We’re determined to make 2021 the year we shut down the dog laboratory at Texas A&M University (TAMU)—where nearly two dozen dogs are being kept for cruel muscular dystrophy experiments.
Now, thanks to a special matching-gift opportunity, you can do 10 TIMES as much to help.
For just 48 hours—until midnight on December 31—every dollar you give, up to our $100,000 goal, will be matched 10 times. Can you pitch in $2 or more today?
As you read this, 23 miserable dogs are still warehoused in TAMU’s laboratory, cowering in metal cages without the affection or comfort that they deserve.
Some are becoming ever more debilitated by a painful canine form of muscular dystrophy, which they were deliberately bred to have, and they struggle to walk, eat, and even breathe. Yet that doesn’t stop experimenters from stretching the dogs’ muscles with motorized levers and cutting out chunks of their muscles to examine.
About half the dogs still trapped in TAMU’s torture chamber—including golden retrievers Baguette and Barbara—are healthy and could be quickly adopted into loving homes if the school would agree to release them.
Friend, 23 lonely dogs still need our help. We can’t give up on them now.
With your support, we will win this campaign. Since PETA first exposed the torturous experiments at TAMU, hundreds of thousands of compassionate people have joined us in demanding an end to the vile tests and the release of every single individual who’s imprisoned there—and today, TAMU is reeling under the pressure.
It shut down its hideous breeding program—which marked the beginning of the end for the laboratory—and slashed the number of dogs used in experiments. Dozens of dogs were released for adoption by families and now live in real homes. Now, we must seize every opportunity to keep building on this momentum; overcome the school’s desperate, continued attempts to censor free speech on its social media pages; promote human-relevant test methods; and free every dog held there and make 2021 a happy year for them.
This e-mail was sent to [email protected]. Please let us know 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. You can also choose to receive fewer e-mails or unsubscribe if you're absolutely certain that you want to become less involved in our work for animals.