View allAll Photos Tagged Slaughter
Captured this moment just before the chicken was slaughtered for dinner. Everything is at peace just before the storm.
Rep. Louise Slaughter met with Major Andrea Pitruzzella, Chief Master Sargeant Scott Scharlau, and Col. Allan Swartzmillter.
16 December, 2015 – Risso’s Dolphins Slaughter – at Taiji, Japan
After 16 consecutive Blue cove days, the hunters of Taiji mercilessly slaughtered another family of Risso's.
At 8:35am-local Taiji time, Cove Guardians spotted the hunting vessels coming together, corralling this family and driving them toward the killing cove.
The family fought valiantly for over 5 hours, coming very close to escaping many times, however in the end, they were outmatched by the ruthless hunters and their machines of death.
The family of 8, including one juvenile were finally herded into the cove and brutally murdered.
While no dolphins were selected for captivity, the reality remains that the captive industry is what duels this senseless and barbaric act.
It is imperative that we all take a stand against the captive industry, boycotting any company that promotes the SWD programs and encouraging everyone we know, not to participate in these programs.
Captivity Kills!!
Sites for more information :
Sea Shepherd Cove Guardians Page (official)
www.facebook.com/SeaShepherdCoveGuardiansOfficialPage
Cove Guardians
www.seashepherd.org/cove-guardians
Photo: Sea Shepherd
Mark Slaughter, president & CEO of RigNet, a company that provides remote communication services (video, voice, data) to the global oil and gas industry—it’s no longer a “ship-to-shore” radio proposition.
The caretaker of the house in Calima took us into town, got a pig, slaughtered it, and roasted it himself. It was bloody, gory, and absolutely delicious.
A modern art installation in front of the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo. The S on the left flickers at night, alternating the sign between Laughter and Slaughter.
The test birds. They were all being picked on the worst in the pens so I wanted to process them before the other birds killed them.
These photos were taken in a slaughterhouse in rural Tennessee over a two year period. They show the hard work of a family owned slaughterhouse competing with industrial based slaughterhouses. I used many different film and camera setups. The two black and white photos are taken on Kodak Tri-X film exposed at 320 with a Yashica Mat EM. All Rights Reserved, Copyright Joshua Harriman 2008.
[...]
Considerate se questa è una donna,
Senza capelli e senza nome
Senza più forza di ricordare
Vuoti gli occhi e freddo il grembo
Come una rana d’inverno.
[...]
primo levi "se questo è un uomo"
Nashville, TN. So there I was.... making the nice, leisurely drive from the Edgefield neighborhood in East Nashville to the old City Cemetery in South Nashville. I was in an area of downtown called SoBro (South of Broadway) when all of a sudden I see these skulls on the windows of a building. Freaked me out, it did. Turns out that this is where Slaughter House is located which is a haunted house type amusement. I have wondered where it is so now I know. The corner of Peabody and 6th Ave. South.
These photos were taken in a slaughterhouse in rural Tennessee over a two year period. They show the hard work of a family owned slaughterhouse competing with industrial based slaughterhouses. I used many different film and camera setups. These are from the many rolls of black and white film shot with either a Nikon FM2 or a Yashica T4. I shot in either Tri-X 400 or T-Max 400. The shots were taken on breaks or at the homes of the workers. All Rights Reserved, Copyright Joshua Harriman 2008.
Co. B, Cass County Home Guard, MO. Cavalry
Enlisted June 27, 1861
Mustered in June 27, 1861
Mustered out Feb. 28, 1862 at Harrisonville, Missouri
William G. Cutler's History of the State of Kansas
NEOSHO COUNTY, Part 14
GALESBURGH.
J. M. SLAUGHTER, M. D. and farmer, Section 35, P. O. Galesburgh, is a native of Tennessee and was born in 1812. In 1832 he commenced studying medicine and moved to Kentucky, where he bought a farm and gave his attention to this. In 1844 he moved back to Tennessee and bought a farm, and took his second course of reading while engaged in farming. In 1850 he moved to Brooks Bend, Jackson Co., Tenn., and took up his practice again, where he was busy until 1855, when he moved to Missouri, locating in Cass County, near Harrisonville, meaning to farm here, but his neighbors made him resume, so he worked at both occupations. In 1861 he enlisted in the Missouri Home Guards that were formed under the call issued by Gen. Fremont. In 1863 he enlisted in the Missouri State Militia. After the war he lived in Missouri until 1869, when he emigrated to Kansas, locating on his present home; at first living in a camp, and as winter came on built a curious house of hay, with walls four feet thick; in the meantime ministering to scattered pioneer families and getting out rock from the quarries and building, doing the mason work himself. In 1870 they moved into it. He has improved his farm, having now eighty acres, sixty-five cultivated and the rest in pasture, with a fine orchard with 830 bearing trees - apples, peaches, pears and cherries, also plenty of small fruit. During the war he met his present wife, whose father, Mr. Collins, befriended him. Dr. Slaughter has been married four times. He is the father of nineteen children, eight now alive. In 1879 he obtained a certificate from the State Medical Association.