Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Saving Poland's Lynx

Saving Poland's Lynx

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Fwd: Call Congress Now to Help End Chimpanzee Experiments!



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Begin forwarded message:

From: PETA <do-not-reply@peta.org>
Date: January 31, 2012 9:11:28 AM CS
Subject:
Call Congress Now to Help End Chimpanzee Experiments!
Reply-To: PETA <do-not-reply@peta.org>

PETA
PETA's Action Team AlertJoin PETA's Action TeamLivingTVShopDonate NowShare on Facebook
Dear Cindy,

Thanks to you, there is currently more bipartisan support in Congress for banning invasive experiments on chimpanzees than ever before! The Great Ape Protection and Cost Savings Act now has 150 cosponsors, with more than 35 of those signing onto the bill after our last National Call-In Week in December! This is great progress, but we still need your help to make history for great apes.

Last night, NBC's Rock Center With Brian Williams aired a story about the fiery national debate surrounding the continued abuse of chimpanzees at the notorious Texas Biomedical Research Institute and a small handful of other barbaric laboratories in the U.S. that are the last in the industrialized world to still use great apes for invasive experiments.

Dr. Jane Goodall cut right to the heart of the issue when she told NBC, "All invasive research is torture. And it's not just the procedures. It's the imprisonment. It's being kept in a small space with no choice. You just are there. You're powerless."

But while the nearly 1,000 chimpanzees locked in U.S. laboratories are powerless, you and I are not. We are chimpanzees' only defense against heartless vivisectors, and it is now more important than ever that we take decisive action to end this vile practice.

Even if you've already sent an e-mail, please join me and other concerned citizens by calling your senators and representatives today to ask them to cosponsor the Great Ape Protection and Cost Savings Act (H.R. 1513/S. 810).

If you already know who your members of Congress are, you can call 1-855-855-7276 right now to reach the switchboard at the Capitol. If not, click here to find the telephone numbers for your senators and here to find the telephone numbers for your congressional representative.

Thank you for all that you do for animals.

Very truly yours,









Justin Goodman, M.A.
Associate Director
Laboratory Investigations Department
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

Friday, December 16, 2011

Fwd: Victory for Elephants in Santa Ana, Calif.!



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Begin forwarded message:

From: PETA <newsmanager@peta.org>
Date: December 16, 2011 9:59:08 PM CST
Subject:
Victory for Elephants in Santa Ana, Calif.!
Reply-To: PETA <newsmanager@peta.org>

PETA
PETA's Action Team AlertJoin PETA's Action TeamLivingTVShopDonate NowShare on Facebook

Dear Cindy,

I'm thrilled to share some exciting news with you. Thanks to all of you who took part in our more than yearlong campaign, the city of Santa Ana, Calif., has just announced that it will no longer offer elephant rides. This means that the Santa Ana Zoo will stop supporting the miserable treatment of elephants who spend much of their lives chained by two legs, barely able to take a single step forward or backward, and are dominated and controlled by bullhooks—barbaric training devices that resemble a fireplace poker. These can be seen in video footage from Animal Defenders International (ADI) that shows trainers from Have Trunk Will Travel, the company that rented the elephants to the zoo for rides, repeatedly beating and shocking elephants in order to teach them "who's boss" and intimidate them into giving rides or performing tricks. Elephants are highly intelligent, social, and curious animals who deserve better than being forced to plod along in circles all day while being prodded by a bullhook for people's amusement.

In addition to actions by our supporters, celebrities, including Charo and Switched at Birth star Constance Marie, and other animal protection groups, including ADI and the Animal Protection and Rescue League, joined the effort to end the elephant rides at the Santa Ana Zoo. 

Please take a moment to send a brief e-mail to Santa Ana Mayor Miguel Pulido and Gerardo Mouet, the executive director of the city's Parks, Recreation and Community Services Agency, to thank the city for making the compassionate decision to end the elephant rides—and please be sure to ask Mr. Mouet to make the same decision for the Orange County Fair in his capacity as a member of the Orange County Fair Board.

Thank you for speaking up for animals.

Sincerely,



Tracy Reiman
Executive Vice President
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals


Thursday, December 15, 2011

Fwd: A Historic Day for Chimpanzees!



Sent from my iPaddie

Begin forwarded message:

From: PETA <newsmanager@peta.org>
Date: December 15, 2011 8:55:52 PM CST
Subject:
A Historic Day for Chimpanzees!
Reply-To: PETA <newsmanager@peta.org>

PETA
PETA's Action Center Alert
Get ActiveLivingTVShopDonate NowShare on Facebook

Dear Cindy,

It is a historic day for chimpanzees, and we need your help to keep up the momentum! After decades of advocating, organizing, demonstrating, and agitating in behalf of chimpanzees, we are closer than ever to ending experimentation on our closest living relatives. The National Institutes of Health (NIH)—which is the primary funder of chimpanzee experiments in the U.S.—has just announced that it is accepting the conclusion of a highly anticipated report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM). The report, for which PETA provided testimony and other input, concludes that "most current use of chimpanzees for biomedical research is unnecessary."

NIH director Dr. Francis Collins stated that effective immediately, NIH is suspending all new funding for experiments on chimpanzees! The agency will be convening a working group to carefully evaluate the experiments that are currently being conducted on chimpanzees, and it is expected that half of the chimpanzee experiments currently underway may be stopped! Moreover, while the working group deliberates, chimpanzees who are currently not being used in experiments or are in a state of unofficial retirement will not be used for experimentation. This includes the nearly 200 Alamogordo chimpanzees, whose sad fate compelled scientists, elected officials, and other public figures to take action. They are now safe!

The IOM report—and NIH's response—is the first step toward ending all experimentation on these remarkable animals. However, it's more important than ever that you contact your legislator now  and ask him or her to support the Great Ape Protection and Cost Savings Act, which would outright ban all use of chimpanzees in laboratories and retire the more than 600 federally owned chimpanzees to sanctuaries.

Thank you for your continued advocacy in behalf of all animals and for your support of PETA.

Sincerely,





Kathy Guillermo
Vice President
Laboratory Investigations Department
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals


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This e-mail was sent by PETA, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 USA.
 

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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Fw: Victory: University of Michigan Drops Cruel Cat Lab!

------Original Message------
From: PETA
To: MyProfile
ReplyTo: PETA
Subject: Victory: University of Michigan Drops Cruel Cat Lab!
Sent: Dec 9, 2011 4:38 PM

Dear Cindy, I have very exciting news to share about one of our campaigns to end university animal experimentation. After more than a year of pressure from PETA and over 100,000 people—including students, alumni, and Michigan natives Iggy Pop and Lily Tomlin—wrote letters and led protests, the University of Michigan (U-M) has announced that it has replaced the use of cats in its Survival Flight training course for nurses with modern and superior human simulators. This means that cats will no longer have hard plastic tubes repeatedly forced down their delicate windpipes before being killed. U-M's announcement comes just one day after PETA released an exposé on how the school was buying lost, stolen, and homeless cats from a notorious animal dealer and revealed that school officials had lied to the public about the fate of the cats used in the course. PETA will continue to urge U-M to end its trauma training laboratory that uses pigs and fully align its training curriculum with the guidance of medical experts and professional organizations that endorse the use of simulators as complete replacements for these cruel and archaic animal laboratories. In the meantime, please take a moment of your time to urge St. Louis Children's Hospital to follow in the footsteps of U-M and end the hospital's use of animals for intubation training as well. Thank you again for helping cats abused in laboratories and making this victory possible. Sincerely, Justin Goodman, M.A. Associate Director Laboratory Investigations Department People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals Click to update your e-mail preferences or to unsubscribe. Please do not respond to this e-mail. Instead, click here to contact PETA. This e-mail was sent by PETA, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 USA.  

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Monday, November 28, 2011

Fwd: Ringling Faces Biggest USDA Fine in Circus History

Begin forwarded message:

From: PETA <do-not-reply@peta.org>
Date: November 28, 2011 5:33:28 PM CST
Subject:
Ringling Faces Biggest USDA Fine in Circus History
Reply-To: PETA <do-not-reply@peta.org>

PETA
PETA's Action Team AlertJoin PETA's Action TeamLivingTVShare on Facebooknone
Dear Cindy,

I'm thrilled to tell you about a historic breakthrough. It has to do with elephants who are beaten with bullhooks by Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. Feld Entertainment, Inc., parent company of Ringling, will now pay a penalty of $270,000 for violations of the Animal Welfare Act dating from June 2007 to August 2011. It is the biggest penalty paid by a circus in the history of the United States.

Since June 2007, PETA has spent every year taking formal complaints about Ringling to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. We have met with members of the agency's Office of the General Counsel and provided ample evidence of Ringling's abuse, including the death of a baby elephant, the beating of elephants, the killing of a lion, the circus's use of crippled elephants, and more.

Of course, PETA cannot rest until all the elephants are freed from their lives of servitude. Elephants used in circuses are torn away from their families, chained, dragged from city to city in boxcars, and forced under threat of bullhook beatings to perform repetitive tricks. Please help: There is more that you can do to help animals abused in circuses today. I urge you to share the heartbreaking photos of baby elephants who are bound with ropes, shocked with electric prods, and jabbed with sharp-tipped bullhooks with your friends and family now. After they see Ringling's cruelty, please ask them to join you in pledging never to go to a circus that uses animals.

With the help of PETA donors like you, we can put an end to the suffering of elephants, tigers, and other animals who are beaten and forced to perform.

Kind regards,






Ingrid E. Newkirk
President
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals


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This e-mail was sent by PETA, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 USA.