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This wasn’t an elephant “going rogue”.
In places like Kerala, they’re used in temple festivals and pushed into conditions they were never built for.
Chained for hours in packed grounds. Moved from event to event with little rest. Surrounded by loud drums, fireworks going off close by, and dense crowds.
Constant noise, pressure and confinement with nowhere to go.
Then when they reach breaking point, everyone acts like it came out of nowhere.
But it doesn’t. It’s the result of sustained stress, repeated until something gives.
End this cruelty now.
Reuters@Reuters
An elephant at a temple festival in the southern Indian state of Kerala turned violent, killing at least one person and damaging several vehicles
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Don’t turn away from what animals are made to endure. 🥺
Pregnant and nursing pigs are kept in gestation and farrowing crates - metal enclosures barely larger than their bodies. 💔
They can’t turn around or lie down properly. The lack of space causes severe physical discomfort and distress. 😣
This is their everyday reality, lasting for most of their lives. 😔
#pigs #farmanimals #saveanimals
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Sound on 🔊
Baby sheep who were abducted from their #dairy slave mothers 😢
Being raised in cages to be slaughtered 💔
Animal exploitation is vile and cruel.
#EndAnimalSlavery
#LiveVegan live without causing harm 🙏
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Humanity is dead
Animals used… exhausted. When animals can no longer carry you, they are left to die.
Maybe the real pilgrimage is compassion, not convenience. 💔
#KedarnathTruth #AnimalCruelty #Humanity
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"Biodegradable" balloons don't fix balloon releases. They might make them worse.
The label suggests the balloon disappears within weeks. The reality: latex balloons take months to years to fully break down, and during that entire time they're litter.
And during that time, animals eat them. Sea turtles mistake balloon fragments for jellyfish, birds feed shredded latex to nestlings, cattle and deer swallow ribbons.
The "biodegradable" claim makes people feel okay about a release that's still going to kill something.
If you're planning a memorial or celebration that calls for a release moment, there are better options.
Bubbles photograph beautifully. Native wildflower seed paper does the same job and grows habitat where it lands.
Whatever you let go of doesn't really go away. It comes back down on a beach, a field, or an animal that didn't ask to clean up after the moment.


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The plastic ring around a duck's beak doesn't kill it fast. It starves it slowly. 2 seconds and a couple cuts fixes this problem.
A duck with a ring stuck on its bill can't open its mouth to eat. It can't fish. It can't preen. It tries to scrape the ring off against rocks, branches, mud, anything, until its bill is raw and it's exhausted from the effort.
Wildlife rehabbers see this constantly in waterfowl: cranes, geese, ducks, pelicans, and herons. The birds in the photo below are three out of millions.
The numbers are hard to stomach:
90% of seabirds have ingested plastic. Ingesting even a single piece of plastic increases a seabird's risk of death by 20%.
Eight million tons of plastic enter the oceans every year. Six-pack rings, gallon jug seal rings, water bottle multipack loops, mask straps, tamper bands, hair ties. Every one of them is a snare.
Most plastics take 10 to 500 years to break down in marine environments. The "biodegradable" alternatives still take months at minimum, and during that window they're functionally identical to regular plastic.
The fix takes about two seconds.
Cut every plastic loop you encounter before throwing it away. Six-pack rings, jug seals, the rings around milk caps, dog treat bag tops, mask ear loops. Snip every closed circle into an open line.
You won't see the bird your snip saved, but the ring you cut tonight isn't out there waiting to choke a tern next year. It's already a piece of broken plastic on its way to a landfill, no longer a snare for anything.

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