Dear Friend,
Daisy didn't even have a name until a PETA investigator gave her one.
She was bred by experimenters to develop pelvic organ prolapse—an agonizing
condition in which her rectum protruded through her anus. For 10 long weeks, she
received no pain relief whatsoever, forcing her to walk with her back legs
unnaturally spread, gingerly dragging her bleeding, inflamed rectal tissue
through the bedding at the bottom of a cramped cage. According to an
experimenter's aide, after a year of languishing in misery, giving birth to
litter after litter of mice who themselves would be experimented on, Daisy and
mice like her were killed and discarded like so much medical waste.
Other mice at this facility—one of America's best-known research
institutions—fared little better. In one particularly gruesome experiment,
laboratory workers cut into the skulls of mice, suctioned out portions of their brains, and glued
a glass cover in place to create a "cranial window" so that they could peer into the suffering
animals' skulls.
Help us end this waking nightmare for animals by making a special gift of $3 or more right
now.
[[link removed]]
Mice are intensely social animals who love to play together and curl up next to
each other at night. They even sing to their friends at frequencies humans can't
hear.
They're also among the most abused animals on Earth , and despite the current historic public health crisis, the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) is pouring tens of millions in taxpayer dollars into
crude and cruel experiments on them.
For six months, a PETA investigator went undercover at the Cleveland Clinic—an
institution that received more than $100 million from NIH in 2019 alone. Inside
the clinic's laboratories, they found that experimenters injected mice with a
chemical that caused an inflammatory disease of the central nervous system,
leaving them struggling to walk and dragging their hind legs. In addition to
gluing glass plates onto the skulls of mice, workers cut into other mice's backs
and separated their muscles from their vertebrae in order to take pictures of
their spinal cords.
To give you some idea of how little concern experimenters had for the animals,
when veterinary technicians told one experimenter that mice used in a kidney
disease experiment were in pain, the experimenter apparently replied that they wanted to "kill" the mice "just because they're ugly."
And it's not just mice who are suffering at the facility—monkeys, rabbits, rats,
pigs, and other animals are being routinely experimented on there, too. No animal—no matter their size—should ever have to experience such abuse.
Please donate right now to power our vital work to expose—and stop—cruel and
deadly experiments and promote modern test methods that save lives.
[[link removed]]
Today, we're ramping up pressure on NIH to stop wasting billions of U.S.
taxpayer dollars on experiments on animals like those at the Cleveland
Clinic—experiments whose failure to provide human-relevant results even the
agency itself acknowledges.
The innovative work of PETA scientists is helping more and more researchers
around the world embrace sophisticated, non-animal methods, like the team of
engineers and physicians in Bolivia who—with our guidance—recently developed a
lifesaving new ventilator for COVID-19 patients without testing it on animals.
NIH has now begun an investigation based on our findings at the Cleveland
Clinic, and already tens of thousands of our supporters have joined our call for
the agency to stop funding such hellish experiments on animals.
But as long as sensitive animals are still being tormented in laboratories like
the ones revealed in our new investigation, we must do more. Are you with us?
[[link removed]]
For the mice like Daisy, there's simply no time left to lose.
Kind regards,
Kathy Guillermo
Senior Vice President
DONATE NOW!
[[link removed]]
******************
This e-mail was sent to
[email protected] . Please let us know
[
[email protected]?subject=Update%20My%20Contact%20Information&body=I%20would%20like%20to%20update%20my%20e-mail%20address.%20%0D%0A%0D%0AName%3A%20%0D%0A%0D%0AOriginal%20E-mail%3A%20%0D%0A%0D%0ANew%20E-mail%3A%20%0D%0A%0D%0A] if you'd prefer that we use a different e-mail address. Want to get more active
for animals? Sign up to receive additional updates about PETA's work through our subscription page
[[link removed]] . You can also choose to receive fewer e-mails
[[link removed]] or unsubscribe
[[link removed]] if you're absolutely certain that you want to become less involved in our work
for animals.
[[link removed]] [[link removed]] [[link removed]]
This e-mail was sent by PETA, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510 USA .
White Mouse: ©iStock.com/filo