- PETA’s Spay Neuter Services for Your Dog or Cat | PETA
PETA’s spay neuter services mean that countless animals will never be left on the streets to fend for themselves, succumb to untreated injuries and illnesses, become the victims of abuse, or be turned over to an animal shelter and have to be euthanized because no one wanted them
- Animal Issues | PETA
PETA is at the forefront of stopping this abuse PETA's millions of supporters around the world know that animals aren't ours to use for food—they're unique individuals with their own wants and needs Every year, billions of animals suffer and die for clothing and accessories
- Why Animal Rights? - PETA
In The PETA Practical Guide to Animal Rights, PETA president Ingrid E Newkirk provides hundreds of tips, stories, and resources It’s PETA’s must-have guide to animal rights
- Animal Testing Facts and Statistics | PETA
PETA created “ Without Consent ”—an interactive timeline featuring almost 200 stories of animal experiments from the past century—to open people’s eyes to the long history of suffering that’s been inflicted on nonconsenting animals in laboratories and to challenge people to rethink this exploitation
- Animal Testing: Animals Used in Experiments | PETA
Scientists in PETA’s Science Advancement Outreach division, a part of the Laboratory Investigations Department, have developed a roadmap to phase out failing tests on animals with sophisticated, animal-free methods
- Action Center: Online Animal Rights Advocacy | PETA
Join PETA’s Action Team to hear about protests, events, and volunteer opportunities in your area You’ll also get tips and ideas to help you advocate for animals
- The Truth About Animal Testing | PETA
“ Without Consent,” PETA’s interactive timeline, features almost 200 stories of twisted experiments, including ones in which dogs were forced to inhale cigarette smoke for months, mice were cut up while still conscious, and cats were deafened, paralyzed, and drowned
- PETAs Work to Help Animals in Our Community | PETA
PETA’s Community Animal Project (CAP) has improved the lives of thousands of animals in Virginia and North Carolina CAP rescues local animals directly—crawling through sewers, poking through junkyards, climbing trees, dodging cars, and coaxing terrified strays to safety
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