replyforall
  • faqs
  • blog
    • log in
    • |
    • sign up
    •  
  • sign up
  • how to get your personal email signature for Outlook 2007 or Yahoo Mail, Gmail, Hotmail
  • impact
  • causes
  • the advertising sponsors in your email signature
  • Share |
  • Recent Posts

    • The fight to provide clean water
    • replyforall spotlight on: Petfinder.com Foundation
    • States take the lead on animal rights legislation
    • Foie Gras the Faux Pas
    • replyforall spotlight on: Partners in Health
  • Archives

    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
    • March 2009
    • February 2009
    • January 2009
    • December 2008
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • July 2008

Archive for January, 2010

Supporting Haiti with replyforall

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

This morning, a 6.1 aftershock quake hit Port-au-Prince.  While families search for food, water, and missing people, replyforall keeps Haiti in the forefront of our thoughts.

Americans are showing that little by little, individual actions are making a difference.  After last Tuesday’s devastating 7.0-magnitude earthquake in Haiti, over $200 million have been raised through texts, calls, and mail.  And over $22 million was raised for the Red Cross through ten dollar donations made by texting “HAITI” to 90999.

Our nonprofit partner, Partners In Health, has been on the ground in Haiti for over 20 years.  PIH co-founder, Paul Farmer, wrote an op-ed in the Miami Herald about what can be done right now to best help the survivors in Haiti, because “there are lessons to be learned from our efforts, not always honorable or effective, to help Haiti over the past two centuries. This can change and must do so, if we are to be real partners in responding to this latest misfortune.”

One of Farmer’s suggestions was not to give in-kind donations, but financial ones.  We know that small amounts can make a huge difference, and we are urging our replyforall users to do their part by sending emails.  One thing that is needed by the earthquake survivors, and by the PIH doctors who are caring for them, is clean water.  Your clean water cause signature raises donations for Partners In Health (and Engineers without Borders) with every email you send.

And you’ll notice that, in our sponsor section of the signature, there is a link for your email recipients to learn more about how to help Partners In Health in their relief efforts in Haiti.  It’s important that we do as much as we can, as soon as we can.  So if you can donate, text GIVE to 25383 to donate $10 to Partners in Health.  If you can’t donate, please put out the word through your emails for others who can!

You can also keep up with what Partners In Health is doing in Haiti by following them on Twitter, @PIH_org.

Fight the Good Fight,

Johanna Hudgens

This signature helps provide clean water if you click to 'Always Display Images'
sponsored by
Provide Clean Water
1.8 million children die every year as a result of diseases caused by unclean water and poor sanitation.
By using this email signature, Johanna and Partners In Health provided an hour of clean water for 846 people.
Related articles to check out:
  • If Haiti is to `build back better’ (3quarksdaily.com)
  • Local donors dig deep for quake victims (windsorstar.com)
  • Haiti devastation emerges (theworld.org)
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tags: Caribbean, clean water, Earthquake, Haiti, Johanna Hudgens, Miami Herald, Partners in Health, Paul Farmer, Port-au-Prince, Replyforall
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

Food and Feelings: Animals and the Ethics Behind Eating

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

There was a wide range of reactions to my post on environmental effects of meat production, and a couple of them I found to be very interesting.  I think it’s important to remember that there are many reasons that people cut meat down or out of their diet completely.   Food choices are important to those of us who may not be particularly passionate about animal rights because it affects our water, our air, and our health.  But at the core of meat and dairy is the ethics behind raising or, to be more accurate, producing animals for consumption.  Did you know:

  • In 2003, the US slaughtered 9.1 BILLION animals — 8.68 billion were chickens alone.  This also doesn’t include aquatic animals (no official count) or animals that die on the farms or in transit (around 100 million).
  • In factory farms, animals are crammed into windowless sheds, wire cages, gestation crates, and other confinement systems.  Many do not ever see the sun until they are loaded on trucks to be killed.
  • Dairy cows must be repeatedly impregnated in order to continue producing milk.  According to the USDA in 2004, 9 million cows on dairy farms live in large sheds or mud lots where disease is common.
  • Pigs are considered smarter than the average 3-year old human.  Pigs, chickens, cattle and sheep are all sentient beings, meaning that– according to Darwin– they have “the same senses, intuitions, and sensations, similar passions, affections and emotions . . . the same faculties of imitation, choice, imagination, the association of ideas and reason though in very different degrees.”

If you can stand it, you can watch a short clip on what factory farming actually looks like.  The terms “factory” and “farm” together seem like an oxymoron, don’t they?

The facts I listed are not to make you feel guilty, but rather to make you aware.  We can get bogged down with the overwhelming evidence that animals are mistreated on farms, to the point that we compartmentalize and put it out of our heads whenever a food decision is made.  But we should know where our food comes from, right?

As one of our users commented on our last post, if you feel like eating a hamburger, eat it.  I certainly do not hold back if I really want that turkey sandwich.  But I am better about whether or not I need to eat meat every day, at every meal.  And when I do eat meat, I know exactly how I’m affecting the world around me.

Another commenter suggests eating organic.  That’s a good idea, and I would suggest eating local, too, since there is always greater transparency and accountability if you can visit the farm 30 miles away.  And you’re supporting your community economically (a la the Slow Money Movement).  You can check for farms near you by visiting Local Harvest, or by stopping by your local farmer’s market.

What are your feelings on this topic, and what advice would you give our readers about food?

Fight the Good Fight,

Johanna Hudgens

This signature helps defend animal rights if you click to 'Always Display Images'
sponsored by
Defend Animal Rights
2.95 million mice were used in the UK for testing in 2006.
By using this email signature, Johanna and ASPCA provided an hour of protective services for 15 animals.
Related articles to check out:
  • Farmers fight back against animal rights groups (sfgate.com)
  • The Meatrix: The Revolting Reality of Factory Farming (naturalbias.com)
  • Ethical Eating (timesunion.com)
  • Interview With A Vegan, Part Two (themoderatevoice.com)
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tags: Agriculture, animal rights, Animal welfare, Factory farming, Farmers' market, Johanna Hudgens, Local Harvest, Replyforall
Posted in news | 1 Comment »

Food for thought: eating to support animals, people, and a cleaner environment

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

As I said in my last post, I’m trying to live more consciously, taking into account how my decisions affect the world around me.  I thought food was a good, though perhaps the hardest, place to start.  So how can my (and your) food choices support animal rights, the fight on global warming and poverty, and clean water?  It’s all connected, even if we tend to compartmentalize to lessen our guilty conscience.

“People adapt their attitudes to specific contexts and may actively avoid learning about specific animal procedures and uses to minimize cognitive conflict,” said Dr. Grahame J. Coleman, professor at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, and deputy director of the Animal Welfare Science Centre.

I have to agree.  I’m guilty, for sure.  I don’t want to think about my pizza’s production process, or the rights related to that rib-eye.  But some facts should be hard to ignore:

  • The USDA reports that animals in the US meat industry produce 61 million tons of waste each year, which is 130 times the volume of human waste – or five tons for every US citizen.
  • The 7 billion livestock animals in the United States consume five times as much grain as is consumed directly by the entire American population.
  • Agriculture accounts for 87 percent of all the fresh water consumed each year. Livestock directly use only 1.3 percent of that water. But when the water required for forage and grain production is included, livestock’s water usage rises dramatically. Every kilogram of beef produced takes 100,000 liters of water. Wheat takes 900 liters of water per kilogram, and producing potatoes uses 500 liters of water per kilogram
  • According to the EPA, hog, chicken and cattle waste has polluted 35,000 miles of rivers in 22 states and contaminated groundwater in 17 states. (The EPA has begun to crack down on Clean Water Act violations at livestock feeding operations.)
  • Animal production, whether for meat or dairy, is hazardous for the atmosphere.  In fact, a 2006 UN report states that meat industry alone accounts for more greenhouse gases than the emissions of all the SUVs, cars, trucks, planes, and ships combined.

You can find more facts about food production’s harmful effects by checking out books like Omnivore’s Dilemma, Livestock’s Long Shadow, and Making a Killing, to name a few.  And check out this UK site about how to sustain a healthier diet and a healthier planet (which just so happens to be animal-friendly, too), or this compassionate eating guide.  Every time you sit down to eat, think about it.

What are your thoughts on the topic?

Fight the Good Fight,

Johanna Hudgens

This signature helps defend animal rights if you click to 'Always Display Images'
sponsored by
Defend Animal Rights
The fur industry demands the thicker pelt of an older animal and almost no fur comes from the slaughterhouses.
By using this email signature, Johanna and ASPCA provided an hour of protective services for 12 animals.
Related articles to check out:
  • Animal Welfare Victories Prompt Farmers to Change – ABC News (abcnews.go.com)
  • Livestock accounts for 51% of greenhouse gas emissions, says new report (energyrefuge.com)
  • Jeff Biggers: New Year’s Resolution: Mountaintop Removal Ends in 2010 (huffingtonpost.com)
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tags: animal rights, clean water, Clean Water Act, diet, global warming, Johanna Hudgens, Livestock, Livestock's Long Shadow, Making a Killing, Omnivore's Dilemma, poverty, Replyforall, United States
Posted in news | 2 Comments »

sign up for your personalized email signature. works with Yahoo Mail, Gmail, Hotmail or Outlook 2007
  • terms of service |
  • privacy policy |
  • contact us |
  • about us