Featured Every action counts! Yours are helping to win victories for animals and save lives. Please ask Expedia to end sales of "swim with dolphins" experiences, ask Free People to help spare goats violent deaths by ditching mohair, urge the Pearl Hotel to stop treating fish like decorative objects, and do even more by taking action on PETA's top 10 alerts for January. Help us end more crude and cruel tests in 2019. Right now, animals in university laboratories are being mutilated, poisoned, deprived of food and water, forcibly immobilized in restraint devices, infected with painful and deadly diseases, burned, electrocuted, irradiated, addicted to drugs, and psychologically tortured. Urge eight schools to stop experimenting on animals now. Wait until you see Buttercup and these other pups in their new doghouses, thanks to PETA and our supporters. Help keep "outdoor dogs" protected from the freezing cold by sponsoring a doghouse during #UnchainADogMonth. PETA has meal plans, vegan mentors, vegan starter kits, nutrition guides, and more to help you go vegan and stay that way. For the past 50 years, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln has released thousands of balloons at each of its home football games. One of these balloons was recently found on a beach in New York—more than 1,200 miles away—but days later, the school still released more of the hazardous items, which animals have choked on. Please contact university officials now. Badgers are driven insane in tiny cages on farms in China, where they languish with untreated injuries before they're violently killed for their fur to make shaving, makeup, and paint brushes. More than 40 companies, including Procter & Gamble and The New York Shaving Company, have already dropped the vile material—now, tell Dick Blick Art Materials, eShave, and Morphe to ban badger-hair brushes immediately in favor of cruelty-free synthetic ones. Academy Award–winning actor Mark Rylance explains that bears exploited for entertainment aren't able to fulfil their drive to hibernate—one of their most basic needs. They're also often prevented from expressing other important types of natural behavior, such as foraging for food and nesting, which can result in severe psychological distress, frustration, and malnourishment. Despite this, exhibitors continue to confine them to tiny transport cages, cart them from city to city, and force them to perform unnatural and confusing tricks. SeaQuest aquariums are notorious for exploiting animals—yet the company wants to open more exhibits in malls across the country. Urgent Action Needed |
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