Ed. Note: I have no financial or professional affiliation with PETA. This is in no way to be viewed as response from PETA. The boys at the Center for Consumer Freedom really thought they had something on PETA when they launched “
petakillsanimals.com” and plastered the website address on a billboard at Times Square. PETA haters fanned out across cyberspace to educate message boards and blogs everywhere of PETA’s “dirty little secret.” At petakillsanimals.com, the opening paragraph levels the charge,
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.
While this may sound scandalous and hypocritical at first the only scandal here is a sad tale of companion animal overpopulation. PETA didn’t need to come up with a response to these charges since it was already online and the Center for Consumer Freedom and everyone else who thinks they’ve got damning evidence of PETA’s ill intentions should have at least taken the time to see if PETA had taken a position on euthanasia of animals before charging hypocrisy. PETA publishes fact sheets explaining its positions on various issues. “
Euthanasia: The Compassion Option” begins,
Approximately 6 to 8 million animals are handled by animal shelters in the United States each year. Even though some are reclaimed or adopted, nearly 4 million unwanted dogs and cats are left with nowhere to go. Shelters cannot humanely house and support all these animals until their natural deaths—they would be forced to live for years, lonely and stressed, in cramped cages or kennels, and other animals would have to be turned away because there would not be room for them.
This is the thesis for PETA’s stance on euthanasia. There are many in the animal protection movement who disagree. There is nothing wrong with debate, but agree or not, it is clearly not hypocrisy if their actions correspond with their previously published stance on the issue.
And then there is the whole unfortunate situation with the misguided PETA employees who stupidly dumped the carcasses of 31 euthanized animals illegally in a dumpster. Much to CCF’s glee, they were charged with 31 counts of animal cruelty despite the fact that they had been humanely euthanized. There is no excuse for what the former employees did, and they should have been charged with illegal dumping.
What really gets my blood boiling is the hypocrisy these anti-animal rights (they’re not just anti-PETA, they have a problem with the principles) folks display with their disingenuous outrage over PETA’s practice of euthanasia in hopes of trying to hype up what they think to be (or at least hope to get others to think to be) PETA’s hypocrisy.
Check out this excerpt from an
anti-PETA column published in the San Francisco Gate:
That's right. PETA assails other parties for killing animals for food or research. Then it kills animals -- but for really important reasons, such as running out of room.
To draw a moral equivalence between the lives of misery, torture and slaughter that animals for food are damned to and the humane euthanasia of unwanted dogs and cats is reprehensible. Are these people really too stupid not to understand that this is about suffering.
What you also see a lot of on this subject on the internet is the idea that the reason why PETA euthanizes animals is because they have other spending priorities. It is not merely an economic issue. Yes, you could feed all these animals and hire someone to keep their cages clean but then the animals would live a miserable life deprived of the social interaction and stimulus they deserve.
As for “these animals could have been adopted.” Some of PETA’s animals are adopted, but the larger point is expressed in these statistics - nearly 10 years old - from American Humane.
- Of the 1,000 shelters that replied to the National Council's survey, 4.3 million animals were handled.
- In 1997 roughly 64% of the total number of animals that entered shelters were euthanized -- approximately 2.7 million animals in just these 1,000 shelters. These animals may have been put down due to overcrowding, but may have been sick, aggressive, injured, or suffered something else.
- 56% of dogs and 71% of cats that enter animal shelters are euthanized. More cats are euthanized than dogs because they are more likely to enter a shelter without any owner identification.
- Only 15% of dogs and 2% of cats that enter animal shelters are reunited with their owners.
- 25% of dogs and 24% of cats that enter animal shelters are adopted.
It’s a shame that the only tears that the anti-PETA crowd can muster for these animals are crocodile tears - when what they deserve are real tears and real advocacy.