Baguette, Jigglypuff, Juniper, and 16 other dogs all need you terribly right now: Each is as sensitive, smart, and loyal as a canine companion you may know, yet they’re imprisoned in barbaric laboratories without the comfort and care of a loving home.
After PETA exposed the haunting misery and agonizing experiments—including muscle stretching akin to medieval torture—that dozens of dogs endured at Texas A&M University, we’ve been pressuring the school to halt the tests and release all surviving dogs so that they can finally be adopted into safe homes.
Some died in the laboratory without ever knowing a family’s love—and we can’t let that be the case for these 19 survivors.
More than half a million PETA supporters have responded to our action alerts targeting Texas A&M for its canine muscular dystrophy experiments. We’ve held dozens of protests, partnered with celebrities and 500 physicians to stop the cruelty, and prevailed in free-speech lawsuits when the school tried to silence PETA and our supporters.
We’ve made huge progress: The experiments have ended, and more than 50 dogs have been released and adopted. But 19 dogs—12 of whom are healthy and don’t have canine muscular dystrophy—are still trapped at Texas A&M. There’s no reason at all for the school to hang on to them.
They’re desperately waiting for a chance to receive the care and affection that every dog deserves. You can help give them that chance.
This e-mail was sent to sajanram.shrestha@blogger.com. 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.
We’ve set a deadline of October 31 to raise $300,000 through the “Stop Animal Testing” Challenge. Gifts made after that date or after our goal has been met will not be matched, but they’ll still make a tremendous difference to PETA’s work against cruel and archaic experiments on animals. PETA is grateful to David J. Reuben for providing the funds for the matching-gift challenge.
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