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Breaking PETA Exposé Reveals Cruelty in Your Cashmere Sweater

A new PETA investigation into the cashmere industry in China and Mongolia—the world's top cashmere exporters—reveals extreme cruelty to and violent killing of cashmere goats.

The video exposé shows goats screaming in pain and fear as workers tear their hair out. Later, their throats are slit in slaughterhouses and they're left to die in agony. Goats suffered on every farm in China and Mongolia visited by the eyewitnesses.

Together, China and Mongolia produce 90 percent of the world's cashmere.

Workers Stepped on Terrified Goats and Twisted Their Limbs

Eyewitnesses saw workers hold down and step on frightened goats, bending their legs into unnatural positions as they tore out their hair using sharp metal combs.

No Veterinary Care Provided

Goats left with bloody cuts from the hair-removal process received no pain relief or veterinary care. One worker simply poured rice wine into an animal's wound.

Goats Hit With Hammers and Killed When No Longer Profitable

Cashmere goats deemed no longer profitable endure slow, agonizing deaths. At a slaughterhouse in China, eyewitnesses saw workers hit animals in the head with a hammer in an attempt to stun them. In Mongolia, workers were seen dragging goats by one leg onto the slaughterhouse floor before slitting their throats in full view of other goats. They were left to bleed out on the filthy kill floor, and some were seen still moving a full two minutes later. Their flesh is then sold as cheap meat.

Ninety Percent of All Cashmere Comes From China and Mongolia

Nearly all cashmere is produced in China and Mongolia, so if you buy a cashmere item, it probably came from goats who were abused in one of those countries. One goat produces, on average, only 240 grams of hair per year. This is so little that in order to produce just one cashmere jacket, the hair of six goats is required. China has no penalties for abusing animals on cashmere farms, and the situation in Mongolia appears to be much the same. The best way to help these goats is to refuse to support this cruel industry—by never buying anything made of cashmere.

No matter where it comes from or what assurances companies give, cashmere is a product of cruelty to goats, which is rampant in the industry. And when they stop being profitable, the goats are slaughtered.

Devastating to the Environment

Cashmere also has the most destructive environmental impact of any animal-derived fiber—roughly 100 times as destructive as that of wool! Because cashmere goats must consume 10 percent of their bodyweight in food each day and they eat the roots of grasses, which prevents regrowth, the industry is a significant contributor to soil degradation followed by desertification.

Already, 65 percent of Mongolia's grasslands are degraded, and 90 percent of Mongolia is in danger of desertification, which has led to some of the world's worst dust storms on record and air pollution dense enough to reach North America.

What You Can Do

China has no penalties for abusing animals on cashmere farms, and the situation in Mongolia appears to be much the same. The best way to help these goats is to refuse to support the cruel cashmere industry, by never buying anything made of cashmere. Warm, stylish, animal-free materials are widely available, so you can leave goats' hair and other animal-derived materials like wool and fur where they belong: on the animals. No matter where it comes from or what assurances companies give, cashmere is a product of cruelty to goats, which is rampant in the industry. And when they stop being profitable, the goats are slaughtered. Brands such as ASOS have already made the compassionate decision to ban cashmere.

Will you please help us urge Madewell to ban it, too?

Ms.
Libby
Wadle
Madewell

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