The Bear Bile Industry: Cruelty Can't Stand the Spotlight
An Animal Rights Article from All-Creatures.org

FROM

Marc Bekoff, Psychology Today - Animal Emotions
May 2013

Fang Shuting, chairman of the China Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine, has "suggested that bears enjoy the process, which he likened to turning on a tap. 'Natural, easy and without pain,' he said. 'After they’re done, the bears can even play happily outside.'” Nothing can be further from the truth.

It always amazes me how few people outside of China know about the bear bile industry and when they hear about it they are shocked and often moved to tears because of the utterly inhumane and reprehensible treatment of these amazing sentient bear beings.

But things are changing. On 21 May an essay accompanied by a video was published in the New York Times called "Folk Remedy Extracted From Captive Bears Stirs Furor in China" that tells the story of the horrific treatment to which the bears are exposed and how public protests are helping to make people aware of their plight. Those people interested in animal protection are feeling more free to come out of the woodworks and protest the reprehensible and heartless treatment of bears and other animals and call attention to the fact that despite promises by the government and the bear bile industry, there are not fewer bears being abused than in the past.

To wit, "the industry has grown significantly in the 13 years since Chinese officials first pledged to gradually reduce the number of captive bears to 1,500 from 7,000. These days, there are an estimated 20,000 bears on nearly 100 domestic bear farms, an expansion fueled in part by marketing efforts promoting novel uses for bear bile, like a hangover cure for well-to-do businessmen who engage in nightly carousing." For more on bear bile farming see the website for "Cages of Shame" and for more on animal protection in China please see Dr. Peter Li's superb interview for Forbes magazine with Michael Tobias.

Guan Zhiling, a youngster who visited the Moon Bear Rescue Centre outside of Chengdu, China, summed the situation up beautifully: “It’s brutal and disrespectful to the bears, and a disgrace to the human race.”

Moon bears are sentient beings and incredibly sensitive while also physically and emotionally strong. How else could they be rehabilitated from years of egregious pain and suffering?

Thus, it's ludicrous and could be laughable (but it's not) to note that Fang Shuting, chairman of the China Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine, has "suggested that bears enjoy the process, which he likened to turning on a tap. 'Natural, easy and without pain,' he said. 'After they’re done, the bears can even play happily outside.'” Nothing can be further from the truth, both from what we know about the science of how bears and other animals suffer and also from what we know about how the bears are really locked up for life on the farms.  


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