Federal authorities are giving animal exhibitors the go-ahead to abuse animals year after year. Why?
Want to eat mouthwatering meals in the company of top-notch celebrities? Then head to these five “hidden gems.”
Sport Chalet agreed to stop selling fur after learning from PETA how animals are electrocuted, bludgeoned, strangled, and skinned alive for their pelts.
Bullfighting’s deadly toll continues.
You do not want to mess with this cow’s friend.
When PETA alerted Dallas County officials that elephants with UniverSoul Circus might be carrying TB, the animals were barred from performing.
Brock plays the perennial bridesmaid as all the other kittens get adopted.
A seedy roadside zoo that removes tiger cubs from their mothers puts animals’ welfare last.
Virginia farmers were planning to raise these piglets for meat, but then something wonderful happened.
Animals are suffering and dying in painful—and completely preventable—ways: It’s business as usual at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Things are shifting in Spain. In the last few months, we’ve seen progress for animals in towns and cities all across the country.
Unlike Stella McCartney, who suspended all purchases of wool within minutes of watching PETA’s video, Patagonia has failed to act even remotely responsibly.
PETA is calling on the National Restaurant Association to drop octopus from menus.
Littering is not only bad for our planet, it can also mean death for animals
Stella McCartney has cut ties with the Argentina-based Ovis XXI, which also supplies Patagonia and other global brands.