Local Illustrator Nabs First-Ever ‘Advocacy Through Art’ Award From PETA

His depiction of a family of turkeys gathered around a table with a human on the serving platter went viral on X (formerly Twitter), and now visionary vegan artist Choice has nabbed PETA’s first-ever Advocacy Through Art Award for creating an immersive world in which other animals have power over humans and exploit us in all the ways we use them. His surreal, conversation-sparking images include a man suckling a cow, Santa Claus chowing down on a reindeer, and a camel riding an exhausted tourist.

Credit: Choice

“Through his remarkable artwork, Choice gives viewers food for thought about how humans treat other animals, including by using them as meat and milk machines, wearing their skin, treating them as taxis for tourists, and more,” says PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman. “PETA is honored to recognize Choice for flipping our human-supremacist world on its head and encouraging others to eat and live vegan—for the sake of everyone.”

Choice’s art includes moving messages against the dairy industry, in which female cows are forcibly impregnated repeatedly, only to be separated from their beloved babies; the dog-sledding industry, in which dogs are tethered to plastic barrels in the cold when not forced to run such long distances that many choke to death on their own vomit; the leather industry, in which cows’ throats are slit in filthy slaughterhouses; and the fishing industry, in which fish are violently gutted on boat decks and scores of other aquatic animals, including over 11,400 sharks every hour, are killed as “bycatch.” PETA offers a free vegan starter kit here and a guide to living compassionately without relying on animal suffering here.

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way”—points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on X, Facebook, or Instagram.

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Dog Who Saved Philly Block From Gas Leak Nabs National Award

A Heroic Dog Award is on its way from PETA to a local dog named Kobe, who saved his neighborhood last month from a potentially deadly gas leak.

Kobe’s guardian, Chanell Bell, told PETA that he first tried to alert her to the gas leak by digging a hole in their yard. She covered it up—but a few days later, Kobe returned to the same spot, dug another large hole, and stood over it, looking serious and determined. Bell checked the hole with a gas-detection device, found that there was a gas leak, and notified the gas company. Responders found, in total, three mainline gas leaks entering homes in the neighborhood, including Bell’s. If unchecked, the leaks could have caused respiratory issues, brain damage, death—or an explosion.

Photo courtesy of Chanell Bell

Bell told PETA that Kobe is a rescued dog she adopted at 6 months old. She now considers him her protector and even published a book about how he saved their neighborhood.

“Kobe’s intelligence and determination saved his guardian, his neighbors, and his whole block,” says PETA Senior Vice President Colleen O’Brien. “His story reminds us that many loving, dedicated dogs are just waiting for the right family to come along, and PETA encourages anyone with the ability and resources to care for an animal to adopt one from a local shelter and never to buy from a pet shop or breeder.”

PETA is sending Bell a framed certificate along with a “doggie bag” of goodies for Kobe to enjoy.

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way”—points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, or Instagram.

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Video: Nearly 900 Dogs, Cats Bled and Caged for Life at Blood Bank Tied to Ethos Veterinary Health

Stray kittens as well as dogs and cats seeking good homes and found through online ads and Facebook posts have ended up caged and repeatedly bled at a facility that says it supplies blood to locally based Ethos Veterinary Health, a breaking PETA undercover investigation reveals. The Veterinarians’ Blood Bank in Indiana confines nearly 900 animals to barren kennels and severely crowded pens, where the constant din of barking is deafening, and draws their blood every three weeks—even from animals who suffer from infections and cancer—while coaching staff to keep the operation “hush-hush.” Video footage is available here, and photographs are available here.

PETA has sent a letter to Ethos Veterinary Health—which reported $2 billion in revenue this year and operates 145 specialty hospitals across the country—alerting the corporation to its findings and urging it to obtain blood only from healthy dogs and cats who live in homes with loving families.

PETA’s video footage reveals that some animals kept captive at the blood bank were emaciated; that many had pressure sores and growths from being forced to lie on hard floors without respite; that dogs were seen with wounds after being attacked by stressed kennelmates—including one who developed a deep infection of the skin and underlying tissue, causing a massive wound that still hadn’t healed seven weeks later; that cats with respiratory infections were still bled; and other atrocities. Even senior animals and those too small to be used for blood collection were warehoused indefinitely. As one worker said, they “stay here until they die.”

jane orange cat

Jane, whom a manager had planned to leave at “a barn out in a field” because she was too sick to be used for blood draws

“Animals at this supplier are treated like live blood bags, serving a life sentence amid deafening noise and in barren pens, denied a home or family, and deprived of needed medical attention and any semblance of joy,” says PETA Senior Vice President Daphna Nachminovitch. “PETA is calling on Ethos Veterinary Health to immediately reexamine its relationship with this crude and cruel operation and any other blood bank that imprisons and exploits animals until they take their last breath.”

A manager offered workers $200 for each cat they brought to the facility, saying, “Where you get [them] from is not my business.” She said that she had acquired other cats from online ads seeking a good home for them. After a worker brought in kittens she said she “found off … Facebook,” one died, apparently having received no veterinary care. A manager said that workers aren’t blamed for animals’ deaths, stating, “They’re replaceable.”

PETA’s investigator persuaded the facility to let them adopt some of the animals held there, including Vivi, a 4-pound cat who cried out in pain from a lingering mouth infection for which she was denied adequate veterinary care. The investigator rushed her to a veterinarian, who determined that her mouth was so infected that all her teeth had to be removed. They also adopted Kolbie, a 12-year-old hound who was born at the facility and had been subjected to a “horrible” debarking surgery (during which, a worker admitted, animals “bleed so bad” and that was performed only because the blood bank’s owners wanted to keep dogs quiet). And they adopted a cat named Jane, whom a manager had planned to leave at “a barn out in a field” because she thought she had feline herpesvirus, and another cat named Fox, who was 13 years old and had bloody diarrhea that had evidently not been treated. After his adoption, a veterinarian determined that Fox had gastrointestinal cancer, so he was euthanized.

PETA has also alerted the other large veterinary chains that The Veterinarians’ Blood Bank lists as clients to its findings and asked the Indiana State Board of Animal Health to investigate the facility for apparent violations of state law, seek an injunction stripping it of its license, and pursue other relief to protect the hundreds of animals still confined there.

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way”—points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, or Instagram.

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‘Hell on Wheels’ Is Coming: Squawking Chicken Truck to Ruffle Feathers Outside Fort Myers and Cape Coral Restaurants

Diners in Fort Myers and Cape Coral just might think twice about chowing down on fried chicken after they see—and hear—“Hell on Wheels,” PETA’s guerilla-marketing campaign featuring a life-size chicken transport truck covered with images of real chickens crammed into crates on their way to a slaughterhouse, complete with actual recorded sounds of the birds’ cries and a subliminal message every 10 seconds suggesting that people go vegan.

When:    Saturday, January 20, 12 noon (Fort Myers), and Thursday, January 25, 12 noon (Cape Coral)

Where:    Outside Ford’s Garage, 2207 First St., Fort Myers, and McDonald’s, 1222 Cape Coral Pkwy. E., Cape Coral

The vexatious vehicle will debut outside Ford’s Garage on First Street in Fort Myers before moving on to confront diners at Wings and Rings, Pollo Tropical, Zaxby’s, PDQ, Buckett’s Wings & More, and Patinella’s Chicken Grill. The following week in Cape Coral, the truck will ruffle feathers at McDonald’s on Cape Coral Parkway E. before moving on to Wendy’s, Hurricane Grill & Wings, Buffalo Wild Wings, Popeyes, Chick-fil-A, Wingnuts, and other restaurants.

“Behind every barbecued wing or bucket of fried chicken is a once-living, sensitive individual who was crammed onto a truck for a terrifying, miserable journey to their death,” says PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman. “PETA’s ‘Hell on Wheels’ truck is an appeal to anyone who eats chicken to remember that the meat industry is cruel to birds and the only kind meal is a vegan one.”

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to eat”— points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness.

For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, or Instagram.

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Eugene Airport Lands PETA Appeal: Wearing Wool Is Just Plane Wrong!

Travelers heading to baggage claim at Eugene Airport just might rethink any wool scarves and sweaters they’ve packed when they see PETA’s pro-sheep messaging blitz reminding everyone arriving in Oregon—a top 10 state in terms of sheep population—to pick something other than the stolen coats of sheep, who are bred to overproduce wool and who are routinely beaten, mutilated, and killed in the wool industry. (PETA has the video footage to prove it.)

“Every sheep is someone, not something for the taking, and these gentle, thinking, feeling individuals don’t deserve to be pinned down and sliced to ribbons for fleeting fashions,” says PETA President Ingrid Newkirk. “PETA encourages everyone to stay warm with cozy vegan fabrics and keep anything taken from animals off their shopping lists.”

PETA entity investigations have uncovered cruelty to sheep at over 100 wool operations worldwide—even on “responsible” farms, where shearers have been seen punching, stomping, kicking, and throwing around sheep. Shearers are often paid by volume, incentivizing them to work recklessly, and sheep are often left bloodied and in pain as a result. The gaping wounds caused by careless shearers are then crudely stitched up—without painkillers. Fortunately, most top retailers offer clothing made of natural eco- and animal-friendly vegan fabrics, including organic cotton, linen, Tencel, and modal.

PETA’s ads are located at baggage claim in the Eugene Airport Terminal Building, 28801 Douglas Dr.

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to wear or abuse in any other way”—points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, or Instagram.

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