Alaskan Government Going to the Dogs!

 

We have been hearing down here the Alaskan Government was having a howling time implementing new global United Nations standards for dogs.  It appears among the many regulations being considered is a competency test for dog owners.  I hope all you Alaskans have trained your vicious dogs to go after invasive government agencies who think they are a foreign county.

Here!  Here! To private property and  LIMITED GOVERNMENT!  All you dog lovers and hounds best get on top of this before they come testing in your neighborhood. This is another excuse for surveillance and eventual seizure of your property.

Stop Agenda 21 dead in its tracks.

From the trenches,

Celeste

 

‘Wicked Problems’ Displacing Humanity

Part 3: VS2015-Strategic Plan for Implementing One Health

Newly Changed from VS2015 to Vision and Science in the USDA continuing Semantic Wars

 By

Celeste Bishop

 USDA APHIS VS Internal-Use Only Document

The Vision

 APHIS VS will provide US leadership for the animal health component of One Health (OH).  As a dedicated OH partner they will contribute toward improving the global health of people, animals, ecosystems, and society.

 The Mission

 As the Federal governments animal heath authority, APHIS VS will contribute expertise, infrastructure, networks, and systems to partner effectively in a multidisciplinary, multi-level (local, state, national, and international) collaborative approach to healthy animals, people, ecosystems, society. (Notice the order)

The Strategic Plan for implementing One Health includes integrating the plan into a more comprehensive Synthesis Plan.  By definition the Synthesis Plan is the composition of one or more concepts knitted together to form a compound which is why APHIS utilizes cornerstone principle.  Synthesis is also process of reasoning which advances by a regular chain from principles before established or assumed (real or imaginary), and propositions already proved until we arrive at the conclusion.

Agriculture is a skill which improves our physical health by producing food, fiber, materials for shelter, and is also an important source of livelihood for many individuals.  APHIS VS which was tasked with overseeing agriculture has begun implementing the concept of One Health Eco-militaristic strategy that oozes forth in a multi-agency coordination (MAC) effort.  With the implementation of One Health APHIS VS adopts a new paradigm to collaboratively and collectively address the complex and often intertwined relationship among animal populations of any kind, humans, and their shared environment.  APHIS VS is a dedicated OH partner which boldly advocates eliminating human primacy replacing it with animal primacy, and goes so far as placing ecosystem and socio-economic well-being ahead of human life, as you will see in their governance model.  In a nutshell, you have just sunk to the bottom of the food-chain.  Continue reading

NIAA: The Old Family Veterinarian is History

The Genesis of One Health: What it’s all about

Dr. Roger Mahr, DVM, CEO, One Health Commission

Mahr, Roger

This is from one trusted profession, veterinarians, who are transforming our world into green global slavery.

The following is the new and improved Veterinary Oath.  Notice the global emphasis:

  • Benefit of society
  • Protect animal health
  • Relieve animal suffering (Euthanize)
  • Conservation of animal resources (Cradle to Cradle)
  • Promote Public Health Continue reading

Pit of Hell: NIAA & The Global Food Basket (Pt.1)

This is one of a handful of the  most disturbing power points that I have ever seen in the many years I have waded through government documents exposing  the corruption and evil embedded within.  I will include my commentary with each slide.  For the entire Power-Point click on the link below.

From the trenches,

Celeste Bishop


It is said that a picture says a thousand words…

Dr. Corrie Brown, DVM, PhD, DACVP, University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine

Brown, Corrie


When the final push towards global governance began, with hushed tones, code word was, “The train has left the station.”  The year 2010 will be known as the year that the “global food express has left the station.”   Your groceries will now be going to the world.


As the world harmonizes and turns to globalization it will become socially unacceptable to believe in the historic reality of a sovereign nation. Why to believe in sovereignty is taking a giant leap back in time when people believed the world was flat. Global governance in the past would have been considered sheer nonsense.  The fence guarding America has been taken down exposing this grand nation to demons, thieves, and dangerous ‘bugs which threaten your family and animals.


Continue reading

UK Proposes Expensive ‘Competency Test’-'Insurance’-Microchip for Dog Owners

The UK testing breaking ground for international dog ownership reg’s.  Keep your eyes open as it goes from the UK testing ground towards incremental adoption in the US.  Livestock owners beware, what is good for companion animals is better for livestock!

From the trenches,

Celeste

Now the Government wants competence tests before you can be a dog owner

By Jonathan Petre

28th February 2010

Every dog owner will have to take a costly ‘competence test’ to prove they can handle their pets, under new Government proposals designed to curb dangerous dogs.

Owners of all breeds would also have to buy third-party insurance in case their pet attacked someone, and pay for the insertion of a microchip in their animal recording their name and address. Continue reading

Protest Opportunity: Pro-NAIS CSU Open House

Hate the National Animal Identification System?

Here is your opportunity to protest a major driver of the NAIS program!

Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital Hosts 30th Annual Open House

Bring:

* Cardboard, fabric, or plastic protest signs,

* Mega-phone if you enjoy sharing your ideas with the “other side” of the fence,

* A smiling face ready to educate those who are clueless about the dangerous program.

* Be ready to ASK and ANSWER questions about NAIS

Be creative!

* Print up some flyers

* Wear NoNAIS T shirts or other attire

* Wear a costume (scratch the USDA vulture costumes because I checked a few years ago and to rent it was $3000, yes, $3000-with inflation, deflation, or Depression the cost probably has sky-rocketed.)

* Print and hand out NoNAIS logo stickers for the kids (I have had great response with those at the fairs)

* Do a Farm Sit-In in a pet carrier or cage representing what quasi-law/reg is doing to American farmers

* Set up a card table and put a nice meal with black streamers over it, saying No FOOD, FAMINE, STARVATION in the name of SCIENCE and Disease prevention

* Bring examples of what your farm products (not animals because they might get sucked into CSU)

* Please make sure that you are courteous and respectful, firm but polite. Dress appropriately. We want our NoNAIS Movement to be remembered in a positive light. Stay in public areas and be ready to stand your ground, if challenged.

* You may want to bring a video or tape recorder for “documentation” purposes.

Let’s brain-storm, other protest opportunities are coming up so please SHARE ideas J

Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital Hosts 30th Annual Open House

FORT COLLINS – A chance for insight into the fast-paced, high-tech world of cutting-edge veterinary medicine is available at the Colorado State University’s James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital’s annual Open House. The event will be from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. on Friday, April 3 and Saturday, April 4 at the hospital at 300 West Drake Road.

The day will feature tours of the hospital, about 15 displays put together by students about animals and animal health, a petting zoo, activities for children, and demonstrations and lectures from leading veterinarians at the university and animal professionals. Most of the booths offer fun, hands on activities for children including anatomy, exotic animals to look at and touch, balloon animals, and medical equipment used on animals available for them to touch and examine.

Adults can pick up information about pet care and animal behavior.

This is the 30th year of the open house, which attracts about 3,000 people each year.

Tours, student exhibits and animal information exhibits, the petting zoo and mock surgery for children to dress as veterinary surgeons and perform operations on stuffed animals will be available during all hours of the open house. The last tour starts each day at 3:15 p.m.

A schedule of events follows:

Friday, April 3
- 9 a.m. “Equine wound care,” lecture by Dr. Dean Hendrickson, director of the Veterinary Teaching Hospital and an equine veterinary medicine expert
- 10 a.m. Demonstration by Larimer County Search and Rescue Dogs
- 11 a.m. “Aquatic medicine: Veterinarians treat fish too,” lecture by Dr. Terry Campbell, exotics veterinarian at CSU
- 1 p.m. “Weird and wacky: Exotic animal medicine,” lecture by Dr. Matthew Johnston, exotics veterinarian at CSU
- 2 p.m. “So you want to be a veterinarian,” Sherry Stewart, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, assistant dean for Admissions and Student Affairs in the College of Clinical Sciences
- 2 p.m. “Hands for Horses” demonstration by Polly Webb, equine sports massage therapist, CSU equine hospital

Saturday, April 4
- 9 a.m. “Comparative orthopedic research: How sheep are helping people,” lecture by Dr. Simon Turner, orthopedic veterinarian at CSU
- 10 a.m. “Basic Hoof Knowledge: What you need to know about your horse’s feet!” demonstration by Dr. Shawn Olson, equine veterinarian at CSU
- 11 a.m. “Common diseases of wildlife in Colorado,” Dr. Laurie Baeten, veterinary resident at CSU
- 1 p.m. “Cancer in Pets,” Dr. Deanna Worley, veterinary surgical oncologist at CSU
- 2 p.m. “The Bird Experience” demonstration of free flying birds from all around the world, presented by the Northern Colorado Bird Center

NAIS Public Disclosure Doc: GIS Data Collection & Mobile Command Units to Track Livestock, PETS, Exotics

wsda-gis-nais-data-collection-to-map-diseases-mobile-labs-command-units-tracks-pets-and-exotics-as-well-as-livestock