Saturday 9 June 2012

9 comments:

Big Fashionista said...

I totally agree with you here, another part of the story which has a lot of people FUMING is that they are describing people who are complaining about the situation as Animal Rights Activists! Not as people who care, or are interested in the welfare of animals but activists.
Chalk another PRFail up for Urban Betray right there.

Anitacska said...

I agree with you. Like you, I'm not going to exclude brands because they may test on animals, and to be honest, I don't even know which ones do. But I don't buy Urban Decay's crap about entering the Chinese market to help. B*llocks. They want to make money and in the end of the day it's more important to them than not testing on animals. They don't have to sell their products in China, nobody does. End of.

Natalie said...

It can be really hard to avoid all companies/brands that conduct or benefit from animal testing. I just try to avoid the main offenders:

Avon
Beiersdorf
Colgate
Johnson & Johnson
L'Oreal
PZ Cussons
Procter & Gamble
Reckitt Benckiser
Unilever

These companies either conduct animal testing themselves or pay other people to do it for them.

http://www.uncaged.co.uk/index.html

Lydia said...

Couldn't agree with you more, another thing that stinks is how Urban Decay is handling the backlash. Like Big Fashionsita said, they have essentially grouped everyone against their decision to be an activist, rather than taking into consideration that people might be pissed off because they've completely gone back on what their company stands for.

Not a fan of their 'deletefuckingeverything' approach either.

Julie said...

I'm really disappointed to hear this, particularly from a company who have used their position on animal testing as a selling point of their brand.

I have always been against animal testing for cosmetics and thought I always bought products which weren't tested on animals. The recent LUSH campaign prompted me to do some online research and check the position of all the companies I buy products from and I have been left in a quandary and am interested to know your thoughts. I have bought Liz Earle products for many years. One of the reasons I do so is becuase they are approved by BUAV, however Avon which now owns Liz Earle do test on animals. Does this mean that I now shouldn't buy Liz Earle and should Liz Earle still be BUAV approved?

I'd like to see more openness from companies in general about whether they test on animals or not.

Louise @ The-Beauty-Pages.com said...

Like you say, why didn't they just wait? I wish they'd just be honest and say that they want to make some money - I'd have more respect. It doesnt put me off testing/using their products, but it does leave me feeling a bit disappointed.

Anonymous said...

I thought Avon didn't test on animals? Also, can someone please let me know if Guerlain test on animals?

Georgina said...

I'm so glad that you have covered this. I'm disgusted with Urban Decay. It is an ugly decision - hypocritical and money-grabbing. I also agree with the first commenter about their inappropriate/divisive use of the word 'activist'. Their initial press release was disgraceful and almost comically inept. (They spent the day editing it and finally removed most of it from their Facebook page). I will not buy their products again, partly because they attempted to treat long time, thoughtful customers as idiots but also because their cruelty-free statements stamped all over their products are now nothing but a bad joke. They commanded the kind of goodwill, respect and loyalty that most brands can only dream of and they shot it to pieces in a single day. Incredibly stupid and arrogant.

Lucy said...

I've been reading about this for a few days now. The point that's really put my nose out of joint is, as you say, the 'we're only trying to help' attitude.

Big difference between the development of scientific principle or a moral stance and a really offensive colonialist prejudice. Chinese culture has had plenty of time to develop a complex, detailed perspective on the relationship between man and animal.
It's difficult to get excited about women from other cultures gaining access to products and different beauty ideas if they arrive with the implication of inferiority.