Kacie Lee
Sawyer P.5
Sophomore Persuasive
12/08/17
Animal Experimentation
Almost everyone dreads the confinement of the doctor’s office where the probability of getting a couple annual shots and blood tests is more than likely. The current human population in the United States is over 300 million people. The average American visits a doctor’s office four times a year and then goes on with their daily lives. To over 100 million animals, about a third of the human population in the United States, this dreadful day is the animals’ daily lives as they become familiar with scientific doctors. Animal experimentation is one of the oldest practices still used in the status quo. Descriptive accounts of dissections of live animals from approximately 500 BC is not foreign to this day with over 100 million animals often senselessly killed in the United States alone for medical, educational, or cosmetic business purposes. Although this practice was originally used to learn more about the animal anatomy, it was later used to discover life-saving cures and to test new discoveries. However, with the support of recent discoveries, many have rightfully deemed this a controversial practice. Animal experimentation is a flawed practice because stark differences in the biology of humans and non-human animals, animal testing being an archaic practice, and testing being ineffective.
Animals and humans differ too much biologically, making animal experimentation faulty. First, the absence of
Around the world, millions of scientists conduct their studies by testing their research on animals. Many people believe that experimenting on animals is crucial to the advancement of medical discoveries. Studies show however, that animal experimentation is brutal and unnecessary. There are alternatives though: “replacement, reduction, and refinement” (Howard 2).
Throughout history, animal experimentation has played an important role in leading to new discoveries and human benefits. However, what many people tend to forget are the millions of animals that are tortured or killed during the process of these painful, deadly experiments. Many people seem to misunderstand animal nature and the laboratory procedures and techniques that are executed on the animals. The procedures are cruel, unreliable, and harmful. Luckily there are more humane alternatives that have also proved to be less expensive.
To begin, the experimental use of animals in medical studies is unethical. These creatures are confined in isolated cages where they are deprived of necessary environmental elements. It is not uncommon that they undergo ghastly methods of experimentation; including the inhalation of toxic fumes, the burning of their skin, and the crushing of their spinal cords ("People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals"). This information sheds light on the grim realities of animal experimentation. These creatures are living, breathing beings that do not deserve to be treated as they are nothing more than lab objects. Not only are they ripped from their natural habitats, but are forced to endure an irreversible psychological trauma . To put it in perspective, imagine a six-month-old child being taken from their parents and sent to a lab to undergo scientific experiments that could ultimately result in
Using animals for medical experimentation and education is a controversial subject that often leads to a heated debate. The issues are complex, but the suffering and waste involved in animal experimentation are painfully obvious. Vivisection, the act of cutting into a live animal, has led the nation down countless scientific dead ends, while detracting funds and attention from more applicable scientific research. The practice of animal experimentation at NYU continues, not because it has been proven to be an accurate and reliable means of research (which it has not) but rather, because of tradition and promotion from those with strong vested interests (i.e. Lynne Kiorpes). These values have
“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated” (Mahatma Gandhi). Scientists have been using animals for biomedical research for centuries. They provide a source to get information scientists can not get without harming humans. A lot of debate is spread about whether it is good or bad. Animal experimentation is a controversial topic because it is helpful to humans, but it is also cruel and inhumane.
Have you ever been watching your favorite television show, and all of the sudden a failed drug commercial comes on? An example of this could be Vioxx. How would you like to know that this was tested on animals? If you are unaware Vioxx caused over 100,000 people to suffer severe heart attacks. Yet Vioxx was extremely successful in the animal test trials. Doesn’t that show you how different us animals and humans are, and how pointless this dangerous routine is? Now how do you feel to know that animals are also being killed everyday because of animal testing? In one test run on average of the LD50 test, more than 50 percent of the animals die. The LD50 test is a test that forced 60-200 animals to do this. How would you feel if a rabbit, like a pet you own, was getting force fed this? Nowadays scientist limited this test to 6-10 animals, but that’s just this test. I still believe no animal, should die this way whether it’s cosmetic, medical, or everyday chemicals like paint. (Added the ways I meant.)
Peta is bad, your opinion is wrong, and the animals should die for science. Hold on, give me a sec,* clears throat* angry mob, put the torches and the pitchforks down, it's a joke. Clickbait and controversy aside, back in the space race animal testing was completely necessary. Many people disagree with this topic, and that's ok. Now that the angry mob has settled down a bit, let me tell you why animal testing was necessary during the space race. “Was the testing even necessary? Is winning the space race even important? And how will this help us as a nation?” Most people didn’t and still don’t think of these questions. They think, “NASA, the smartest and most responsible people on our planet are killing animals for science? Not on my
Over the centuries, humankind has made incredible advancements in every field. Scientists have been able to document the history of the world without a single consistent writing system. They have gone to great lengths to finally prove evolution. Scientists have gained great knowledge, but some of this knowledge came at great cost to the innocent creatures of this planet. These creatures are being tortured and experimented on just because they are not human and somehow that makes them less important. There are alternatives to this behavior. The better path is not always easiest, but it will end this monster humankind created.
Isolated, "confined in small, bare cages", alone, their "dull and blank" eyes showed the loss of hope. Do these animals deserve this? Do they deserve to be torn away from their families just to be "locked away, innocent of crime, into solitary confinement" and tested on just so we can have all of these new cosmetic products that we already have a sufficient amount of. Do we need more shampoos or do we have enough? I am aware there are tests used to advance in medical research and I believe that this is acceptable but, the tests performed should be effectuated only if it will make progress. However, the tests being done for cosmetic usage are unnecessary, capitalistic, and inhumane.
Imagine, you are in an animal lab and there are scientists all around you. Now these people are not your friends. They put you in cages where you stay. Now they have shots that they give you every day. You never know what is going to happen to you next. You could throw up, get a disease, a horrible rash, and much more.
Animals can be ferocious and wild, but they can also be gentle and tame. Some are our pets, and some are powerful forces that are to be respected and admired. It is as easy to appreciate a loyal dog as it is to be in awe of a lion in its' natural habitat. But the truth that many people either don’t know or don’t appreciate is that animals are essential to human existence and have played a vital role in improving the quality of our lives. They have been providing us with answers to our most complex medical questions for decades. Their role in finding cures for diseases, treatments for illness, and product safety is immense. First, we will examine how animal testing has
Imagine just waking up one day being stripped of your home, children, food and everything you own. You’re in the dark and all of a sudden these bright, intense, fluorescent lights flick on. A very large, unfamiliar looking menacing figure approaches you and prods you with needles and all sorts of drugs. Your barely fed and you're stuck here for the rest of your life. Now what if I told you that already happens today in the year 2017. These “people” i'm talking about are poor defenseless animals that have to go through these horrible conditions every day just for an experiment that might not even work. All animal testing should be banned, even if such testings would save human lives because, the process is painful, you’re endangering a species and haven't all cruel despicable nations tested on not only humans but also animals.
As long as I can remember, I wanted to do something with animals when I got older. I would dream about helping when they are in need. I have always wanted to be a veterinarian since day one. With growing up, I learned that veterinary students go through a lot to become a veterinary. Writing is very important and it's needed in anybody wants to go into. To be an animal sciences major, a lot of research papers have to be written and as well as persuasive papers.
Because of differences in animal and human anatomies, they respond to drugs in different ways, proving test results done on animals to be inaccurate when applied to humans. For this reason, animal experimentation has done little to produce any definitive advances in medical research and has actually hindered medical progress.
Did you know that our of the 767.622 animals used in research and experimentation forty percent undergo cruel and unethical experiments? That is almost half of all the animals used in experimentation. Some animal researchers claim that the animals they are experimenting on are dealt with ethically. But the statistics show otherwise. Over the past year, 100 million animals have died during these experimentations. Including monkeys, birds, fish, dogs, cats, hamsters, frogs, mice, rats, guinea pigs, and much more that have not been mentioned. Based on these facts, it can said that even though animal experimentation has helped further some medical research and knowledge, we should not depend on it because it is inhumane, unethical, and unreliable.