People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
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People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is an animal rights advocacy organization. Founded in 1980 as a non-profit organization, it has its headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia, and a stated one million members and supporters, and over 100 employees worldwide. Outside the U.S., there are affiliated offices in the UK, [1] India, [2] Germany, [3] Asia, and the Netherlands. [4] There is also peta2 Street Team for high school and college-age activists. [5] Ingrid Newkirk is PETA's international president.
PETA focuses its attention on four major areas of human interaction with animals: factory farming, [6] vivisection or animal testing, the clothing trade, and animals in entertainment.[7] It also works on a wide range of other animal-rights issues, including fishing, the killing of animals regarded as pests, abuse of backyard dogs, Bullfighting, and cock fighting.
PETA works through public education, cruelty investigations, research, animal rescue, legislation, special events, celebrity involvement, and protest campaigns. There has been significant criticism of PETA from a variety of sources, notably with regard to claims of lack of care for animals.
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PETA's philosophy
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"PETA believes that animals have rights and deserve to have their best interests taken into consideration, regardless of whether they are useful to humans. Like you, they are capable of suffering and have an interest in leading their own lives; therefore, they are not ours to use—for food, clothing, entertainment, experimentation, or any other reason."
Official PETA Website, About PETA, 2/24/2006
"There is no rational basis for saying that a human being has special rights. A rat is a pig is a dog is a boy. They are all mammals." — Ingrid Newkirk
History
The group first came to public attention in the United States in 1981, when it became involved in the Silver Spring monkeys case. Alex Pacheco, one of PETA's founders, conducted an undercover investigation of a primate laboratory, documenting numerous cases of abuse and neglect. The investigation resulted in the first-ever conviction of an animal experimenter on charges of animal abuse and the first-ever suspension of federal research funds for cruelty, although all convictions against the researcher were overturned on appeal. [8][9]
Other highlights of the organization's campaigns include:
- 1983: successfully stopped a United States Department of Defense "wound lab" which had planned to fire missiles into dogs and goats.
- 1984: released more than 70 hours of videotape shot in the University of Pennsylvania head-injury laboratory, showing the treatment of primates there. The Secretary of Health and Human Services subsequently cut off all funding to the laboratory and the experiments were stopped. In the same year, a Texas slaughterhouse to which 30,000 horses were taken each year from all over the United States, then allegedly left to starve outside without shelter, was closed after a PETA campaign.
- 1985: revealed details of the treatment of dogs at the City of Hope laboratory in California. The government fined the center $11,000 and suspended more than $1,000,000 in federal funding.
- 1986: stopped the total-isolation confinement of chimpanzees at a Maryland research laboratory called SEMA. Dr. Jane Goodall called her tour of the SEMA lab “the worst experience of my life.”
- 1987: stopped a plan by Cedars-Sinai, California’s largest hospital to ship stray dogs from Mexico into California for experiments. In the same year, they launched the Compassion Campaign to fight cosmetics and personal-care product testing on animals. By 1989, PETA had persuaded nearly 500 companies, including Mary Kay and Amway, to go cruelty-free.
- 1988: secret video shot inside East Carolina University and distributed by PETA showed an inadequately anesthetized dog undergoing surgery during a classroom exercise. The university subsequently declared a moratorium on the use of live animals.
- 1990: exposed the alleged beating of orangutans by Las Vegas entertainer Bobby Berosini, who used the primates in a nightclub act. His captive-bred wildlife permit was suspended by the U.S. Department of the Interior, and his show closed. Four years later, the Nevada Supreme Court unanimously ruled in PETA’s favor and overturned a Las Vegas jury’s $3.2 million defamation award to Berosini. In the same year, the Caring Consumer Campaign succeeded in persuading Estée Lauder and 40 other companies to halt animal testing.
- 1991: the Silver Spring monkeys case receives a unanimous, positive ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court, the first time that a case involving animals in laboratories had been heard by the court.
- 1992: PETA undercover investigators revealed the details of U.S. foie gras production, documenting the force-feeding of geese. Police subsequently conducted the first-ever raid in the United States, and possibly in the world, on a factory farm, and many restaurants removed foie gras from their menus. In the same year, PETA testified at the first-ever U.S. congressional hearing on the use of animals in circuses, rodeos, films, and other types of entertainment.
- 1993: General Motors gave PETA a statement of assurance that it had ended the use of live pigs and baboons in crash tests after a PETA campaign. In the same year, L’Oréal, the world’s largest cosmetics company, signed a worldwide ban on animal testing, following a PETA campaign. PETA also revealed details of scabies experiments using dogs and rabbits at Wright State University. The university was subsequently charged with violating the Animal Welfare Act, and the experiments ended.
- 1994: Buckshire Corporation, a laboratory animal breeding facility, was charged with violations of the Animal Welfare Act after a 38-page complaint was submitted by PETA. A furrier is charged with cruelty to animals following the release of PETA videotapes showing a California fur rancher electrocuting a chinchilla by clipping wires to the animal’s genitals. It was the first time in U.S. history that a furrier was charged with cruelty.
- 1999: a North Carolina grand jury handed down the first-ever felony cruelty indictments against pig-farm workers after an undercover PETA investigator videotaped workers beating lame pigs with wrenches, and skinning and dismembering a conscious pig.
- 2000: successfully campaigned for 11 months against McDonalds to implement more stringent welfare standards.
- 2001: launched a successful campaign against Burger King. After months of vocal public pressure, the fast-food giant agreed to implement the welfare standards demanded by PETA. These standards increased the amount of cage space given to laying hens and promised unannounced inspections of slaughterhouses, among other things. [10] [11] In this same year, the group launched a very public, but unsuccessful campaign to have the University of South Carolina change its mascot from the Gamecock. The group contended that the name promoted cock fighting, but the school stood firm and kept the mascot name, saying that cock fighting had not been legal in South Carolina for more than a century, and the mascot was a representation of the fighting power of a gamecock, not indicative of any promotion of cockfighting.
- 2005: PETA sued Feld Entertainment (producer of Ringling circus and Disney on ice) saying Feld ran a spying operation on the PETA organization run by an ex-CIA employee. [12]
Campaigns
Image:PETA Lettuce Ladies.JPG PETA is well known for its aggressive media campaigns, public demonstrations, and attacks on large corporations for their alleged mistreatment of animals. In 2003, PETA received media attention for its boycott of Kentucky Fried Chicken. PETCO and Procter & Gamble are other examples of companies PETA says are exploiting animals for profit. According to PETA, PETCO confines animals in filthy enclosures, where they are commonly left to die, and Procter & Gamble tests its products on animals. On April 12, 2005, PETA announced it had ended its boycott against PETCO, in part because of PETCO's decision to end sales of large birds in its stores.
Jesus was a Vegetarian
Several PETA commercials have used Christian themes to promote vegetarianism, including one claiming that Jesus was a vegetarian, and another featuring a pig with the caption "He Died for Your Sins." [13] Some Christian leaders, such as the Reverend Andrew Linzey, support some of these ideas, but mainstream theologians cite passages in the Christian Bible that support the view that Jesus ate fish and lamb. [14]
Lettuce Ladies
PETA's 'Lettuce Ladies' are women, some of them Playboy models, who appear publicly in scanty costumes made to look like lettuce leaves, and distribute information about the vegan diet. [15] There is a lesser-known male counterpart to the Lettuce Ladies, called the Broccoli Boys.
Holocaust on Your Plate
One of the most controversial PETA campaigns was their Holocaust on Your Plate campaign. In it PETA claimed that: "like the Jews murdered in concentration camps, animals are terrorized when they are housed in huge filthy warehouses and rounded up for shipment to slaughter. The leather sofa and handbag are the moral equivalent of the lampshades made from the skins of people killed in the death camps. [16]."
The Anti-Defamation League strongly criticized the implication of moral equivalence between the killing of animals and the Holocaust. A press release from the ADL stated:
PETA's effort to seek approval for their Holocaust on Your Plate campaign is outrageous, offensive and takes chutzpah to new heights. Rather than deepen our revulsion against what the Nazis did to the Jews, the project will undermine the struggle to understand the Holocaust and to find ways to make sure such catastrophes never happen again.
PETA defended the comparison, saying that "the logic and methods employed in factory farms and slaughterhouses are analogous to those used in concentration camps." PETA argued that in both the Holocaust and animal slaughter, there is a systematic "concept of other cultures or other species as deficient and thus disposable, and that this indifference allows the slaughter to continue." [17]. PETA also claimed the moral support of Holocaust survivor and Nobel Prize winning author Isaac Bashevis Singer, and used his statement "In relation to [animals] all people are Nazis; for the animals, it is an eternal Treblinka" [18]. The use of this quote in this context was supported by Singer's grandson Stephen R. Dujack. [19] In May 2005, PETA apologized for the campaign while broadly defending the analogy. The campaign however continues in areas such as San Francisco Template:Fact
Name changes of cities
PETA regularly asks towns and cities whose names in its view are suggestive of animal exploitation to change their names. In April 2003, they offered free veggie burgers to the city of Hamburg in exchange for changing its name. PETA also campaigned in 1996 to have the town of Fishkill, New York change its name, claiming the name suggests cruelty to fish. (The root "kill", found in many New York town names, is Dutch for "creek".)
In October 2003, the group urged the town of Rodeo, California, to change its name because it invokes images of the sport of rodeo, which they claim is harmful to animals, even though the town's name is pronouced differently than a cowboy 'rodeo'. As a replacement name, they suggested Unity, an acknowledgement of Union Oil's role in saving the area economically in the late 19th century. PETA offered to donate $20,000 worth of veggie burgers to local schools if the name was changed. Residents of Rodeo were not warm to the proposal and it appeared to have little chance of succeeding.
These campaigns have been effective in generating media coverage of animal-rights issues, even if the names of the places did not change.
Youth Education
Image:Grrrcover2001.jpgPETA runs a website geared towards kids at Petakids.com with contest, online games, online video, a free subscription to Grrr! Magazine, comics, celebrities and music that is supportive of animal causes. The website also provides an E-News list that has seen an increase from 50,000 to 250,000 subscribers.
PETA teamed up with bands such as Deftones, STUN, and Further Seems Forever, to record radio spots on a variety of topics, including reporting animal abuse. The youth-oriented web site Peta2.com featured over 50 interviews from popular bands such as Yellowcard, The Shins, The Used, and Good Charlotte. PETA’s efforts were widely covered, including by MTV, Rolling Stone, AP, and Revolver.
PETA2 dispatched activist, volunteers, and staffers on 61 summer concert and skateboard tours including the Warped, Phish, and Morrissey tours. At these events, PETA screened the "Meet Your Meat" video and spoke with and handed out information to approximately 3,500,000 youthsTemplate:Fact.
Animal Liberation Project
The most recent controversy generated by PETA is its "Are Animals the New Slaves?" campaign. [20] The campaign involves a tour of the United States and featured a display in which images of black people who had been lynched were juxtaposed with those of slaughtered cows [21]. The campaign was criticised by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People [22]. PETA temporarily suspended the campaign [23], but decided to continue after concluding nothing was wrong with the campaign. Though African-American activist and legendary comedian Dick Gregory would go on to explicitly state in a PETA campaign that when he saw animals in cages, "slavery" was the only word that came to mind. PETA's 2004 IRS form 990 shows that on March 30th of that year, PETA gave Dick Gregory $3,000[24] to support program activities.
Community Animal Project
PETA has several programs helping cats and dogs in poorer areas of southeastern Virginia and northern North Carolina. PETA has spayed or neutered over 25,000 cats and dogs for reduced price or for free in the last few years. The organization comes to the aide of neglected dogs and cats who are severely ill and injured, and it pursues cruelty cases against extreme cases. They offer free humane euthanasia services to counties that kill unwanted animals via gassing or shooting. PETA also offers free euthanasia to people whose companion animals are severely ill/dying but who can’t afford euthanasia at a veterinarian. PETA paid for and built a cat shelter in a North Carolina county. Each year the organization builds and sets up hundreds of sturdy dog houses, with straw bedding, for dogs that are chained outside all winter. PETA also creates and airs numerous public service announcements and billboards urging people to help control the rampant pet overpopulation crisis through spaying/neutering, and adopting animals from shelters instead of purchasing cats and dogs from pet stores or breeders.
Criticism of PETA
Critics look down on the fact that PETA has financially contributed to "eco-terrorist" groups such as the Animal Liberation Front and the Earth Liberation Front (ELF). [25].
Critics also point to a statement from Alex Pacheco, one of PETA's founders, that "arson, property destruction, burglary, and theft are acceptable crimes when used for the animal cause" [26] as a reason that PETA should lose its status as a non-profit organization. [27] Part of the reasoning behind their concern is the degree of financial support given by PETA to these organizations, [28][29] associated with firebombings and other destruction of property, and described by the United States Department of Homeland Security as "terrorist threats." [30] PETA has also been accused of operating animal shelters that kill more animals than most publicly operated shelters in the United States. [31]
Adrian R. Morrison DVM PhD, has accused PETA of using edited and out-of-context video footage to allege cruelty to animals. In particular, he cites an example of videos purporting to show cats being embalmed alive by the Carolina Biological Supply Company being given to the USDA as evidence of animal cruelty. Subsequent testimony demonstrated that the cats had not been alive and that the video was being used an in an attempt to convey false information [32].
Following a complaint from the Research Defence Society, the UK Advertising Standards Authority ruled that a PETA mailing about vivisection was misleading [33].
In North America, opponents have sardonically formed a group also known as "PETA," except that the letters stand for "People Eating Tasty Animals". PETA was involved in legal action for several years in the 1990s to shut down the competing web site operated by this group.
Penn & Teller: On PETA
In the first episode of season 2, Penn and Teller delivered a scathing indictment of PETA, accusing the organization of misleading its members, euthanizing most of the animals it received, funding a convicted arsonist, and ultimately putting its political agenda of animal rights over the welfare of human beings.
Alleged targeting of vulnerable groups
PETA has also been accused of targeting "vulnerable or emotionally sensitive" groups, particularly teenage girls, and was ordered by Great Britain's Advertising Standards Authority to discontinue claims it made about milk consumption in a campaign targeted at school children.[34] The ad featured trading cards with statements such as "Sue's milk-drinking led to her battle with zits." Other cards claimed that dairy products cause obesity, belching and flatulence, and excessive nasal mucus build up. In response to the ruling, PETA modified the cards to address the Standards Authority's regulations.
PETA has also been accused of promoting vegetarian and vegan lifestyles without providing sufficient information on how to avoid alleged health risks involved in eating in an unorganised and non-nutritionally savvy manner. It has also linked both lifestyles to weight loss, prompting concerns over PETA's targeting the gender and age groups that are vulnerable to eating disorders.
Support of other animal rights activists
- "We're here to hold the radical line." (Ingrid Newkirk, founder and director of PETA, 1991)
- "Arson, property destruction, burglary, and theft are acceptable crimes when used for the animal cause." (Alex Pacheco, director of PETA at the time, and its co-founder, in 1989)
- "We cannot condemn the Animal Liberation Front ... they act courageously ... [their activities] comprise an important part of today's animal protection movement." (PETA statement concerning ALF's activities, 1991)
- Gave $45,200 to the legal defense of ALF arsonist Rodney Coronado (1995). [35]
- Paid $2,000 to the ALF spokesman after the ALF claimed responsibility for fire bombing the Utah Fur Breeders Agricultural Co-op in 1997. [36]
- Paid $2,000 to David Wilson, a member of ALF in 1999. [37]
- Paid $5,000 to the "Josh Harper Support Committee" in 2000. [38] [39]
- Paid $1,500 to ELF in 2001. [40]
- Paid $7,500 to Fran Stephanie Trutt, who attempted to kill a medical research executive. [41]
Response to a suicide bombing
In response to a news report in January of 2003 that a donkey was laden with explosives and intentionally blown up in a failed attack on a busload of Israeli soldiers in Jerusalem, PETA President Ingrid Newkirk sent then Palestinian Authority president Yasser Arafat a request that he "appeal to all those who listen to [him] to leave the animals out of this conflict"; she was criticized because she did not in the process ask Arafat to try to stop suicide bombings that killed people but did not harm animals. She later explained to the Washington Post, "It is not my business to inject myself into human wars."
Use of nudity
Feminists for Animal Rights have published articles criticizing PETA for its use of female nudity in campaigns such as "I'd rather go naked than wear fur,", "Milk Gone Wild" (in which young women pull up their tops to reveal prosthetic udders worn over their breasts ), "vegetarians make better lovers" and for using Playboy models in some campaigns as well as having string-bikini-clad women wrestle in tofu. Animal-rights lawyer Gary L. Francione has also been outspoken in his condemnation of what he sees as PETA's sexism. Many also feel that PETA's use of gimmicks such as nudity trivializes the seriousness of animal-rights issues. PETA's defenders respond that they are not sexist, as both men and women appear in the campaigns, and that they use arresting images to gain publicity for their campaigns against animal abuse. Nikki Craft is also an outspoken critic of such promotional female nudity on her web site PeTA: Where Only Women Are Treated Like Meat.
Animal cruelty and euthanasia
In June 2005, police investigators staked out a garbage container in Ahoskie, North Carolina after discovering that over one hundred dead animals had been dumped over the course of a month. [42]
Police observed PETA employees Andrew Benjamin Cook and Adria Joy Hinkle approach the trash container behind a grocery store in a van registered to PETA and dump 18 dead animals into it. Thirteen more were found inside the van. Police charged Cook and Hinkle each with 31 felony counts of animal cruelty and eight misdemeanor counts of illegal disposal of dead animals. These were dismissed on 14 October 2005, and 25 felony charges (22 of animal cruelty and three felony charges of obtaining property by false pretense) brought in their place. The latter charges are based on PETA having euthanized three cats from an Ahoskie veterinarian after allegedly promising to find the animals new homes [43])
Newkirk condemned the dumping of the animals, but noted "PETA has never made a secret of the fact that most of the animals picked up in North Carolina are euthanized." [44] According to PETA's own filings with the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, PETA killed 86.3% of the animals in its care in 2004. [45]. Similar filings for the Norfolk SPCA shelter, located 3.5 miles from the PETA headquarters, show that the Norfolk SPCA killed fewer than 5% of animals in its care. (PETA has pointed out that the Norfolk SPCA refuses to take in stray and unadoptable animals so they can continue to call themselves a "no-kill" shelter.) PETA has defended euthanasia by arguing that there are far more unwanted dogs and cats than there are good homes (millions of dogs and cats are euthanized every year in the US) and that euthanizing dogs and cats is more humane than leaving them on the street or putting them in a cage in a shelter for the rest of their lives.
List of famous members and supporters of PETA
- Pamela Anderson [46]
- Christina Applegate [47]
- Bea Arthur [48]
- Simon Cowell [49]
- Des'ree [50]
- Ellen Degeneres [51]
- Edie Falco [52]
- Emmylou Harris [53][54]
- Tommy Lee [55]
- Loretta Lynn [56]
- Bill Maher [57]
- Sir Paul McCartney [58]
- Rue McClanahan [59]
- Nellie McKay [60]
- Sharon Osbourne [61]
- Dolly Parton [62]
- P!nk [63]
- Richard Pryor [64]
- Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails [65]
- Charlotte Ross [66]
- Amy Sedaris [67]
- Russell Simmons [68]
- Anna Nicole Smith [69]
- Charlize Theron [70]
- Betty White [71]
- Montel Williams [72]
- Carnie Wilson [73]
Multimedia releases to benefit PETA
- Animal Liberation (April 21, 1987) WaxTrax! (LP, CS, CD)
- Paul McCartney and Friends: The PETA Concert for Party Animals (2000) Image Entertainment (DVD)
- Tame Yourself (April 30, 2001) R.N.A./Rhino (CD)
- Liberation: Songs to Benefit PETA (2003) Fat Wreck Chords (CD)
References
- Morrison, A.R. (2001). Personal Reflections on the “Animal-Rights” Phenomenon. In Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, vol 44:1, pp. 62-75. The Johns Hopkins University Press.
- Meet Your Meat a PETA-produced film about the treatment of animals in egg and meat industries. Narrated by Alec Baldwin
Further reading
Official PETA sites
- AnimalActivist.com
- AskCarla.com
- HelpingAnimals101.com
- Ingrid Newkirks Blog
- PETA's Catalog.com
- PETAKids.com
- PETATV.com
- CaringConsumer.com
- IAMSCruelty.com
- StopAnimalTest.com
- CowsAreCool.com
- FurIsDead.com
- SaveTheSheep.com
- BuckTheRodeo.com
- Circuses.com
- RunningOfTheNudes.com
- HelpingAnimals.com
- PETA Espanol.com
- PETA India.com
- PETA UK
- FishingHurts.com
- GoVeg.com
- JesusVeg.com - not to be confused with the Christian Vegetarian Association's christianveg.com
- KFCCruelty.com
- MilkSucks.com
- VegetarianStarterKit.com
- Lettuceladies.com
- HelpingWildlife.com
- Other PETA Websites
- PETA kills animals
- PeTA: Where Only Women Are Treated Like Meat Site by activist Nikki Craft.
- Animalrights.net
- Animal Crackers
- Anti-PETA.com
- Companion Species Coalition
- PETA-Sucks.com
- Expose PETA
- Consumerfreedom, Animal Scam, Peta Kills Animals.com
- Boston Globe article on the peta.org dispute
- Anti-Defamation League statement: PETA's Appeal for Jewish Community Support 'The Height of Chutzpah'
- Does "PETA" stand for People Excusing Terrorist Atrocities? — Article from the Jewish World Review
- Jewish News of Greater Phoenix: Article criticising PETA for suicide bombing letter
- Feminists for Animal Rights: An Ecofeminist Alliance
- Citizens Against the Abuse of Public Trust
- RickRoss institute furcommision and FBI testimony — pages detailing FBI and other records relating to PETA.
- Animal Whites: PETA and the Politics of Putting Things in Perspective, by Tim Wise | LiP Magazine
- peta-deception.net
- Crusade Against PETA
- Activistcash.com exposing PETA
- Download the Penn & Teller video
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