Friday, June 29, 2007
Monday, June 25, 2007
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Notes... and more notes
I completed some more notes today i have answered 7 foundation questions, will continue into to marrow intill i am done as of now i ahve used 7 sources, my interview, book, and 5 websites, i need to get an article.
Friday, June 8, 2007
Notes again
Ive have complted more notes today need to answer about 5 more questions. Will update next week.
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Interview
Today i had my interview with Ron Smith a Humane Society Police Officer, he gave me some very valuable information and it was nice meeting him.
Notes Con.
i began my notes today looked at a couple sources to answer some foundation questions. Still working to answer the other ones.
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Notes
Today i updated my essential and foundation question, i began to start my note taking after listing to giudelines from miss fossum. I decided to try to answer my questions with my sources then site them.
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Update
I have not blogged everday so i want to update how far along i am.
Im moving along fine, i got two books from the library that are usefull sources of information, I am thinking about more resources. I have my topic down pat and im looking into more information for my project.
Im moving along fine, i got two books from the library that are usefull sources of information, I am thinking about more resources. I have my topic down pat and im looking into more information for my project.
Friday, June 1, 2007
Glossary
William Faulkner
1. Animal cruelty- Acts of violence or neglect against animals are considered animal cruelty. Some examples are lack of food, water or shelter.
2. Animal Hoarding or Collecting: a disorder in which people keep a large number of animals sometimes more than 100 at a time and neglects to care for the animals and the home environment, collectors are usually in extreme denial about the situation. Technically, hoarding
is considered a crime, and a form of neglect.
3. Branding: burning an identifying mark onto the body of an animal using an extremely hot iron stamp, or brand seared hard into the animal’s flesh for a few seconds without anesthesia. Ranchers use brands to tell their cattle and hogs from those owned by others.
4. Broilers: Chickens raised for meat consumption on factory farms. These chickens have been selected or bred so that their bodies grow very rapidly. Learn more about efforts to protect animals in factory farms.
5. Canned Hunts: The canned hunt is a practice in when hunters pay fees to shoot and kill exotic animals in a confined where they are unable to run away.
6. Crush Act: A federal law that prohibits people from creating, selling or possessing depictions of animal cruelty with the intent for personal/commercial gain.
7. Ear Cropping: The cropping of a purebred dog's ears to conform to a breed standard. Although this unnecessary surgery is performed by some veterinarians, it is done by untrained individuals, without anesthesia, in dirty environments.
8. Feral Cat: A cat too poorly socialized to be handled and who cannot be placed into a typical pet home; a small population of free-roaming cats.
9. Neglect: The failure to provide an animal with the most basic of requirements of food, water, shelter and veterinary care.
10. Killer Buyers: Men who travel from horse auction to horse auction, buying any horse they can, Then eventually sell these animals to slaughterhouses for human consumption, but regularly subject horses to cruel and inhumane treatment such as beating them, depriving them of food and water.
1. Animal cruelty- Acts of violence or neglect against animals are considered animal cruelty. Some examples are lack of food, water or shelter.
2. Animal Hoarding or Collecting: a disorder in which people keep a large number of animals sometimes more than 100 at a time and neglects to care for the animals and the home environment, collectors are usually in extreme denial about the situation. Technically, hoarding
is considered a crime, and a form of neglect.
3. Branding: burning an identifying mark onto the body of an animal using an extremely hot iron stamp, or brand seared hard into the animal’s flesh for a few seconds without anesthesia. Ranchers use brands to tell their cattle and hogs from those owned by others.
4. Broilers: Chickens raised for meat consumption on factory farms. These chickens have been selected or bred so that their bodies grow very rapidly. Learn more about efforts to protect animals in factory farms.
5. Canned Hunts: The canned hunt is a practice in when hunters pay fees to shoot and kill exotic animals in a confined where they are unable to run away.
6. Crush Act: A federal law that prohibits people from creating, selling or possessing depictions of animal cruelty with the intent for personal/commercial gain.
7. Ear Cropping: The cropping of a purebred dog's ears to conform to a breed standard. Although this unnecessary surgery is performed by some veterinarians, it is done by untrained individuals, without anesthesia, in dirty environments.
8. Feral Cat: A cat too poorly socialized to be handled and who cannot be placed into a typical pet home; a small population of free-roaming cats.
9. Neglect: The failure to provide an animal with the most basic of requirements of food, water, shelter and veterinary care.
10. Killer Buyers: Men who travel from horse auction to horse auction, buying any horse they can, Then eventually sell these animals to slaughterhouses for human consumption, but regularly subject horses to cruel and inhumane treatment such as beating them, depriving them of food and water.
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