Tuesday, April 7, 2009

humane society is not what you think it is…

When many of you hear the words “Humane Society”, you think of sad little puppies and kitties who are abandoned and need a home. There is a humane society for those dogs and cats, but many people confuse that with the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), the animal rights activists group.

Today’s animal rights movement has never wavered from its ultimate aim: the complete abolition of a long list of consumer choices that most Americans enjoy. These include meat, dairy foods, hunting, fishing, zoos, aquariums, circuses, rodeos, fur, leather, wool, and silk. Activists even want to do away with vital medical research that uses animals—the very lifesaving work that provides insulin could one day cure cancer.

Inch by inch, groups like PETA, PCRM, and HSUS continue to advance toward a society that views human beings as no different from (and no more important than) barnyard livestock and lab rats. And they have an army of people behind them.  HSUS has been quietly trying to get Carrie Underwood voted Entertainer of the Year via the Academy of Country Music. The problem is, a large percentage of country music fans are also gun owners and hunters who do not like Carrie Underwood’s active support for HSUS. And HSUS knows it.  Nonetheless, they aimed to get enough votes for Carrie Underwood to win the ACM Entertainer of the Year, and they succeeded.

Additionally, PETA killed a record number of pets in 2008. Despite its $32 million budget, PETA does not operate an adoption shelter. And its employees make no discernible effort to find homes for the thousands of pets they kill every year. According to public records from the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, since 1998 a total of 21,339 dogs and cats have died at the hands of PETA workers. Last year, PETA killed 2,124 pets and placed only seven in adoptive homes. PETA and HSUS have false premises and don’t let the public know everything to keep themselves protected. Let’s all tell the truth about what animal right’s activists are doing and spread the truth about animal welfare and animal agriculture.

A little knowledge can be a powerful thing. Share these “7 things you didn’t know” resources with a friend, a family member, your government officials, or even your community’s newspaper or TV news team.

This is a summary of the “7 THINGS YOU DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT HSUS”, but you can click here to read more.

1) The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) is a “humane society” in name only, since it doesn’t operate a single pet shelter or pet adoption facility anywhere in the United States. During 2006, HSUS contributed only 4.2 percent of its budget to organizations that operate hands-on dog and cat shelters.

2) Beginning on the day of NFL quarterback Michael Vick’s 2007 dogfighting indictment, HSUS raised money online with the false promise that it would “care for the dogs seized in the Michael Vick case.”

3) HSUS’s senior management includes a former spokesman for the Animal Liberation Front (ALF), a criminal group designated as “terrorists” by the FBI. HSUS president Wayne Pacelle hired John “J.P.” Goodwin in 1997, the same year Goodwin described himself as “spokesperson for the ALF” while he fielded media calls in the wake of an ALF arson attack at a California veal processing plant.

4) According to a 2008 Los Angeles Times investigation, less than 12 percent of money raised for HSUS by California telemarketers actually ends up in HSUS’s bank account.

5) Research shows that HSUS’s heavily promoted U.S. “boycott” of Canadian seafood—announced in 2005 as a protest against Canada’s annual seal hunt—is a phony exercise in media manipulation.

6) HSUS raised a reported $34 million in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, supposedly to help reunite lost pets with their owners. But comparatively little of that money was spent for its intended purpose.

7) After gathering undercover video footage of improper animal handling at a Chino, CA slaughterhouse during November of 2007, HSUS sat on its video evidence for three months, even refusing to share it with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

1 comment:

Chelsea Good said...

Kelsey,
Thanks for getting the word our about HSUS and what they really stand for. Your right, many people hear the name and assume the HSUS is connected with local humane shelters.
Rush Limbaugh recorded some messages for the HSUS last week and there's a movement to contact him and let him know why it's a bad partnership.
http://beefbites.wordpress.com/2009/04/20/rush-gets-rushed/
Chelsea