seen from South Korea

seen from Mexico

seen from Mexico
seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Bulgaria
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
Have you ever wondered why successful companies carefully select core values that describe how they envision their company culture? How can a few words make a difference in the success of a company? Here's how to bring your core values alive instead of letting them die slowly in your employee manual. ➡️ https://www.oridoc.com/bring-company-core-values-alive-how-to-go-beyond-more-than-just-words/ #corevalues #companyvalues #valuesmatter #corporatevalues #values #excellence #valuedriven #workplacevalues #valuedriveculture #companyvaluesmatter #weloveourwork #detailsmatter #inthedetails #howto #givingback #corporate #leadership #success #integrity #teamwork #passionatework #management #humanresources #oridoc #consultancy #ondernemer #Unternehmer #Unternehmerinnen #entrepreneur
I just supported WFM killed the Easter Bunny! on @ThunderclapIt // @surfandsand23
We’ve written about the article in Vogue’s October issue (“Is Rabbit the New Ethical Meat?”) about how rabbit meat is an “ethical meat” and called out Vogue, which regularly features fur in its pages, for its hypocrisy in even attempting to make a statement about what is and isn’t ethical with respect to animals and animal welfare.
But what we didn’t realize at the time was that Tamar Adler, the article’s writer, isn’t just a freelance writer. She’s a paid shill for Whole Foods. In fact, the article was placed in Vogue as part of Whole Foods’ public relations strategy to ensure that the public begin to think that rabbit meat is ethical, when it clearly is not (see our articles on how rabbits for Whole Foods are raised and slaughtered). Adler teaches cooking classes at Whole Foods, and has a long time association with the company.
Here are the things I could have told you about rabbits before Evander and Greedy Panda came into my life: Bunnies are storybook creatures, runaway or velveteen. They wear blue blazers or consult pocket watches. They live in burrows or raid gardens and subsist on a diet of carrots. Rabbits are not pets any rational person would choose to have, especially not someone who lives in an apartment. Rabbits, I would have told you with much certainty, are not for me.
I’m home alone in Echo Park when my boyfriend, Justin, calls me. “You won’t believe what just happened,” he says. “We have rabbits!”
Follow the link to read the rest of this amazing story.
Here is Bella!
She was raised for meat and then abandoned at the local animal shelter with about 8 guinea pigs. She was in the shelter for about 8 months because no one wanted her because of her size and ruby eyes. Bella was VERY timid and scared at first but is coming out of her shell and showing her character.
She enjoys sprinting up and down the garden but doesn’t like getting mud on her paws! She is in the process of being bonded with a new friend named Baxter.
Meet your "meat" rabbit: Bella. Bella is the same breed of rabbit now being sold as meat at Whole Foods.
Well-known vegan and social justice activist lauren Ornelas was arrested for leafleting during a peaceful protest against the sale of rabbit meat on Sunday, November 16, in Sebastopol, California. Then, a week later (i. e. yesterday), there was another protest, with three protesters briefly entering Whole Foods, but this time no arrests were made.
That’s right: Ornelas was arrested for leafleting. The official charge is “trespassing,” but in California (and in over half of the other U. S. states) the area where she was standing (outside the store, on the sidewalk) is considered a public area where demonstrators may gather as long as they are not blocking traffic. When the police were called, they refused to arrest Ornelas, but then the store manager made a “citizen’s arrest” of Ornelas, and she was issued a citation for the criminal charge of misdemeanor trespassing. She is scheduled to be in court on January 21, and is now looking into legal representation.
I have cried a lot since July 18.
What happened on that day was to blow open a side of myself I had never met. It was early; I had my coffee going, and was browsing through my email when I came upon a Change.org petition that affected me in a way no others had before. This was a petition announcing that Whole Foods, a store I revered as being top notch in every way, was carrying rabbit meat. What??? No way! I immediately emailed Whole Foods’ corporate headquarters to see if this was true, and that’s when the crying began. A “customer information specialist” named Julie Covar from Austin replied within hours; not only was it true, but Whole Foods had been planning it for years – planning to sell the meat of animals regarded by most Americans as household pets. Needless to say, this mother of four happy house rabbits signed the petition!
Since that sad morning in July I have done a lot more than cry. First it was the unflattering video I took of myself with two of my rabbits and shared on YouTube, Facebook and Google + and soon I was engaging in verbal dialogues with total strangers. I have been a bit obsessed – even more than normal (for people who know me) – with standing up to this big corporation for what I believe is a huge mistake. I know I have gotten on the last nerve of some of my friends and even driven some away on social media, but I am a bunny mom! If a huge grocery chain suddenly began selling the meat of dogs or cats (or horses or guinea pigs…), I’m pretty sure you would come unglued too.
I’ve learned a lot about myself in the past several months. I am brave. I am fierce. I am capable of doing things I did not know I could do. I don’t say that with ego, but rather with immense humility. I did not know I could stand in front of a popular grocery store in the middle of the town I grew up in, by myself, holding up a protest sign. Or that the signs would multiply and get bigger – attracting even more attention to my unpopular feelings about a store so many of my friends and members of the community love. I did not know I could hear without personalizing or reacting to the comments made by consumers with differing opinions or by those who nonchalantly choose to make light. It never occurred to me that this was a fight or that I would still be standing in front of Whole Foods during the holidays.
On the flipside, I cannot possibly count all the interesting conversations I’ve had with people, the honks, waves, hugs and thanks I’ve received for being there for the rabbits or just standing up for something I believe in. Or the amazing community of rabbit moms (and dads) and activists I’ve met who’ve lifted me up and shown me that I am not alone in my thoughts or position. On one Sunday in October a man called out to me (with a smile and a wave) “David and Goliath!” This inspired me for the remainder of the day and caused spontaneous smiles at the ground in between my chats with customers.
Sometimes shoppers ask “what did Whole Foods do now?” But more frequently I hear, “Whole Foods sells rabbit?” Why do you suppose Whole Foods doesn’t advertise this new meat product? Did you know that all of Whole Foods’ rabbit comes from Iowa and that Iowa passed “ag-gag” legislation in 2012, making the reporting of farm animal cruelty a punishable crime? There is no way for Whole Foods to guarantee the way rabbits are raised, transported or killed because there is no true oversight. Does it bother you that these are domestic rabbits raised solely for their meat and that not a single one will live more than 16 weeks? Or what about the fact that they’re auto-shipped to the individual stores where there must be some pressure to sell them, demand or no demand? Even if you don’t have pets, let alone rabbits, this information should raise a red flag.
The grassroots Rabbit Advocacy Network, born out of Whole Foods’ decision to carry rabbit meat, is an extraordinary effort of some of the mightiest people I have met during this campaign. And together we fight (and sometimes cry), remaining hopeful that Whole Foods will rescind their decision to sell the flesh of our pets for $10.99 a pound.