View allAll Photos Tagged Slaughter
Vader (w/ Internal Bleeding, Sacrificial Slaughter, Voices of Ruin, Micawber) @ Club Red (Mesa, AZ) on June 4, 2017
Lower Slaughter, Cotswolds. I grew up in Oxfordshire and when I was a child we had family trips to the villages of the Cotswolds. This is the first time that I have returned in 60 years.
Germany, the country that brought the killer B’s to classical music – Bach, Beethoven and Brahms, that brought Goethe and Schiller to literature, and Leibnitz, Kant and Hegel to Philosophy is also the country that is responsible for the biggest and most highly organized genocide in human history. Coming to understand this duality has been a constant theme in the analysis of the Holocaust. The elements of such a transition involve the manipulative reinterpretation of history, the keen use of blame, propaganda, dehumanized representations of the other in order to transform the unacceptable into the ordinary.
Beijing - Slaughtering a pig in open air south of Fenzhongsi Street west of G2 Jinghu Expressway east of Fenzhongsi Subway Station (Line 10)
Photo credit: Animal Equality / Aitor Garmendia
A groundbreaking investigation by Animal Equality and award-winning photojournalist Aitor Garmendia exposes the slaughter of horses in Spain. The findings reveal persistent abuse and inhumane treatment within the industry.
Between November 2023 and May 2024, Animal Equality documented the cruel conditions at a slaughterhouse in Asturias, Spain. Despite a decrease in horse meat consumption, Spain remains the largest producer in the EU.
Congresswoman Louise Slaughter addressing the audience at the Community Dialogue Event hosted by Mark Gearan, board chair of the Corporation for National and Community Service and president of Hobart & William Smith Colleges in Geneva. The event was held in the Welles-Brown room at Rush Rhees Library, University of Rochester.
Vader (w/ Internal Bleeding, Sacrificial Slaughter, Voices of Ruin, Micawber) @ Club Red (Mesa, AZ) on June 4, 2017
Taken on the 10.01.2006 all the goats and sheeps before slaughtering for the Special Occasion where it is the practice for slaugtering as religous practice
The name of the village of Lower Slaughter stems from the Old English name for a wet land 'slough' or 'slothre' (Old English for muddy place) upon which it lies. This quaint village sits beside the little Eye stream and is known for it's unspoilt limestone cottages in the traditional Cotswold style.
The stream running through the village is crossed by two small bridges and the local attraction is a converted mill with original water wheel selling craft type products.