From Human Body Trafficking to Tiger Farming
Yeah! Communist China has some kind of “moral” issue going on or a lack of it to say the least.
They also farm human body parts taken from prisoners, the prisoners blood type is in the system, and all they have to do when they get a buyer is plug in the blood type information. That is called Laogai [see Laogai Research Foundation], and “The closing ceremony of the Olympics made it once again open season for harvesting.” [ see China's Gruesome Organ Harvest ] The communists told the world they would allow more openness and freedom to the Chinese and Tibetan people, but they appear to have not changed at all. It’s still the Genocide Olympics.
The communists that took over China have really destroyed Chinese culture, and the moral system it once had. Communist’s don’t seem to have any kind of religious or natural morals. It’s evident on how they are trying to destroy Tibetan Buddhism and the monks who are teacher’s to the people of Tibetan citizens of Tibet [Free Tibet].
Tiger farming is just as despicable! C’mon, raising animals just so you can kill them for body parts. Lets not forget about the black bears who are also caged while their bile is drained. I think Gandhi was right.
The communists could learn something from the Dalai Lama. Previous Emperors once respected the moral teachings of the Lama’s [teacher]. Sure some say that the Emperors were bad people, but people are bad in just about every culture, and they change in time for the better. Most countries still have Emperors, but they don’t have political power anymore, but it’s still part of their long history and culture. Emperors of China were in many cases great people who made China what it was before the communists came in and allege that they built China. Sorry, off topic, but some what related, it’s about morals and respect for the other.
WWF is working on every front to save wild tigers and stop the sale of tiger products, from patrolling the forests where tigers live to galvanizing international law enforcement to go after smuggling syndicates. Hard-fought bans on tiger trade have significantly reduced the killing of wild tigers for their skins and bones.
But a threat is growing from commercial facilities in China that have bred more than 5,000 tigers in captivity for the purpose of reigniting trade in tiger products. The owners of these facilities, called “tiger farms”, are pressuring Chinese authorities to lift the country’s successful 16-year-old ban and let them legally sell tiger products. [read more]
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