From Ingrid Newkirk, PETA <[email protected]>
Subject Piglets died slowly, just out of reach of their mothers
Date December 15, 2019 1:54 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Dear Friend,

The horrors that an eyewitness found on a sprawling pig farm in Indiana are the
stuff of nightmares: tiny piglets dying slowly, just out of reach of their
distraught mothers … their bodies left to rot on filth-covered floors, sometimes
in full view of their siblings.

Your much-needed gift of just $3 or more today will help PETA protect piglets and other animals
from such extreme cruelty and neglect.

Donate Now: [[link removed]]

On this farm, as many as 1,200 mother pigs are confined to metal crates barely
any larger than their own bodies, some packed so tightly they can't move at all.
They'll be forced to give birth in cramped crates—just inches above pits
overflowing with their own waste—that prevent them from tending to their babies
during the critical first few weeks of their lives.

This is life inside a pig farm, and we need your help right now to change it.

Please help PETA do more to stop animals' suffering by making a gift of just $3 today.

Pigs used for breeding aren't able to walk freely or even turn
around—confinement that leaves them with atrophied muscles and chronic pain.
They receive no psychological stimulation or even a chance to engage in any
natural behavior. Instead, they're repeatedly impregnated until their bodies
wear out and they're sent to a slaughterhouse.

The piglets who make it through their first few weeks of life will endure having
their tails cut off by workers without any pain relief— their distressed mothers
hearing every agonizing scream —and things won't get any better as they grow. On
this Indiana farm, pigs were found with bloody sores, massive abscesses, and
injured legs, shoulders, and hooves—all of which went untreated. Instead, sick
and injured pigs were just left to languish, experiencing a slow, miserable death
on a maggot-covered floor.

Each one of the sensitive, intelligent animals who manages to survive this cruel
ordeal will be violently killed and dismembered—their flesh turned into bacon or
a holiday roast.

Friend, we're going to do all that we can to stop
this extreme suffering in the year ahead. If you don't want pigs—or any other
animal—to face such horrors in 2020, please give $3 or more to help them.

Donate Now: [[link removed]]

The Indiana farm exposed by an eyewitness previously had ties to JBS USA—a
subsidiary of the world's largest slaughterer of farmed animals. But after
viewing the footage we sent, the company quickly banned this hideous facility
from its supply chain.

When we take action for animals, we get results. But the relentless cruelty of
the global meat industry goes far beyond any one farm—and PETA is determined to
make it stop everywhere that it's taking place .

Footage from this case is inspiring thousands to reconsider who is on their plates.
It's no wonder we've sent out more than 320,000 free copies of our popular vegan
starter kit in 2019 alone, and our colorful protests and eye-catching advertisements
are sure to prompt a wave of consumers to order them in the year ahead.

No animal should ever have to experience the nightmare that the eyewitness
documented on that farm.

Please, make a generous gift of just $3 or more today and help us accomplish even more to stop the
suffering in 2020.

Donate Now: [[link removed]]

Thank you for your compassion and for everything that you do to help pigs and
the many other animals who need us.

Kind regards,

Ingrid E. Newkirk
President
_______________________________________________________________________________________

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 .
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis