The Beagle breed is friendly and loves people. Beagles are eager to please and are very trusting. Sociable by nature, Beagles tend to get on well with other dogs when socialised from an early age.
It is fair to say that the Beagle breed is a victim of it’s own success.
It’s excellent characteristics and love for people makes it a breed of choice.
Exploited by the animal testing industry in the UK, “They won’t fight back”, said the technician at the laboratory.
Some UK puppy farms are legally allowed to breed thousands of dogs a year as long as they are sold to laboratory's around the UK to be tested on. The laboratories are legally allowed to inject and force feed a whole range of chemicals and other substances into the dogs and also cut them up, bleed them out and harvest their organs.
It is really bad what they do to them.
The Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986, or 'ASPA' protects the perpetrators of torture and abuse of these dogs in the UK.
If you think it is for the future benefit of mankind then think again because the vast majority of experiments performed on dogs and other animals do not help in our endeavour to find medical treatments for human conditions.
Have scientists actually tested rat poison on dogs to determined the affect it would have on humans? It seems so.
If you don't want to get upset or angry I hope you think very carefully before using Google to educate yourself on animal testing happening today in the UK.
It is fair to say that the Beagle breed is a victim of it’s own success.
It’s excellent characteristics and love for people makes it a breed of choice.
Exploited by the animal testing industry in the UK, “They won’t fight back”, said the technician at the laboratory.
Some UK puppy farms are legally allowed to breed thousands of dogs a year as long as they are sold to laboratory's around the UK to be tested on. The laboratories are legally allowed to inject and force feed a whole range of chemicals and other substances into the dogs and also cut them up, bleed them out and harvest their organs.
It is really bad what they do to them.
The Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986, or 'ASPA' protects the perpetrators of torture and abuse of these dogs in the UK.
If you think it is for the future benefit of mankind then think again because the vast majority of experiments performed on dogs and other animals do not help in our endeavour to find medical treatments for human conditions.
Have scientists actually tested rat poison on dogs to determined the affect it would have on humans? It seems so.
If you don't want to get upset or angry I hope you think very carefully before using Google to educate yourself on animal testing happening today in the UK.