Written by PETA
Don't let your dog or cat appear on 16 Weeks and Pregnant. Spay and neuter.
A PETA member found a fun way for her little car to send a big message in the Big Apple.
New York resident Emily McCoy wants NYC to go v-e-g to save animals and the planet. Switching to a vegan diet is easier than navigating bridge-and-tunnel traffic and more effective in preventing climate change than switching to a hybrid car. So we can have our vegan cake and our classic cars too.
Written by Michelle Sherrow
While we don't encourage anyone to try to replicate this elsewhere, it looks like someone has figured out a way to make an entire street vegan:
Egan Street in Sydney, Australia, already boasted a vegan pizza place, but if the city decides to stick with the name, could more animal-friendly businesses be far behind?
When our beauties in the buff graced Bourbon Street to show that baring skin is better than wearing skin, one passerby was so inspired that he shed his shirt and joined in.
While it takes a lot to raise eyebrows in New Orleans, the ladies (and gent) managed to capture the attention of hundreds of passersby, who walked away with informative leaflets about the cruel fur and leather industries.
It looks like the Pearly Gates aren't too far away from the Golden Arches. Snapped outside a McDonald's near PETA's headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia, this photo gives new meaning to the phrase "Big Mac attack":
Written by Jared Misner
While shopping for our picture of the month, we unearthed this fleshy photo and knew we'd struck cellophane-wrapped celluloid gold.
The photo was taken outside a pig slaughterhouse in Toronto as part of a demonstration aiming to show people that all animals have the same parts and are made of flesh and bone.
“So a policeman and a chicken walk into a bar …” In our favorite photo this month, taken during a protest outside a KFC in Montrose, Colorado, a police officer confers with a chicken about … what? Maybe the proper spelling of “potato”? Share your thoughts about what these two could be discussing below.
If you have a general question for PETA and would like a response, please e-mail Info@peta.org. If you need to report cruelty to an animal, please click here. If you are reporting an animal in imminent danger and know where to find the animal and if the abuse is taking place right now, please call your local police department. If the police are unresponsive, please call PETA immediately at 757-622-7382 and press 2.
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