If you are like most people, you know a lot more about how farm animals are treated on factory farms than dogs, primates and other animals are treated in U.S. labs. It is no coincidence.
Exposure of what occurs behind the Plexiglass Curtain would be so damaging to National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded university research contracts that millions are spent to prevent transparency. For example, in 2009 the University of Iowa was cleared to construct an $11.2 million, 35,000-square-foot āsubterranean vivarium that will house experimental animals to be used in biomedical research and offer an extra measure of protection from animal rights extremists,ā reported The Scientist. The experimental animals include primates, sheep, pigs and rabbits.
Why would exposure be so damaging? Because much government-sponsored research is expensive, cruel, repetitive and without scientific value. Better that it stays out of the news.
Lab animals are the actual currency of government grants to medical centers and universitiesāa kind of academic pork. At a medical center where I worked, researchers felt they had not āmade itā until they were given primates instead of lowly cats or rodents. And while NIH Director Francis Collins, who describes himself as a āserious Christian,ā has tackled a lack of minorities and sexism in science, he is strangely silent on the millions, probably billions, of animals he sends to their deathāusually for meaningless experiments.
Animal Research at the Highest Government Levels
Thomas R. Insel directed the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center at Emory University, one of the worldās largest centers for primate research, before becoming director of the NIHās National Institute of Mental Health. In one experiment Insel participated in, newborn monkeys were āremoved from their mothers within 48 h of birth,ā and subjected to āstressorsā without being āable to use a social companion to buffer their response to a stressor.ā What was learned? āAs expected from previous studies, monkeys removed from their mother shortly after birth and raised in standard nursery conditions develop a syndrome characterized by decreased affiliation, increased aggression, and increased self-directed, repetitive behavior.ā
In another experiment conducted by Insel on voles, a mouse-like mammal, āan animal was placed in the start boxā with 2-8 days old pups. āParental behavior was recorded as time spent with pups, either nursing, grooming or crouching during a 5-min period. Females were decapitated the same day.ā
Similar banal, cruel and taxpayer-funded research has been conducted by Nora Volkow, director of the NIHās National Institute on Drug Abuse. One research paper co-written by Volkow shows a bloody āpregnant bonnet macaque in transverse position within HR+ PET scanner . . . positioned so that maternal and fetal organs were within same field of view.ā The paper concludes that when female primates are dosed with cocaine, fetuses are affected too. Does anyone not know this?
The NIHās National Institute on Aging (NIA) is also complicit. A few year ago, when I inquired about degrading and mocking primate images posted on its website from an official NIA workshop created by Wake Forestās Thomas Clarkson, the images were promptly removed with no written explanations. The photos showed monkeys posed with glasses, posed at typewriters and dressed in clothing. āFunnyā cartoon bubbles were added.
Defending Their Dollars
There is probably no industry more afraid of transparency than animal research. Ever since Alex Pacheco exposed treatment of the Silver Spring monkeys in 1981, animal researchers have been reduced to uttering āitās not how it looksā or ālet us explainā when unwanted images surface.
And, expectedly, animal researchers turn nasty when their deeds are exposed and career security threatened. For example, when a group called Progress for Science dared to question taxpayer-funded primate research conducted at UCLA in 2014, they were met by an angry mob of as many as 40 UCLA researchers and their supporters who yelled obscenities. Some pro-animal research protesters became so livid they had to be restrained by police. It was hard to believe the mob was, by day, men and women of āscienceā dedicated to advancing human medicine. It was reminiscent of Northwestern University medical students who jeered and screamed at protestors of their ādog labsā outside their medical building in 1988. Are these future healers?
In the 1980s, the animal research industry tried to spin negative public opinion with campaigns like āyour daughter or your dogā implying your child would die if the dog or chimp didnāt. Then researchers replaced dog labs with pig labs, a less loved animal. But by the 2000s, the animal research industry, running scared, pushed through the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act which criminalizes interference with āthe operations of an animal enterpriseā a precursor to āAg-Gagā laws covering farm operations.
Yes the Public Can Judge Animal Research
In addition to underground vivariums, electronic surveillance, code cards, high tech security and the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, the animal research industry has another way of evading scrutiny: the public canāt judge their āhigh levelā science. You do not have the scientific background to judge the work of scientists so ātrust them.ā Yet revealing that maternal deprivation causes harm in babies or maternal cocaine use affects the fetus is not āhigh levelā scienceāit is a waste of taxpayer dollars, cruelty to animals and an insult to our intelligence.
Consider the āDraize Testā in which millions of restrained, conscious animalsāusually albino rabbits but sometimes dogsāhave test substances applied to their eyes to observe for redness, swelling, discharge, ulceration, hemorrhaging, cloudiness, or blindness. This āscientificā test is thrown out when product liability cases come to court because āanimal results cannot be extrapolated to humans.ā So why are they done?
The animal-research industry is a vast, macabre enterprise richly supporting medical centers and individual researchers with almost no transparency or accountability. The public is denied a right to āknowā even though the public pays for it. Z
