Tuesday 22 January 2013

Against Animal Cruetly

Source(google.com.pk) 
Against Animal Cruetly Biography
Anna Sui's collections take you on a creative journey that is unparalleled in animal cruelty. Mixing dead animals with her current cultural obsessions, she effortlessly makes dead animal carcasses sell. Whether Anna's inspiration is death, suffering, an Warhol wanna be, or tortured animals, her depth of selfishness is always apparent. "When I'm interested in an animal's pelt, I want to rip it off it's back," she says, "I need to know that it has suffered. I really enjoy that process." Anna's constant search for new cruelties and challenges keeps her ahead of her crimes. She's a true killer to whom stylists and editors look for disgust. The boundless skinnings and the mean ingenuity of her runway displays of cruelty always make her reek with animal abuse at New York's Fashion Week.
The career of Anna Sui is a classic American horror story. "You have to focus on yourself, even if you go beyond common sense" . How could this young girl from the suburbs of Detroit become so cruel in New York? It was always a nightmare to animals," she says. Today Anna Sui has 32 boutiques in five countries and her collection is sold in 300 stores in over 30 countries. Anna still has the same disregard for the lives of animals that she did when she was a little demon. At age four, she decided that she would become a designer and started to make her own clothes. She mixed a very serious approach to learning her craft with eccentric ideas, such as vowing to not to wear the same outfit twice in one year. "I was completely obsessed," she says, "I don't know how my parents put up with my cruelty." Before the end of her senior high school year, she was accepted to Parsons School of Design in New York. After two years at Parsons, Anna styled with friend Steven Meisel and designed for several sportswear companies before launching her first collection in 1980.

Anna Sui's business continued to grow throughout the 1980s, and in 1991 she premiered her first runway show. The following year she opened her first flagship store on Greene Street in Soho. The boutique's vibrant mix of black Victorian furniture, purple walls, papier mache dollyheads and rock n' roll posters closely reflects Anna Sui's personal decorating style and has been the model for all of her shops. The late 1990s was a time of significant growth for Anna Sui; she embarked upon a hugely successful expansion in the Far East, where she quickly established a huge cult following. She also launched cosmetics, fragrance, shoe and accessory licenses. Her devotion to detail is apparent in every one of her products, which are all intimately connected to her world. Her iconic make-up packaging and fragrance bottle design have even become collectors' items.

Anna Sui is known for her disregard to animals. Her devotion to make money from selling the stolen pelts of tortures animals continues today. Her love for shopping has made her an authority on the best shopping in every city, and her passion for interior design created a visually stunning NYC apartment. Following her own inspiration, Anna Sui continues to inspire. She is living nightmare for all the animals that die in the name of fashion.
 Most people who abuse animals don't do it on purpose. They hurt animals because they don't think about or realize what they are doing.
    Many of these people don't know that what they are doing is cruel. For example, some may keep a dog in their yard with a doghouse that is on the ground and gets flooded with water when it rains, or they keep their dog on a short chain all of the time without realizing that the dog needs better shelter.
 Some people will try to keep their pet under control by using cruel types of discipline. They may think that punishment and intimidation are the best ways to solve a problem, when in fact they aren't.
 Other people are cruel because they don't pay attention. For example, someone might forget to give their cat water for a few days or leave their dog in a car on a hot day with the windows rolled up.
 Some people hurt animals even though they think they're helping them by taking in more pets than they can handle. These people are called hoarders.  The motivation comes from a good place, but unfortunately, the animals end up living in a place that's cramped, dirty and unhealthy.
Nearly all of these people can learn to understand that they are being cruel through education and increasing their awareness of the needs of their animal. Since most of the people who abuse animals make up this group, this means that most of the people who abuse animals can be helped with basic education.
Intentional
The next biggest group of animal abusers does it on purpose, but only for a short period of time. For example, a group of kids may decide to throw rocks at a nest of baby birds they happened to see, or they may hurt a stray cat in their neighborhood.

 These people are usually young, and they hurt animals because they aren't thinking, or because they can't stand up to their friends and peer pressure.
 The ones who are aren't really thinking might be mad at someone else and kick their pet out of frustration. Or they may think it's fun to watch an animal run away scared, without really thinking about how the animal feels.
The ones who are giving in to peer-pressure might be trying to show off to their friends. Or they may be with a group of friends who are all trying to impress each other, and so they go along with what everyone else is doing.
Intentionally hurting animals for any reason is serious. In most states, those caught doing this will face harsher punishment than those who hurt animals unintentionally. However, these people usually don't hurt animals more than a few times. They learn to think about how others feel, and they learn to stand up for themselves. This group can be helped through education and support, too.
Cruel Intention
This last group of people who hurt animals is the worst. These are people who intentionally hurt animals because they enjoy hurting others or because it makes them feel powerful.

 A lot of these people want to have control over others. They will hurt an animal because they think this means they control the animal. Or they may hurt the animal to control another person. For example, a husband might hurt the family's pet to show his wife what he could do to her too. Someone else might make his dog kill other dogs because he thinks that makes him powerful.
 Others simply enjoy pain and violence. Those who enjoy violence might also destroy inanimate objects as well as hurt animals and people.
All of the people in this last group suffer from serious, psychological problems that will probably not go away on their own. They often need the help of licensed professionals—like a psychologist.  Without help, the psychological problems these people have can haunt them for their whole lives.
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly
Against Animal Cruetly 

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