Dirty Secret
PETA’s Dirty Secret
Hypocrisy is the mother of all credibility problems, and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has it in spades. While loudly complaining about the “unethical” treatment of animals by restaurant owners, grocers, farmers, scientists, anglers, and countless other Americans, the group has its own dirty little secret.
PETA kills animals. By the thousands.
From July 1998 through December 2009, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) killed over 23,000 dogs, cats, and other “companion animals.” That’s more than five defenseless creatures every day. PETA has a walk-in freezer to store the dead bodies, and contracts with a Virginia Beach company to cremate them.
Not counting the pets PETA spayed and neutered, the group put to death over 90 percent of the animals it took in during the last five years. And its angel-of-death pattern shows no sign of changing.
| Year | Received† | Adopted | Killed | Transferred | % Killed | % Adopted |
| 2009 | 2,366 | 8 | 2,301 | 31 | 97.3 | 0.34 |
| 2008 | 2,216 | 7 | 2,124 | 34 | 95.8 | 0.32 |
| 2007 | 1,997 | 17 | 1,815 | 35 | 90.9 | 0.85 |
| 2006 | 3,061 | 12 | 2,981 | 46 | 97.4 | 0.39 |
| 2005 | 2,165 | 146 | 1,946 | 69 | 89.9 | 6.74 |
| 2004 | 2,655 | 361 | 2,278 | 1 | 85.8 | 13.60 |
| 2003 | 2,224 | 312 | 1,911 | 1 | 85.9 | 14.03 |
| 2002 | 2,680 | 382 | 2,298 | 2 | 85.7 | 14.25 |
| 2001 | 2,685 | 703 | 1,944 | 14 | 72.4 | 26.18 |
| 2000 | 2,681 | 624 | 2,029 | 28 | 75.7 | 23.27 |
| 1999 | 1,805 | 386 | 1,328 | 91 | 73.6 | 21.39 |
| *1998 | 943 | 133 | 685 | 125 | 72.6 | 14.10 |
| Total | 27,478 | 3,091 | 23,640 | 477 | 86.0 | 11.25 |
|
* figures represent the second half of 1998 only † other than spay/neuter animals » Skeptical? Click here to see the proof. |
||||||
On its 2002 federal income-tax return, PETA claimed a $9,370 write-off for a giant walk-in freezer, the kind most people use as a meat locker or for ice-cream storage. But animal-rights activists don’t eat meat or dairy foods. And during a 2007 criminal trial, a PETA manager (testifying under oath) confirmed the obvious — that the group uses the appliance to store the bodies of its victims.
In 2000, when the Associated Press first noted PETA’s Kervorkian-esque tendencies, PETA president Ingrid Newkirk complained that actually taking care of animals costs more than killing them. “We could become a no-kill shelter immediately,” she admitted.
PETA kills animals. Because it has other financial priorities.
PETA rakes in nearly $30 million each year in income, much of it raised from pet owners who think their donations actually help animals. Instead, the group spends huge sums on programs equating people who eat chicken with Nazis, scaring young children away from drinking milk, recruiting children into the radical animal-rights lifestyle, and intimidating businessmen and their families in their own neighborhoods. PETA has also spent tens of thousands of dollars defending arsonists and other violent extremists.
PETA claims it engages in outrageous media-seeking stunts “for the animals.” But which animals? Carping about the value of future two-piece dinners while administering lethal injections to puppies and kittens isn’t ethical. It’s hypocritical — with a death toll that PETA would protest if it weren’t their own doing.
PETA kills animals. And its leaders dare lecture the rest of us?
Martin Luther King, Jr. Quotes
Martin Luther King Jr., US black civil rights leader and clergyman (1929 – 1968)
- In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.
- Hatred paralyzes life; love releases it. Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it. Hatred darkens life; love illuminates it.
- Let no man pull you low enough to hate him.
- Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.
- The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.
Road trip with Via
Via and I went along with a friend, Lisa, and her 6 year old daughter, the Kid Squid, to visit Julie Richards-Mostosky, at Alta-Tollhaus German Shepherds in Marshall, Michigan. They went to pick up a puppy while Via and I were slumming.
The drive each way is about 12 hours. We drove down in a day, spent a day and drove back in a day. It was a quick turn around and we packed a lot in to the short visit.
Via did great. On the way we stopped in Illinois so that Via (and the kid) could spend about 30 minutes running around.

When we arrived, the child climbed into a pool with a litter of 4 week old puppies.

Ms. Via played in the front yard.

Ten year old Funny (V1 Faye vom Kirschental HGH, KKL1), Via’s grandmother, was very interested in the going ons.

I put a bowl in the shower to keep Via from flinging it and all the water around our bedroom. She wasn’t bothered at all by the odd placement.
It was a long day. Ms. Via asked politely to join me in bed for a cuddle. However, as she was more interested in dancing on my head than sleeping, she finished the night in a borrowed crate.

Wednesday was super busy.
My friend and I tested 8 week old puppies.
Via and I took a hike on Julie’s many acres.

Via had her hips and elbows x-rayed for an Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA) preliminary view by Julie’s husband, Dr. “Mos” U.V. Mostosky and her daughter Tiffany Mostosky. They have a clinic right on the property attached to Julie’s training center, Taking the Lead.
Mos read Vias’s x-rays for me as soon as he took and processed the films. He started the veterinary radiology program at Michigan State University, the first veterinary radiology program in the world. I trust his judgment. Though he retired from the MSU in 2008, he is still considered one of the world’s leading experts in veterinary radiology.
“Could not be better,” he said, pointing out the deep sockets and tight fit.
Lisa asked the value of doing a preliminary. I want early knowledge of the hip status on a puppy to plan the dog’s future jobs and training. Mos did Blue’s for me when she was 4 months old and he was still at the University.
Preliminary hip evaluations are as valuable to me as the final OFA evaluation. The OFA accepts preliminary consultation radiographs on puppies as young as 4 months of age for evaluation of hip conformation but I will not be sending mine in.
While Via was sleeping off the tranquilizers used to get her in the mood for the x-rays, Lisa and I went to see Gustavo Sanchez of Lansing MI, a schutzhund trainer work his dogs. I was too busy taking notes, which will be a different post, to make any photos. I will say that I was in AWE. Addicting, is how Lisa described the experience. Here are photo’s of Gustavo working with two of Via’s litter mates earlier in the week. Via and I will be returning to in March to spend a week working with Gustavo.
I returned home to nap the afternoon away with Via.

Monica and Funny came to hang out with us which woke Via.

Funny seemed to enjoy teaching her grand child to share by stealing Via’s favorite bone out of Via’s crate and chewing it on Via’s favorite mat. She later gave Via a lesson about sharing bread, a toy and a container of leftovers. Funny never had to do more than look at Via for Via to back up and say, “Whatever you say, Ma’am.”
I stayed up late chatting with Julie and doing dog chores. I would have liked to stay for year or so.
Watching Funny interact with Via and spending time with Julie were the highlights of the trip.
The drive home the next day was long yet uneventful – except that Paige, who joined us for the return trip, is quite the crate singer.
Shades of Brady
Alta-Tollhaus Epic a.k.a. Brady owned by Michelle gets compliments on his protection work from everyone. Watching Alta-Tollhaus Kapone, owned by Al and Karen, is a like watching a little carbon copy of his older half-brother Brady. They are both Maika sons. These are pictures of K-Pony (Kapone) working for the first time since Christmas break at 7 months of age:
Look at this picture then look at this link: See anything familiar?















