The Pentagon now says that deadly trauma training on animals is archaic, expensive, and anatomically inferior and that more effective human simulators exist.
Pressure from PETA and members of Congress prompts Coast Guard to stop stabbing and shooting animals and examine superior simulators.
During World Week for Animals in Laboratories, PETA headed to seven military centers, brandishing the gardening tools often used on live animals
PETA and PETA Australia persuade surgeons-in-training Down Under to stop cutting holes in live animals.
Edie Falco joined PETA on Capitol Hill to support a bill to improve training for troops, end military animal mutilations, and save millions of tax dollars.
We’ve said it a hundred times: “I just wish I could put [mean thing happening to animals] on the side of a bus.” So we did.
A new bill mandates replacing cruel and archaic military trauma training with superior human-patient simulators.
PETA pressure has ended the use of animals in ANOTHER Army training course.
Not so fast, says PETA in its letter to the Army base’s commander.
A group of PETA “soldiers” mutilated a “goat” outside Camp Lejeune to expose the military’s inferior, cruel trauma drills.
Tree cutters. Knives. Metal rods. Guns.
Tree cutters. Knives. Metal rods. Guns.
A recent opinion poll shows that a supermajority of Americans are ready to see experiments on animals relegated to the history books.
Goats form emotional relationships with humans—but the military continues to stab, mutilate, and kill these trusting animals in barbaric training exercises.
When animals are suffering and dying, the FBI needs to turn the investigation on itself.