Synthetic Cosmetic Products – Are you supporting animal testing?

65
rate or flag this page

By rydergifts


 

Not everyone believes that the exploitation of animals is wrong, the majority of people eat meat without even thinking it was once a cute enough animal which could possibly make a nice pet. But hey we are all animals and it's part of our instinct to do this.

A small minority that still wear fur and a vast number of people take medicinal products in the full knowledge that they may well have been perfected and safety tested through animal experimentation. Though most people don't know how, why and what is happening in these experients.

 

Whether one agrees or disagrees with people in these categories is a matter of personal viewpoint, but what can't really be disputed is that in the majority of the above cases the people concerned have made a choice.

 

It isn't really possible to buy and wear a 'real' fur without being clear that the making of it probably involved killing an animal. Similarly with many foodstuffs such as meat or fish, one can't really eat them without knowing that they come from animals.

 

Even with prescribed medicines, although a pill or liquid doesn't immediately communicate its origin, this whole area receives such constant publicity in the media that for me at least it would be difficult to believe that most people do not understand that animal testing is probably involved at some stage.

 

In the case of synthetic cosmetics though, the position is different. The power and financial influence of the major global corporate cosmetics companies is truly amazing a multi billion pound industry . Their advertising budgets are vast and the TV and papers are constantly full of their publicity and 'positive spin' ads. What is even more interesting is that large numbers of these ads and articles try to link their product to nature and natural. Images of forests, waterfalls, beautiful models frolicking on a pristine each and cuddly pet animals sitting on a couch watching admiringly as their owners apply whatever the product is.

 

Although there is some negative publicity and media comment about the realities of certain synthetic cosmetic production processes, this is often totally submerged and drowned by the outpourings of the mega-companies and their vast budgets though there is a lot of animal testing going on not only to mice but also to some very cute and endangered animals

 

I think this is a great pity because as a result the consumer can fail to understand two critically important things:

 

  • Some synthetic cosmetics are based upon artificial compounds that may involve animal exploitation during testing

  • It isn't necessary! There are natural cosmetic products available that do not involve the creation of artificial chemical compounds and their subsequent testing on animals.

 

Major cosmetic manufacturers now say they do not test on animals. It is also true that the European Parliament plans to ban cosmetic animal testing in 2009, though this is not entirely the whole story. Many of the chemicals used in synthetic products are sourced from third-party companies where the guarantees are far less clear. If these companies are outside of the EU then those humane laws may be difficult to apply.

 

The easy way to avoid indecision and uncertainty is to look for those cosmetic products that are based upon 100% natural ingredients and which offer a 'no animal testing' guarantee. You can be sure that no animal has had to suffer for your convenience and they are more than likely a lot more beneficial for the skin.

A Harsh Reality for Animal Testing
A Harsh Reality for Animal Testing

Print   —   Rate it:  up  down  flag this hub

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

No comments yet.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

Animal Testing

working