The Federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA)

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The Federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA), passed in 1966, manages animal testing in the United States. [6] We use animals for a wide variety of occasions, such as research. Millions of people throughout the U.S. keep dogs and cats as pets, while billions of animals are killed each year for food. We use animals for transportation, sports, and companionship. This shows how important animals are to our society. Animals are also used to teach us about our everyday lives and illnesses that trouble us humans and other animals. Animal research has played a vital part in nearly every medical improvement over the last decade. Animals suffer from similar diseases to humans, including caners, TB, and asthma. When a new medicine is produced we use …show more content…
According to “Animal Rights,” animals have legal and moral rights, just as humans do. This means that it’s unethical to use animals as pets, food, clothing, recreation, or even research. Whether or not animals have “rights” depends on how you define the term. If living things are ascribed a “right” to remain living, then animals would have rights. In ways we try to say that lives of animals and humans are equal. But the death of a mouse is not the same as a human. We wouldn’t call someone a murder for eating meat. There are man people around the world that don’t agree with animals being used for human needs; such as, recreation, food and definitely research. Since 1980, more than 30 break-ins, thefts, and acts of vandalism against research facilities have caused millions of dollars in damage. Researchers and their families have even been harassed and threatened. Years of work and education just ruined all because of how people feel about animals being experimented on. This is work that could one day save many …show more content…
[1] All of these tests involve pure torture. There are tests that literally kill the animals. The LD50 (lethal dose 50) test involves finding out which dose of a chemical will kill 50% of the animals being. [2,3] The monoclonal antibody TGN1412 was safe in monkeys at 500 times the dose tested in humans, yet all six British volunteers who received the drug in 2006 nearly died. [5] In 2010 The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported that 97,123 animals suffered pain during experiments while not given any anesthesia for