Is Animal Testing Necessary

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When one thinks of animal testing or animal experimentation, the mind is brought almost immediately, to the misguided notion of animals being mistreated and used solely for the personal gain of all mankind. Although this notion can be true in some instances, this is not always the situation at hand. Animals may be unnecessarily mistreated from time to time during studies or experiments, as well as in the way that they are stored throughout the duration of these studies. It has also been thought that these studies are not being conducted for any productive reason of any kind other than to meet the regulations of product safety set upon the industry to be accomplished through the practice of animal testing. Adding to all of this confusion surrounding …show more content…

In addition to this lack of mental capacities, there have been various cures developed to some fatal and not so fatal diseases that have been discovered through the process of animal testing. Some major examples of the vaccinations discovered were smallpox, anthrax, and polio. In addition to these vaccinations scientists were also able to develop some other breakthrough medical advancements such as the development of insulin, and blood transfusions coming out of this often condemned research. But despite all of this back and forth on both the benefits and downfalls of animal testing, there are a select few scientists and corporations that are looking into the possibilities of some equally productive alternatives to animal testing that could potentially limit the use of animals or cut out the necessity for them altogether to conduct experiments testing the toxicity of products currently in …show more content…

P.E.T.A. says "Right now, millions of mice, rats, rabbits, primates, cats, dogs, and other animals are locked inside cold, barren cages in laboratories across the country." In another article titled, "Is Animal Testing Morally Justified?" the author quotes Alistair Currie, a policy advisor for P.E.T.A. saying, "They feel pain and fear just as we do, and their overwhelming natural inclinations—like ours—are to be free and to protect their own lives, not to be locked in a small cage inside a laboratory, where they are subjected to abuse and suffering that would be illegal if they took place anywhere else." Although some activists use these horrible images and facts to portray their message to the public . Others, such as author Tom Regan try to compare the treatment of animals today to the unjust treatment of another group of individuals in the past which is now in present day unlawful. Tom Regan in his book, "All That Dwell Therein: Essaays on Animal Rights and

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