Music legend and lifelong animal rights activist Moby joins the rescuers who walked into Ridglan Farms — the second-largest beagle experimentation breeder in the U.S. — and walked out with 30 dogs destined for death. Join a Zoom conversation with the electronic music pioneer on Saturday, April 28 at 1 pm ET. Then stick around afterwards to hear how you can be involved with the historic effort to rescue 2000 beagles from cruel labs.
THE SIMPLE HEART: Join a Zoom conversation with the electronic music pioneer Moby on Saturday, April 28 at 1 pm ET. Then stick around afterwards to hear how you can be involved with the historic effort to rescue 2000 beagles from cruel labs. You will be sent a Zoom link for this event on Saturday morning at 10 am ET, three hours before the event. If you don’t receive the Zoom link, check your spam folder and contact us at info@simpleheart.org.
Music legend and lifelong animal rights activist Moby joins the rescuers who walked into Ridglan Farms — the second-largest beagle experimentation breeder in the U.S. — and walked out with 30 dogs destined for death. Moby will tell us why the Ridglan rescuers are on the right side of history. And you’ll learn how you can join the effort to rescue all 2000 dogs at Ridglan on April 19.
Ridglan Farms bred thousands of beagles for pharmaceutical experimentation. On March 15, activists rescued 30 of them — and caused a media firestorm. Now they’re planning to recruit 1000+ new rescuers to join them to get all 2000 dogs trapped at Ridglan out of their cages and into loving homes.
And Moby — vegan since 1987, lifelong animal rights activist, creator of the Punk Rock Vegan Movie — is now supporting the effort. Moby has been on the front lines of this moment. He’s compared animal rescuers to the suffragettes and the civil rights movement. “They’re on the right side of history.” Now he’s joining the Ridglan effort live to talk about what happens next…
60,000 dogs are used in U.S. laboratories every year. Most of them are beagles — chosen because they’re gentle, trusting, and don’t fight back. Ridglan Farms was breeding them by the thousands for exactly that purpose. The open rescue on March 15 and the legal and public pressure campaign that followed didn’t just save the dogs at Ridglan Farms. It could mobilize public opinion on April 19 to save tens of thousands of dogs across the nation. SOURCE
RELATED VIDEO: