![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
![]() |
![]() |
|||
|
Select the current article you would like to read from the list,
or click the search button below to search our article archive.
HSUS Doubles Down on Salmonella Spin 8/27/2010 A Little Perspective on Eggs 8/24/2010 HSUS’s Salmonella Certainty Is A Yolk 8/19/2010 Meritless Animal Rights Theory Skewered, Grilled by Court 8/16/2010 HSUS Clucks About Future Politicking 8/12/2010 Darwin and Chicken Wings 8/6/2010 Cracking Open an Anti-Egg Agenda 7/27/2010 East Meets West in PETA Gaffes 7/26/2010 Animal Rights Group’s Lawsuit a Leafy Fantasy 7/15/2010 |
||||
|
PETA Animal Cruelty Trial: The Fallout Continues PETA's successes with a North Carolina jury haven't translated well into the court of public opinion. As we wrote in yesterday's Norfolk (VA) Virginian-Pilot, the fact that PETA unapologetically kills healthy cats and dogs has done irrevocable damage to the group's reputation:
The Virginian-Pilot also ran a response piece from Daphna Nachminovitch, who leads PETA's ironically named "Rescue Department." ("Rescuing" pets from what? Oxygen over-consumption?) Nachminovitch basically argued that PETA staffers were doing the animals they killed a favor because the conditions in North Carolina shelters are so bad. You would expect an animal "rights" group to at least make a good faith effort to find "rescued" pets homes before killing them. But in North Carolina, PETA's workers didn't even wait to get out of the parking lot before they "put down" dozens of perfectly healthy and adoptable animals. And very little of PETA's $25 million dollar budget goes towards pet adoption programs. So while PETA may be helping animals by taking them out of substandard shelters, what it does to them clearly violates the principle of animal "rights" as it is commonly understood. That message has gotten through to at least one long-time PETA donor. Yesterday, animal activist Brennan Browne -- a PETA "supporter and defender since 1980" -- announced on an animal rights mailing list that he's removing PETA as the beneficiary of his $3 million life insurance policy because, in his words: |
|
|||
| © 1997-2010 Center For Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved. View Privacy Statement | ||||