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Welcome to the Jeffers Notes with John Jeffers, only on Contra Radio Network. In episode 12, John Jeffers delves into the latest political landscape as a new poll shows Donald Trump leading Kamala Harris by a notable margin. He discusses the potential implications if the Democrats decide to replace Biden with Harris for the 2024 presidential ticket. Jeffers also addresses the controversial Yulin Dog Meat Festival in China and its declining popularity, despite ongoing animal rights violations. In addition, he highlights a recent gaffe by President Joe Biden, which has sparked reactions from both social media and political commentators. Tune in for a candid and unfiltered discussion on these pressing issues, and don't forget to subscribe to stay updated with the latest episodes of Jeffers Notes.
Welcome to the Jeffers Notes with John Jeffers, only on Contra Radio Network. In episode 12, John Jeffers delves into the latest political landscape as a new poll shows Donald Trump leading Kamala Harris by a notable margin. He discusses the potential implications if the Democrats decide to replace Biden with Harris for the 2024 presidential ticket. Jeffers also addresses the controversial Yulin Dog Meat Festival in China and its declining popularity, despite ongoing animal rights violations. In addition, he highlights a recent gaffe by President Joe Biden, which has sparked reactions from both social media and political commentators. Tune in for a candid and unfiltered discussion on these pressing issues, and don't forget to subscribe to stay updated with the latest episodes of Jeffers Notes. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/contra-radio-network/support
Empowering and Inspiring Women Globally- Dianna Bellerose Show
Visit Amazon's Diana Bellerose Page My mother's book of poems https://amzn.to/3eoy8Sp Spotify Dianna Bellerose Music iTunes Dianna Bellerose Music This crime against innocent dogs and cats has to be stopped forever, it is absolute horror and there is nothing to be celebrated. Please be the voice for the voicless and send email to the Chinese goverment.
A group of 31 dogs rescued from meat breeding farms in China arrived in the US to begin their new lives in American homes, an animal welfare group said Tuesday. The pack of rescued pooches were the first to arrive in the US in over a year, due to a temporary government ban on importing canines from abroad that was sparked by fears of a rabies outbreak, according to the China Rescue Dogs organization. “To know these dogs now have a second chance at life and will experience love for the first time, makes all the time spent on a project like this worthwhile,” the group's Vice President, Brandy Cherven, said in a press release. “They were being sent to the slaughterhouse when we stepped in and saved them.” The dogs were rescued April where owners were planning on selling them to slaughterhouses and the Yulin Dog Meat Festival. Over 10 dog rescue organizations aided in the effort to bring the pups to the US. They spent the last three weeks in Vancouver, Canada waiting for approval to cross into the US. Sixteen of the dogs are Golden Retrievers and 15 are Frenchies and Pugs, the group said. They did not give details on what the future holds for the dogs, but the group makes efforts to “provide them with loving homes,” they said on their website. “This truly was a global effort with teams from China, Canada and the United States all coming together to save these dogs from slaughter,” Jill Stewart, President and Founder of China Rescue Dogs, saidThe CDC's dog ban was due to an increased risk of the canine rabies virus variant. During this period, organizations like China Rescue Dogs brought their furry friends into Canada to be adopted. Canada's own ban on dogs — restricting street dogs from over 100 countries — will kick in Wednesday Sept. 28. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/world-voices/support
The Yulin Dog Meat Festival just ended, but that doesn't mean we can't keep talking about the dog meat trade! Join us in this short episode as we talk about the annual event and the general impact of the dog meat trade.
The Yulin dog eating festival sparks enragement and controversy every year with a strong global outcry for its banishment. But, in all honesty, is it really that bad? How is it any different than what every other country is doing every single day? By Emily Moran Barwick at BiteSizeVegan.org. Original post: https://bitesizevegan.org/ethics/why-the-yulin-dog-meat-festival-isnt-a-big-deal/ Bite Size Vegan was founded on the belief that everyone deserves access to solid, factual information on issues impacting their health, our planet, society, and the lives of other sentient beings. The website, videos, resources and speeches serve to provide this access in formats tailored to modern methods of information consumption—digestible and approachable, yet backed by rigorous research. Believing in the power of an informed public, Emily provides free, open-access to right-to-know information in a digestible format. Bite Size Vegan fills a unique space in vegan activism & advocacy by bringing together the accessibility of engaging social-media content with the integrity and depth of research-backed, transparently-cited educational information. By helping people make the connection that veganism—far from an extreme way of life—is simply aligning our actions with the values we already have, Bite Size Vegan strives to end the pervasive exploitation of non-human animals. How to support the podcast: Share with others. Recommend the podcast on your social media. Follow/subscribe to the show wherever you listen. Buy some vegan/plant based merch: https://www.plantbasedbriefing.com/shop Follow Plant Based Briefing on social media: Twitter: @PlantBasedBrief YouTube: YouTube.com/PlantBasedBriefing Facebook: Facebook.com/PlantBasedBriefing LinkedIn: Plant Based Briefing Podcast Instagram: @PlantBasedBriefing #vegan #plantbased #veganpodcast #plantbasedpodcast #plantbasedbriefing #bitesizevegan #animalrights #dogs #dogmeat #yulin #yulinfestival #stopyulin #yulindogmeatfestival #stopyulinforever #endyulin
Elizabeth Coe joins us to tell Hansums story as a Yulin Dog Meat Festival rescue, how he came to the UK and some of the amazing charity work she has been doing.If you want to help, please go to the Angels for Animals website : http://angelsforanimals.org.uk/Trigger warning : This episode touches on animal torture and rape.---A Create Podcast See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Bridget and Sydney are joined by John Dalley to discuss the dog meat trade in Asia and how activists can effectively intervene to create change and save lives. John Dalley is the Co-Founder and President of Soi Dog International.Topics Include:Understanding the supply and demand of dog meat in Asian countries. Effective and ineffective interventions. Why activism needs to focus on changing norms and laws. Misconceptions westerners have about the dog meat trade. The infamous Yulin Dog Meat Festival. Fundraising scams. And much more...Resources Mentioned:Soi Dog Foundation – https://www.soidog.org/Want to connect with us? Follow us on social media!Email – podcast@cuddly.comInstagram @welovecuddlyTwitter @welovecuddlyFacebook @welovecuddlyhttps://cuddly.com/
Pet-Talks: Klartext – der Interview-Podcast von DeineTierwelt
Im chinesischen Yulin fand auch in diesem Jahr wieder das umstrittene „Yulin Dog Meat Festival“ statt – trotz zahlreicher Proteste. Tierschützer Sebastian Margenfeld engagiert sich mit seinem Verein „Animal Hope and Wellness e.V.“ gegen die barbarischen Zustände und den Verzehr von Hundefleisch in China. In dieser Folge von „Pet-Talks: Klartext“ spricht er mit Felix darüber, wie er versucht die grausame Situation in China zu ändern, wie das Festival in diesem Jahr abgelaufen ist – und warum es nicht verboten wird.
This week on The Pet Buzz, Petrendologist Charlotte Reed and Michael Fleck, DVM, talk with Dr. Peter Li of the Humane Society International about how the Coronavirus Pandemic has affected the Yulin Lychee and Dog Meat Festival; with Doug Shupe about traveling taking a vacation with Fido and Fifi this summer; and with SSG Trent Tweeddale and his fight with an alligator to save his dog's life.
In this episode Joe and Evan discuss Yulin Dog Meat Festival, Faroe Islands Whale Slaughter Festival, how to shave your balls, and ordering dirty tissues to get sick on your own time.
In Episode 6, Two Reasonable Vegans take on the Yulin Dog Meat Festival. This festival takes place in Yulin, a city in the Guangxi province of China, from June 21-30 to mark the Summer Solstice. It’s estimated that as many as 10,000 dogs and cats are savagely beaten, tortured, and slaughtered for consumption every year during this barbaric and vile event. However, the outrage that the Yulin Dog Meat Festival generates in Western cultures is so hypocritical that it borders on satire. Bringing this to light, 2RV questions: Why only dogs? Why does the Western world only seem to care when it’s dogs being brutally slaughtered, but not other animals? A collective blind eye is being turned to the cows, pigs, sheep, chicken, and turkeys that are also being barbarically slaughtered—hundreds of thousands of them, every single day. It’s noted that there are a portion of protesters at the Yulin Dog Meat Festival who are also anti-slaughterhouse activists, but there is also a large portion of protesters who will shamelessly eat a hamburger for lunch right after protesting or signing a petition to abolish the Yulin Dog Meat Festival. Listen in as Glenn and Marty expose this hypocrisy. Yulin runs for one week out of the year, and while the West seems to vehemently condemn what happens there, it also fails to acknowledge the atrocity of animal slaughter that is happening right here at home, everyday.
John, Jamie, & Madden sit on their monstrous couch for their first live stream podcast. Listen as they tell the story of their new dog, Mochi, whose mother was rescued from the Yulin Dog Meat Festival, their schizophrenic wall, and Scobie getting explosive diarrhea on his face.
“I’m a huge believer in humanity. I wake up and look at my children and I see something that’s so pure; at that age they don’t know what violence is; and they don’t know how to hate yet. And I think that is what inspires me to do the things that I do.”Marc ChingThis week's guest is a straight up hero.One of the most courageous and committed animal rights activists I have ever met, Marc Ching (@animalhopeandwellness) is the founder of Animal Hope and Wellness Foundation, a non-profit devoted to the rescue and rehabilitation of dogs abused and often tortured at the hands of the Asian dog meat trade.A family man, successful small business owner and animal lover who has been treating dogs (and humans) for years as a holistic nutritionist, in 2011 Marc began using his skills to rescue and rehabilitate abused dogs in need and place them into homes — work he does primarily in and around his home in Los Angeles.But Marc's evolution into an ardent animal rights activist didn't begin until 2015, when he heard about something called the Yulin Dog Meat Festival in China.He understood that dog meat is simply part of the regional cuisine across many parts of Asia. What he didn't understand were the reports of mistreatment and abuse. So he decided to infiltrate the festival to learn more.What Marc discovered was an utterly horrific, systemic practice of torture far more pervasive than anything he could have previously imagined.Life for Marc would never be the same again.According to the Humane Society, 30 million dogs are slaughtered every year across Asia with an estimated 10 million per year in China alone. A significant portion of these animals are brutally tortured — often burned and boiled alive prior to death — a practice attributable to the bizarre and misguided belief that tortured dog meat tastes better and provides enhanced health benefits.Let that sink in for a moment.Attending Yulin transformed Marc from an essentially normal, suburban family man into a man obsessed. Over the last two years, Marc has devoted all his free time and resources to combating the Asian dog meat trade. Posing undercover as as a wealthy dog meat buyer, he has traveled extensively across China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, South Korea and Indonesia to document and expose the inhuman practices of this barbaric industry.This is dangerous work. Marc has been chased, harassed, beat up and even shot. But to date, he has saved over 1,000 dogs, many on his own dime. More importantly, his work has been essential in catalyzing global awareness of dog meat trade practices, which in turn has led to legislative and regulatory reform.There is something undoubtedly heroic about Marc. But it's a heroism that comes at a cost. This work has traumatized him. Perhaps even permanently damaged him. He's made peace with the trade-off. Maybe that makes him even more heroic. I don't know.Mark's work has been extensively profiled in outlets that include the New York Times, Forbes, Entrepreneur, The Hollywood Reporter, The Telegraph, The Independent, Buzzfeed, and even Breitbart.It's an honor to celebrate the difficult work that Marc does. My hope is that this conversation will raise additional awareness around wrongs we must collectively work to correct.NOTE: The subject matter of today's conversation is disturbing. It's an emotional conversation that traverses sensitive issues. That said, I believe it's an important conversation to have as conscious, global citizens. A conversation I don’t think we can or should shy away from.On that note, I encourage all of you to listen and listen with an open ... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Bark And Swagger - Pet Fashion on Pet Life Radio (PetLifeRadio.com)
Marc Ching is a superhero for dogs. With a non-profit in L.A., called Animal Hope and Wellness, where he rescues, rehabilitates and rehomes severely abused Los Angeles dogs to his under-cover rescue and awareness mission into the most depraved dog slaughterhouses in Asia, Ching is risking his life and health to make sure the world knows how these animals are suffering. You can help. Discover his story, learn more about the industry, spread the word and contact your Congressmen and women about Resolution 752 to ban the Yulin Dog Meat Festival in China. Questions or Comments? Email Jody at jody@petliferadio.com More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - Risking His Life to Save Meat Industry Dogs in Asia on Pet Life Radio
Marc Ching is the owner of The Petstaurant located in Sherman Oaks, CA where he makes species-appropriate meals for both dogs and cats. He founded Animal Hope & Wellness Foundation five years ago so he could start rescuing locally abused animals. Just last year, he added another cause to the Foundation: conquering the Dog Meat Trade in Asia. Marc recently took a trip to China to save 1000 dogs and shut down numerous dog slaughterhouses during the Yulin Dog Meat Festival. He has traveled multiple times to Asia and has risked his life to bring awareness to the governments of the inhumane treatment of dogs. For the show notes page for this episode please visit: theasianamericanvoice.com/podcast/20 "Like" our Facebook page for updates on future shows and other resources: https://www.facebook.com/TheAsianAmericanVoice/
The Bearded Vegans finds hosts Paul and Andy in a discussion dissecting all things vegan. News, reviews, interviews and in depth discussion of issues within the […]
It's that time of the year again when the Yulin Dog Meat Festival sets off a national debate on animal welfare and the limits of so-called tradition in modern day. However, the festival, starting every year June 21 on the summer solstice, in Yulin, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, will still go ahead, though perhaps a little bit quietly this year.
www.DogCastRadio.comIn this show, Dr Patrick Mahaney has the advice you need if your dog has allergies, and Sally Gutteridge shares 10 good reasons not to copy Cesar Milan. Plus the DogCast Radio News, and how you can add your voice to the protest against the Yulin Dog Meat Festival.
www.DogCastRadio.comIn this show, Dr Patrick Mahaney has the advice you need if your dog has allergies, and Sally Gutteridge shares 10 good reasons not to copy Cesar Milan. Plus the DogCast Radio News, and how you can add your voice to the protest against the Yulin Dog Meat Festival.