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  • Argue A Case Against Animals As Specimens For Scientific Experimentation

    Argue A Case Against Animals As Specimens For Scientific Experimentation

    Ethics can be described as an internal control on the decisions made by an individual. It refers to the moral values and principles that guide one's behavior with respect to what might be considered right or wrong. Ethical standards are not set by law but merely guided by it and the accepted social standards that exist in a particular community or society. It is a simplistic opinion that choices are governed either by law or

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    Essay Length: 850 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    Animals are being killed in order to know if a product is safe for humans. Some products are meaningless due to the animals being too scared. The animals are caged for many years until the day of their death approaches. Animal testing is often used in cosmetics, household products, and chemicals. In many cosmetics out there, an animal test was preformed. It is not required by law to do animal testing on cosmetics (Animals in

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    Essay Length: 596 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 1, 2010
  • Animal Experimentation

    Animal Experimentation

    Animal experimentation is a big part of medical progress. Opponents of animal testing point out the amount of animals used and the different types of animals used but if you look at it, it’s all for a good reason. Animal experimenters don’t do this just to do it. It’s for a purpose. There are thousands upon thousands of medical situations that couldn’t have been done without animal experimenting. Animal suffering is pointed out but for

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    Essay Length: 2,353 Words / 10 Pages
    Submitted: December 2, 2010
  • Hog Farming And The Dangers To The Air And Water

    Hog Farming And The Dangers To The Air And Water

    Hog Farming and the Dangers to the Air and Water Hog farming in North Carolina has been around for thousands of years and has changed over the course of that time. The changes have included better farming techniques, bigger farms, more pigs and along with these changes more and more hog waste build up. This build up is becoming more of a problem because it not only is smelly it is endangering the environment. It

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    Essay Length: 724 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 3, 2010
  • The Body Farm

    The Body Farm

    The Reaper is a Creeper The definition of death is the termination of life. The mythical character named death which acts as a personification of the taker of life and souls. It is usually represented as a walking skeleton with a mysterious black cloak, holding a scythe. He is also known as the Grim Reaper. Does this make death scary? Walking upon a dead decomposing body is like spending the night in a haunted house.

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    Essay Length: 994 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 3, 2010
  • Animal Cruelty

    Animal Cruelty

    Many of you sitting in this room have, had some bond with yours or someone else's pet in your life time, dogs, cats, birds etc. You think of them coming to greet you at the door when you come home. They were always apart of our lives one way or another. Even in the past, when they had to, people only sacrificed animals for the sake of survival. But as time progressed humanity increased in

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    Essay Length: 850 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 4, 2010
  • The Shrimp Industry: Farming And Environment

    The Shrimp Industry: Farming And Environment

    The Shrimp Industry: Farming and Environment Jina Kephart AMC05 CA100 Chef Cash May 13, 2005 History of Shrimp Farming The idea of shrimp farming originated way back in time, approximately 3,000 years ago (Tibbetts, A318). Chinese farmers began by raising fish in freshwater ponds and nearly 1,000 years later they began raising shellfish, especially mollusks (Tibbetts, A318). They implemented aquaculture, which is defined as the farming of fish, shellfish and aquatic plants (Tibbetts, A318). In

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    Essay Length: 1,246 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 4, 2010
  • Animal Rights

    Animal Rights

    Upon laying my eyes on this piece of "fine literature", I knew that I wasn't going to enjoy it too much. To my surprise, once I read each line at least twice, and broke each sentence down, I was able to actually from an a opinion, actually, more than one opinion. In the essay, I found that there are many things that I agree with, many that I disagree with, and many that I have

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    Essay Length: 939 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 5, 2010
  • Racism In Animated Films

    Racism In Animated Films

    Racism in Animated Films While Disney animated films are the ideal family movies, it is undisclosed to many that such racism is being portrayed. "Rarely do we ask about the origins and intentions of the messages we encounter through mass media; sometimes we forget that [producers] have origins or intentions at all" (Lipsitz 5). The social inequality found in such popular culture can be due to several reasons. According to David Croteau and William Hoynes

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    Essay Length: 939 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 7, 2010
  • Animal Rights

    Animal Rights

    It may seem as though the many medications we use today would not be available to us had they not been tested on animals. The truth is, they would not be attainable had scientists not tested on non-animal subjects. Despite popular belief, testing drugs on animals often give defective results. Although animals may seem the like ideal specimens for testing new drugs, the experiments are untrustworthy and can cause unknown side effects. Research on animals

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    Essay Length: 476 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: December 9, 2010
  • The Farming Of Bones Summary

    The Farming Of Bones Summary

    02.29.08 Component B “The Farming of Bones” By: ~Edwidge Danticat~ Talking about the culture brought throughout this book, your looking at a Latin American culture, specifically the Dominican/Haitian cultures. As I read this book, beyond the many numerous ways she worded her sentences and how the characters spoke, they often spoke with a definant difference than you would hear here in common U.S. language. They would constantly use inferences to what they were talking about

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    Essay Length: 1,674 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 10, 2010
  • Discuss How The Converging Interests Of Farming Ranching And The Railroad Contributed To The Closing Of The Frontier And The Rise Of Conflicting Interests That Would Strengthen Populism And Lead To Attempts To Address The Abuses Of The Railroads.

    Discuss How The Converging Interests Of Farming Ranching And The Railroad Contributed To The Closing Of The Frontier And The Rise Of Conflicting Interests That Would Strengthen Populism And Lead To Attempts To Address The Abuses Of The Railroads.

    the united states was going through an era of development in which it was industrializing and upsizing its agricultural industry. this progressive era led to the closing of the frontier, ending an iconic era in United States history. The government was ending its land granting system, and settlers were starting to build up a modern life there The most obvious issue that led to the closing of the frontier, was the physical one. land was

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    Essay Length: 621 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 11, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    Word Count: 748 Animal Testing Every year millions of animals suffer and die in painful tests; in order to determine the safety of make-up products. Products like eye shadow and soap are tested on rabbits, guinea pigs, rats, dogs, and many other animals; despite the fact that the test results do not help prevent or treat human illness or injury. Cosmetics are not required to be experimented on animals, and since non-animal alternatives exist, it

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    Essay Length: 740 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 11, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    Animal testing is not a new thing. For many centuries scientists and testers in research have used animals of all kinds. Most of the animals are small ones like rodents - rats, mice, hamsters and gerbils. Some dogs, cats and a variety of goats, monkeys and rabbits have also been used. The animal rights issue is an emotional one. For decades the value of animal research has been grossly overrated. Although researchers claim that they

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    Essay Length: 1,677 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 14, 2010
  • Farm Life

    Farm Life

    Farm Life Isn't Easy! Life as a farmer was by no means easy. There were a lot of problems and strains, but it had its good points. The Homestead Act passed in 1862 by Congress gave 160 free acres of prairie land to anyone who would live on it for five years. A lot of farmers also bought land from the Railroad Company so they could be close to the transcontinental railroad tracks, which made

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    Essay Length: 433 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: December 14, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    Introduction As many as 115 million animals are experimented on and killed in laboratories in the U.S. every year. The taxpayers and consumers pay for such testing as pumping chemicals into rats' stomachs, hacking muscle tissue from dogs' thighs and putting baby monkeys in isolation chambers far from their mothers. There is no accurate count on the number of animals killed every year because experimenters and the government have decided that mice and rats and

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    Essay Length: 1,081 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 18, 2010
  • Research Paper - Organic Farming

    Research Paper - Organic Farming

    Research Paper Organic Farming Introduction: Every Sunday is Simon's grocery-shopping day. Unfortunately, he is in a bit of a dilemma while standing in the produce section of his local supermarket. In one hand, Simon is holding a conventionally grown Granny Smith apple. In his other hand, he has one that has been organically grown. Both apples look firm, shiny and green. Both provide vitamins and fiber, and both are free of fat, sodium and cholesterol.

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    Essay Length: 2,519 Words / 11 Pages
    Submitted: December 19, 2010
  • Animal Rights

    Animal Rights

    Test Them? Eat Them? Leave Them Alone? Every year millions of animals are killed needlessly. They are tested in laboratories and butchered in slaughterhouses. These people that do such things are not completely wrong for what they do, but wrong for doing it in such mass numbers and in such horrible situations. Animals should be used for testing and in consumption but only under certain conditions. The testing should be for extreme medical reasons that

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    Essay Length: 1,620 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 19, 2010
  • Animal Rights

    Animal Rights

    Animal rights are held entirely too high in regard. Many activist do not realize the benefits of testing on animals. They claim that it is "unethical" or "cruel" to perform experiments on such creatures. The truth is, the world as a whole has advanced tremendously in the past century due to animal experimentation. We are affected every day by at least one thing that has been influenced by animal testing. Many of the things we

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    Essay Length: 2,953 Words / 12 Pages
    Submitted: December 19, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    The Problem with Testing Drugs on Animals Every year is that nearly 100 million animals die in research laboratories at the hands of curious scientists who perform outdated and inaccurate tests that prove no benefit to humans or animals. Before these animals die, they are routinely burned, scalded, poisoned, starved, given electric shocks, addicted to drugs, subjected to near freezing temperatures, dosed with radioactive elements, driven insane, deliberately inflicted with diseases such as cancer, diabetes,

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    Essay Length: 791 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 20, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    Animal rights are held entirely too high in regard. Many activist do not realize the benefits of testing on animals. They claim that it is "unethical" or "cruel" to perform experiments on such creatures. The truth is, the world as a whole has advanced tremendously in the past century due to animal experimentation. We are affected every day by at least one thing that has been influenced by animal testing. Many of the things we

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    Essay Length: 2,768 Words / 12 Pages
    Submitted: December 20, 2010
  • Animal Testing

    Animal Testing

    Animal Testing In the world that we live in today, medical experts still have yet to come up with a cure for certain medical mysteries, for example, there is still no cure for AIDS, and researchers say “animal experimentation benefits AIDS research” (Animal Experimentation, p. 13). They relay on the testing of animals in laboratories to help find a cure. While yet many people think that we don’t have to test on animals, they don’t

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    Essay Length: 492 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: December 22, 2010
  • Perdue Farm Responding To 21st Century Challenges

    Perdue Farm Responding To 21st Century Challenges

    Employee satisfaction variables Employee Satisfaction: Employee satisfaction is considered to be a key indicator of productivity and customer satisfaction. Employee satisfaction is a key to the success of the organization. The Company's ability to fulfill the physical, emotional, and psychological needs of its employees is employee satisfaction. Satisfaction: Satisfaction is the psychological state that indicates how a person feels about his or her situation, based on an evaluation of the situation. Motivation: Motivation is the

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    Essay Length: 1,341 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: December 23, 2010
  • Moral Obligation: Do Animals Have Rights?

    Moral Obligation: Do Animals Have Rights?

    A moral obligation is a theory according to which obligations arise from a social contract which is dictated by the demands or expectations of a society. Morals in separate are defined as the perpetrating concern with the principles or rules of right conduct or the distinction between right and wrong. Obligations are defined as something by which a person is bound or obliged to do certain things and which arises out of a sense of

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    Essay Length: 797 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 23, 2010
  • Animal Dreams

    Animal Dreams

    For many, true self-discovery takes a lifetime to achieve. In Barbara Kingsolver's novel, Animal Dreams, main character Codi Noline locates the individual masked beneath her various facades. Through flashbacks and narration shifts, the story of a bright and rebellious girl's exodus and eventual return to her constrictive hometown, where she copes with the deaths of her controlling, intransigent and disdainful father and adored sister Hallie. At first, Codi is unable to prescribe a personality or

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    Essay Length: 707 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 24, 2010

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