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Indybay Feature

Guerneville fur fight gains momentum

by Carol Benfell
Protesters, supporters crowd Guerneville with reports of threats but plenty of levity
guernevillebilde-crp.jpg
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Monday, December 27, 2004

Matt Tupper showed up about halfway through Sunday's animal rights protest in Guerneville, wearing a blue vintage Playboy bunny outfit and carrying a sign that said, "Hate stops here."

It was a plea to end a dispute between the Sonoma People for Animal Rights and two Guerneville merchants selling fur that is stretching into its third week.

About a dozen animal rights activists, a dozen other people sympathetic to the store owners and others talked and carried signs in a Sunday afternoon downpour.

Store owners Jennifer Neeley and Mikki Herman said they have received personal threats since the dispute started. Activists with Sonoma People for Animal Rights said counterprotesters had threatened to torch their homes.

Both sides denied threatening each other and there are no signs that the dispute will end soon.

Three sheriff's deputies circulated among the picketers and a private security guard with a dog kept watch.

"We're explaining the law to them and asking them ... to be respectful of each other," said Sgt. Dave Anderson of the Sonoma County Sheriff's Department.

Animal rights activists formed a small line along Main Street, carrying signs with pictures of cuddly-looking baby raccoons and skinned carcasses.

"I was really impressed at the number of people who came out in this weather," protest organizer Alex Bury said. "A lot of cars driving by saw our signs and that was important to me."

Counterprotesters said they were fighting for the right of shopkeepers and consumers to choose what they sell, buy and wear.

Michael Kinney, a Guerneville resident, passed along the line of activists wearing a mink stole.

"I'm here to protest the protesters that have nothing better to do than harass small businesses," Kinney said.

"We are absolutely committed to civil and peaceful means," said Stefan Howard, one of the protest organizers. "We are absolutely not into anything violent or any kind of destruction."

Howard said the animal rights group was waiting to hear if the Russian River Chamber of Commerce would mediate the dispute.

But Ernie Carpenter, the chamber's acting executive director, said Sunday night that no one has asked the chamber to mediate the dispute.

"I don't know if we want to get involved or not," Carpenter said. "But if they want mediation, we can find someone to do it. But somebody has to step forward and say what they want to mediate."

The protest had been planned in front of Neeley's store, Memories that Linger, because Neeley had been selling rabbit fur scarves.

But Neeley had a friend park a large truck in front of her store with the engine running, so protesters and counterprotesters were forced to stand in exhaust fumes in front of a hair salon.

Neeley said she was disgusted with the protest and would hold a venison outdoor barbecue if they came again next Sunday.

"I've sold all my furs. I'm furless," she said.

Down the street, the display window of Herman's Kings & Queens Vintage Clothing was dominated by three mannikins wearing faux fur coats.

Herman had prepared a buffet for the public with elk meat and turkey sausages. The elk was donated by fellow merchant Steve Young of King's Sport and Tackle, Herman said.

Herman said sales had picked up markedly since news articles of the protests appeared.

"It's unbelievable," Herman said. "People call me from all over the county and show up to shop at my store and in the rest of Guerneville."
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by steve
Who are these jerks? Don't they have anything to do all day but harrass businesspeople? Someone needs to get a life.
by Worker
This preoccupation with the problems of the rich is grotesque and obscene. I am still waiting for stories and photos from Indybay freelancers of the Christmas charity food lines so that the world finally learns that America is not rich but profoundly poor and that most of the workingclass, those of us who sell our labor for less than $70,000 per year, and usually much less, are not receiving enough food, clothing, shelter, medical care, education or public transportation. Considering some 80% of us are members of this workingclass, and most earn far less than $70,000 a year, there is massive poverty in this country, yet this website is in a tizzy over some old furs being sold in the backwoods vacation resort on the Russian River, namely in Gurneville, Sonoma County.

How about interviewing the poor people of Sonoma County, including but not limited to the farm workers, restaurant workers, unskilled and semi-skilled construction workers, retail clerks and other low wage workers so we learn of the lack of unionization, and the wages, hours and working conditions of these workers?

I recall reading elsewhere about a large group of tenants being kicked out of their homes by a greedy landlord in Sonoma County a few years ago because Sonoma County does not have rent control. How about a story on the tenants' needs in Sonoma County?

We have lots of laws on the books that when enforced do stop the abuse of animals. Calls for enforcement of these laws are reasonable; this is nonsense.

What the bourgeois types glorifying poverty do not understand is that we workers have suffered enough with rags from charities and are more than ready for Big Rock Candy Mountain. We want the whole enchilada, and be sure to include meat of all kinds, fish, fowl and vegetables. We will take the best clothes we can afford. In an area where there is no snow, fur coats are silly. But if some fool wants to prance around in some old furs, I will not waste time protesting. I am too busy working for a living so I an live decently, in my rented apartment which in San Francisco, is under rent control, thanks to lots of massive struggle by the workingclass.
by Susan
I am just amazed at the people who think it is not only OK to sell real fur but who also feel that the protesters must have "nothing better to do". etc. How would a civilization progress and evolve if no one fought for change, if everyone thought that it was ridiculous or rationaized that there are other more important things to think about. Fortunately there are always people who have courage, yes folks, COURAGE, to defy the laughter and abuse and never give up their fight to right a wrong. I'm sure there were lots of people with "better things to do" who thought fighting slavery, campaigning for women's rights, ending child labor, fighting Nazism, and much more, were all ridiculous and a waste of time. This fur protest is about ethics and integrity and the real meaning of morality. This is an issue about animals but just as much it is an issue about human beings and what we are all about.
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