If you are using Internet Explorer 6, you may not have the best Bebo experience. Please consider upgrading.

Rachel Beatle

Add as Friend
  • Female
  • from United States
  • Profile views: 42
  • Last active: 6/28/06
  • www.bebo.com/mrspmccartney
Post a Comment:

About Me

Me, Myself, and I
I LOVE the beatles! I'm a hippy am all peace and love, some say I'm a reincarnation of John Lennon or priogenicly frozen from the 60's. And I belong in 1965.
Music
I love anything and everything by the beatles and almost anything from the 40's-71 but especialy The Beatles<&hearts>, Peter and Gordon<&hearts>, and Jimi Hendrix<&hearts>
Films
Phantom of the Opera! A Hard Days Night, Help, Road to Elderado
Sports
Football/Soccer
Scared Of
fear...
Happiest When
Listening to the Beatles.
Actors
Kenneth Braghnah, Sean Connery, Shawn O'Niel(go shawn!), Christian Bale...

close Video Box

help

Beatles - Shakespeare Skit

close Blog

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Dear friends,
    What follows is the words of Sir Paul McCartney on a very imortant matter so here goes:

    As you might have heard, Heather and I recently went out to the east coast of Canada to make an appeal on behalf of the harp seals that live out there and who are so cruelly hunted at this time of the year. Heres what happened:

    We arrived in Halifax on the afternoon of March 1st and then took a short flight on to Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. On the plane we met a representative from the Canadian Department of Fisheries & Oceans, who tried to persuade us about the arguments for retaining the seal hunt. He told us that it was an economic necessity for the people in the area and gave us a few other facts. Fortunately we had read up on the situation and we had a long discussion with him and listened fully to all his points but finally had to tell him that we felt that none of these reasons added up to the retention of the brutal seal hunt. It was good however to at least hear the other side of the story.

    On arrival, Heather and I were met by representatives from Respect for Animals and the Humane Society of the United States, who had organised this trip to visit the harp seals on the ice floes. The purpose of our trip was to raise awareness about the plight of the seals, as at this time of year hunters take part in a massive cull in which many baby seals are clubbed and shot to death for their fur.

    Soon after our arrival, we had a briefing session with Respect for Animals and the Humane Society, who told us that this was the largest and most brutal marine mammal hunt on the planet, and that almost one million seals had been killed in the last three years. 97% of those seals were less than three months of age, and most of them just a few weeks old, still not old enough to have taken their first swim, or eaten their first solid meal.

    The next day we took helicopters out to the ice floes. It was absolutely freezing, with a wind chill of minus 30 degrees, but we were wrapped up in special thermal suits to combat the cold. We also found some thermal hand warmers, which we managed to put inside our gloves and our boots. All around us were the beautiful harp seals and their baby seal pups, which we would defy anyone to be able to see up close and condone what is happening out there. It was heartbreaking to think that in a short time many of them will be clubbed to an untimely death. The good thing was that we had got the media out there and were surrounded by photographers & cameras, all wanting to get a piece of the action.

    After spending three hours on the ice, talking to journalists, having our photographs taken, lying on the ice watching the pups with their mums, and taking in the breathtaking scenery, it was time to leave. As the helicopter took off, we looked out over the vast expanse of ice below. It was so very sad, and we sat in silence for a while, just thinking of what was to come, how the ice would soon be turned red with their blood.

    Then it was back to Charlottetown for debriefing and dinner with our Respect for Animals and Humane Society colleagues, during which we all agreed that this barbaric practice must be stopped once and for all. The next morning we all met up for a further de-briefing session, during which we discussed what our strategy should be. That day Heather and I did an interview for the Larry King Show with Danny Williams, the Premier of Newfoundland, who came up with some comments that we found rather strange, including a reference to the FBI having a file on the animal awareness group PETA and the suggestion that they were considered to be terrorists, which having known them for many years we found ludicrous. He didnt deter us however.

    One of the things that I most remember from the trip is that literally the first thing we saw on reaching that part of the world was a newspaper article, in which a 70 year-old fisherman said something like We dont want these

    0 Comments 369 weeks

close Games

close Whiteboard

close Photos

close Comments

Post comment as:

Share the Luv (5 Luv left)

Attach a photo from your albums