall. A handful of protesters were still planted on the pavement outside the new animal laboratory on Monday even (to the great enjoyment of all those working around the area; see my earlier comment about megaphones)
Having seen the demonstration and its so-called violent abuse by the police, I am beginning to wonder if it was actually the same demonstration I had been at.
Yes, there was a little cafuffle at the front, when a few of the more militant activists tried to break through the lines of policemen and women protecting the science area. These were dealt with in what seemed a very civil restrained manner. To me it seems pretty obvious that if you are going to attack a line of policemen, they are not going to step aside and give you a pat on the back.
As for the suggested intimidation by the coppers, that again seems only the demonstrators’ own fault: if you are going to threaten to attack any building that is part of the university and you fail to provide your own stewards to the demonstration, it seems only logical to me that a close-guarding heavy police presence is required. The police seemed very civilised to me. In fact, having seen them in action during potentially violent football matches, to my eyes there was no sign of intimidation at all. The front rows of officers did not even have helmets and shields! And if, like the SPEAK website so happily claims, the fight is not with Thames Valley Police, but with the University itself, why are demonstrators hurling objects at the police?
This whole weekend of demonstrations proved once again to me that the activists involved in this protests are just bleating: everybody is out to get them, no one is cooperating, the university and all its workers are evil, etc. etc. If they could keep their violent component and conspiracy theories under control, none of this would be necessary and peaceful protest could take place, perhaps even dialogue. As it stands we just have to live with the continual threat of violence and they will have to live with the police being on their case.
January 17, 2006 | Tuesday
SPEAK's demo behaviour - fair or foul?
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Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
SPEAK had a demo at Oxford on Saturday (14th Jan) at which they claimed there was an ‘unprovoked police attack’. According to SPEAK, their protesters showed ‘discipline and self-restraint’ –
despite provocation on many occasions by Thames Valley Police officers, who were clearly looking for a confrontation.
SPEAK
Strangely, independent articles in The Guardian, The Oxford Mail and The Oxford Student (the latter two being well placed to comment knowledgeably on local happenings) didn’t have quite the same slant on SPEAK’s behaviour:
... the builders roll an empty wheelbarrow directly in front of the protesters, who hurl abuse at them with the aid of a megaphone.
The Guardian, 14th January 2006
Violent clashes at an animal rights demonstration in Oxford saw protesters break through metal barricades and hurl missiles at riot police…
The Oxford Mail, 16th January 2006
The demonstration did not pass without incident. Individuals hurled abuse at police, accusing them of traumatizing police horses.
The Oxford Student, 17th January 2006
The police officer who oversaw the demonstration also noted that a lawful protest (as had been discussed with the organisers) should not involve participants wearing masks to conceal their identity and the removal of barriers put there to ensure public safety.
Nor should they include unsettling words such as those heard from SPEAK’s main man:
Mel Broughton, spokesman for animal rights group Speak, told the crowd: “Now it is time to fight. We must take this chance, we must do what is necessary – and if that means some of us being arrested, then so be it.
“The time has come for fighting, not talking. If we need to, we have got to tear that place down with our bare hands.
“You have got every opportunity to enter this city any time of day or night and they won’t stop you. They are going to have to worry about what will happen next.”
Mr Broughton told police: “Everybody who works at this university has made a fundamental mistake and you really are going to regret what you have done today.
“If we have to go to prison, then so be it. We are going to fight like we have never fought before.”
The Oxford Mail, 16th January 2006
SPEAK also claim to have two audio clips that:
finally explode the myth that Thames Valley Police are an impartial police force. The audio clips clearly illustrate that the confrontation that ensued on Saturday can be blamed solely on the disgraceful behaviour of Thames Valley Police and that Thames Valley Police are a force exclusively under the influence of Oxford University!
SPEAK
If anyone manages to make out what the muffled and mumbling (and unattributed) voice is actually saying then please let us know!
<Wrap up...>
January 16, 2006 | Monday
Veggie icon condones violence
By
Zebedee | Filed in
Extremism /
Former frontman of the 80s band The Smiths, (Saint) Morrissey is a well-known animal rights sympathiser. He spent much of the 90s exiled in the USA, where for some reason it’s a minor celebrity cause: he was winner of last year’s PetA Linda McCartney Memorial Award, no less. Now, a fan’s question to the online Morrissey fanzine True To You asks him for his “message to the world to make life better for animals on our planet.” Unfortunately, the best that Morrissey could come up with was:
"I support the efforts of the Animal Rights Militia in England and I understand why fur-farmers and so-called laboratory scientists are repaid with violence - it is because they deal in violence themselves and it’s the only language they understand - the same principals that apply to war. You reach a point where you cannot reason with people. This is why the Animal Rights Militia and the Hunt Saboteurs exist. They are usually very intelligent people who are forced to act because the law is shameful or amoral."
After some barbed comments about carnivorous celebrity chefs Jamie Oliver and Clarissa Dickson Wright, and an attack on hunting, he concludes “Everybody needs to hate something, it seems.”
In a Sunday Times article, Clarissa Dickson Wright responded “He’s probably cracked from a lack of animal protein,” while a spokesperson for HLS said “People can have whatever opinions they want, but to condone and encourage acts of violence is entirely wrong and should not be allowed in a democracy.”
January 04, 2006 | Wednesday
Latest on PeTA killings
By
Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
For those of you following the PeTA-kills-animals-instead-of-’liberating’-them saga (see previous blogs, PeTA - animal killers and PeTA = hypocritical bull***t, say Penn & Teller), some interesting points are made on CNN’s programme Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees.
You can read the transcript or watch the video.
January 03, 2006 | Tuesday
Pot calls the kettle black
By
Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
Ah, the hyposcrisy continues… SPEAK has another pop at Oxford, despite intimidation being one the extremist group’s own tactics.
It has become clear that some of the arrogant and self interested members of this institution now believe that they can use intimidation as a weapon to stifle free speech…
SPEAK
December 19, 2005 | Monday
PeTA - animal killers
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Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
So, let me get this straight… PeTA – the self-styled saviour campaigning against animal cruelty and for the total liberation of animals (including ‘freeing’ pets from their oppression) – has been killing cute, furry animals?!?!
What a surprise… unless you are already familiar with their dubious tactics. For a glimpse of these, check out the Penn and Teller blog entry below (btw, thanks for posting that Zebedee I found P&T very informative).
Two PeTA employees (not merely members, but people actually paid to ‘save’ animals) are facing 22 felony counts each of cruelty to animals as well as three counts each of obtaining property by false pretence.
The cruellest irony is that many of these strays would have found a home if PeTA had left them alone…
Dr. Pat Proctor of AAH [Ahoskie Animal Hospital] said Cook and Hinkle had promised to give the animals a good home. However, the mother cat and her two kittens handed over by Dr. Proctor to the PeTA pair were later discovered among the 31 dead animals linked to Hinkle’s and Cook’s possession on the day of their arrest.
Proctor said the cat and two kittens were all in good health and were adoptable.
Roanoke-Chowan New Herald
Unbelievably, PeTA Campaign Coordinator, Chris Link, tried to defend PeTA’s involvement in the killing of an estimated 12,000 animals…
… PeTA “killed over 80 percent of the flesh-and-blood animals it took in” in 2004 and has euthanized more than 12,400 animals since 1998.
Link did not dispute the charges, but defended his group’s actions. “[A]t this point because of the overpopulation, because enough people aren’t spaying and neutering animals and they’re over-breeding ... at this point it is in their best interest to be euthanized,” Link said.
“If they would have died at that shelter they would have been inhumanely gassed with CO2 [carbon dioxide],” Link said. “So the way that we did it was humane. We mainly euthanized them.”
Link added that PeTA does not “support dumping animals the way that they were disposed of, but they were killed in a humane way.”
Townhall.com
Now, I don’t even know where to start with this nonsense.
1) Animal shelters don’t use CO2 to euthanize animals, they use injections just like vets do.
2) Even if they did use CO2 it would actually be a pretty humane way to go as you just go to sleep.
3) Link doesn’t say what method they used to ‘mainly’ euthanize the animals (and I seriously doubt that their drugs and equipment is better than those found in the legitimate animal shelters) so we can’t judge how humane or otherwise it is…
4) … or exactly what he means by ‘mainly’. Was each animal almost euthanized and then hit with blunt instrument to finish it off? Or did they euthanize the majority (by their unspecified method), and have a BBQ with the rest?
To cap it all, PeTA has HUGE amounts of money, especially with their celebrity endorsements (I’m all for celebs trying to do good, I just wish they’d check out exactly what it is they’re putting their names too). So I’d speculate that PeTA could better serve the animals’ ‘best interests’ by spaying and neutering them themselves, and funding animal shelters so that the animals can be looked after.
So where is their money spent since it’s not going on animal welfare? Big advertising campaigns; massive headquarters that any global capitalist corporation would be proud of; and donations worth thousands of dollars to animal rights extremists for legal fees to defend serious crime like arson – even though PeTA supposedly doesn’t support the use of violence (again, check out the Penn and Teller video). They also fund deliberate attempts at misinformation as recently highlighted by the US’s Center for Consumer Freedom.
Now, I wouldn’t normally side with the CCF but I was pleased to hear that they’d disrupted a PeTA demonstration in front of the US Department of Agriculture meant to protest the sale of chicken products, read about it here. In a spirited attempt at misinformation, PeTA were claiming on the basis of no scientific evidence whatsoever that you can get bird flu by eating chickens.
I’m sure there must be a law against deliberate misinformation and attempting to scaremonger, and if there isn’t then there should be. Perhaps we should all be visiting the CCF’s website to sign the petition to revoke PeTA’s tax free status – the money could go towards genuine information campaigns to promote sensible dialogue around the animal research issue.
<Wrap up...>
December 16, 2005 | Friday
Oxford balaclavas
Do SPEAK know something we don’t? How many activists in balaclavas are they expecting to recruit?
Backlash against extremism continues
By
Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
Well, looks like disgust about ARE (animal rights extremist) activities round Darley Oaks has spread around the globe – the latest article I’ve seen is from Australia:
GLADYS Hammond was a kindly woman who lived in the English county of Staffordshire. When she died seven years ago, her family buried her in a quiet village churchyard, a fitting resting place for this elderly, unassuming woman. But then in October this year, her remains were dug up and stolen. Why?
Because her daughter was married to a man who owned a share in a farm that bred guinea pigs for medical research…
… The incident was the trump card in a campaign of abuse and intimidation by animal rights extremists. For six years, the family that ran the farm and those connected to them had been subjected to death threats, hate mail, malicious phone calls, hoax bombs and arson attacks. Suppliers were similarly targeted: one was hit by a brick thrown through a window and endured an anonymous campaign that he was a paedophile.
But the theft of Gladys Hammond’s remains was the last straw. After 30 years of breeding guinea pigs, the family decided to stop.
The Age, 14th December 2005
The article then points out that the activities of the ARE are not stopping the use of animals in research – their avowed aim – but encouraging UK research to move to other countries. Since the UK is the most tightly regulated system in the world, by definition research conducted elsewhere will be under lighter legislative control.
Strange then that the closure of Darley Oaks should have been hailed as a victory by ARE – instead of lab animals being covered by the most stringent laws in the world, they may soon have less protection.
<Wrap up...>
December 13, 2005 | Tuesday
Compassion or compulsion?
In a live web chat on the Channel 4 website last night, long-time animal rights activist John Curtin said he wanted a gentler world, based on love and compassion. But he implied, without actually saying it directly, that he is determined to use violence, intimidation and harassment if necessary to achieve it. How big a contradiction does there have to be for John to start to notice?
John also said that he doesn’t agree with other groups like anti-abortionists and Islamic jihadists, just acting on their beliefs. So it’s only the animal rights extremists then John? Thank you for clarifying that. How thoughtful.
Megaphones
Oh no, the protesters are here again!
Again the Science area of Oxford University is flooded with protesters, police and a lot of facemasks and video cameras. Why does this minority feel it has to cause such a fuss over something it simply don’t understand?
Of course I can’t answer that, but how about regulating the sale of megaphones so that people would have to do an IQ test before purchase? At least we would not have to endure the stream of drivel and ‘facts’ at high volume. Why do we need to hear about the 5-week-old kittens that Oxford University apparently “murdered” in 2002? Something uninteresting and irrelevant does not gain relevance by increasing the volume.
December 12, 2005 | Monday
An attack of conscience at SPEAK?
By
Tigger | Filed in
Extremism /
I’d be interested to know what has prompted the toning down of SPEAK’s latest suggestion that their members phone up to complain about an Oxford University department Christmas party.
Recently, SPEAK have incited two of these phone-ins. The first was aggressive and self-aggrandising:
SPEAK has insisted from the outset of this campaign that we plan to highlight exactly the sort of people that work inside the animal labs at Oxford. We believe that those companies dealing with such people have a right to know exactly who they are doing business with in order for them to make an informed decision. Animal abuse at the university exists because of the lies told by those that work in those departments torturing animals and animal abuse will continue as long as such people are allowed to peddle their lies. SPEAK will never allow those lies to go unchallenged despite the best attempts by Oxford University to muzzle us in the Courts.
We also said: nothing Oxford University does will escape our attention and we meant it!
SPEAK
This mini-campaign was a failure: according to the Oxford Mail the party went ahead as planned and although four protestors were allowed to continue until 9pm, they left by 7:30pm. That’s commitment for you!
The landlord should be commended for his refusal to be cowed;
The landlord of the pub, who asked not to be named, said he had received around a dozen threatening or obscene phonecalls during the day.
He did not give details about the nature of them but said they were not pleasant.
He said: “I had to take the phone off the hook - it was intimidation. The animal rights protestors were at the top of the alley, challenging me to come outside.
Oxford Mail, 8th December 2005
Despite the utter failure of this tactic, SPEAK had another call to arms (well, call to phones) about a second Christmas Party. This one was notably less aggressive, and with much stronger weasel words;
Please do keep any calls polite, the intention of any communication should be to inform those working at this establishment exactly who they will be serving on the 16th December, nothing more.
SPEAK
They almost sound genuine – perhaps someone has realised that inciting malicious communications masquerading as ‘polite phone calls’ may now be a serious criminal offence?
<Wrap up...>
November 30, 2005 | Wednesday
Victory at Oxford University. But for whom?
Have SPEAK been caught on the hop with the announcement from Oxford University that work is resuming on the research centre? A recent post on the SPEAK website urges its supporters to “make 2006 a year to remember, a year in which we see Oxford University abandon their plans”, and claims that victory “is tantalisingly close”.
Ho Hum. What about the rest of 2005? We shall see!
Oxford University research building gets green light
By
Zebedee | Filed in
Extremism /
Great news! Oxford University has just announced that building work has restarted on its research centre. The work stopped in July last year when the main contractor pulled out because of intimidation and harassment by extremists.
The University’s Registrar, Mr David Holmes, said: “Completing the project will be good for animal welfare, good for medical research and good for the treatment of life-threatening conditions all over the world.” I couldn’t agree more, and I’m sure most others feel the same - surveys have shown that most people can see the need for animals in medical research and abhor violence in the name of animal rights. And completion of the building will also be good for local residents and students who, as GeorginaTheGiraffe blogged recently here, are heartily sick of the antics of the antis.
Dr Simon Festing, Executive Director of RDS, said this morning:
"The medical research community welcomes the restart of the Oxford building project. This research centre is vitally important for the future of biomedical research in the UK. The half-finished building stands as a symbol of our ability to continue essential animal research in the face of intimidation and harassment by animal rights extremists.”
“The government and criminal justice system are finally tackling extremism so that we can continue to use animals in research to overcome serious medical conditions like stroke, Parkinson’s disease, cystic fibrosis and malaria. The new Oxford research centre will provide top class facilities for such research, and also for the animals that will be used, a point that the extremists apparently choose to ignore."