Activist: “What were we accused of saying?”
PC Paul Adams: “They sell fur!”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bijyHLf5eMk
On Friday 4th Feb protesters were back outside Dixie's Vintage market stall in Cambridge over their sale of fur. Activists came armed with a new petition calling on the Council to ban the sale of fur on their land, which would effectively prevent Dixie's from continuing to sell real fur items.
Public support was great as usual with plenty of signatures gathered. Amnesty International campaigners stopped by to sign the petition as well and the anti-fur activists signed theirs.
PCSO Diana Neill 7240 arrived on the scene, her attitude was abrasive and she objected to her collar number being filmed. PCSO Neill proceeded to spend her paid working hours browsing the stall and asking the prices of various items. The PCSO tried to dissuade activists from publishing her picture by claiming she would 'prosecute you' – no wonder one Council employee once referred to her as 'very stupid'!
She called in Riot squad cop PC Paul Adams 1241 who is the Neighbourhood Policing Constable for the West of the City. He started by demanding an activist's details, attempting to misuse Section 50 of the Police Reform Act – his request was refused. After standing in the middle of the road , obstructing a public highway he returned claiming that a female activist had been abusive about the stall. Pushed on what the abusive comments were he responded 'they sell fur'! Activists concur that the sale of fur is indeed offensive but in this case it was simply a statement of fact!
He later returned demanding to know when the activists were leaving. When they refused to tell him he told a female activist that he would stand in her face until she left. The video camera was then switched on and his attitude soon changed!
Adams even saw fit to tell a passer-by that the peaceful activists had links to 'terrorism'!
This sort of police intimidation will never prevent us from fighting the cruel, abusive fur trade. Please show your support by speaking to Dixie's market stall and asking them to go fur free.
Comments
Hide the following 12 comments
Terrorism??!
08.02.2011 12:50
CPS
Question
08.02.2011 13:04
(A) Sab x
Shame on Dixies stall
08.02.2011 13:22
community
@ (A) Sab
08.02.2011 13:38
It is not a matter of an old product that is no longer produced. Instead its about perpetuating a fashion trend that begins in Vintage retailers and then leads to the sale of new items of fur. As the Vintage items become 'acceptable and fashionable' the sale of new fur rises. Today's new fur is tomorrows Vintage and the circle continues. Many Vintage retailers up and down the UK recognise this and refuse to sell fur.
We are not asking for the fur to be destroyed, many positive uses can be put to it: donations to the homeless as done by groups like PETA (as this does not perpetuate the upmarket fashion trend of using fur), donations to animal shelters to keep animals warm (after all it was their kin the fur was taken from) or used in anti-fur stunts (helping repair some of the damage done by the 'acceptable' image Vintage gives the fur trade). All we ask is it is not paraded around as a middle class fashion statement as this leads directly to the sale of new fur items.
I hope this helps answer your questions.
Animal Rights Cambridge
Homepage: http://animalrightscambridge.webs.com/
No to all fur!
08.02.2011 14:37
no compromise
Fur has been used for 1000s of years
08.02.2011 18:07
People should be left to do what they want without all this nanny state telling you what you can and can't wear.
Fox
@ Fox
08.02.2011 18:53
Your freedom ends where the foxes nose begins
@ Fox
08.02.2011 19:11
We are not talking about Eskimos or other subsistence communities. We are talking about fur in Britain in the 21st century where there is no necessity for its use. Overtly supporting unnecessary cruelty to animals will inevitably solicit objection. We can't stop you from wearing fur but we have a right to object on behalf of the animals that suffered totally unnecessarily for your 'fashion statement'.
Animal Rights Cambridge
Homepage: http://animalrightscambridge.webs.com
Never...
08.02.2011 19:42
Cambskid
natural life cycle
08.02.2011 23:47
You could say that about anything. Whatever you do in life, someone is always going to have an issue with it.
>> Tradition is a particularly poor argument to use to justify something morally. Slavery was 'traditional', gender roles are 'traditional' and class privilege is 'traditional'. There's no reason to assume something is ethical just because it is traditional.
Ethical is somebody elses opinions forced onto another. Paying taxes that are given to the long term unemployed is ethical because it continues to feed their problem of being dependent on the state, rather than looking after themselves. But I certainly wouldn't demand people to stop paying their taxes, or give someone grief if they did so.
>> We are not talking about Eskimos or other subsistence communities. We are talking about fur in Britain in the 21st century where there is no necessity for its use.
I think you will find that eskimos have access to all the latest guns, clothing and trucks that we have. They certainly don't have a need to use fur, but they still do - yet no one seems to have a go at them. I just think its a bit of a another pick on the middle class.
>> Overtly supporting unnecessary cruelty to animals will inevitably solicit objection. We can't stop you from wearing fur but we have a right to object on behalf of the animals that suffered totally unnecessarily for your 'fashion statement'.
What about if i used it for purely functional reasons? That way, I'm not doing it needlessly, I doing it naturally as we have done for 1000s of years. We didn't need to wear fur - ever. But we did. Why are those people allowed to and I'm not?
Fox
@ Fox
09.02.2011 01:00
Ethical views are forced on you every day: don't kill people, don't keep human slaves, don't abuse children. Your freedom is conditional upon you not harming others.
It is a simple matter of deciding if you support unnecessary cruelty or not. We don't and we will continue to propagate our viewpoint.
Animal Rights Cambridge
Homepage: http://animalrightscambridge.webs.com
thanks for the heads up
09.02.2011 15:02
ACTco