• PETA Set to Release Meat-Allergy–Inducing Ticks in Northeastern U.S.

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    We do get a little ticked off that some people are still eating animals, but we are not alone: Apparently, so does at least one breed of ticks. Scientists have discovered that the bite of the Lone Star tick causes people to develop an allergy to meat. Once a person has been bitten, if he or she eats meat, things can get a little uncomfortable and a hives-like rash can break out within hours. That gave PETA the germ of an idea, and we'd like your input.

    Currently, the ticks are predominantly found in the southeastern United States. But PETA has hatched a plan to release Lone Star ticks in parks in the Northeast, hoping that warming weather and moist conditions will help the ticks thrive. PETA's Don Beleav, a biologist who is investigating the feasibility of the project, explained how the resulting meat allergies will greatly benefit human beings who come into contact with the ticks:

    Just as leeches purify the blood, these tiny insects can help people kick a habit that sucks for animals, human health, and the environment," says Beleav. "Obviously, PETA's main goal is to prevent animal suffering, but going vegetarian or vegan helps people lose weight, boosts their immune systems, and lowers their risk of three of our nation's  biggest killers—heart disease, cancer, and strokes." Beleav continues, "Really the only pushback we anticipate will be from fast-food companies. Maybe McDonald's will start handing out free flea and tick collars with its value meals!

    PETA is also considering offering the bugs by mail for anyone itching to go vegetarian but lacking the willpower to do so.

  • It Doesn't Take a Rocket Scientist to Eat Like Einstein

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    Schools named after Albert Einstein clearly have high hopes for their students' potential. So, for Einstein's birthday on March 14, PETA is urging some of his namesake schools to serve only vegetarian food, funded by PETA, in the school's cafeteria. Eating vegetarian is just as smart as devising the theory of relativity, which is probably why great minds such as Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, Pythagoras, and Gandhi refused to eat animals.

    In a colorful, kid-friendly leaflet that PETA would give to students, Einstein is quoted as saying, "So I am living without fats, without meat, without fish, but am feeling quite well this way. It almost seems to me that man was not born to be a carnivore."

    And he was right—the saturated fats and cholesterol in meat contribute to heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes, and Alzheimer's disease. Mercury in fish can also cause learning problems and memory loss. But plant-based foods such as blueberries, avocados, whole grains, and nuts contain powerful nutrients to help students' growing minds reach their full potential.

    We don't have to be able to come up with E=mc2 in order to look like geniuses. We just have to raid the produce aisle.

  • The Food That the POTUS Should Promotus

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    Why must every American president shoot the obligatory "and here I am chowing down on a burger" photograph? Best bet? To please the meat lobby and because of the old-fashioned idea of what "being American" is all about: no falafel; it's red meat and guns for me. Mr. Obama is no exception, often deliberately choosing hot dogs and burgers for his photo ops with visiting heads of state.

    Well, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) has taken the POTUS to task for promoting foods that are known to contribute to the obesity epidemic in the U.S. and that have been linked to cancer. PCRM has started a petition asking the White House to ban staged photos that show the president, the first family, the vice president, or the president's Cabinet eating unhealthy foods such as processed meats.

    "The White House would never set up a photo op showing the president buying cigarettes, so why is it okay to show him eating a hot dog?" asked Susan Levin, PCRM's nutrition education director.

    You can sign the petition and ask the pres to set a good example for Americans by eating healthy food. Some Obama Oatmeal With Presidential Peaches sounds nice.

     

    PETA promotes and educates the public on the benefits of a vegetarian diet. PETA does not directly or indirectly participate in any political campaign on behalf of or in opposition to any candidate for public office.

     

  • Stay Alive on Friday the 13th

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    If you always have a sleepless night after watching a horror movie, you might want to think twice before sitting down to a meal of dead bodies. Here's why meat is more dangerous than an ax-wielding maniac:

    There's something deadly in the water.

    If you're still eating fish despite the dangers of mercury, might I suggest that you may also enjoy a summer job at Camp Crystal Lake?

    The hormones will get you every time

    As every randy teenage slasher-flick victim can attest, hormones can be deadly. Hormones in meat can cause all sorts of unsexy conditions, such as "moobs." Which leads me to number three …

    Which would you rather have a standoff with?

    Eating meat causes impotence. Given their druthers, I think a lot of men would opt instead for the hockey mask–wearing serial killer.

    The chubby guy always gets it.

    That's another good reason not to ingest all the saturated fat that meat contains.

    It's getting hard to breathe.

    Find yourself short of breath when you hear that ominous theme music ("Ki-ki-ki-ma-ma-ma")? The toxic gasses and bacteria that wind spreads from factory farms make it even more difficult to inhale.

    Stay out of the woods.

    Do you ever shout, "Why are you running into the woods?!" when some moron is being chased by a psycho? People in real life do dumb things that lead to their untimely demise, too, like eating meat, eggs, and dairy products even though bad diets are to blame for one-third of all cancer deaths

    Farms are generally good to avoid, too.

    Have you seen PETA's slasher movie that features video footage from chicken farms? If you're too chicken … don't eat chicken.

    A knife isn't the only thing that will stop a heart.

    Heart disease caused by diets high in artery-clogging animal products will do the trick, too.

    What kills a killer?

    In Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan, Voorhees is finally done in by toxic waste in the sewers. If the kids had only gotten him into one of the waterways polluted with factory-farm runoff, he would've been a goner a lot sooner.

    The killer always comes back to life.

    Meat's got its own resilient killer: antibiotic-resistant bacteria caused by the overuse of antibiotics on factory farms.

    Freddy vs. Jason

    Between meat and dairy products, trying to choose which is more deadly is like trying to decide which serial killer you want to take a weekend getaway with.

    Guess what's hiding behind the barn door.

    Poo. And lots of it. Yeah, it gets in meat, too.

    Death … and taxes

    Maybe the worst thing about how deadly meat is, is that we actually have to pay for it—both at the check-out counter and in the form of government subsidies. I mean, at least when Jason is swinging a machete, he's not simultaneously asking for your wallet—am I right?

    Slash your risk of getting killed off early by running from meat as if your life depended on it. (But don't go running through the woods. That's never a good idea.)

  • Student Wins Award for Humane Science

    Written by Jeff Mackey

    At the Los Angeles County Science Fair, PETA presented its first Special Award for Humane Science—along with a $500 cash prize—to Palos Verdes Peninsula High School senior Shu Hee "Sophie" Kim for her mathematical model that accurately predicts the growth of breast cancer cells in patients after they receive radiotherapy treatments. Sophie's project has also been selected to advance to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel ISEF) next month.


    Here's Sophie and her award-winning project

    Boxing Isn't the Only 'Sweet Science'

    When compared with results from in vitro tests using human tissue, Sophie's model—which she developed working with a mathematics professor at the University of California–Irvine—accurately predicted outcomes, which may help doctors better anticipate the effectiveness of treatments for breast cancer and other forms of cancer.

    This award is part of PETA's work to promote humane and progressive non-animal research. In 2010, after discussions with PETA, the Intel ISEF—of which the Los Angeles fair is a satellite event—adopted a policy that "strongly endorses the use of non-animal research methods and encourages students to use alternatives to animal research."

    Don't Give if It Hurts

    Animal-based breast cancer research typically involves injecting animals with chemicals or cancer cells and forcing them to endure the growth of painful tumors until they die or are killed. These cruel studies have still not identified a cure for the disease, in part because, as National Breast Cancer Coalition founder Fran Visco has stated, "[a]nimals don't reflect the reality of cancer in humans."

    If you want to donate to the fight against breast cancer, make sure you're giving to organizations that won't waste your money on shabby and cruel experiments on animals.

  • Photo: Hot Dogs Cause Butt Cancer?

    Written by Michelle Kretzer

    Photo of the Day

     

    The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine erected this billboard in Chicago to help people in the hot-dog capital reduce their colorectal cancer risk—no small task since 39 percent of Americans don't even know what the colon is. Seriously. Although I'm guessing a much greater percentage don't know what's in a hot dog

    Besides mechanically separated meat, bones, connective tissue, and the stuff they put in instant hand warmers, hot dogs and other processed meats are chockfull of cancer-causing nitrates, which greatly increase the risk of deadly colorectal cancer

    Given the choice, I think I'd rather put down the bun and save my buns.

  • Is Your Diet a Killer—or a Lifesaver?

    Written by Jeff Mackey

    There are countless things that we can do that endanger our lives, but there's one thing we can do that can not only help us live longer but also save many more lives at the same time: adopting a vegan diet.

    Around 16 billion (that's "billion" with a "b") animals are slaughtered each year to feed Americans, which works out to more than 100 animals per meat-eater in the U.S. But you're smart—you do the math. And then do the smart thing: Go vegan.

  • A Doctor Warns: Never Eat These Three Foods

    Written by PETA

    When asked what one food he would ban if he could, PETA's chief medical adviser, Dr. Neal Barnard, responded with three: hot dogs, bacon, and ham. We'll let him tell you why!

    In an interview with Forbes magazine, the bestselling author and president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine cited those three processed meats as foods that no one, especially children, should ever eat.  

    In 2007," he says, "the World Cancer Research Fund and American Institute for Cancer Research released the most comprehensive review on diet and cancer ever published, prepared by the world's leading experts, and it was quite damning about the link between processed meat and colorectal cancer. In early 2011, an update to the report encouraged people to avoid processed meats altogether.

    But the disease that's weighing on Dr. Barnard's mind and that has increased threefold in just the last 30 years isn't cancer—it's diabetes. And here again, meat is to blame.

    Dr. Barnard notes that the fats that people consume, prevalent in meat, make muscle and liver cells resistant to the action of insulin, triggering diabetes. "The forecast from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is frightening: one in three people born in 2000 will eventually develop the disease," he says. "The medical burden is bad enough—the average person with diabetes loses well over a decade of life." 

    To read the rest of Dr. Barnard's eye-opening interview, visit Forbes.com. And to find tasty recipes that are 100 percent ham-, bacon-, and hot dog–free, visit our "Living" page.

     

    Written by Michelle Sherrow

  • The Cure for Breast Cancer—Don't Think Pink

    Written by PETA


    © Robyn Mackenzie/
    Dreamstime.com

    "If shopping could cure breast cancer, it would be cured by now," says Think Before You Pink, an organization dedicated to ending "pinkwashing"—slapping pink ribbons on products in order to convince consumers that they can end breast cancer by buying pink products. In truth, reports Forbes, corporations seek to profit off consumers' strong feelings about breast cancer while simultaneously marketing products that actually contribute to the disease.

    Such was the case with KFC's cancer-linked chicken, sold in "Buckets for the Cure," which, adding insult to injury, didn't really raise much money for cancer research, either, as is often the case with pinkwashing campaigns. And what little money makes it to breast cancer research frequently goes to support antiquated, unreliable experiments on animals.

    I lost the person I was closest to in the world—my grandmother—to breast cancer, but I know that no matter how many pink sun visors I buy, it is unlikely that I am doing much to help with the search for a cure. Women deserve better than greedy corporations throwing a few pennies at a charity in exchange for huge profit margins. We deserve better than having our money spent on experiments that have proved to be useless. We deserve a cure, and the only way to find one is to stop buying pink doohickeys and start supporting breast cancer research that works—cutting-edge, effective, non-animal research.

    For Breast Cancer Awareness Month, please look at PETA's list of cruelty-free charities and join us in supporting breast cancer research that really works.

    Written by Michelle Sherrow

  • Save Breasts and Animals

    Written by PETA

    Watching my cherished grandmother suffer through breast-cancer surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, then pass away, was the hardest thing that I have ever gone through. I felt so helpless—then I became determined to help find a cure. For me, that meant participating in walks and other fundraisers for breast-cancer charities that are actually helping us get closer to a cure by funding cutting-edge, effective, non-animal research.

    After decades and billions of dollars spent tormenting and killing dogs, cats, monkeys, rabbits, mice, rats, and other animals, we still have no cure for breast cancer. Experiments on animals are unreliable because of the significant genetic, cellular, and physiological differences between species. Former National Cancer Institute Director Dr. Richard Klausner has stated, "The history of cancer research has been the history of curing cancer in the mouse. We have cured mice of cancer for decades, and it simply didn't work in humans."

    While every 12 minutes in America, another woman dies from breast cancer, organizations such as the Susan G. Komen Foundation waste money on cruel, archaic animal experiments, and people are starting to say "Enough." The Seattle Veg Singles group was set to do a charity walk for Komen, but when the group learned that the charity funds experiments on animals, it immediately canceled its plans.

    If you want to help raise money for breast cancer research, do women a favor by supporting one of the many charities that don't fund experiments on animals, including the American Breast Cancer Foundation, the Keep A Breast Foundation and the Breast Cancer Fund. And let the Susan G. Komen Foundation know that it won't be getting a dime from you until it stops funding animal experiments.

     

    Written by Michelle Sherrow

REPORT CRUELTY

If you have a general question for PETA and would like a response, please e-mail Info@peta.org. If you need to report cruelty to an animal, please click here. If you are reporting an animal in imminent danger and know where to find the animal and if the abuse is taking place right now, please call your local police department. If the police are unresponsive, please call PETA immediately at 757-622-7382 and press 2. 

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