People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), with more than 2 million members and supporters, is the largest animal rights organization in the world. Founded in 1980, PETA is dedicated to establishing and protecting the rights of all animals. PETA operates under the simple principle that animals are not ours to eat, wear, experiment on, or use for entertainment.
PETA focuses its attention on the four areas in which the largest numbers of animals suffer the most intensely for the longest periods of time: on factory farms, in laboratories, in the clothing trade, and in the entertainment industry. We also work on a variety of other issues, including the cruel killing of beavers, birds and other "pests," and the abuse of backyard dogs.
Articles by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals - PETA
Wasteful and cruel addiction experiments on animals are being conducted all over the country—and taxpayers are footing the bill for many of them. Federal tax dollars would be much better spent funding cash-strapped addiction treatment centers and studying drug addictions in humans in a clinical setting.
Hospitals across the country are starting to buy only antibiotic-free meats in an effort to improve the quality of the food that they serve to patients. This begs the question, "Why are hospitals serving meat in the first place?"
Thousands of people all over the country have been bitten, mauled and killed by exotic pets. Keeping tigers, monkeys, pythons and other dangerous animals in our homes is like lighting a fuse and pretending it won´t go off.
Training a dog requires practice, patience and positive reinforcement. The "p" that doesn't belong is punishment.
The EPA is using efficient and effective non-animal testing methods to study the endocrine effects of chemical dispersants that could be used to clean up oil in the Gulf of Mexico. As this urgent situation highlights, we can no longer afford to rely on crude and cruel animal toxicity tests that date back to the 1930s and take years to provide answers.
"Green" state and county fairs—featuring everything from vegetable oil-powered cars to organic food vendors—are sprouting up all over the country. We should embrace these eco- and animal-friendly innovations and send tired animal displays, such as elephant rides, tiger photo booths and petting zoos, packing.
Animals aren't any better equipped to survive natural disasters than humans are. Making emergency plans now can help all the members of our families weather the storm.
The USDA's new dietary guidelines recommend a shift toward a "more plant-based" diet. Going vegan is the easiest, healthiest way for Americans to fight the "battle of the bulge."
More than 20 orcas have died in U.S. SeaWorld facilities since 1986—and none of them died of old age. As you make your summer vacation plans, please leave cruel marine mammal theme parks off the list.
Undercover footage shot by PETA shows Ringling Bros. trainers beating elephants with sharp metal bullhooks. Elephants used in circuses are forced into training at a young age; still-nursing baby elephants are captured rodeo-style and dragged away from their mothers. One former Ringling circus clown explains why he walked away from the Big Top.
According to a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, almost two-thirds of Americans believe that the federal government should pursue criminal charges against BP. Cruelty to animals should be included on the list of charges that BP faces.
Most puppies and kittens who are sold at pet stores come from mass-breeding facilities where animals are kept in tiny, feces-caked cages and are never given any love, attention or even a chance to roll in the grass. We can put puppy mills out of business by never buying animals from pet stores.
It's time to stop pretending that fishing is an acceptable pastime. Fish are intelligent animals who form complex social relationships, have impressive long-term memories, and use tools. And they feel pain, as all animals do.
PETA's undercover investigation of Sun Pet Ltd.—a supplier of animals to stores nationwide, including PETCO and PetSmart—revealed that animals are cruelly killed, abusively handled and forced to live in severely crowded, filthy conditions. When you buy animals from pet stores, you are supporting this cruelty.
P&G may be bragging about its efforts to help birds and other wildlife, but it isn't saying much about what it does to dogs, cats, and other animals in laboratory experiments.
Studies have long shown that eating meat—including chicken—can increase your cancer risk. So why is KFC peddling "Buckets for the Cure"?
Every day in the U.S., three horses, on average, suffer catastrophic injuries while racing and must be euthanized. People who care about horses for horses' sake should steer clear of the upcoming Preakness and Belmont stakes.
Animal handlers in circuses use whips, sharp metal bullhooks, electric shock prods and other devices to force elephants to perform. These barbaric devices can turn animals into ticking time bombs—as a recent incident at a Shrine-sponsored circus shows.
Saving the planet starts with what you put on your plate. Celebrate Earth Day every day—and at every meal—by going vegan.
Showing cruelty of gastronomical proportions, some restaurants are now chopping up and serving live octopuses, lobsters and other sea animals to their customers. But consuming live animals doesn't just push the boundaries of good taste: It's animal abuse.
Animals on factory farms live mired in their own waste and are slaughtered on killing floors that are contaminated with feces, vomit and other bodily fluids. When government food inspectors—pressured by supervisors—turn a blind eye to these filthy conditions, it's little wonder that tainted meat enters the food supply.
Most rabbits who are purchased as Easter presents for kids end up dead or abandoned before their first birthday. Weeks after Easter, when "bunny fever" has subsided, many people consign now-unwanted bunnies to outdoor hutches, dump them at animal shelters or simply set them free outdoors—where they will starve or be killed by predators.
Animal Planet will be doing both viewers and birds a terrible disservice if it airs Mike Tyson´s reality show about pigeon racing. These gentle, loyal birds, who race their hearts out in order to get home to their life mates, often become lost in storms or have their necks wrung for failing to beat their competitors´ time.
Research in psychology and criminology shows that people who commit acts of cruelty to animals rarely stop there—many of them move on to their fellow humans. For everyone´s safety, state lawmakers should consider establishing online registries for convicted animal abusers.
Dogs die every year in Alaska's grueling Iditarod race. It's time to relegate the Iditarod to the history books.
For many people, NASA represents cutting-edge science and grandiose achievements such as sending a human to the moon. Unfortunately, future NASA projects are not so inspiring: The agency plans to irradiate squirrel monkeys and force them to endure years of laboratory experiments to measure the inevitable devastation that the radiation causes to their brains and bodies.
The death of the SeaWorld trainer following the attack by a killer whale is a tragedy that didn´t have to happen. For years, PETA has been calling on SeaWorld to stop confining oceangoing mammals to an enclosure that to them is like a bathtub—and to stop forcing the animals to perform silly tricks over and over again.
While we at PETA would prefer that no animals be killed for food, we won't ignore the horrors of factory farms and slaughterhouses just because we wish that they didn't exist.
Fashion guru Tim Gunn says, "Wearing fur is like wearing a big sign reading, 'I'm in favor of inflicting cruelty and pain on animals as a fashion statement.'" Surely the frigid temperatures haven't left you that frosty.
Half of the fish consumed worldwide now comes from fish farms. As the saga of the Asian carp shows, we'd be better off if we left fish off our plates.
Removing dolphins from their natural habitat and communities to display them as attractions at theme parks and resort hotels is a reprehensible practice that has brought a great deal of trauma and tragedy to hundreds of these intelligent animals. It's time for a permanent ban on cruel dolphin displays.
January is "Unchain a Dog" Month. If you know someone with an outside dog, please urge the dog's guardian to bring his or her forgotten companion indoors to be with the rest of the family.
Congress and the EPA are considering reforming the laws that regulate toxic chemicals. Any update of these laws must include measures to ensure that only the most modern, non-animal testing methods are used.
Elephants in captivity suffer a life of chronic physical ailments, social deprivation, emotional starvation, and premature death. The U.S. should follow the progressive lead of India, which recently announced that it will no longer allow these magnificent animals to be imprisoned in zoos and circuses.
There is no such thing as a meat-eating environmentalist. Whether you do it for the planet, your own health, or for the sake of animals, you have the power to change the world, simply by changing what's on your plate.
Jellyfish invasions from Japan to New York are a warning sign that our oceans are stressed and unhealthy. Each of us can help improve the health of the oceans—simply by leaving sea animals off our plates.
Animals who are given as holiday gifts are often discarded or given away yet again when the holiday season is over. Well-intentioned holiday shoppers who might be thinking about giving a kitten, puppy, or other animal as a gift should cross animals off their shopping lists.
The U.S. is the only country in the world that continues large-scale use of chimpanzees in experiments. It's time to stop viewing our closest living relatives as little more than test tubes with fur.
Animal advocates who engage in nonviolent protests and civil disobedience are sitting in jail cells, while people who wake up every morning and go to jobs in which they torment and kill animals in laboratories continue to enjoy their freedom, paychecks, social lives and families. This should give every American pause.
A new study provides more insight into the intelligence of pigs—and raises questions about the intelligence and thoughtfulness of the humans who eat them.
In the exotic skins trade, alligators are commonly bludgeoned with hammers or metal bars; snakes are nailed to trees and skinned alive. These animals should not have to suffer just for humans' coldblooded vanity.
Thanksgiving is murder on turkeys. With delicious cholesterol-free vegan holiday recipes available online and fabulous "faux fowl" in most supermarkets, we can celebrate without causing suffering—and give a bird something to be thankful for.
What does it say about society's mindset when children are encouraged to participate in a program that ultimately means the death of an animal they've befriended and whose trust they actively courted? 4-H programs teach the wrong lessons about animals—and they should have no place in our schools.
A recent Pew Research Center poll found that 43 percent of adults—and nearly 60 percent of those under 30—oppose the use of animals in experiments. A top Alzheimer's researcher explains why we would all be better off if animal experimenters stopped subjecting animals to painful and deadly experiments that are irrelevant to humans.
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." The time has come to recognize that all oppression, prejudice, violence and cruelty are wrong and must be rejected, regardless of race, regardless of sexual orientation—and regardless of species.
October is "Adopt a Shelter Dog" Month: If you're ready to provide a dog with lots of walks and belly rubs—and receive plenty of tail wags and unconditional love in return—look no further than your local animal shelter. There, you'll find loving dogs of all shapes and sizes, just waiting for a forever home.
From birth to death, animals on today's factory farms are treated like nothing more than machines. Cows on dairy farms are no exception—as PETA's latest undercover investigation reveals.
The children who eat chicken nuggets and pepperoni pizza today will likely grow up to be the obese adults and heart patients of tomorrow. Encouraging kids to eat nutritious vegetarian foods instead will give them the fuel they need to be healthy and active now—and help protect them from many debilitating diseases as they grow older.
October is national "Cut Out Dissection" Month. There are far better ways to teach biology than by killing animals, damaging the environment, and giving students a lesson in insensitivity.
Most people wouldn't dream of wearing a coat made from the skins of 120 dead minks, but what about fur trim? Even a little bit of fur adds up to a lot of suffering for rabbits and other animals on fur farms.
A new Wisconsin law begs the question: How low will hunting lobbyists go?
In an effort to revive a dying sport, states across the country are loosening hunting restrictions and putting loaded weapons into younger and younger hands. The Wisconsin law, which went into effect this month, lowers the ...
None of us would dream of drinking water tainted by sewage, pesticides, heavy metals and other contaminants, yet we'll happily eat fish who are pulled from this toxic brew. A new study, which found mercury in every single fish tested from streams across the country, provides one more reason to leave fish off our plates.
Every year between September and March, thousands of dolphins are slaughtered in the small fishing village of Taiji, Japan. A few live dolphins are sold to aquariums and performing-dolphin shows—these lucrative sales fund the deaths of all the rest.
Car dealers are breathing a sigh of relief now that the popular "cash for clunkers" program has been extended by $2 billion. With the new funding, as many as a half-million more Americans will be able to junk their gas guzzlers and buy more fuel-efficient vehicles.
I'm not impressed. If we are se...
During the "dog days" of summer, the temperature inside a parked car can climb to well above 100ºF in just a matter of minutes. Keep your canine companions safe: Never leave them alone inside a parked car.
Across the country every day, companion animals are stolen for experimentation, used for target practice or bait for dogfighting and worse after being left outside alone for "just a few minutes." Keep your feline (and canine) friends safe by keeping them indoors.
Since 1989, experimenters at the University of Wisconsin have sentenced dozens of rhesus monkeys to solitary confinement to see how starving them affects their health and longevity. Perhaps the university should turn its attention to a more pressing matter instead: Why is there such a deficit of compassion among animal experimenters?
Every year, countless people succumb to the temptation to purchase "exotic" animals such as monkeys, pythons, macaws—even tigers, lions and bears—to keep as "pets." All too often, they—and the animals—pay with their lives.
Earlier this year, PETA went undercover at Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus and captured Ringling workers on video as they beat and whipped elephants dozens of times. The abuse extended from Birmingham, Alabama, to Providence, Rhode Island―Ringling's venues changed, but the beatings did not.
With so many high-profile stories in the news lately—the passing of Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett, the Gov. Sanford scandal, post-election protests in Iran—you may not have heard about the historic victories for animals that are taking place in American courtrooms. It´s worth ...
From Chesapeake Bay retrievers to Boston terriers to Alaskan malamutes, millions of dogs in the U.S. live their entire lives in chains. This Fourth of July, before we slice the watermelon and light the sparklers, let´s make it a true Independence Day for everyone—by urging friends and neighbors to unchain their dogs.
Every year, hundreds of thoroughbreds from the U.S. are sold to stables in Japan. Many of these horses will eventually end up in Japanese slaughterhouses, where they will be killed, cut apart, and turned into dog food.
What do chimpanzees, dolphins, crabs, and even flies have in common? They all have talents—and feelings—that humans are often completely unaware of. PETA President Ingrid E. Newkirk makes the case for recognizing and embracing the bonds we share with animals—and acting on them.
With the news that airline passengers with "extra baggage" may have to pay for two seats, here´s a simple way for frequent flyers to shed pounds and avoid paying extra airfare: Go vegetarian.
The animals on our plates were once inquisitive individuals who valued their lives, solved problems, formed friendships and experienced fear and pain—just as we do. Just ask Molly the cow.
Big-cat photo ops, petting zoos, pony turnstiles and elephant and camel rides are staples on the state and county fair circuit. But for the animals used in these cruel displays, life is anything but fun and games.
While on-track breakdowns are dramatic, racehorses are much more likely to meet a different end. The horses who will be revered, praised and wagered on during this year´s Triple Crown races may very well end up in a slaughterhouse.
Factory farms are breeding grounds for life-threatening conditions, including swine flu, avian flu, E. coli infection and others. If we don´t want pigs, chickens and cows to be our downfall—either through animalborne illnesses or through heart disease or cancer—it´s time to reevaluate the way we eat.
It won´t happen overnight, but if we vow always to do two simple things—adopt animals from shelters or rescue groups rather than buy them from breeders or pet shops and get our animals spayed or neutered—then together, yes, we can end animal homelessness once and for all.
At 17 military bases across the country, medics are being forced to maim and kill goats and pigs in cruel and outdated trauma-training exercises. Our troops deserve the very best, so why is the military still stabbing, burning and shooting animals when it could be using the very latest equipment to train medics to save soldiers´ lives?
As you read this, tens of thousands of seals are being clubbed and shot for their fur in Canada. Killing animals for something as selfish as fur can never be justified—but the very least that we can do is end the sickening spectacle of the seal slaughter once and for all.
Here´s some advice for the millions of people who will soon be celebrating Easter: If you´re thinking of getting the kids a real bunny, please think again. Real bunnies have no place in children´s Easter baskets.
We punish criminals in our society by taking away their freedom. Yet animals in zoos, who have committed no crimes, are also denied all of their most basic needs, including the opportunity to move about and roam freely, forage, explore, play, and socialize with other animals.
According to food writer Giles Coren, using foie gras is "a lazy way for a half-competent chef to make his food seem flash." If there´s one bright spot in the current recession, it´s that foodies are beginning to give up this cruel and selfish indulgence.
Cruelty is never in style. But now more than ever, as more and more fashionistas are becoming "recessionistas," fur is as conspicuously out of place as a bailed-out banker´s private jet.
Every year, dogs die in the Iditarod—Alaska´s grueling 1,150-mile dog-sled race—and this year has proven to be no exception. The race´s participants, almost none of whom are indigenous Alaskans, are motivated by only one thing, the cash prize, and they will do almost anything to attain it.
It´s time for lenders to take a look at what their money supports. Investing in drug companies that use and kill millions of animals every year represents neither good ethics nor good business sense.
Charles Darwin once said, "Animals, whom we have made our slaves, we do not like to consider our equal." Nearly two centuries after Darwin´s words, not much has changed—we continue to imprison animals in zoos and circuses, intentionally hurt them in painful and invasive experiments, and subject billions of them to hideously cruel lives and deaths to feed ourselves.
The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show and other dog shows are little more than overblown beauty pageants. But as trivial as dog shows may seem, they have serious repercussions, including the promotion of dangerous and unhealthy breeding standards that result in one out of four dogs being born with physical problems ranging from allergies to epilepsy.
No animal deserves to be kept in a tiny tank or boiled alive. The best way to extend compassion to crustaceans—and other sentient beings——is to stop eating them.
America is a melting pot—the people of the United States can be described by talking about the people of Uganda, Uruguay or Utah. But in the ways that truly count, we are all simply residents of this planet with the potential to be kind and compassionate toward all beings, animals included.
Officials in the U.S. and Canada should follow Victoria, Australia´s progressive lead by banning glue traps. Glue traps are one of the slowest, cruelest methods of killing animals that exist today and they should have been banned a long time ago.
In the coming year, the NIH will disperse $15 billion of our tax money to animal experimenters—many of whom are conducting experiments that are redundant, painful or just plain useless. It´s time for these cruel experiments to end.
While 2008 was tough for almost everyone, surprisingly, it was a great year for animals. Amidst all the chaos—from economic meltdowns to global food shortages—people´s attitudes toward animals were changing.
The wonderful new movie Marley and Me shows that animals are a part of the family, for better or for worse, and when we bring them into our homes, we are making a lifetime commitment. This is a reminder that we all need to hear.
Today´s crowded streets and mall parking lots are no place for horse-drawn carriages. Horses and humans alike have been seriously hurt—some fatally—when horses used for holiday carriage rides have spooked and run amok.
Americans gobble up an extra 600 calories per day during the holiday season. If you want to avoid the holiday spread, here´s a tip: Put down the turkey drumstick and back away from the baked brie. Avoiding animal foods is the easiest way to whittle your wattle.
PETA´s new exposé of rabbit fur farms shows workers pulling rabbits from cages by their ears and shooting them in the head with electric stun guns—often multiple times—while the terrified animals kick and scream. Consumers can help stop this cruelty simply by shunning real fur, including fur trim, forever.
Rhino, the pint-size hamster sidekick in Disney´s new movie, Bolt, is getting the big-screen star treatment, but his real-life cousins are all too often treated like trash. All those "Rhinos" you see for sale in pet shops come from massive breeding warehouses, where small animals live in deplorable conditions and routinely go without fresh food, clean water or veterinary care.
We all know the health risks associated with smoking, but did you know that smoking hurts animals too? Mice, rats, ferrets, dogs and primates continue to be mutilated, pumped full of nicotine and forced to inhale smoke in cruel, archaic smoking experiments.
President-elect Barack Obama and PETA President Ingrid E. Newkirk share a resolute belief: Change can happen. Together, we can achieve the dream of liberation from oppression, not just for human beings but for all beings, regardless of race or gender—or species.
The Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus has much to answer for, including elephants beaten bloody, babies torn from their mothers and animals forced to perform under the threat of punishment. It´s time for Ringling to replace its real elephants with state-of-the art, high-tech animatronics.
Last month, several candy companies found themselves caught up in China´s tainted-milk scandal. But even if it were contaminant-free, cow´s milk would still have problems.
In laboratories across the country, researchers are busy infecting healthy mice and rats with breast cancer even though such experiments hold little promise for human patients. True medical progress will not come until we stop relying on outdated animal models.
In the animal sheltering community, cute animal movies such as Beverly Hills Chihuahua are not something to look forward to. When moviegoers rush out to buy a dog like the ones they saw in a movie, dogs in shelters—whose lives depend on being adopted—lose a chance at finding a forever home.
For more than three months, PETA went undercover at an Iowa pig factory farm that supplies piglets who are raised and killed for Hormel products. The rampant cruelty that we documented should be enough to make anyone think twice before buying sausage, ham or bacon.
In his groundbreaking article "Consider the Lobster," the late writer David Foster Wallace asked readers, "Is it all right to boil a sentient creature alive just for our gustatory pleasure?" Short answer: no.
Ducks are curious animals who have a zest for life that rivals that of any toddler or puppy. So why are hunters taking aim at these beautiful birds?
If we needed any more proof that fur-loving fashionistas are out of touch with the rest of the population, Fendi´s new $100,000 "gold fur" coat is it. By now, most of us know that there is no kind way to rip the skin off animals´ backs, and we´re not buying it—at any price.
All parents want their children to have healthy choices in the school cafeteria, but it can be frustrating if you live in a school district that flunks lunch. By serving vegetarian meals instead of animal products, schools can help set kids up for a lifetime of good health.
A man is suing a Chicago restaurant after, he says, he acquired a 9-foot-long tapeworm from an undercooked salmon salad. While tapeworms are gross, they won´t kill you—but some of the other substances in fish just might.
It´s time for designers and celebrities to stop treating dogs as fashion accessories, interchangeable with the latest "It" bag. Unlike a purse that you can toss in the closet when you grow tired of it, dogs are living, feeling beings who require a lifetime of love and care.
The state- and county-fair circuit is rife with exploitative animal displays—from elephant rides to photo sessions with tiger cubs. But life for these animals is anything but fun and games.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, chained dogs are nearly three times more likely to attack than dogs who are not tethered. For the sake of dogs and everyone´s safety, it´s time to ban chaining.
Researchers have given Rubik´s Cubes to 25 octopuses in Europe to determine if they, like humans, have a dominant "arm." We know that octopuses are intelligent, have excellent memories, play (just like dolphins and dogs), and can learn by watching others—so why do we keep imprisoning them in aquariums and killing them for sushi?
Using live animals in trauma-training exercises is outdated and unethical—and your tax dollars are funding it. Our soldiers deserve better.
When the Spanish parliament recently voted to extend basic rights to great apes, it sparked debate around the world. In light of all we know about great apes´ complex mental and emotional lives, extending rights and protections to these animals is both a logical and a moral imperative.
Giving overweight children cholesterol-lowering drugs, as the American Academy of Pediatrics suggests, is not the best way to prevent them from becoming tomorrow´s heart patients. A better solution is to teach kids to eat healthful vegetarian foods.
While millions of people around the world do not have enough to eat, a billion more—many of them Americans—are overweight. Our addiction to meat is largely to blame for both problems.
More than two dozen people—and counting—have been injured during this year´s Running of the Bulls in Pamplona, Spain. Many tourists do not realize that the bulls suffer, too: All of the bulls who are stampeded through the streets during the day are slaughtered in the bullfighting ring at night.
Animals of the sea inhabit vast, fascinating and complex worlds—but for the countless fish, dolphins, whales, sea lions and other animals confined to aquariums and marine mammal parks, their world has been reduced to a chlorinated tank. Families who care about marine animals can help keep them in the oceans where they belong by refusing to patronize aquariums and marine mammal theme parks when hitting the road this summer.
With hundreds of companies now refusing to test their products on animals, there´s no reason for others to continue blinding and poisoning animals in cruel and crude tests that are relics of the 1920s. Modern, sophisticated testing techniques are accurate and fast—and no one gets hurt.
By going vegan for 21 days, TV talk show queen Oprah Winfrey is setting a great example for her legions of fans. Even if only a fraction of her admirers are motivated to try a vegan diet, it will make a world of difference—for their health, for the environment and of course, for animals.
As the recent terrifying string of natural disasters shows, emergencies can strike anytime and anywhere. It´s vital to make emergency plans now to protect all members of our families—including our animals.
After the tragic breakdown of Eight Belles at the Kentucky Derby, PETA heard from dozens of trainers and track employees about horses being injected with strong anti-inflammatories, painkillers and muscle relaxants to make injured, sore animals run when they should be recovering. Is this what happened to Eight Belles—and to the hundreds of other horses who´ve died on tracks in the last year?
Illnesses, injuries and even deaths at slaughterhouses are shockingly routine. What´s even more shocking? If you eat meat, you are funding the daily exploitation of slaughterhouse workers.
Chimpanzee "actors"—like the young chimpanzee who plays Chim Chim in the new Speed Racer movie—are forcibly taken from their mothers when they are still infants and beaten into submission. It´s time to put the brakes on the use of great apes in the entertainment industry.
Eight Belles´ breakdown and euthanasia at the Kentucky Derby on May 3 has put the spotlight on an industry that values speed and profit first and leaves the horses in last place. It´s time to stop pretending that there´s anything majestic about the "sport of kings" and recognize it as the cruelty that it is.
At first, the idea of eating meat that is grown in a test tube may make some people—especially vegans like me—a bit squeamish, but when you consider the current method of meat production and its devastating impact on the planet, you´ll likely agree that in-vitro meat is an appetizi...
Last year while racing at California´s Bay Meadows track, 4-year-old gelding Imperial Eyes took a wrong step and broke down in the deep stretch. Jockey Russell Baze, the winningest jockey in thoroughbred racing history, whipped the stricken horse to a second-place finish. Imperial Eyes had suf...
Opossums don´t get any respect. The Rodney Dangerfields of the wildlife world were recently featured in a Wall Street Journal article that touted the pelts of New Zealand opossums as "eco-fur" because opossums are allegedly overpopulated in Kiwi country. Ironically, opossums´ bad rap has...
Many Americans got their first shocking look at puppy mills earlier this month, thanks to an investigation conducted by The Oprah Winfrey Show. Anyone moved by this heartbreaking exposé can make a difference by adopting animals from local shelters—never buying them from pet stores or breeders—and always having animals spayed or neutered.
A recently released study found that rats can be trained to use tools and to understand the tools´ functions. Now it´s time for experimenters to act on the mounting evidence that rats can think, learn, laugh and feel—and stop hurting them in laboratories.
Everyone who is appalled by Canada´s annual seal slaughter needs to take action to stop it. We can start by making sure that there is no demand for fur—not seal fur, not rabbit fur, not any fur.
If you don´t want to spend your retirement fund on growing food bills, invest in a vegan diet. Vegan staples such as beans, rice and vegetables cost relatively little compared to animal products—and if you factor in all the money you´ll save on doctor´s bills by avoiding unhealthy animal foods, a vegan diet is downright economical.
South Africa recently announced a proposal to kill thousands of wild elephants—highly social, intelligent animals who experience joy, anger, grief and sympathy, just as we do. The zoo community should be leading the charge to halt this cruel and misguided plan.
What can we as individuals do to help the families whose worlds have been turned upside-down by foreclosure? We can give their animals a "lifeline"—by spaying or neutering our own cats and dogs.
The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show may seem like good, clean family fun, but its promotion of purebred dogs helps fuel the animal overpopulation crisis. It´s time for a Westmuttster dog show instead, featuring homeless dogs up for adoption at local animal shelters.
As a recent New York Times investigation shows, fish is anything but "health food." With every single bite, you could be ingesting a toxic brew of mercury, bacteria, contaminants—and cruelty.
The FDA recently declared that meat from cloned animals is as safe as conventional meat—which is little comfort considering that animal foods are loaded with saturated fat, cholesterol and contaminants. The only truly safe meats are mock meats.
Some furriers are trying to convince consumers that killing small animals and turning them into tacky coats is on par with recycling and calculating your carbon footprint. This is greenwashing at its worst.
New Jersey recently became the second state in the U.S. to pass a law that prohibits product tests on animals when a federally approved alternative exists. Now it´s time for every other state to follow suit.
Dog crates may be convenient devices for busy humans—but they´re not good for dogs. If you´re in doubt, try this simple experiment: Lock yourself inside a crate for awhile and see what you think.
It´s time to say "out with the old and in with the new"—habits, that is. The New Year is the perfect time to make a resolution to be kinder toward our four-legged and finned friends.
By Carla Bennett
Wondering what to buy the urban hipster who has everything? How about a stuffed-and-mounted pheasant? Or perhaps a traditional mounted deer head? If your friend is game, you might even consider a full-size moose.
Taxidermy chic, once confined to trophy rooms and hunting lodge...
By Lisa Towell
Nothing’s more fun than surprising someone with just the right holiday gift. But when the gift is an animal, the story doesn’t always have a happy ending.
I’ve been a volunteer at my local animal shelter for almost nine years. I always read the little cards on the front of eac...
By Lindsay Pollard-Post
For most of us, spending time with visitors we’d rather avoid is an inescapable part of the holidays. While there isn’t much you can do about nosy Aunt Louise, your nit-picking in-laws or your crazy cousin who insists on reciting the same embarrassing story about you every...
By Paula Moore
Angelina Jolie’s wardrobe malfunction at the London premiere of Beowulf earlier this month may have caused some fashionistas to think twice about adding “skintight leather pants” to their holiday wish lists. (Actually, anyone who doesn’t look like Jolie should think twice about ski...
By Kim Sturla
This time of year is supposed to be joyous, but it fills me with sorrow. As the cofounder of Animal Place, a sanctuary for rescued farmed animals, I’m mindful that tens of millions of turkeys are tortured and killed for the Thanksgiving table alone. The holidays are a time for us to...
By Heather Moore
As if we didn’t have enough to worry about, now comes the alarming news that killer bugs have made the leap from hospitals and nursing homes to playgrounds and locker rooms. According to a new study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), MRSA, an antibiotic-resi...
By Debra Durham, Ph.D.
Recently, we mourned the loss of an icon¯Washoe. She was one of the few chimpanzees people are likely to know by name¯in large part because she learned to use American Sign Language. She famously taught it to fellow chimpanzees, and the people who know her best shared stor...
By Kathy Guillermo
Are worms gay? If they are, what does that mean for humans? Such questions may sound entirely irrelevant to anything in our lives, but some scientists, including Erik Jorgensen at the University of Utah, have apparently received money to study these questions. The worms—nemato...
By Lindsay Pollard-Post
Every evening around twilight, as the last traces of gold melt from the sky, the air above my backyard comes alive with small black flying creatures. They flutter a drunken loop from the shed, over the deck, above my neighbor’s roof and back again. Sometimes they torpedo e...
By Matt Prescott
The Nobel committee has made a powerful statement by awarding this year’s Peace Prize to former vice president Al Gore and the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. As Achim Steiner, executive director of the U.N.’s Environment Program, says, we now know “tha...
By Christina Matthies
During the second episode of the reality show Kid Nation, a warning flashed on the screen that the scene to follow, which involved butchering chickens, might be “too intense” for kids. Not to worry, my 8-year-old daughter and 6-year-old son were in their rooms doing their ho...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
It should go without saying that dogfighting is a cowardly, despicable business. Yet, read blog comments and letters to the editor or talk to folks gathered at the bus stop and you will hear a smattering of remarks from people who show not a hint of embarrassment in demandin...
By Lisa Wathne
One of the zoo world’s grandes dames, the Alaska Zoo’s 27-year-old African elephant, Maggie, is being sent to a sanctuary in California to live out her days in peace. I could not be happier: Female elephants are highly social animals, but Maggie has been living alone since 1997, wh...
By Kathy Guillermo
The passing of the parrot Alex, who spent 30 years in a laboratory learning to speak and understand many English words, has prompted a discussion about one point that Alex raised repeatedly: These experiments are boring. It is said that when the parrot got tired of identifying...
By Jennifer O’Connor
Homecoming, Hail Marys and bowl games: The energy and exuberance of college football exemplifies school spirit. But how do tigers, lions and bears fit into the playbook?
Louisiana State University (LSU) recently found itself embroiled in controversy when it replaced its d...
By Paula Moore
When I was growing up, I idolized my Aunt Dixie. She was different from the other adult women I knew—less Laura Petrie, more Barbara Stanwyck. Dixie was a fiery redhead who wore fashionable dresses and high heels—not Capri pants and Keds like most of the moms in my neighborhood. S...
By Alisa Mullins
Here’s a pop quiz: Who is responsible for the deaths of more dogs—Paris Hilton or Michael Vick, who recently pleaded guilty to federal dogfighting charges? It may seem like a no-brainer, but the air-headed heiress may actually edge out the err-apparent quarterback if the scope o...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
It is hard for those of us whose jobs have long been to pick up the remains of abused animals—beaten, burned, raped, chained to the point of madness—to think kindly of Michael Vick.
We think of his now well-publicized role in the crude electrocution of trusting dogs, and ...
By Christina Matthies
As a woman who loves animals—and a mother who loves her kids—I frequently have to steer my son and daughter away from pet stores, especially the hermit crab section. With the lure of sparkly painted rainbow shells—not to mention the SpongeBob shells with crazy glued-on wigg...
By Jennifer O’Connor
Animals who are caged, chained and beaten for our “amusement” are starting to fight back. Last month, in between news reports about the Michael Vick dogfighting indictment, you may have seen video footage of elephants wandering the streets in Newmarket, Ontario. They were on ...
By Jessica Sandler and Kate Willett, Ph.D.
Is there any adult in America who is unaware that exposure to asbestos is linked to certain cancers and respiratory diseases? The cause and effect has been conclusively documented, yet our government is now proposing to spend hundreds of thousands of ta...
By Matt Prescott
If you have a strong stomach—or maybe just a blind eye—Uncle Sam wants you. According to the Partnership for Public Service, in a report released last month, the federal government will hire 193,000 new workers over the next two years. Many of these “mission critical” jobs will ...
By Daphna Nachminovitch
It’s time for Michael Vick to hang up his Falcons jersey. He should be immediately suspended from the NFL and, if convicted of dogfighting, thrown in the slammer. People who abuse animals belong in prison, not on the playing field. Anyone who is capable of the heinous crue...
By Robyn Wesley
Ratatouille is the big cheese at the box office, and I could not be more delighted. Disney’s hit movie about a plucky rat named Remy, who dreams of becoming a gourmet chef, is showing audiences what I’ve known for some time: Rats are friendly and affectionate animals who can charm...
By Paula Moore
Childhood obesity is getting a Shaq attack. In his new reality TV show, Shaq’s Big Challenge, NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal sets out to transform six overweight middle school students—ranging in age from 11 to 14 and in weight from 182 to 285 pounds—into fit, active kids. He has his ...
By Christina Matthies
Last year, the city of Chicago passed a landmark ban on the sale of foie gras, making it the first city in the U.S. to take a stand against the cruelty inherent in the production of the indelicate “delicacy.” That ban is now in jeopardy, largely because of political chest-th...
By Paula Moore
If your summer vacation plans have you buying tickets to a marine mammal park or a “swim with the dolphins” program, be forewarned: You could be helping to finance the slaughter of dolphins in the wild. This is the captive-animal industry’s dirty little secret. Every year, thousand...
By Alisa Mullins
On July Fourth, Americans from sea to shining sea will commemorate the signing of the Declaration of Independence more than 200 years ago. As we celebrate the colonists' determination to be free from British rule by setting off fireworks and hosting backyard barbecues, how many o...
By Bruce Wieland
Bob Barker said his final goodbye on The Price Is Right the same way he always did, with the gentle reminder, “Help control the pet population. Have your pets spayed or neutered.”
The beloved game-show host, who just retired after 50 years on television—35 of those spent as t...
By Paula Moore
Who says television isn’t educational? For the past five years, TV has been helping me get dressed in the morning. When I go shopping for clothes, one simple phrase guides me: “What would Lorelai wear?” I mean Lorelai Gilmore, the fast-talking single mom from the recently canceled ...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
Reports that millions of chickens were fed pet food tainted with the chemical melamine and then slaughtered and sold to consumers have raised questions about food safety. In response, the Food and Drug Administration has appointed a food safety czar and promised to come up wi...
By Debbie Leahy
Spring has arrived and with it comes the zoo industry’s most powerful marketing tool: babies. Zoos know that nothing brings paying customers through their gates faster than newborn animals. But breeding programs, often operating under the guise of species preservation, inevitably...
By Heather Moore
If you plan on celebrating this Earth Day, April 22, by taking a short shower, wearing a “Save Our Oceans” T-shirt, riding a bus or a bike instead of driving a car, collecting recyclable cans, and chowing down on fried chicken or cheeseburgers—such as I used to do—you may be doin...
By Alka Chandna, Ph.D.
When dogs and cats began to sicken and die after eating certain brands of commercial food, the public had the right to expect swift action from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to resolve the situation. That’s not what we got. Instead, FDA officials have dithered, hem...
By Jennifer O’Connor
Now that the last dog has crossed the finish line, Iditarod organizers are rushing to patch up “The Last Great Race’s” tattered reputation after three dogs died and a veteran musher, Ramy Brooks, was disqualified from this year’s race. Witnesses caught Brooks beating his dog...
By Ingrid Newkirk
The opening scene of the movie Amazing Grace, which chronicles 18th and 19th century abolitionist William Wilberforce’s battle to stop the British slave trade, portrays a true event in Wilberforce’s life in which he intervened when he saw a coach driver beating and kicking a fal...
By Paula Moore -
Al Gore didn’t mention the giant squid during his appearance at the Academy Awards, but he certainly could have. Experts say that the rare colossal squid recently caught by a New Zealand fishing party may not be unusual in coming years. Thanks to rising temperatures, squid and ...
By Alisa Mullins
As a springer spaniel named Felicity’s Diamond Jim pranced to victory at the recent Westminster Kennel Club dog show at New York’s Madison Square Gardens, I was thinking of another springer spaniel named Minnie whose life is quite different from the champ’s. Minnie, along with a...
By Bruce Friedrich
Despite the wave of frigid air that swept in with the new year, 2006 was the warmest year on record in the United States. The United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a scientific panel that met recently to discuss global warming, reported that climate ...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
China, emerging as a major player in world trade and politics, has earned an enormous amount of coverage in recent weeks. What you won’t read, at least in the pages of most mainstream online and print news, is the other way in which China is earning distinction—the nation is ...
By Bruce Friedrich -
This year marks the 100th anniversary of passage of the first food safety law in America. It was enacted just one year after the publication of Upton Sinclair’s "The Jungle," the landmark book that exposed the horrific conditions of America’s meat-packing industry at the tur...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
January marks the 131st anniversary of the birth of Dr. Albert Schweitzer, a giant of a man whose legacy of kindness has trickled down through the years and still touches us today. Equally important to the poor people he served in equatorial Africa and to the wounded and orph...
By Christina Matthies
Every time I see a shopping mall pet store, I wish I could stand in front of it and show the passersby an elderly Chihuahua named Sophia. Sophia is the reason no one should ever buy an animal from a pet store. Like most dogs for sale in stores, she came from a puppy mill.
...
By Heather Moore
If you’ve read Charlotte’s Web—E.B. White’s poignant tale about a spider who saves a pig from slaughter by weaving the words “Some pig,” “Terrific,” “Radiant” and “Humble” into her web—or watched the new movie version, you likely cheered when Wilbur’s life was spared. Don’t dismi...
By Reannon Peterson
If you just enjoyed a Thanksgiving dinner with a turkey at the center of your table, then you’ve never been to the Butterball slaughterhouse in Ozark, Ark. Undercover investigators from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals worked there from April to July of this year. W...
By Kathy Freston
Well, the holiday shopping season has arrived, and I must admit I have been successfully lured into the more materialistic side of my psyche by the flashy ads and layouts in all the mags. As I make my way through the stores, tear sheets in hand, I begin to feel the old familiar e...
By Heather Moore
Unless they’ve been living under a rock, smokers know that cigarettes are bad for them and for the people in their homes. But not everyone realizes that cigarettes are harming animals too. Dogs, rats, primates and other animals are forced to inhale smoke and injected with nicotin...
By Emily Allen
Last month, California became the third state in the country to pass a statewide law restricting chaining. The bill, which outlaws the tethering of dogs for more than three hours a day, was signed into law by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who stated that it “helps protect dogs from ...
By Paula Moore
If you’re decking the halls for Halloween—with creepy ghosts and bubbling cauldrons—here’s a suggestion: This year, skip the swooping bats.
Although bats and Halloween seem to go together like candy bags and x-ray machines, you actually have more to fear from a stranger’s sweet...
By Paula Moore
The recent string of fatal school shootings has rightly spurred President Bush to action. The Bush administration is hosting a meeting of education and law enforcement officials to search for ways to stem the tide of violence in our schools.
Installing more metal detectors and l...
By Dan Paden
In early October, animal lovers in communities all over the country brought their dogs, cats, birds and other companion animals to their churches for the Blessing of the Animals. This annual ceremony is conducted in remembrance of Saint Francis, whose love for all creation is well kn...
By Heather Moore
The recent outbreak of E. coli contaminated spinach, which killed several people and sickened at least 189 others in 25 states, has many people scratching their heads in bewilderment. After all, E. coli is typically found in ground beef and other animal products, not vegetables. ...
By Heather Moore
September, National Cholesterol Awareness Month, is the ideal time for schools to start teaching kids the importance of a healthy, low-fat diet. They can do this best, not in the classroom, but in the cafeteria. Health teachers’ efforts to encourage children to eat more fruits, v...
By Paula Moore
Fur is the new nothing. You’re not likely to see that headline splashed across the pages of Vogue magazine anytime soon, but that’s the message that Jay McCarroll—the dishy designer who won the first season of Bravo’s Project Runway—will be sending at New York Fashion Week, now in ...
By Heather Moore
According to nationwide news reports, one man was just killed and another was injured during a dispute at a cockfight in Needville, Texas. Tragic? Yes. Surprising? No. Anyone who enjoys watching animals rip one another to shreds surely has a similar disrespect for human life. Coc...
By Alisa Mullins
Every time a serial killer or perpetrator of a particularly violent crime is apprehended, you can bet that, eventually, it will be revealed that the killer “practiced” his crimes on animals. In the case of Steven D. Green, the former soldier accused of orchestrating the murder of...
By Heather Moore
Senior Writer
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
On August 21, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), the world’s largest animal rights organization, celebrated its 26th birthday. Since its inception in 1980, PETA has propelled animal rights issues ...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
Calling for a strong consumer action against China is like saying yell at the grocery store manager for selling groceries. But what choice do Chinese officials leave us when they viciously beat to death 50,000 dogs? A nation that can murder its most vulnerable inhabitants in ...
By Dan Paden
The cruise ships and helicopters sent by the U.S. to rescue Americans from war torn Lebanon are poignant symbols of our government’s commitment to its citizens, wherever they may be. Yet for many of the people who are desperate to escape the strife, the government’s plan comes at a h...
Many people believe that cows are sacred in India—that they spend their days lying in the sun and grazing on grass, worshipped by everyone around them. But if you take a closer look at the lives of draught cattle in India, you’ll see a very different reality.
Throughout India, thousands of bullo...
By Heather Moore
The Center for Science in the Public Interest has just filed a class-action lawsuit against KFC because its food is high in trans fats, artery-clogging substances found in foods made with, or fried in, partially hydrogenated oils. There’s no doubt that KFC chicken is unhealthy —a...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
If a woman were beating a dog to death in the street, would people passing by be justified in asking her to stop? What if the woman were paying someone else to beat the dog to death? What if the woman were famous?
These are the issues surrounding PETA’s recent confrontati...
By Heather Moore
If Philadelphia City Councilman Jack Kelly gets his way, the city known for brotherly love will also soon be known for kindness to animals. Councilman Kelly recently proposed a bill to ban the sale of foie gras—a so-called delicacy made from the diseased livers of ducks and geese...
By Ingrid E. Newkirk
Imagine tucking into a plate of sausages, popping chicken nuggets into your mouth and dining on a sumptuous steak — all with the approval of the most ardent vegan animal rights activists.
This may not be just wishful thinking, for meat-eaters or activists, because scientists...
By Heather Moore
During the late 1980?s and early 90?s, a massive public outcry against animal testing changed the face of the cosmetics industry. Undercover footage of a kitten convulsing after being doused with a chemical, a rabbit whose skin had been eaten away by a corrosive substance, a beag...
By Kathy Guillermo
As the horse-racing industry heads into the Triple Crown, the annual trio of races that forms the highlight of its year, television viewers will witness the usual parade of glossy, prancing horses who appear to lead lives of great luxury. But for every horse who sleeps in a se...
The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2006
by Pamela Anderson
King Kong is my hero. He’s big, muscular, sensitive, a terrific actor—and he’s not real. The use of computer-generated imagery has really taken off in Hollywood. So why has Madison Avenue suddenly gone bananas for real apes? Chimpanzees...
By Heather Moore
WalkAmerica, March of Dimes’ largest annual fundraiser, is taking place now in cities across the U.S. Seventeen years ago, I participated in this event, believing funds would be used to fight birth defects. Since then, I've had three surgeries to correct foot deformities that doct...
By Jessica Sandler
When six men in England signed up for the Parexel clinical trial involving a new pharmaceutical drug called TGN1412 they were probably thinking that it was a great way to earn some extra cash. Now they lie in a London hospital, fighting for their lives. What went wrong is still ...
By Paula Moore
Before the end of March, men armed with clubs, guns and knives will begin the annual slaughter of thousands of baby seals in Canada so they can harvest their fur coats. Seal pups can legally be killed as soon as they have molted their white natal fur, when they are about 12 days old...
By Heather Moore -
March is National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month. Colorectal (colon and rectal) cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States and has been widely linked to the consumption of red and processed meats.
A 2005 study by the American Cancer Society (A...
Note from PETA: The following opinion piece was written for PETA by comedian Richard Pryor just weeks before his tragic death last year. We offer it now, during Black History Month, as its message is an eloquent plea for extending compassion to all, regardless of race or species.
By Richard Pryor
...
By Kathy Guillermo
As long as Dick Cheney is apologizing to lawyer Harry Whittington for peppering him with shot in a hunting accident, perhaps the vice president should take a few minutes to say he’s sorry for what he’s done to all those birds he’s blasted out of the skies over the years. Mr. Whi...
By Paula Moore
When people find out that I’m an animal rights activist and a vegan, their eyes invariably drop to the ground—not because of some lingering guilt over that last hamburger they ate, but because they want to check out my shoes. Then they look up and pose the inevitable question: “Are ...
By Leana Stormont
It was about this time last year when I learned that the FBI was stealing my garbage. It?s not every day you walk out your front door to find a man wearing a suit and sunglasses in an unmarked grey sedan offering your trash a private escort to an undisclosed location.
I was in...
By Heather Moore
The 34th annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, a grueling 1,150-mile expedition from Anchorage to Nome, Alaska, kicks off on March 4, 2006. The mushers, or dog-sled drivers, will be competing for a hefty cash prize; the dogs will simply try to survive. They?re viewed as little more...
By Paula Moore
Last March, a crowd of well-wishers gathered at Manomet Point in Plymouth, Massachusetts, to see off a new friend as he journeyed back home.
The gathering made headlines because the traveler was a 15-pound lobster named Donovan, on the final leg of a nearly 1,000-mile trek. After...
By Heather Moore
More than 50,000 kittens and puppies are born each day in the United States alone. The only kind word or gentle touch many of them ever receive is from the technician who must end their lives because there simply aren?t enough homes?or even cages?for them all.
Between six and ...
By Kathy Guillermo
It happened again. It was Saturday afternoon and my husband and I had taken our three kids out for an afternoon at the beach. I happened to be wearing a shirt with an animal rights message: "Respect your fellow earthlings." Beneath the words is a drawing by cartoonist Berke...
By Carla Bennett
Recent reports from the newspaper industry look bleak: Circulations are down, advertising revenues are flat, stock prices are sinking, and scandals are harming good reputations. Industry analysts say the percentage of adults buying papers has been going down for several decades. ...
By Heather Moore
Iams pet food company may put forth a wholesome animal-loving image, but it pays contract laboratories to conduct cruel nutritional tests on animals for research and product development. For nearly 10 months in 2002 and early 2003, an investigator from People for the Ethical...