There are only two things that the misnamed People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) are really good at. Bamboozling the public and killing
animals. Recently PETA has agreed to
pay $49,000 to Wilber Zarate, the owner of Maya, a dog that PETA operatives
were recently caught stealing and killing in Virginia. The
complicit mainstream media has gone along with PETA to rewrite Maya’s history
by portraying Maya as some sort of unowned stray that they picked up out of the
goodness of their heart and then accidently killed. The
media used such words as “unattended” and “unleashed” in their stories to make
it look like Maya was some sort of abandoned stray but in fact, PETA stole Maya
off her owner’s porch. Of course she
wasn’t leashed, she was at home! To add insult to injury, PETA tried to give
the Zarate family a vegan fruit basket in place of their dead dog. This isn’t the first time PETA has been
caught stealing and killing animals.
Back in 2005, the Piggly Wiggly Dumpster trial in North Carolina was
front page news.
"In 2005, two PETA employees were
caught in North Carolina operating a mobile death van. These activists were driving around
collecting up animals to kill inside the van and dumping their bodies behind a
Piggly Wiggly grocery store dumpster before heading back home to the Norfolk
headquarters. The two employees, Adria
Hinkle and Andrew Cook, were caught after police set up surveillance on a
dumpster behind a grocery store after regularly finding trash bags filled with
the bodies of dead dogs and cats in them." Staring
the Dragon in the Eye: The Hidden
Victims of Animal Extremists.
So much for PETA’s unfortunate accidents. PETA
claimed that Mr. Zarate sued them simply because “no kill” activists encouraged
him to do so because they are upset that PETA kills almost every animal they get
their hands on. The complicit media
helped them neatly side step the fact they were caught stealing someone’s
dog.
Killing innocent cats and dogs aren’t the only animals that
activists harm. I've written extensively
in my book, The
Art of Terror: Inside the Animal Rights
Movement about the animal rights infiltration into the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA). As I wrote in my book, their head elephant
expert knows nothing about elephants and their horse expert hates horses. Activists cozy up to government in order to
shut down businesses they are ideologically opposed too. If you want proof, just look at the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Regarding the 2014, USDA exotic animal symposium for tiger owners, “[S]even of the 18 subject presenters were people whose personal philosophy is hostile toward keeping exotics in captivity, against captive breeding of exotics, against hand raising of any wild animals, and who have strong ties with animal rights groups activity lobbying for laws and regulations banning exotic animal ownership completely.” Kurtis B. Reeg, counsel for The Cavalry Group.
In an effort to shut down all of America’s zoos, PETA has
sued or threatened to sue one zoo after another. After targeting the
DeYoung Zoo and others, the animal abolitionists
from PETA are now targeting Cathy Stearn’s 22-acre Dale City’s Wild Things animal
rehabilitation and zoological facility in Florida. Surprising no one in the animal industry, PETA
sent two activists in to work undercover at Wild Things to find abuse of
animals. PETA’s subsequent animal abuse
video has caused a social media firestorm among young Americans. Blogs
and petitions wallpaper the Internet claiming Wild Things abuses baby tigers
with no proof other than the word of a 20 year old brainwashed high school
dropout. Wild Things has now sued PETA
operatives Jenna Jordan and Delena
Pennington.
At the same time, Wild Things is fighting against a
PETA/USDA lawsuit. Of the USDA lawsuit,
"On Monday, Stearn's called the USDA lawsuit unfounded and said the agency
has piled on violations for minor infractions like having a nail sticking out
of a wood plank. They
are throwing the book at me," Stearns said. "I have some of the
fattest and healthiest tigers people have seen, so tell me I'm doing something
wrong." Wild Things owner
Cathy Stearns was forced to do an emergency evacuation of her tigers to save
them. Stearn's 19 tigers were
transported to a private zoo in Oklahoma.
Tragically 3 tiger cubs died during the emergency evacuation. Not willing to give up, the vegan lawyers of
PETA convinced a Judge that they are somehow some sort of animal experts and
demanded and were given the right to inspect a private business.
Let that one sink in.
The U.S. Marshalls escorted a vegan extremist group with a sordid
history of killing animals into a private business and gave the extremist group
protection while these private activists searched through private
property. One of the activists who accompanied PETA on
their inspection was Jay Pratt, who spoke at the 2014 USDA anti-exotic animal
conference.
Once Stearns and about 20 Wild Things supporters in shirts reading
"PETA kills" moved aside, the group followed PETA experts throughout
the two-hour inspection, "making abusive remarks" and doing
"everything they could kind of physically getting in our way," said
PETA legal counsel Jenni James.
Stearns' husband, Kenneth, and son, Randy, were also armed,
"touching their holsters and posturing, following us every step of the way,"
James said.
The court filing from PETA reads like their typical side
show circus. PETA objects to the fact
that the Oklahoma Zoo sedated the tigers to safely remove them from the
transport trailer then they claim the unloading was highly stressful to the
animals.
Really? I thought
the animals were sedated? How can they
be so highly stressed if they are asleep?
Meanwhile, in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey, one of PETA’s mobile
slaughterhouse vans, euphemistically called the “Community
Animal Project” was allegedly spotted in Houston, Texas.
To prevent animal looting in the aftermath of natural
disasters, state legislatures need to pass laws outlawing animals from being
exported across state lines by anyone but their owners. I’ve written extensively in the past about
shady rescues that steal animals out of their owner’s backyards and ship them
out of state to resell as tornado/hurricane rescues. Now activists are swooping in to simply kill
them on the spot while businesses such as Wild Things struggle to recover from
a natural disaster.
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