The Gloves Are Off!
Grab
the Paper Bags-Here Come the Fur Hags
It's winter-time for those fur-clad cavepeople to come lumbering back
onto the streets-a scene that makes as many people shiver from disgust
as from the cold. It's also time for people who care about animals
to shift the anti-fur movement into high gear and take any fur hag
to task.
Our message this winter is this: "Fur-wearers beware!" After
9/11, PETA temporarily suspended its confrontational anti-fur tactics
out of consideration for an already shell-shocked public. But now
the gloves are off, and the essential accessory for fur-wearers has
become a paper bag over their heads to hide their faces from the horrified
expressions on ours.
Minks
and Chinchillas Agree: There Is No "Comfort" in Fur Gorements
Not surprisingly, given their cold-heartedness, furriers took advantage
of a country shaken by the tragedy of 9/11 to promote their cruelly
obtained merchandise as "comfort wear." While Americans
slowly recover from 9/11, the attack on animals packed into fur farms
or dying in traps continues. Minks, foxes, beavers, chinchillas, and
others continue to be separated from their families and companions,
continue to frantically tug at their broken limbs trapped in steel-jawed
traps. On fur farms, they still neurotically pace in their tiny cages
before anal electrocution, suffocation, or neck-breaking painfully
robs them of their precious lives.
Speaking
Up for Foxes in Boxes
PETA is putting everyone involved in this barbaric industry on notice.
Fur-wearers, manufacturers, farmers, trappers, designers, and magazine
editors who promote fur, beware: We're not going to take the fur plague
lying down!
In a stunning bid to show consumers that behind every fur coat, collar,
or cuff was a living animal, Girlfriend star Persia White
held the body of a skinned fox in a new ad for PETA titled "Here's
the Rest of Your Fur Coat," which Persia unveiled at a demonstration
outside the New York Metropolitan Opera's opening night gala. PETA's
anti-fur brigade greeted notoriously "furry" operagoers
with the bodies of skinned foxes, reminding fur-wearers of the sensitive,
timid animals who died for their hideous attire.
Fur
Wearers Can't Hide: Pelt Them for PETA
Here's how you can help. No matter who you are, no matter how shy
or inhibited you are, always confront people wearing fur. Whether
you say, "How did you get the blood out of your coat?" or,
"I hope that's fake," or even yell, "Fur Shame!,"
no one who cares about animals should let fur-wearers get away with
perpetuating this torturous industry.
Cat got your tongue? Hand them one of PETA's new cards that say, "You
look pretty in fur … pretty ugly." Or issue them a new
PETA fashion police anti-fur citation. Their fine can be a donation
to PETA. Organize or join a PETA anti-fur rally in your area. You
can find plenty of ideas on our web
site for activists. We would love to have you join us!
Right
Now
• Right now, there are young, confused, hungry
foxes in a den crying for their mother, who will never come home.
• Right now, there are snow-covered raccoons shivering in
cramped, exposed wire cages on fur farms, where they'll spend the
rest of their sad, empty lives.
• Right now, thousands of frantic minks run in circles inside
their tiny cages day after day, year after year.
• Right now, an alarmed coyote claws furiously at a steel-jaw
leghold trap that bites down on his life-long mate, her bones crushed,
her body limp.
• Right now, a caged wolf sends out her last broken-spirited
howl to her canine family hiding among the trees.
• Right now, an inquisitive, brave lynx furiously fights the
suffocating grasp of a metal trap that clamps down on his neck. He
frantically claws the merciless trap but quickly weakens. His fight
will soon be over. Your fight has just begun.
|