I could not be more impressed with this German Court and Judge who ruled it legal to expose cruelty. In the U.S. there is SO much money behind the kind of suffering that goes on behind closed doors. It’s fiercely guarded and if you expose it you are punished. YOU are punished, but not the people who are committing the crime of unspeakable horror on living beings. Their bosses are too busy turning everyone’s focus on the crime of trespassing. Some trespassing is for the greater good. Otherwise the mean get meaner and the greed is rewarded with our dollars. This judge called exposing cruelty “a justifiable necessity”. How true is that for any living being?? Thank God for this man, he is a true hero! And Barbara Hendricks? The Federal Minister of the Environment has banned meat from state functions as her way of combating climate change!!! I am BLOWN away but these forward thinking leaders. Absolutely blown away. #Repost @vegan_universe ・・・ A German court ruled that it’s legal for activists to go undercover into factory farms and take pictures and videos if there's reason to believe that the authorities aren't doing their job of enforcing animal protection laws. In the case, the prosecution argued that three activists who entered a pig factory farm to document cruelty were guilty of trespassing. The prosecution has now lost, and the activists have been released. The historic ruling essentially states that entering a factory farm and filming is not trespassing, but rather a justifiable necessity. The court ruled that undercover activists are making sure that farmers adhere to animal welfare laws and regulations. Ulf Majstrak, the presiding judge of the criminal court, found that the activists were in the right because there was a danger to animal welfare. He stated that the activists had done exactly what was needed with the means available to them. Earlier this year, CNN reported on a study that found Germans were ditching meat for plant-based versions. In fact, a 2016 study based on 2008–2011 data estimated that 4.3 percent of Germans between 18 and 79 identified as vegetarian, with the majority between 18 and 29. Compare that to 2 percent in the United King

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マギー・Qのインスタグラム(maggieq) - 10月25日 06時05分


I could not be more impressed with this German Court and Judge who ruled it legal to expose cruelty. In the U.S. there is SO much money behind the kind of suffering that goes on behind closed doors. It’s fiercely guarded and if you expose it you are punished.
YOU are punished, but not the people who are committing the crime of unspeakable horror on living beings. Their bosses are too busy turning everyone’s focus on the crime of trespassing. Some trespassing is for the greater good. Otherwise the mean get meaner and the greed is rewarded with our dollars. This judge called exposing cruelty “a justifiable necessity”. How true is that for any living being?? Thank God for this man, he is a true hero!
And Barbara Hendricks? The Federal Minister of the Environment has banned meat from state functions as her way of combating climate change!!! I am BLOWN away but these forward thinking leaders. Absolutely blown away.

#Repost @vegan_universe
・・・
A German court ruled that it’s legal for activists to go undercover into factory farms and take pictures and videos if there's reason to believe that the authorities aren't doing their job of enforcing animal protection laws.

In the case, the prosecution argued that three activists who entered a pig factory farm to document cruelty were guilty of trespassing. The prosecution has now lost, and the activists have been released.

The historic ruling essentially states that entering a factory farm and filming is not trespassing, but rather a justifiable necessity. The court ruled that undercover activists are making sure that farmers adhere to animal welfare laws and regulations.

Ulf Majstrak, the presiding judge of the criminal court, found that the activists were in the right because there was a danger to animal welfare. He stated that the activists had done exactly what was needed with the means available to them.

Earlier this year, CNN reported on a study that found Germans were ditching meat for plant-based versions. In fact, a 2016 study based on 2008–2011 data estimated that 4.3 percent of Germans between 18 and 79 identified as vegetarian, with the majority between 18 and 29. Compare that to 2 percent in the United King


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