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Topics in the News: Animal Rights


Donald Trump on Animal Rights: (Principles & Values Sep 14, 2019)
I don't have time for political correctness

[In 2016,] debate moderator and Fox News host Megyn Kelly asked, "One of the things people love about you is you speak your mind and you don't use a politicians filter. However, that is not without its downsides , in particular when it comes to women. You've called women fat pigs, disgusting slobs, and disgusting animals'."

Then Trump cuts her off, "Only Rosie O'Donnell." The studio audience, mostly Republican honchos, loved it. Kelly quickly corrected him, "No it wasn't. You once said to a contestant on Celebrity Apprentice, 'It would be a pretty picture to see her on her knees.' Does that sound to you like a man we should elect as president?" Then Trump launched into a tirade. "I don't have time for total political correctness. And to be honest with you, this country doesn't either. This country is in big trouble. What I say often times, it's fun, it's kidding. And honestly Megyn, If you don't like it, I'm sorry. I've been very nice to you."

Click for Donald Trump on other issues.   Source: Piety & Power, by Tom LoBianco, p.228-9

Julian Castro on Animal Rights: (Environment Sep 4, 2019)
PAW: connect the dots for Protecting Animals and Wildlife

Q: You propose setting aside half of American land and oceans for wildlife, for biodiversity?

CASTRO: We actually need to undo the damage that this administration has done and then expand the lands that we're protecting in our country. We can do that. A few weeks ago, I put out something that we called PAW, Protecting Animals and Wildlife. And I have to be honest with y'all, some people when they heard that, were like, what? You're putting out a plan to protect animals and wildlife? It's not usually something that a lot of presidential candidates do. But again, we need to connect the dots. I've connected the dots of actually preserving more of our lands both for the benefit of wildlife and for our benefit to combat climate change. And so we would go back and reclassify places like Bear's Ear and other land that this administration has gone backward on, and then look for other land that we can also protect and preserve. And we need to do it. We need to do it and we can do it.

Click for Julian Castro on other issues.   Source: CNN Climate Crisis Town Hall marathon (10 Democrats)

Cory Booker on Animal Rights: (Environment Sep 4, 2019)
Deforestation of Amazon started long before current fires

Q: So many folks around the world watching horror recently as the Amazon burned in Brazil, and how illegal gold miners are ripping up the Peruvian Amazon. Your policy?

BOOKER: We may be noticing the fires but the crisis of the disappearing of rainforest on this planet have been happening every single day. More and more rainforest is being torn down, principally by the way for grazing lands and large international corporate animal agriculture and more. We have a crisis at a time that my plan calls for the planting of billions and billions of trees from urban areas that desperately need them to all throughout our nation. And by the way, they hear that number and they say, "oh, he's a big dreamer." We did it under FDR which was the last time we had the most massive period of reforestation from something that I'm going to reinvigorate, called the Civilian Conservation Corps.

Click for Cory Booker on other issues.   Source: CNN Climate Crisis Town Hall marathon (10 Democrats)

Tom Steyer on Animal Rights: (Environment Jul 2, 2019)
Regulate confinement of farm animals more humanely

Click for Tom Steyer on other issues.   Source: Ballotpedia.org on California ballot measure voting records

Marianne Williamson on Animal Rights: (Environment Apr 14, 2019)
Deal with factory farming by having environmentalists at EPA

We would have, if I were president of the United States, a world-class environmentalist at the head of the EPA. No more chemical company executives heading the EPA. No more oil company heading the EPA. We need to deal with the animal factory farming. Enough with these incremental changes here and these incremental changes there.
Click for Marianne Williamson on other issues.   Source: CNN Town Hall 2020 Democratic primary

Cory Booker on Animal Rights: (Environment Apr 11, 2019)
Not a crusade, but addresses animal agriculture

Booker is the only open vegan in the race and has commented previously on the environmental problems of "billions of people consuming industrially produced animal agriculture." Booker was the first vegetarian elected to the senate and has even made other members of Congress eat vegan food. Booker doesn't talk much about animal rights and has publicly framed his veganism as a "sustainability" issue. He has sponsored some worthy pieces of animal-protection legislation, but it's hardly a crusade.
Click for Cory Booker on other issues.   Source: Current Affairs magazine, 2019 interview series

Donald Trump on Animal Rights: (Immigration Feb 23, 2018)
Opposes Catch-&-Release laws; throw criminal aliens in jail

With our foreign partners we have helped charge or arrest more than 4,000 members of the savage gang, MS-13. They don't like guns. You know why? They're not painful enough. These are animals. They cut people. They cut them. They cut them up in little pieces, and they want them to suffer. And we take them into our country. Because our immigration laws are so bad, and when we catch them, it is called "catch and release." We have to, by law, catch them and then release them. Catch and release. And I can't get the Democrats and nobody has been able to for years to approve common-sense measures that when we catch these animal killers, we can lock them up, and throw away the keys. In 2017, our brave ICE officers arrested more than 100,000 criminal aliens who have committed tens of thousands of crimes. And, believe me, these are great people. They cannot--the laws are just against us. They're against safety. They don't make sense.
Click for Donald Trump on other issues.   Source: Speech at the 2018 CPAC Convention

Cory Booker on Animal Rights: (Environment Dec 31, 2016)
Rated 100% on all animal welfare ratings

Click for Cory Booker on other issues.   Source: Vote-Smart 2013-2016 Animals and Wildlife group ratings

Cory Booker on Animal Rights: (Environment Feb 16, 2016)
Vegetarian since 1992; vegan since 2014

I had been a vegetarian since 1992--a lifestyle choice that had started as an experiment. I realized that there was a lot about food I could never fully pin down. After poring over data on health, the environment, and how industrial agriculture treated animals, I thought I should try to go without meat. Did I need it? Was I the master of my desires, or had my desires mastered me? I decided to try being a vegetarian.

Within a couple of months I was astounded by the results. Active as I was, when I went vegetarian my body felt supercharged. I felt energy like I hadn't ever had before. My sleep improved, my recovery after workouts improved, and I felt lighter, stronger and more capable. I never looked back. 22 years later, after more reading, study and self-examination, I decided to try another experiment for the same reasons: from the day after Election Day 2014 until the end of that year, I would try being a vegan. It, too, would become an experiment that would stick.

Click for Cory Booker on other issues.   Source: United, by Senator Cory Booker, p.124-5

Donald Trump on Animal Rights: (Environment Sep 19, 2015)
My sons love trophy hunting, but I'm not a believer

Donald Trump has never served in public office so it is very difficult to find any information on Trump's views on animal rights. However, both of Donald Trump's sons are known trophy hunters and recently defended the killing of beloved Cecil the lion. The brothers themselves traveled to Zimbabwe to shoot, "a variety of animals, including an elephant, a crocodile, a kudu, a civet cat and water buck." After his sons went under fire for their big game hunts, Donald Trump reportedly told TMZ, "My sons love hunting. They're hunters and they've become good at it. I am not a believer in hunting and I'm surprised they like it."
Click for Donald Trump on other issues.   Source: TreeHouseAnimals.org on 2016 presidential hopefuls

Bernie Sanders on Animal Rights: (Environment Sep 5, 2015)
Advocate of animal welfare and humane treatment

Bernie Sanders is an advocate of animal welfare and ensuring animals' humane treatment. He has co-sponsored several pieces of legislation to protect the interests of animals and has recently received a 100 percent rating from the Humane Society Legislative Fund (HSLF):
Click for Bernie Sanders on other issues.   Source: 2016 grassroots campaign website FeelTheBern.org, "Issues"

Donald Trump on Animal Rights: (Civil Rights Aug 6, 2015)
Political correctness is country's problem, not my problem

Q: You don't use a politician's filter. However, that is not without its downsides, in particular, when it comes to women. You've called women you don't like "fat pigs, dogs, slobs, and disgusting animals."

TRUMP: Only Rosie O'Donnell!

Q: You once told a contestant on Celebrity Apprentice it would be a pretty picture to see her on her knees. Does that sound to you like the temperament of a man we should elect as president?

TRUMP: I think the big problem this country has is being politically correct. I don't have time for total political correctness. And to be honest with you, this country doesn't have time either. This country is in big trouble. We don't win anymore. We lose to China. We lose to Mexico both in trade and at the border. We lose to everybody. And frankly, what I say, and oftentimes it's fun, it's kidding. We have a good time. What I say is what I say. But you know, we need strength, we need energy, we need quickness and we need brain in this country to turn it around.

Click for Donald Trump on other issues.   Source: Fox News/Facebook Top Ten First Tier debate transcript

Donald Trump on Animal Rights: (Environment Mar 6, 2015)
Won't go to circuses that cut elephants due to animal rights

Trump tweet of 3/5/15: "Ringling Brothers is phasing out their elephants. I, for one, will never go again. They probably used the animal rights stuff to reduce costs."

Here is our investigation into what those poor elephants were experiencing:

"The Cruelest Show on Earth": Bullhooks. Whippings. Electric shocks. Three-day train rides without breaks. Our yearlong investigation rips the big top off how Ringling Bros. treats its elephants.

Click for Donald Trump on other issues.   Source: Mother Jones Fact-Checking of 2016 presidential hopefuls

Ted Cruz on Animal Rights: (Environment Mar 7, 2014)
OpEd: Tweeted joke picture of endangered tiger skin rug

Cruz enraged animal rights advocates after he tweeted, and posted on Facebook, a photo of him and Senator Mike Lee kneeling beside a tiger skin rug." Cruz stated, "Did a little shopping for the office with @SenMikeLee in Houston today."

The Washington Post noted that tigers are an endangered species and the mere act of making light of a skinned tiger set off an angry torrent of tweets and posts. Animal advocates sprung with catlike speed to condemn the senators. "If the rug is real, Ted Cruz's use of it reduces a majestic once-living being to a doormat," PETA said.

Cruz's spokeswoman responded that Cruz was kidding and that he had no intention of bringing the tiger back to Washington. Cruz and Lee simply ran across it in Houston and took a picture, she added. She followed up with an email to the paper stating that Cruz's office is not defensive of the picture. "It's unfortunate the same outrage isn't displayed by the left when it comes to defending the lives of unborn babies aborted every year."

Click for Ted Cruz on other issues.   Source: Cruzing to the White House, by Mario Broes, p.110

Ted Cruz on Animal Rights: (Environment Mar 7, 2014)
OpEd: Tweeted joke picture of endangered tiger skin rug

The Washington Post reported that Cruz is used to getting under people's skin but "what he probably thought was a harmless joke (or a deliberate poke at the left) enraged animal rights advocates after he tweeted, and posted on Facebook, a photo of him and Senator Mike Lee kneeling beside a tiger skin rug."

On his Twitter account Cruz stated: "Did a little shopping for the office with @SenMikeLee in Houston today."

Tigers are an endangered species and the mere act of making light of a skinned tiger set off an angry torrent of tweets and posts, "If the rug is real, Ted Cruz's use of it reduces a majestic once-living being to a doormat," PETA said.

Cruz's spokeswoman responded that Cruz was kidding and that he had no intention of bringing the tiger back to Washington. Cruz & Lee simply ran across it in Houston and took a picture, adding that Cruz is not defensive: "It's unfortunate the same outrage isn't displayed when it comes to defending the lives of unborn babies aborted every year."

Click for Ted Cruz on other issues.   Source: Cruzing to the White House, by Mario Broes, p. p.110

Steve Bullock on Animal Rights: (Civil Rights Apr 18, 2013)
Signed repeal of criminalization of gay sex under state law

SB 107: To revise deviate sexual conduct laws.

Analysis by The Atlantic: Under Montana's state legislation, gay sex, [before this bill, was] a felony punishable with up to 10 years in jail and a $50,000 fine. SB 107 would change the definition of "deviate sexual relations" in the state--a full 16 years after the state Supreme Court ruled that the language criminalizing gay sex as unconstitutional--and no longer lump in gay sex as the same kind of crime as having sex with an animal.

The bloc of 36 Republicans want to keep the law in place: "Sex that doesn't produce people is deviant," says Rep. Dave Hagstrom. Rep. Jerry O'Neil, who also voted against the bill, said. "If some 2nd-grade teacher wants to introduce her lover to the kids, there isn't anything that the school board can do to stop that."

Legislative Outcome: Passed Senate 38-11-1 on Feb/20/13; Passed House 64-35-1 on Apr/10/13; Signed by Governor Steve Bullock on Apr/18/13

Click for Steve Bullock on other issues.   Source: The Atlantic on Montana legislative voting record SB 107

Bernie Sanders on Animal Rights: (Environment Oct 9, 2012)
Very large farms raise questions about animal cruelty

And the cows [on small farms]? Some are contended. I have been on many dairy farms in Vermont where the cows were cared for almost as if they were part of the farmer's family. VT's Bovine Practitioner of the Year says; "The majority of farmers I work with are farmers because they love their animals. They treat them well." I think those words ring true for the many Vermont famers I have met. They are wonderful people. But very large farms, and veal operations, can raise questions about animal cruelty.
Click for Bernie Sanders on other issues.   Source: Sanders Intro to `Milk Money`, by Kirk Kardashian, p. x

Bernie Sanders on Animal Rights: (Immigration Oct 9, 2012)
Immigrant labor should be treated as valuable, but are not

Negative aspects of 21st century farming: water and air pollution, the hazards of industrial agriculture (farms in California or Idaho or New Mexico can exceed 10,00 cows), and milk that is perhaps not as healthful as that obtained from pasture-grazed animals. The labor situation on dairy farms, which are more and more dependent on immigrant labor from Mexico and Central America. Some of these immigrants are treated as the valuable laborers they are; others, unfortunately and tragically, are not.
Click for Bernie Sanders on other issues.   Source: Sanders Intro to `Milk Money`, by Kirk Kardashian, p. ix-x

Howard Schultz on Animal Rights: (Environment Mar 27, 2012)
Human deforestation contributes more carbon than all cars

In 2008, I [held meetings to] firm up our flatlining relationships with Conservation International. Conservation International's people explained their most pressing concern: climate change. They pointed to endangered areas that are home to irreplaceable plant and animal life. These ecosystems are at risk for destruction by human deforestation, also burning and clearing of forest's contributes 20% of the world's carbon emissions--twice as much as ALL the world's vehicles combined. These hotspots are in areas where farmers grow some of Starbucks' most precious coffees. Starbucks would re-up its partnership with Conservation International with a $7.5 million commitment over three years. We would measure the impact of our CAFE. Practices to ensure that we were making a positive difference for the people and places we intended. We would link small farmers to global carbon markets. And we would stand shoulder to shoulder with Conservation International.
Click for Howard Schultz on other issues.   Source: Onward, by Howard Schultz, p.119-20

Mike Gravel on Animal Rights: (Gun Control May 2, 2008)
Doesn’t hunt, but shot moose injured by Alaskan trains

[My early job in Alaska was] on the snow fleet--a train engine with a plow--to clear the snow that could be three or four feet high on the tracks.

Moose have spindly legs. Rather than cutting themselves in the snow, they’d jump onto the tracks where th snow had been plowed. Trains would accidentally run over moose all the time. Usually, just the legs got severed. The poor animal would be lying there. So the engineer would call a native hospital and they’d come with a handcar or an automobile to pick up the moose and use it for food at the hospital.

After seeing this once I told the engineer that the next time it happens, I’d jump off and shoot the moose, rather than just let it lie there suffering. I don’t hunt or fish, which made Alaskans suspicious of me, but I couldn’t watch the moose writhing in the snow, moaning. So I climbed down from the caboose into the snow. I must have shot three or four moose that way. Then we’d call the hospital to tell them to pick up their meat.

Click for Mike Gravel on other issues.   Source: A Political Odyssey, by Mike Gravel, p.134

Barack Obama on Animal Rights: (Environment Feb 2, 2008)
Regulate animal feeding operations for pollution

AT A GLANCETHE PROBLEMOBAMA’S PLAN
Click for Barack Obama on other issues.   Source: Campaign booklet, “Blueprint for Change”, p. 31-34

Barack Obama on Animal Rights: (Welfare & Poverty Aug 14, 2007)
Saw dire poverty as a child in Indonesia

Indonesia was an exotic experience for Barack, then six years old. Barack encountered new food, wild animals and an entirely foreign culture. He played in rice paddies and rode water buffalo.

For the first time, he also bore witness to the unpleasantness of dire poverty. Beggars would come to their door, and even his mother, who had a woman’s “soft heart,” according to Lolo Soetoro, Obama’s mother’s 2nd husband] eventually learned to “calibrate the level of misery” before handing out money Obama wrote that, over time, he also developed his own calculations, a result of lectures from Lolo advising him not to give all his money away.

Said Obama in a 2004 radio interview: “I think [Indonesia] made me more mindful of not only my blessings as a US citizen, but also the ways that fate can determine the lives of young children, so that one ends up being fabulously wealthy and another ends up being extremely poor.”

Click for Barack Obama on other issues.   Source: From Promise to Power, by David Mendell, p. 32-33

Barack Obama on Animal Rights: (Environment Jan 31, 2007)
Scored 60% on Humane Society Scorecard on animal protection

Click for Barack Obama on other issues.   Source: Humane Society 109th Congress Scorecard, www.fund.org

Hillary Clinton on Animal Rights: (Environment Jan 31, 2007)
Scored 100% on Humane Society Scorecard on animal protection

Click for Hillary Clinton on other issues.   Source: Humane Society 109th Congress Scorecard, www.fund.org

Joe Biden on Animal Rights: (Environment Jan 31, 2007)
Scored 80% on Humane Society Scorecard on animal protection

Click for Joe Biden on other issues.   Source: Humane Society 109th Congress Scorecard, www.fund.org

Donald Trump on Animal Rights: (Principles & Values Mar 23, 2004)
The Art of the Hair: it's all natural, and all mine

I'm amazed by how often people ask me whether or not I wear a hairpiece, a wig, or a rug, as it is affectionately known.

The answer, for the record, is emphatically and categorically no: I do not wear a rug. My hair is one hundred percent mine. No animals have been harmed in the creation of my hairstyle.

However, I must admit that the day might come when I will wear a hairpiece, wig, or rug--but only if I go bald, which I hope never happens. The reason for this is because, I, like most men, am very vain. Random House is paying me a fortune for this book and specifically requested a chapter on "the art of the hair," so I will admit to my vanity.

The reason my hair looks so neat all the time is because I don't have to deal with the elements very often. I will also admit that I color my hair. Somehow, the color never looks great, but what the hell, I just don't like gray hair. I wonder how much longer my hair will be a national topic of conversation.

Click for Donald Trump on other issues.   Source: How to Get Rich, by Donald Trump, p.151-2

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