Animal rights activists protested a proposed state bill and UCLA’s use of animals in medical experiments Friday.
About 40 people walked from Westwood to UCLA, before heading to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, to protest animal experimentation as well as Assembly Bill 700. The bill, which is still in the Assembly Appropriations Committee, would further prevent the disclosure of specific information relating to researchers and their research at public universities and community colleges.
The protest primarily consisted of animal rights activists from two organizations, In Defense of Animals and People for Reason in Science and Medicine.
Julia Orr, co-organizer of the event, said AB 700 will prevent people from finding out if researchers have committed violations of the federal Animal Welfare Act, which regulates the treatment of animals in research and exhibition. Orr said they protested at UCLA because she believes UCLA has violated the act a number of times.
“When I get information from the freedom of information act it is already redacted and there is little pieces of information that you can get,” Orr said. “So basically if this legislation passes what I’ll get is a page of redacted (text) and there will be nothing on there.”
Protesters held up signs reading, “Animal experimentation is scientific fraud” and “Don’t allow UCLA to Torture.” They chanted, “One two three four, open up the cage doors. Five six seven, snatch the locks and liberate.”
UCLA spokesperson Katherine Alvarado said in an email statement that research on animals has led to the development of life-saving procedures.
“Discontinuing all animal research would diminish hope for millions of people with AIDS, cancer, heart disease and other life-threatening ailments,” Alvarado said.
Alvarado added UCLA complies with legal regulations and is accredited by Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International, a private, nonprofit organization that promotes the humane treatment of animals in science.
The protesters stopped in front of Kerckhoff Hall to hear speeches from animal rights activists. One speaker, Sydney Ross Singer, a medical anthropologist and member of the Good Shepherd Foundation, was scheduled to speak but did not attend.
Simone Reyes, animal rights activist and a star of the reality show “Running Russell Simmons,” said in her speech at the event that although activists have not stopped animal experimentation, they have the ability to show the reality of animal cruelty through social media.
“We are positioned to literally bring this revolution home. Our very secret weapon that we have to remember generations before us did not have is social media,” Reyes said. “We have now taken the power away from mainstream media.”
Reyes said she thinks circulating images and videos of animals being tortured will encourage more people to become vegan and advocate for animal rights.
“They are able to look into the eyes of animals who are locked in crates, who are screaming their way to the slaughterhouses,” Reyes said. “Finally, people can look at this and say ‘I don’t want to be a part of that.’”
Reyes said people need to speak to their legislators to push for laws that better protect the rights of animals. She added people need to show pictures of tortured animals to get people to listen.
“You can change their minds, but you got to crack their hearts open,” Reyes said. “Our biggest weapon besides social media are the eyes of those suffering animals.”
Participants in the protest said they were passionately against animal experimentation and that everyone has a right to know about the experimentation practices at UCLA.
Corinne Titus, a temporary assembly line worker, said she has protested against animal experimentation at UCLA since the 1980s.
“I’m very passionate about animal experimentation,” Titus said. “Both because it’s an animal rights issue and a human rights issue, because the information they’re getting from a different species is misleading to human beings.”
Alyson Burton, creative manager for IDA, described herself as an ethical vegan and took part in the protest against AB 700. She said she spoke to students on campus and thought they were uninformed about animal testing.
“The students here have a right know. That’s the whole point about America right?” Burton said. “Everyone has a right to know – we have a right to information.”
John Flores, a volunteer with IDA, said he joined the protest because he felt it was unjust to experiment on animals.
“The personal reason is to be on the side of justice and fairness, and to speak out against oppression with animals that have done nothing wrong, but just to live their lives,” Flores said.
Contributing reports from Vito Emanuel and Dawit Tefera, Daily Bruin staff.
It’s time to stop the myth that animal research helps human. These so called researchers continually enact the same procedures to induce pain and suffering. Cats with their spinal cords broken so they can’t walk. This doesn’t help humans who are paralyzed. They are quadrupeds. NOT like us. The best research has come from studying humans who suffer from the diseases themselves. Monkeys put in straight jackets then force fed Meth? That doesn’t help drug addicts. We KNOW what meth does to the brain. If you want to help science, donate your own bodies to science. My father did when he died. Many others have. Stop the lies. These “scientists” get tens of millions in grant money. They MAKE money off of this torture. Some live in mansions in above sunset all with money made off of the slaughter of the innocent. I refer any fellow bruin to Hans Ruesch’s book “Slaughter of the Innocents”. Stop the lies UCLA. I’m ashamed to be Bruin. SHUT IT DOWN NOW.
Chancellor Gene Block, who has experimented on animals himself, should step up to the plate and debate animal experimentation. If UCLA is confident and not ashamed why not show the public UCLA is not afraid of the scientific arguements against vivisection. Dr Ray Greek has written several books about the subject and has a history of debating. Bring it on!