On Mon, 03 Jul 2006 22:16:29 +0100, amacmil304 [at] aol.com wrote:
>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "SPEAK" <info [at] speakcampaigns.org.uk>
>> To: <AR-list [at] huntingdonsucks.com>
>> Sent: Monday, June 26, 2006 3:33 PM
>> Subject: [HuntingdonSucks] SPEAK Action Alert - Remembering George
>>
> 02, 2006 7:03 PM
>Subject: Fw: [HuntingdonSucks] SPEAK Action Alert - Remembering
>George>
>> Remembering George
>>
>> Meet Carfax Tower 12 noon 22nd July
>>
>> http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=451382&y 6110& amp;z=0&sv=OX1+1DZ&st=2&pc=OX1+1DZ&mapp=newm ap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf
>>
>> SPEAK has received information from a source working in the dept of
>> Experimental Psychology detailing yet again the appalling abuse being
>> suffered by a primate inside Oxford University. Our source has told us
>> that a macaque monkey was imprisoned for several years and was forced to
>> undergo a variety of experiments that included invasive brain surgery.
>>
>> The information we are told was recited to a group of people by the
>> researcher himself. What is of interest is the fact that the researcher in
>> question was the same man that was investigated by the police for cruelty
>> to a monkey he was experimenting on.
>>
>> We have been told that the researcher took great satisfaction in detailing
>> the injuries he caused to the monkey he was experimenting on.
You need to be a weirdo to be in the job, this just proves it.
>He told his
>> audience that they had named the monkey 'George', and then went on to
>> detail the types of injuries he had personally inflicted on this poor
>> innocent creature. At one point George's eyes had extensive injuries
>> caused to them, creating lesions for the purpose of the experiment. The
>> account told by the vivisector is even more obscene when one takes into
>> account that the vivisector then started to laugh as he went on with his
>> story, telling the assembled group that after having blinded (we don't
>> know if he was totally or partially blinded) George, part of the
>> experiment then included taking George out into the university park.
>> George wasn't able to see what we can see: if he could see at all it would
>> only have been partial.
>>
>> George was almost certainly a wild caught macaque. Once he would have been
>> roaming free in the tundra of Tanzania, or on the sugar plantations of
>> Mauritius or in the jungles of Indonesia and China. He was taken from his
>> homeland and forced to endure the most appalling cruelty. The next time he
>> experienced fresh air, he was blind and tethered. His life ended at the
>> hands of someone who can only be described as a monster; there are no
>> other words to describe such a depraved individual.
>>
>> Vivisectors like to talk about how much they care about the animals they
>> torture and eventually kill. Such pronouncements are just that, these
>> people care about nothing but themselves.
>>
>> George died alone, blind, afraid and imprisoned in a barren cage; a cage
>> hardly big enough for him to stand up in - a far cry from the life he
>> experienced in his homeland: free, jumping from tree to tree, interacting
>> with his own kind. Death was probably the only kind act George had ever
>> received at the hands of his human tormentors.
>>
>> Vivisection is allowed to continue because the majority of the public are
>> hidden from the truth. The vivisection industry suppresses it, the
>> Government hide it, the media lie about it and the police protect the
>> interests of the abusers. Now that is about to change!
>>
>> Join us in Oxford on the 22nd July. Its time to take control and let the
>> public know the truth - Let's remember George, but just as importantly,
>> let's tell the Oxford public about George. Let's not let his pain and
>> suffering have been for nothing. We can't bring George back. We can't
>> lessen the torment, the fear and the suffering he experienced imprisoned
>> inside Oxford University, but we can all join together on the 22nd July in
>> the centre of Oxford and shout his name.
>>
>> To the vivisector that laughed as he detailed the torment he inflicted on
>> George - George is but another statistic, another item to add to his
>> latest research paper. To us, George was an individual, an individual
>> capable of experiencing pain, an individual capable of emotion - let's
>> make sure he is never forgotten.
>>
>> The demonstration in Oxford won't follow the format of others, it's not
>> about marching from A to Z, mostly through the back streets, it's about
>> being visible, it's about interacting with the public that have been lied
>> to for so long. Let's be imaginative: bring banners, posters, organise
>> street theatre. As a movement, let's come together and really make a
>> difference. SPEAK will of course be supplying thousands of leaflets
>> 'Remembering George' so that they can be distributed to the public. Let's
>> make this a day that the vivisectors holed up inside Oxford University
>> never forget.
>>
>> Now is OUR time to be fighting back against the lies peddled by the
>> university and their friends that hold key positions in society. It's
>> about all of US taking control, it's about holding our heads high and
>> being proud of the compassionate message we have to tell. Let's remember
>> George and let's make sure the vivisectors that are paid with money and
>> accolades to butcher, maim and inflict the most appalling suffering on
>> sentient creatures are never allowed to forget him. It's time to expose
>> the real extremists.
>>
>> See you on the 22nd July in Oxford.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> HuntingdonSucks mailing list
>> Donate : http://www.huntingdonsucks.com/donate.html
>> Forum : http://www.huntingdonsucks.com/forum/
>> Contact List Admin : mez [at] huntingdonsucks.com
>>
>> Disclaimer: This is an open list. Posts are owned by the people who post
>> them and not by the list owners. The list owners do not necessarily agree
>> with the content of each post. We do not condone or encourage illegal
>> activity.
>>
>>
>Angus Macmillan
>www.roots-of-blood.org.uk
>www.killhunting.org
>www.con-servation.org.uk