Animal testing can be dated back to the ancient times of Greeks and Romans when humans first wanted to start to learn new items. The ancient physicians would dissect many types of animals with merely the pure interest to obtain a better understanding of how the animal’s body functions. However even at this time, one physician declared that he would rather not use a monkey too, “avoid seeing the unpleasant expression of an ape” but he would rather use a pig(Shanks 9). The ethics of animal testing has consistently been questioned from the dawn of its creation and probably always will until they find an explanation. Humans do not want to think that animals are on the same general makeup as we are but they are and there is no denying it. The resemblance …show more content…
A scientist by the name of Realdo Colombo would perform live lectures to his students on live pregnant dogs (Shanks 9). Regalado would take the live pregnant dog and cut her open and remove the young developing fetus out of the mother, he would then harm and abuse the fetuses in front of her. The dog being a mother would bark at him fiercely and attend to her young ignoring her own agony and pain. Even though animal testing has been around as long as anyone could remember animal testing is still the most controversial and frequently debated topic. Animal testing is cruel and inhumane and should not be continued because the animals are harmed while experiments are being performed, animals are mutated on purpose and there are other methods that can be used instead of …show more content…
One of the largest sources of funding comes from publicly funded government granting agencies such as NIH. Approximately 47 percent of NIH-funded research involves experimentation on nonhuman animals, and in 2012, NIH budgeted nearly $30 billion for research and development. In addition, many charities––including the March of Dimes, the American Cancer Society, and countless others—use donations to fund experiments on animals. One-third of the projects funded by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society involves animal experimentation. Visit HumaneSeal.org to find out which charities do and which do not fund research on animals. Despite the vast amount of public funds being used to underwrite animal experimentation, it is nearly impossible for the public to obtain current and complete information regarding the animal experiments that are being carried out in their communities or funded with their tax dollars. State open-records laws and the U.S. Freedom of Information Act can be used to obtain documents and information from state institutions, government agencies, and other federally funded facilities, but private companies, contract labs, and animal breeders are exempt. In many cases, institutions that are subject to open-records laws fight vigorously to withhold information