Even if their cages were enlarged a hundred times they would still fail to satisfy the basic needs of these inquisitive carnivores lacking, as they would, all the complex factors of their true, natural world. And why are these creatures so confined? For human vanity and profit.

Scientists, designers and
politicians explain why the fur trade is cruel and unnecessary:
Quotes > Scientists
Some who reflect upon this subject for the first time will wonder
how such cruelty can have been permitted to continue in these days
of civilisation, and no doubt if men of education saw with their own
eyes what takes place under their sanction, the system would have
been put to an end long ago.
~ Charles Darwin, Essay on Fur, 1878
The Council believes that the systems employed in the farming of
mink and fox do not satisfy some of the most basic criteria … for
protecting the welfare of farmed animals. The current cages used for
fur farming do not appear to provide appropriate comfort or shelter,
and do not allow the animals freedom to display most normal patterns
of behaviour.
~ Farm Animal Welfare Council Press Notice 4 April 1989
Mink and fox are by nature solitary animals. Keeping them packed
together in close confinement is an even greater torture than that
inflicted on herbivorous group-living animals. That this should be
done to provide human beings with luxury seems indefensible.
~ Sir David Attenborough, C.B.E, F.R.S.
Stereotypies are repetitive, invariant behaviour patterns with no
obvious goal or function. Their occurrence is often associated with
barren and restrictive conditions, or environments which might be
considered sub-optimal, and they develop in animals faced with
insoluble problems of frustration or conflict. They are not seen in
wild mink. Dr AJ Nimon.
~ 'Report on the welfare of Farmed Mink and Foxes in relation to
Housing and Management'. Cambridge University Animal Welfare
Information Centre, 1998
These sort of stereotypies, if you saw them in humans, would suggest
that they had severe psychological problems. Perhaps you'd say that
they were psychotic.
~ Donald Broom, Professor of Animal Welfare at Cambridge University
and Chair of the European Union's Scientific Veterinary Committee.
BBC Wildlife, June 1997.
To me the most important aspect is the question of whether keeping
mink and foxes, given the serious nature of welfare problems is
ethically justifiable. Answering this question should take into
account the necessity and the reasonableness of the aim, the level
of disturbance of animal welfare, and the intrinsic value of the
animals. As far as I am concerned there is no need for keeping these
animals; it does not fulfil an essential human need that could not
be met in another way. Keeping these animals means that their
species-specific behaviour can only partly be exercised because they
are relatively unadapted to humans. To me the absence of a need is
sufficient reason to terminate these developments instead of waiting
for more research.
~ Dr H Verhoog. Institute of Evolutionary and Ecological Sciences,
State University of Leiden, The Netherlands
The result of this degree of confinement is that the animals exhibit
all the typical reactions of wild creatures to a restricted and
deprived environment. They perform stereotyped patterns of movement
and various forms of self-mutilation. These are clear signs to any
objective observer that the captive animals are under stress.
Bearing in mind the fact that the size of their natural living space
in the wild is approximately 12,000 times as great as their captive
living space, this is not entirely surprising.
~ Dr Desmond Morris. 'The Animal Contract', Virgin Books, 1990
Fur farms have more in common with concentration camps than normal
farms. It is the worst form of factory farming. These factories are
bloody appalling places with tiny cages. Consequently they can
suffer from stress-related conditions and that, together with poor
hygiene, can damage the pelts.
~ Prof Stephen Harris, professor of environmental science at Bristol
University and chair of Mammal Society. Quoted in the Express, 31
July 1998 and 11 August 1998
The conclusion cannot be different than that foxes and mink are not
suitable for confinement in cages, and even further, that they are
not suitable to be kept at all. The suffering of these animals goes
beyond the aim for which they are kept, more so because there are
excellent alternatives to the use of fur.
~ Prof FJ Grommers. University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
There is no justified reason for killing animals or keeping them
under restricted conditions in cages only for the purpose of luxury
and no fur farming system recommended or practised so far meets the
physiological or ethological needs of the animals.
~ Veterinary Associations of the Federal Republic of Germany
In fur farms today, the animals have no possibility of a natural
life.Fur farms are rife with cannibalism and self-mutilation...
Wearing fur was something that humans used to do during the stone
ages. That people still do it is a little strange.
~ Ingvar Johansson, former mink fur farmer in Sweden. (translation
of an article in a Swedish magazine)
Mink farming is a disgusting industry... Mink are wild animals ...
Kept in barren cages they go mad... The argument that Britain should
allow mink farming because if we did not someone else would do it is
completely irrelevant... keeping mink in cages is a cruelty that
only debases our humanity.
~ Editorial, The Independent, 24 February 1999
When you go on the sort of expeditions I do, warmth is very
important. I never use fur. There are many more suitable, practical
and warmer man-made alternatives available.
~ Sir Chris Bonington, CBE, Mountaineer, in a letter to CAFT-UK
Quotes > Fashion Designers
I expect you could conjure up a conclusion that fur is the height of
fashion in the way that the Sunday Sport can prove that 'Aliens can
turn your children into fish fingers'.
~ Quotes > Scientists, Designers and Politicians
Considering what animals endure there is nothing fashionable about
fur. Please shun it.
~ Fashion Designer Stella McCartney
Although it was a fabulous hit with the fashion world at the time, I
realised later, with sorrow, that a quarter-million leopards had
been killed in order to enable this fashion trend. … [animals]
continue to be needlessly slaughtered to satisfy the demands of
thoughtless people who themselves remain entrapped in unnecessary
fashion.
~ Oleg Cassini, the designer who put Jackie Kennedy in a
leopard-skin coat in the 1950s. New York Post 13 May 1999
Quotes > Politicians
As we approach the new millennium, it is up to the House [of
Commons] to set the standards that we want for the next one … I hope
that the House will take this opportunity to say, as the Farm Animal
Welfare Council did some 10 years ago, that keeping wild animals in
small barren cages simply to obtain an unessential luxury product is
unacceptable. … Let us put an end to the cruel and barbaric practice
of fur farming.
~ Maria Eagle MP in fur farming debate. Hansard, Parliamentary
Debates, 5 March 1999
Last week, I took part in a radio programme with a representative of
the British fur industry, who described in detail, with great relish
and glee, his recent visit to a fur farm. He said that he had found
mink that were 'relaxed, inquisitive, lively, even cheerful'. I
think that one of the rather fairyland phrases he used was 'mink all
lined up in their little cages'. I do not know which mink farm he
visited, but it struck me that, when he drove up the M1, he must
have taken the turning marked 'Fantasy Island', because his is not
the sort of description that one readily associates with a mink
farm, on which animals live in wire cages.
~ Tim Loughton MP in fur farming debate. Hansard, Parliamentary
Debates, 5 March 1999, col 1369-70
Public and political awareness has been heightened by the tireless
work of campaigners, who have exposed the conditions in mink farming
through video footage and photographs … I make no apology, and no
excuses, for not wanting to visit a fur farm. That video footage and
those photographs clearly illustrated how awful fur farming is. They
brought into sharp focus the secret side of a business that many of
us had not seen, and that is a discredit to Britain.
~ Angela Smith MP in fur farm debate. Hansard, Parliamentary
Debates, 5 March 1999, col 1149
The Bill [to ban fur farming] is extremely welcome as it will
finally kill off the remnants of a sick and discredited domestic
industry in Britain. It will also send important signals to the
international fur trade that there is simply no place in decent,
modern society for fur farming - an unnecessary industry that is
completely indifferent to the animals that it exploits. Mink farming
is cruel and vicious at many levels.
~ Gareth Thomas MP in fur farming debate. Hansard, Parliamentary
Debates, 5 March 1999
The issue of cruelty as far as it attends fur farming is underlined
by the fact that we have been told by those who oppose the Bill that
fur has been farmed in the same way for 80 generations. It strikes
me that if we were unable, in 80 generations of farming, to come up
with a more humane method of doing so, that is a logical argument
for moving straight to a ban, rather than filtering that process
through some from of regulation.
~ Desmond Swayne MP in fur farming debate. Hansard, Parliamentary
Debates, 5 March 1999
Why are we keeping them [mink] in such appalling conditions? Is it
so that prune-like little old women and flashy, spivvy types can
wear mink coats?
~ Tony Banks MP. Hansard, 8 December 1992
Nobody really needs a mink coat … except the mink.
~ Glenda Jackson, actress and MP
Even if their cages were enlarged a hundred times they would still
fail to satisfy the basic needs of these inquisitive carnivores
lacking, as they would, all the complex factors of their true,
natural world. And why are these creatures so confined? For human
vanity and profit. The time is long overdue for these deplorable
places to be banned, and I, as a Member of Parliament, would be
proud if this Parliament took a firm moral stand on this issue.
~ Andrew Bowden MP, Agscene, summer 1991