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A cramped tank at SeaWorld is no place for orcas and other dolphins. Tell Sam's Club that selling SeaWorld tickets supports animal abuse.
California's ban on the sale and importation of alligator and crocodile skins will save countless animals' lives. Share this terrific news, and then keep the momentum going by urging Hermès and Prada to remove ostrich and other exotic skins from their collections.
Our annual challenge begins today! For a limited time, your support to protect cats, dogs, monkeys, and other animals from torturous experiments will double in impact.
After a massive PETA campaign, Texas A&M has stopped breeding dogs with canine muscular dystrophy! The university has also been busted for lying—as many as 100 puppies were born during the two years that Texas A&M claimed that it wasn't breeding dogs to have the disease.
Whenever wild animals are used for fairs, they're denied any semblance of a natural life, and Beulah—an elephant kept in captivity and exploited for profit—was no exception. It's too late for her now, but you can still speak up. Urge The Big E, the Georgia National Fair, and Seven Peaks Waterpark to leave all wild animals out of their upcoming events and all future ones.
Terrified animals sometimes even chew off their own limbs in an effort to free themselves from cruel glue traps. Learn how to save animals stuck on these cruel devices, and then urge companies to stop selling them.
After months of talking with PETA, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation has dramatically reversed its position on animal testing and confirmed that it no longer plans to support or fund cruel tests on dogs, monkeys, or any other animals, which it previously did for decades. Share the good news, and take action for other animals being killed in pointless experiments.
Referring to animals as "it," buying products from companies that test on animals in laboratories, and eating animals are some common examples of speciesism. Find out if your actions are considered speciesist and what you can do about it.
Birds were fed pesticide-laced food for days and monitored for symptoms, including vomiting, weight loss, and lethargy, before being killed in cruel experiments. Thankfully, the PETA International Science Consortium Ltd. and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency swooped in to save hundreds of birds each year from being used to test pesticides.
Urgent Action Needed
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