Showing posts with label Save the Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Save the Animals. Show all posts

PETA Stands For?

People may have different motivations for eating a vegetarian diet. Some chose to be a vegetarian because they want to be healthy, need to reduce weight, bring down their blood pressure and cholesterol, and manage their blood sugars. For some, it’s all about moral and ethical issues. Throughout centuries, we live with the knowledge that man is superior to all other animals on the planet. We use animals for food, clothing, shoes, belts or other accessories. We also use them for scientific experiments for medical innovations.

PETA stands for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, and is an organization devoted to changing that mindset among humans. They are against using animals for food or for clothing, especially for what they consider the needless or particularly inhumane use of animals, such as killing or trapping them for their fur. They are passionate about their cause. In their own words, PETA believes that animals have rights and deserve to have their best interests taken into consideration, regardless of whether they are useful to humans. Like you, they are capable of suffering and have an interest in leading their own lives; therefore, they are not ours to use—for food, clothing, entertainment, experimentation, or any other reason.

We are supposedly an evolved society. But how evolved can a society be that thrives on the suffering of animals? In his excellent book, When Elephants Weep, author Jeffrey Masson explores the emotional lives of animals and presents compelling evidence for it. As a species, we must begin to re-evaluate our place on this earth and where we fit in relation to every other creature that inhabits it. PETA believes this as well and is a passionate advocate for the rights of animals.

Vegetarian: Save the Animals


Why do we eat? We eat to feed our bodies. Many of us obtain an emotional gratification when we eat, and most of us are omnivores, meaning we eat everything, including meat and poultry.

There are many compelling reasons to go with vegetarian diet. Most of them are health-related. However, many people refuse to eat meat because of the inhumane treatment of the animals that are mass-produced to feed the population. Animal farming on the scale that it needs to satisfy U.S. consumption is grotesquely cruel. When you eat meat, you’re eating the flesh of an animal. They’re kept in small pens and cages, where they endure chronic stress. If they bear their young alive, their babies are taken from them, sometimes a day after they’re born. They’re fed with growth hormones and antibiotics and kept from the natural behaviors and actions that characterize the normal life span. Pigs aren’t allowed to root. Calves are kept immobile. Chickens are kept in cages, their beaks seared off with a burning hot knife to thwart aggressive behaviors that are the result of unnatural confinement.

Do you really think the flesh of the animal is separate from its spirit and its energy? The agony and stress they endure in their shortened lives infuses every cell of their bodies. Consider that depression and stress can make humans ill, can infect our muscles and organs. Is an animal different? We don’t need meat or milk for survival. We’re no longer a hunting society; we’re merely a consuming society.

Don't you think it's time we all start thinking differently of what we consume to nourish our bodies? We have evolved from herbivores, and yet we’ve veered off our own evolutionary path. One can make a case for hunting and eating meat when it’s the only means for survival. But that’s no longer the case and our options are many. Do they have to include the flesh of suffering animals? How can that possibly be considered nourishment?