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7月28日 Keep Pork off your Fork!Top 10 Reasons Not to Eat PigsAttention, shoppers: Stop picking up dead “Babes” and “Wilburs” at the grocery store! Here are our top 10 reasons to keep pork off your fork and put delicious Babe-free alternatives on your shopping list instead. 1.) Porking You Up 2.) Pigs Have Feelings Too 3.) Pigs and Playstations 4.) Pigs Prefer Mud, Not Crud 5.) Farming Family Values 6.) The Manure Is Blowing in the Wind … 7.) Bacteria-Laden Bacon and Harmful Ham 8.) Hell on Wheels 9.) Killing Them Without Kindness 10.) Ditch the Bacon and Get Fakin’ Call for a Ceasefire for BearsCall for a Ceasefire for Bears!PETA is calling on Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles, and the British Ministry of Defence (MoD) to stop using Canadian bear pelts to make headpieces for the Queen’s Five Guards Regiments and to instead have the hats fashioned from luxurious faux fur. Bears are still cruelly killed for their hides; they are either shot during hunts or are ensnared—possibly for days—in painful traps. During hunts, as many as one bear in seven does not die immediately after being shot. Some bears escape wounded, possibly dying later from blood loss or starvation. In some Canadian provinces, there are no restrictions on the shooting of mothers who have nursing cubs, leading to the slaughter of entire families during hunts. For nearly two centuries, the British MoD has waged a war on black bears while doing nothing to further the search for synthetic materials. In fact, when PETA presented the MoD with high-tech synthetic materials—sourced from leading faux-fur manufacturers around the world and made to the MoD’s very own specifications—the MoD was quick to make negative comments about the faux fur, saying that it “lacks life” and “doesn’t bounce back.” Please Help Spare the Bears! His Excellency Sir David Manning The Rt Hon. Des Browne, MP To find out more and to view PETA’s undercover video footage, please visit UnbearableCruelty.com. 7月14日 NBA Goes Leather-Free!NBA Goes Leather-Free!The National Basketball Association (NBA) is opting to permanently bench leather balls in favor of better-performing, cruelty-free synthetic basketballs, like those already in use by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Women’s National Basketball Association, beginning with its 2006/2007 season! Although basketball may be a game to us, it’s no fun for cows whose skins are used to make basketballs. Overseas, where much of the leather used in the U.S. is produced, cows are marched to slaughter for days without food or water, causing many to collapse en route; crowded onto transport trucks, where they frequently break bones, suffocate, or gouge each other with their horns; and often dismembered and skinned while they are still alive. In this country, pigs and cattle are often inadequately stunned so that they are still conscious when their hooves are severed. The process of tanning leather is also tremendously destructive to the environment, releasing scores of dangerous chemicals into our water supply. Tannery workers and people who live near tanneries are stricken with life-threatening diseases at rates that are many times the national average. On January 9, 2006, PETA sent the NCAA information on the horrors of the leather industry, including the fact that it takes the skin of an entire cow to make just four basketballs. The switch to synthetic balls was announced on June 28, 2006. It’s easy to moo-ve away from leather. In fact, Spalding Sports carries synthetic basketballs as well as volleyballs, softballs, soccerballs, and footballs. Visit CowsAreCool.com for more information. 6月24日 IAMS Tortures Animals
6月22日 What Every Canadian Should KnowAccording to official sources, extreme suffering is inherent by Len Goldberg For the vast majority of farm animals in Canada, misery is a way of life. According to scientific and government sources, each year millions of animals are severely confined, stressed, broken and traumatized on their way to the non-vegetarian's dinner plate, victims of a system that simply cannot afford to care for its animals humanely. The cost of extending humane treatment to the 500 million farm animals in Canada would escalate the price of animal food-products far beyond the reach of most Canadians. With only token exceptions, affordable beef, poultry, pork and dairy cannot be produced without intense abuse of animals. Animals face extreme confinement and painful mutilations On average, four hens are permanently confined in cages measuring 16 by 18 inches, analogous to four people living inside an elevator. In this unnatural environment, says poultry behaviourist Dr. Ian Duncan, "hens are not well off. They are unable to satisfy certain basic behaviourial needs: foraging, walking about, pecking, scratching and in particular nesting." The resulting stress leads to aggression in the form of hens pecking each other, the damage from which industry tries to control by debeaking the birds shortly after birth: their beak tips are amputated without anesthetic, an operation that industry admits will cause "acute and long-term pain" in these animals.1, 2 The Canadian method of egg production is also known to routinely break the bones of egg-laying hens. Industry reports that "Broken bones ... have shown an alarming increase among laying hens."3 The inactivity of the animals' intense confinement, combined with the calcium loss due to artificially accelerated egg-laying, induces osteoporosis in hens, rendering their bones fragile and easily broken. "Because spent laying hens are worth very little to Canada's poultry industry, not much care is taken ... the birds' fragile bones are often broken upon removal from cages."1 Canada has around 2,800 farms where broiler chickens are raised for meat. Unlike laying chickens used for eggs, broiler chickens are not kept in small cages but roam around large sheds that can house up to 50,000 birds. According to Canadian Professor of Veterinary Surgery Andrew Fraser, these conditions expose the animals to extreme suffering. "At the beginning the young chicks have adequate space to move around, but at the end of the seven-week growing period they are under very crowded conditions. As a result of this, many broiler chicks go unnoticed when they become injured or sick and therefore die without attention. In addition, this large population of individuals experiences circumstances occasionally which cause hysteria to spread throughout the birds, with resultant crowding and suffocation of large numbers."4 Further, ammonia emitted by the massive buildup of urine and feces in sheds will "irritate the birds' eyes and upper respiratory tract."1 Piglets are "due for a few unpleasant surprises in the form of minor surgery. Piglets' tails are usually clipped as a precaution against tail-biting ... Most male piglets are [also] castrated. Castration is done because consumers are thought to find the meat of intact males objectionable."5 For six months per year, most sows are confined in crates and stalls in which they cannot turn around. This confinement "can make it impossible for animals to perform natural behaviour .... We sometimes speak of intensively housed pigs suffering from boredom or under-stimulation or thwarting of natural behaviour. The problem is very real. Confinement can also put considerable stress on the legs and hooves of pigs. As a result, lameness and hoof injuries are important problems in some herds."5 The Canadian pork industry counters that sows must be confined to prevent them from crushing their piglets, but scientific experts say that "most crushing occurs in the first few days after birth."5 Furthermore, according to a University of Guelph study, an estimated " 30% of growing pigs suffer from ulcers, and between 10 and 40% may eventually die from the ailment." The same study reveals that the high percentage of waste in the pig's diet can cause vomiting and diarrhea.6 Dairy cows People who regard milk as "the perfect food" rarely think about milk as a commercial product – prone to the hazards of mass-production. John Robbins, author of May All Be Fed, puts it well; "The modern-day Bessie is now bred, fed, medicated, inseminated, and manipulated for a single purpose – maximum milk production at a minimum cost." While sometimes permitted to range in open pasture, dairy cows still spend most of their lives chained by the neck in milk stalls, reduced to lethargic milking machines. Even Ottawa's Experimental Farm, known for relatively "humane" standards, says its dairy cows are chained by the neck 23 hours a day during winter months. In order to produce milk, a dairy cow must give birth. To maximize their milk supply they are artificially inseminated every year, meaning they are pregnant for a physically demanding 9 months out of every 12. Their calves are traumatically taken from them shortly after birth. The resulting surplus of calves feeds the veal industry. With genetic manipulation and intensive production technologies, Canadian cows produce an average of 9,519 kg of milk per year 7a — seven times more than they would produce naturally. When their milk production wanes after about four years, dairy cows are sent to slaughter where their worn out bodies are ground up into hamburger. These unnatural conditions make the modern dairy cow highly prone to stress and disease. Veal calves Dairy cows must produce offspring every year to keep their milk supply flowing. The result is large surplus of calves. According the Ontario Farm Animal Council, "Veal farming has made it possible to turn by-products of the dairy industry into a positive contribution to our food chain." 7b Unfortunately that comes at the expense of the animals involved. Male veal calves are sold to the veal industry and raised in dark sheds. Motherless and alone, they may suffer from anemia, diarrhea, pneumonia, and lameness and see the light of day only on their way to slaughter. Female calves are added to the dairy herd or are slaughtered for the rennet in their stomachs (used to make cheese). Many calves are isolated in stalls, a practice described by Agriculture Canada as "thought to have a negative effect on animal well-being" in the form of restricted movement and lack of outlet for natural behaviour. As well, "anemia can affect special-fed veal calves during all stages of growth," which is caused by iron reduction to make their flesh pale. 8 There are approximately 500 – 700 veal farms in Ontario worth about $450 million. Beef Cattle During severe heat waves, death and suffering among farm animals is both widespread and expected in Canada's pork and poultry industries. Since industry believes that the cost of air conditioning outweighs the economic cost of death, most pigs and chickens are left unprotected when heat waves increase the temperature of their indoor quarters to extreme levels. In Ontario, the poultry industry reports that hundreds of thousands of hens can be wiped out in a single heat wave, while many more will suffer intensely. 10, 1 And according to Pork News and Views, "Heat stress usually occurs in hot weather or during periods of physical activity when the pig can no longer maintain its body temperature by panting (pigs have no sweat glands) and the animals' body temperature rises to an uncontrollable level. A pig that is in distress makes loud, deep gasping sounds...." 11 For animal agriculture, heat stress is so widespread that it's generated a thriving industry: "Ontario presently has some forty-five organizations involved in a large network of dead stock processing." 11 "The final hours for too many animals are unspeakably painful," says the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies (CFHS) in reference to transport of animals to slaughter in Canada. "There isn't the staff to enforce transportation regulations and the penalties have not been stiff enough to discourage careless truckers." 12 Confirms Agriculture Canada research scientist Dr. David Fraser with reference to pigs, "Several rules of good husbandry may be broken all at once in the few hours before the animals are killed or moved to a new farm." 5 Without question, farm-animal transportation in Canada is fundamentally inhumane. Animals crippled in transit are sometimes dragged alive from the truck by a chain or rope. For example, livestock rigs do not contain air-cooling systems, meaning millions of animals are exposed to "extreme suffering due to severe heat stress." Approximately 2.5 to 3 million poultry die annually in Canada during shipment to federally inspected slaughterhouses, due to what poultry scientists call primarily "severe heat stress" and additional trauma. 13, 1 Despite Canada's bitter cold winter, transport vehicles are also not generally equipped with heating systems. "Too often the animals are left unattended for long periods in the back of a freezing cold truck," exposing animals to extreme suffering and even death. 12 En route, animals may face severe food and water deprivation. Federal regulations allow farm animals to be transported without food or water for 36-72 hours, depending on the species. 14 Furthermore, overcrowding of animals on vehicles is routine and expected in Canada. According to Pork News and Views "...there should be an adjustment in the number of pigs per load to avoid bruising, stress, and possibly death losses during transit." 15 The combination of harsh farm life, rough handling and severe overcrowding on trucks is known to cripple large numbers of farm animals in Canada. Animals crippled in transit are "sometimes dragged alive from the truck by a chain or rope." Referring to what the industry calls 'downers', Dr. Gord Doonan, Acting Chief of Humane Transportation, Agriculture Canada, confirms: "This has been a big problem in Canada." In Ontario, for example, approximately 7,000 crippled dairy cows arrive at provincial slaughter plants annually. 12, 16, 17 A 1982 survey revealed that animals are abused or inhumanely slaughtered at a majority of Canadian slaughterhouses. Abuses included improper stunning leading to painful slaughter; dragging of crippled animals; leaving crippled animals to die lingering deaths; and castration of boars without anesthetic. 18 In 1993, another survey recorded improvements in 11 Canadian slaughterhouses representing approximately 40% of hogs and cattle slaughtered. The plants, however, were not selected randomly, meaning unsatisfactory plants could be excluded; all plants received advance notice; and no provincial or poultry plants allowed inspection. 19 A 1995 survey of 21 Canadian slaughterhouses was undertaken, but "The itinerary was predetermined by representatives of Agriculture Canada, the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies, the Canadian Meat Council and the Canadian Poultry and Egg Processors Council." Nonetheless, even this highly controlled survey revealed that some slaughterhouses exposed animals to unreasonable suffering before and during the slaughter process: "Twenty one percent of the livestock plants and half the ritual and poultry plants were out of compliance." 20 Problems noted included: catheterizing of conscious sheep; bashing of sheep repeatedly with a wooden board; throat-cutting of conscious hens; ineffective throat cutting in ritual plants; extreme pre-slaughter stress for terrified animals, including intense noise, slick floors and tying up of conscious animals. 20 To industry's credit, the survey reports that at least some problems will be rectified; however, it is likely that similar problems will continue to exist in many other Canadian slaughterhouses, the vast majority of which were not covered in this survey. 6月19日 Ralph Lauren goes Fur-Free!Ralph Lauren, long recognized as a leader in fashion, is now also a leader in compassion after announcing a precedent-setting decision to no longer use fur in any of his apparel or home collections, based purely on ethical grounds.
The Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation had been considering eliminating fur from its lines for some time and finally issued a statement making its decision to go fur-free official after a series of meetings with PETA during which executives viewed grisly undercover video footage of fur farms in China, where more than half the finished fur garments imported for sale in the United States are sourced. Shortly after meetings with PETA in February and March 2006, the company committed to pulling all fur from its shelves. “Fur has never been an integral part of our design strategy …,” said a Polo Ralph Lauren spokesperson. “We are publicly announcing this decision because the use of fur has been under review internally and we feel that the time is right to take this action.” On fur farms in China, animals are confined to tiny wire cages through all weather extremes. Before they are skinned, workers bludgeon them with metal rods and slam them against the ground, breaking their bones but not always killing them. Many animals are skinned while they are still alive. The Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation sent PETA a signed statement of assurance acknowledging its intent to pull all advertising for fur, cancel all pending orders for fur products, and beginning with its holiday 2006 collections, no longer sell any fur products. Twelve hundred of its brand-new fall 2006 fur-trimmed coats will be donated to charities in developing nations. Ralph Lauren’s compassionate, progressive decision sends a powerful message to the clothing industry that torturing and killing rabbits, raccoons, foxes, and other animals for fashion won’t be tolerated.6月9日 Philadelphia may soon join Chicago in Foie Gras BAN!Foes see foie gras as a fat target
By Martha T. Moore, USA TODAY Fri Jun 2, 7:14 AM ET If you have the taste and the wallet for foie gras the way they serve it at Philadelphia's swank Le Bec-Fin, you'd better run over there and order it now. The city may soon join Chicago and California in banning the duck liver delicacy. That would mean no foie gras gelled with peach compote at Le Bec-Fin, nor foie gras torchon with "seckel pear tatin, vanilla creme fraiche and warm brioche" at The Striped Bass, nor foie gras and fig empanadas at Alma de Cuba. It would also stop cruelty to ducks, according to animal welfare groups. To make foie gras - French for "fat liver" - farm-raised moulard ducks are force-fed corn through a funnel put down their necks until their livers expand to at least six times normal size. Those who love foie gras and those who abhor it agree there's no other way to make the silky food that, when it gets to a restaurant plate, can cost more than $20 for a 2-ounce portion. What's at issue is whether it hurts the ducks - and whether local government has any business telling people what they can't eat. "It's egregious cruelty, and it's unnecessary," says Gene Bauston of the Farm Sanctuary, an animal welfare advocacy group and anti-foie gras campaigner. "Treating other animals that way takes a piece out of our own humanity." Chefs, restaurateurs and producers say that ducks are not hurt by the force-feeding and enlarged livers, and that banning foie gras is a government intrusion into people's right to eat what they wish. After foie gras, they predict, the next items on the banned menu will be lobster (boiled alive), rabbit (a popular pet) and eggs from hens raised in cages (already eliminated or reduced in the dining halls of 85 colleges). "The people behind that are not against foie gras; they are against consumption of poultry meat and fish. Foie gras is an easy target," says Ariane Daguin, whose company, D'Artagnan, is the largest retailer of foie gras. "Next lobster, next rabbit. Myself, I believe I'm lucky to find myself on top of the food chain. I think God created rabbits and ducks for me to enjoy. And soft-shell crabs." Councilman calls it 'torture' A national push by animal welfare groups to ban foie gras led Philadelphia City Council member Jack Kelly to introduce legislation last week to ban it. "I don't believe in any torture - for what, a couple of restaurants in Philadelphia to serve some French delicacy?" Kelly says. In Massachusetts, a bill to ban foie gras production in the state (there isn't any) is before a committee of the Legislature. A previous committee dropped a provision to ban the sale. It is already coming off the menu in California, which in 2004 set a 2012 deadline to end production and sale. Last month, Chicago imposed its own ban despite protests from chefs and the state restaurant association and ridicule from Mayor Richard Daley. Israel ' name=c1> SEARCHNews | News Photos | Images | Web ' name=c3> Israel and several European countries have banned foie gras production. "We have children getting killed by gang leaders and dope dealers. We have real issues here in this city. And we're dealing with foie gras? Let's get some priorities," Daley told the Chicago Sun-Times. Three duck farms in the USA - two in New York and one in California - produce nearly 800,000 pounds of duck liver annually, worth about $27 million wholesale. In a process that producers call "gavage," cornmeal is poured down the ducks' throats three times a day for four weeks. The ducks are slaughtered when they are 16 weeks old. Michael Ginor, owner of Hudson Valley Foie Gras, the largest producer, says ducks naturally gorge and enlarge their livers before the long haul of migration. They have tough throats designed to swallow food whole, including entire fish, and have no gag reflex. If force-feeding is stopped, the liver returns to normal size. "There is no pain," he says. "The goal of the farmers is to have happy ducks," Daguin says. "Because a happy duck is a good duck." Bauston, however, says the ducks suffer damage to their throats and can barely walk or breathe because of their enlarged livers. "It's an appetizer, for crying out loud. At what cost? It's gustatory narcissism. What are we willing to do for this flavor?" Some chefs, most famously Chicago's Charlie Trotter at his eponymous restaurant, have stopped using foie gras. But others, most famously Thomas Keller of the French Laundry Restaurant in Napa County, Calif., don't want to. "I don't know where you draw the line," says Stephen Starr, who owns a dozen restaurants in Philadelphia, including The Striped Bass and Alma de Cuba. "We probably shouldn't sell chickens either, because it looks like they have a pretty miserable life." But he says he won't object if the city bans foie gras, even if his chefs do. 'The duck's still on the plate' Brendan Dougherty, chef de cuisine at Lacroix at the Rittenhouse, a French restaurant in Philadelphia, serves foie gras. "I love it as a cook," he says. "The way I look at it is, this is something that has been going on for years and years and years. It's a way of life in France." If chefs are going to cook meat, it is splitting hairs to worry about foie gras, he says. "In the end, the duck's still on the plate whether it was stuffed or not." For all the fighting words, U.S. foie gras production may be on its way out - or at least over the border. Last year, Ginor helped draft legislation for the New York Legislature that would have given him until 2016 to stop producing foie gras or take his ducks elsewhere. It was an effort, he says, "to control our own destiny." The bill died in committee. In California, Sonoma Foie Gras will have to end production in six years. But the company may shut down sooner. It has lost its duckling supplier and processor, Grimaud Farms, because Grimaud also does business with Whole Foods, the nationwide grocer. Whole Foods, which hasn't sold foie gras since 1997, won't do business with a company that slaughters ducks for foie gras. "We've been very clear that we want to partner with other businesses that have the like values of treating farm animals humanely," says Margaret Wittenberg of Whole Foods. "Foie gras isn't included in that list." 6月5日 VICTORY! Closed for Cruelty!CLOSED FOR CRUELTY!
After more than 10,000 demonstrations, coast-to-coast television ads and billboards, and a slew of letters from consumers and celebrities such as Pamela Anderson and Sir Paul McCartney, PETA is hearing from our dedicated activists nationwide that KFC stores are kicking the bucket. Regular protests at KFC restaurants in Palo Alto, San Francisco, and Long Beach, California; Washington, D.C.; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Eugene, Oregon; and New York, New York (where a KFC was closed down that—according to one KFC owner—once generated upwards of $30,000 per week) have caused KFCs to throw in the towel and close their doors for good.
It’s no wonder that people don’t want to eat at KFC anymore—with drugged-up chickens who suffer broken legs and have their throats slit or are scalded to death while still completely conscious, who can blame them? If KFC officials won’t listen to the countless kind people—including members of their own animal welfare panel—who have contacted them about the cruel treatment of chickens for their restaurants, perhaps they will listen to their shrinking wallets. Let us know if a KFC you’ve been protesting has closed down. Find out how you can help get KFC out of your city. 5月22日 Protection for Wild Horses
With tremendous grassroots pressure bearing down on Congress this week, the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously approved a measure late Thursday to protect wild horses from slaughter. The outpouring of support from the American public was so overwhelming that House leadership conceded to the provision without a vote by individual members. Reps. Nick Rahall (D-WV), Ed Whitfield (R-KY), John Sweeney (R-NY), and John Spratt (D-SC) successfully offered an amendment to the spending bill for the Department of the Interior for fiscal year 2007. The measure would end the commercial sale and subsequent slaughter of wild horses and burros. Last year, the House overwhelmingly approved an identical amendment in a 249-159 bipartisan vote, as well as another similar appropriations amendment to prohibit horse slaughter, but the U.S. Department of Agriculture thwarted the will of Congress and used private funding to enable the grisly slaughter of horses to continue.
"A public outcry has again begun across the United States over the change in law that now allows the commercial sale and slaughter of these animals," Rahall said. "We need to act before it is too late for thousands of these animals." America's wild horses were protected from sale and slaughter for 34 years. Then, a year and a half ago, those protections were removed through a highly controversial legislative maneuver, without hearings, debate, or the introduction of a bill. Late in 2004, Sen. Conrad Burns (R-MT) attached a provision to an omnibus spending bill, which passed without any public review and reversed a longstanding federal policy of protecting wild horses from being sold at auctions and subsequently shipped to slaughter plants. Wild Horses Sent to Slaughter It is already too late for hundreds of horses. On April 15, 2005, six horses were purchased by Oklahoman Dustin Herbert. Only three days later, these horses were sent directly to a foreign-owned slaughter plant in Illinois. Mr. Herbert told the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) that he intended to use the horses for a church youth program. One week later, another 35 were killed at the same slaughter plant after being traded unwittingly by the Rosebud Sioux Tribe soon after they were sold by BLM. By pure chance, another 52 were snatched from the slaughter plant line in a last-minute effort to preserve their lives by fast-thinking officials. Since then, we've lost hundreds more of our treasured wild horses to the slaughterhouse. We have graphic evidence in hand now that sale authority is not a workable solution. Cruel and Inhumane Practice The cruelty of horse slaughter is not limited to the slaughter itself. Economics, not humane considerations, dictate transport conditions. Horses are shipped in crowded trucks, frequently over long distances, and are typically given no food, water or rest. The truck ceilings are so low that horses are not able to hold their heads in a normal, balanced position. "Horses have done so much for us in our country's history," said Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of The HSUS. "They deserve much better than to be trucked across the country, prodded onto the slaughterhouse floor, hoisted up by a rear leg, and then bled out with a sharp cut to the throat-simply to appease the palates of foreign gourmands." Only three horse slaughterhouses remain in the United States—two in Texas, one in Illinois—and all three are foreign-owned. The Need for a Permanent Ban Congress cast strong, bipartisan votes on the interior and agriculture appropriations bills for fiscal year 2006 in both the House and Senate (House Interior 249-159; House Agriculture 269-158; Senate Agriculture 69-28). But when the U.S. Department of Agriculture's found a way to circumvent the amendment to continue horse slaughter, it did more than undermine the will of Congress—it illustrated a clear need for a permanent horse slaughter ban with passage of the American Horse Slaughter Protection Act. "Congress, on behalf of millions of Americans, has spoken out by an overwhelming majority to save these majestic icons of the West from a certain and inhumane death, and for that we're very grateful," Pacelle added. "It's up to Congress now to act with equal passion and pass the American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act to keep all American horses from ending up in the hands of killer buyers and ultimately on dinner plates in Europe and Asia 5月17日 Animals Used for EntertainmentAnimals Used for Entertainment FAQs
“Don’t zoos teach children important lessons about wildlife?” Animals’ normal behaviors are seldom discussed—much less observed—at zoos because their natural needs are rarely met in zoo environments. Many animals who live in large herds or family groups in the wild are kept alone or, at most, in pairs at zoos. Natural hunting and mating behaviors are virtually eliminated by regulated feeding and breeding regimens. Animals at zoos lack privacy and have little opportunity for mental stimulation or physical exercise. These conditions cause them to exhibit abnormal, self-destructive behaviors called zoochosis. Many zoo officials focus on profits rather than the well-being of the animals. A former director of the Atlanta Zoo once remarked that he was “too far removed from the animals; they’re the last thing I worry about with all the other problems.” Zoos teach people that it is acceptable to keep animals in captivity, where they are bored, cramped, lonely, far from their natural homes, and at the mercy and whim of people. “Don't zoos help preserve endangered species?” Rather than nurturing animals to thrive in natural settings, zoos place very unnatural restrictions on their residents. For example, in zoos, polar bears are typically confined to spaces that are only one-millionth the size of their minimum home range in the wild. Animals who roam across large distances in nature often exhibit dementia and stereotypical behaviors from boredom when placed in zoo enclosures, endlessly pacing or swimming in circles. Ultimately, we will only save endangered species by preserving their habitats and protecting them from hunters—not by breeding a few individuals in captivity. Instead of supporting zoos, we should support groups such as the International Primate Protection League, the Born Free Foundation, and other organizations that work to preserve habitats, and we should also help nonprofit sanctuaries, like The Elephant Sanctuary and the Performing Animal Welfare Society, that rescue and care for exotic animals without selling or breeding them. “Aren't racehorses treated well so that they'll perform better?” Before they are slaughtered, though, many horses are turned into junkies by their trainers and veterinarians, who provide drugs to keep them racing even when they shouldn’t be on the track because of their injuries. Many are forced to run with hairline fractures, which would be too painful without drugs. “There are trainers pumping horses full of illegal drugs every day,” said a former Churchill Downs public relations director. “With so much money on the line, people will do anything to make their horses run faster.” A New York Daily News reporter remarked, “The thoroughbred race horse is a genetic mistake. It runs too fast, its frame is too large, and its legs are far too small. As long as mankind demands that it run at high speeds under stressful conditions, horses will die at racetracks.” “I love seeing animals at the circus, and they don’t seem to mind performing, so why is PETA against the use of animals in circuses?” He also wrote that trainers commonly break bears’ noses or burn their paws to force them to stand on their hind legs and that monkeys and chimpanzees are struck with clubs while they scream. The fact is, animals do not naturally ride bicycles, stand on their heads, balance on balls, or jump through rings of fire. To force them to perform these confusing and physically uncomfortable tricks, trainers use whips, tight collars, muzzles, electric prods, bullhooks, and other painful tools of the trade. We applaud trapeze artists, jugglers, clowns, tightrope walkers, and acrobats, but let’s leave animals in peace. Sweden, Denmark, Finland, India, Switzerland, and the U.K. have all banned or restricted the use of animals in entertainment—it’s time for the U.S. to do the same. “What's wrong with rodeos?” After their short and painful “careers,” animals in rodeos are sent to the slaughterhouse. Dr. C.G. Haber, a veterinarian who spent 30 years as a federal meat inspector, described the animals discarded from rodeos for slaughter as being “so extensively bruised that the only areas in which the skin was attached [to the flesh] were the head, neck, leg, and belly. I have seen animals with six to eight ribs broken from the spine and, at times, puncturing the lungs. I have seen as much as 2 to 3 gallons of free blood accumulated under the detached skin.” Every national animal protection organization opposes rodeos because of their inherent cruelty. Urge your community to buck the rodeo.
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