What's Wrong with Fur?
Fur these days is looking to be more and more of a fashion trend, but much to the average consumer's ignorance and belief that the 'real' fur industry is dead, it is in fact a billion dollar industry in several countries including Canada and the US. Rabbit, fox, mink and raccoon, just to name a few, are being caged, tortured and killed in gruesome factory farms for their fur to make various products for our use such as fur trim on coats, hats, gloves, toys, key rings etc. Shockingly, domestic cats and dogs have been added to this list for their coats and skin, with China as the world's lead exporter.
Why are they doing this? Greed. It is cheaper for them to use the real thing than to create 'fake' or 'faux' fur and the labeling laws in these countries are voluntary so they do not have to indicate to the consumer at all what the material is made from. Sure there is fake fur out there, but to the average consumer who perhaps a) is unaware that real fur is being traded, b) wouldn't believe that this is going on and c) couldn't necessarily tell the difference between the real thing and the fake stuff. Animal fur however is pretty obvious, especially the softer fur of rabbits, cats, fox and minks and would be very hard to recreate with man-made materials.
Why buy into the cruelty? Fur used or worn in any form promotes fur and the fur trade as a whole.
If you are like me, the sight of fur is a strong reminder of just how callous and cruel to animals people can be.
If you're as disgusted as I am—and I hope you are—please read on. We need your help to get the "No Fur" message out to friends, family members, colleagues, and even strangers about why buying and wearing even a little bit of fur must stop. Furriers and their cohorts in the fashion industry are doing everything that they can to promote fur nowadays, sensing a critical turning point in public opinion. They've even gone so far as disguising the species of the animals the fur came from or mislabeling the fur as fake.
When someone—anyone—asks you what's wrong with wearing fur, please tell him or her: everything!
Please let people know that there is not a single federal law that protects animals killed for fur in the U.S. This means that fur farmers get away with cramming minks, foxes, raccoons, and chinchillas into tiny, filthy wire cages—where they stay for months or years, unable to run or play or enjoy any freedom, family, or friendship. They are commonly exposed to snow and sleet in winter and scorching heat in summer and fed slop instead of proper food. They are denied water, and they are killed in frightening and painful ways. Animals raised for fur suffer poisoning, gassing, neck-breaking, and anal electrocution.
To get "wild fur," trappers set metal traps to catch lynx, rabbits, coyotes, foxes, raccoons, and wolves and leave them in traps to suffer for days—in all types of weather. The animals grow increasingly hungry and thirsty before some trappers even try to kill them by jumping on their chests. Many are skinned alive.
Even dogs and cats are killed for their fur—especially for fur collars, hood trims, glove linings, and the like. PETA's undercover investigation into the Chinese fur trade revealed unimaginable cruelty. Millions of dogs and cats are bludgeoned, boiled, strangled with wire nooses, and bled to death before they are skinned for their fur. Imagine if your beloved dog or cat were stolen and killed to be made into fur trinkets or fur trim for American consumers! It's unthinkable, yet it happens.
The fact that it is illegal to import dog or cat fur into the U.S. hasn't stopped this part of the fur trade. The garments are simply mislabeled—marked as fox, raccoon, or some exotic-sounding species. China supplies more than half of the finished fur garments that end up on clothing racks in the United States.
If someone buys any fur whatsoever—even the tiniest scrap—he or she could be wearing a dog or a cat. Either way, the consumer is wearing the remains of an animal who was tortured.
When you're asked what's wrong with fur, please tell people—and keep talking. Explain that every fur coat, lining, or trim represents the immense suffering of several dozen animals—including "trash catch" like dogs and opossums—and is made from the damaged skins of animals who struggled when someone tried to insert electric wires into their genitals. That's right, several dozen—just for one garment!
With so many alternatives available to consumers, why would anyone wear fur? Why would any thinking person perpetuate the abuse and murder of millions of dogs, cats, foxes, minks, chinchillas, raccoons, and other creatures?
For more information, go to www.peta.org or www.furisdead.com







I was just doing research
I was just doing research for a paper on trapping and ran onto this blog. I've trapped my whole life, and your ignorance is simply mind-boggling. Wake up and get the facts before you shoot your mouth off.