In re-reading the previous post I replied to, I thought I would dispel a few initial assumptions about what my level of understanding is about current animal rights groups and what has honed my opinion about them.
Let's start with the HSUS, or
Humane Society of the United States.
Though the name for HSUS invokes a distinct similarity to your local humane society animal shelter, the HSUS is not affiliated in any way to local animal shelters. HSUS does own a rabbit farm they got along with another acquisition, but the HSUS owns and operates exactly
zero dog shelters or rescues in the entire country, and has no facilities for holding, treating, or re-housing dogs, cats, rodents, and other pets. However, year after year the HSUS runs ads in many popular publications, asking for donations so that they can help animals, displaying pictures of dogs and cats or giving statistics about shelters. The money given to HSUS is spent lobbying for legislation, mostly against things like rodeos or livestock farms, medical research facilities, and in favor of anti-meat (vegan / vegetarian) groups.
In a rather recent (and disgustingly deceitful) display of of HSUS using the general ignorance of people about their agenda to make money, they ran a donation campaign using the (in)famous "Michael Vick Dogs"
[link to cached image]. In the ad, the HSUS makes the following claim: "The HSUS has assisted federal authorities in the case against Michael Vick and his co-defendants, and is now overseeing the care of the 52 pit bulls seized from Vick's property in southwestern Virginia." That was a blatant lie, taking advantage of the confusion and outrage at the crimes by Vick to pull in revenue without any responsibility for the dogs themselves, who in reality were rehabilitated (and, in some cases, re-homed) by a different group altogether
[link1, link2]. The HSUS had no intention of any money coming in to donations from that ad to be put toward the rehabilitation, and in fact they wanted the dogs put down. Indeed, the president of the HSUS, Wayne Pacelle, actually called for the dogs to be put down in the NYT
[link]. This is not an exception to HSUS practices, this is simply the highest-profile example.
The fact is that the HSUS does nothing for the welfare of pets, unless you count lobbying (or, in fact, having affiliates lobby for them) to federal, state, and local government bodies to enact more and more legislation every year that either levies fees, fines, or seizures on pet and animal owners by the governing agencies. Again, Wayne Pacelle (HSUS president) is said to have stated that one of the goals of HSUS as "We will see the end of wild animals in circus acts," among other things. That, along with their roughly $30-40 million in donations each year (and more than $100 million in assets) doing absolutely nothing to help the welfare of the thousands of animals each year in shelters or in worse conditions, is the reason why I find the HSUS to be despicable in their tactics, goals, and behavior with regard to the welfare of animals in general. More information can be found
here [& here] about other money and inappropriate legal troubles with the organization.
Next, PETA (everyone's favorite).
I doubt it's any secret that PETA kills loads of animals, and the state of Virginia has actually been asked to classify PETA as a slaughterhouse before
[link] because of it. This was suggested because since 1998 PETA has killed over 19,000 (yes, more than nineteen thousand) animals in their Virginia facility
[PDF of VDACS reports]. PETA advocates tend to argue that there was no other recourse with those animals, yet there are individual no-kill shelters and animal foster groups all over the country-- far too many to list here, a few for nearly every decent-sized city in the US and then some. However, so far at least two PETA members have been brought up on charges
[PDF] of animal cruelty in the execution of their euthanasia practices. The defense was that the animals were beyond help, yet the pictures of some of the animals killed shows that there are many young dogs and puppies (
link - caution, disturbing images for some). PETA's euthanasia ratio to the number of animals they find homes for or otherwise (like people reclaiming the animals) has consistently gone up every year since 1998:
Year
|
Received
|
Adopted
|
Killed
|
Transferred
|
% Killed
|
% Adopted
2007
|
1,997
|
17
|
1,815
|
35
|
90.9
|
0.84
2006
|
3,061
|
12
|
2,981
|
46
|
97.4
|
0.39
2005
|
2,165
|
146
|
1,946
|
69
|
89.9
|
6.74
2004
|
2,655
|
361
|
2,278
|
1
|
85.8
|
13.60
2003
|
2,224
|
312
|
1,911
|
1
|
85.9
|
14.03
2002
|
2,680
|
382
|
2,298
|
2
|
85.7
|
14.25
2001
|
2,685
|
703
|
1,944
|
14
|
72.4
|
26.18
2000
|
2,681
|
624
|
2,029
|
28
|
75.7
|
23.27
1999
|
1,805
|
386
|
1,328
|
91
|
73.6
|
21.39
1998
|
943
|
133
|
685
|
125
|
72.6
|
14.10
Total
|
22,896
|
3,076
|
19,215
|
412
|
83.9
|
13.43
All of those numbers are found in PETA's own filings to the state of Virginia
[PDF]
PETA advocates also tend to try to downplay the criminal activities by saying that they are isolated and unrelated to PETA's cause, yet in the case of Rodney Coronado
[WP], who firebombed a facility for his extreme AR cause, PETA's head Ingrid Newkirk herself made statements defending why PETA was paying the legal fees for his trial
[link] (he even threatened the place be bombed afterward
[link]). That wasn't the only time PETA has given money to individuals or groups linked to criminal and terrorist behavior. Going back to at least 1995 (and likely before), PETA has given money on more than one occasion to individuals linked to extremist or eco-terrorist groups
[link]. Arguing that the organization doesn't is simply false. A quote from Richard Berman, executive director of the Center for Consumer Freedom back in 2002: "PETA collects millions of dollars in contributions every year from people who intend to support the humane treatment of animals," Berman said. "However, many of these well-intentioned individuals are likely unaware that since 1988 PETA has spent
four times as much money defending criminals and domestic terror groups as it has in support of animal shelters." What Berman doesn't mention is the continuing increase in euthanasia practices by PETA, which has a higher animal kill rate than any shelter out there in the US.
These are just two examples of the "animal rights" movement, and they are the two biggest examples. They are liars, hypocrites, and promote an extreme and unreasonable agenda. In PETA's case, they also spend money promoting that agenda by defending criminals.
But please: tell me again how I'm speaking from ignorance or simply promoting sound bytes. I can provide data to back up my accusations. The only defense that AR advocates can use is to claim that individuals involved with these organizations aren't in it for those reasons. The reality is that there are literally millions of people all over the country who have ridiculously flawed idea of what these groups are and what their leadership promotes, all the while having these people volunteer and work for these extremist organizations while the genuine individually-run animal welfare groups throughout the nation suffer from low volunteer numbers, insufficient numbers of foster homes, and tightening budgets. Those local groups are the ones who are working to educate responsible ownership and advocate for the positive welfare of the animals out there. Those local groups are the ones who are taking in these animals and rehabilitating them. Groups like PETA and HSUS take all the credit without doing any of the actual work.
For disclosure: the GSD I mentioned earlier came from a shelter. My home also has a former foster who we adopted, and prior to that dog there was another foster-to-adoption dog in our home that wasn't expected to last three more weeks and wound up living another happy eleven months. We are in touch with more than one rescue group in the Dallas area, and we personally know several animal behaviorists/trainers, breeders, and a few vets. I'm not blowing smoke from my hindquarters with what I'm talking about as far as the presence of support structures out there, because I personally know and help with some of them. None of the groups I've met or dealt with will touch PETA or HSUS with a twenty foot rhetorical pole, partially for the reasons I listed above.
Frankly, to claim I am speaking from ignorance or some lack of knowledge on the subject is nothing but a defense through personal attack and, quite frankly, insulting not only to my intelligence but to intellectual honesty altogether. Yes, the issue is complex and yes not every single PETA or HSUS member is an eco-terrorist (nor supports them). However, what I am talking about is the entirety of the organizations themselves and the leadership thereof, who are the primary and most influential in the "animal rights" movement. As long as such individuals and practices or behaviors exist within the "animal rights" movement, then it can continue to count me out as an advocate and, in some cases, can find me on the other side of the argument against them.