Sunday, June 24, 2012

One Year Later: Joplin Adoption Event

June 22, 2012

A year ago, the ASPCA and animal lovers from across the country were in Joplin, Missouri, making history and headlines. During a two-day adoption event, we placed hundreds of canine and feline tornado survivors in loving homes.
More than 1,300 animal survivors came to our emergency shelter after an EF5 tornado hit Joplin. After reuniting hundreds with their families, we still had 700 whose pet parents could not take them home. So at our Joplin Adoption Event on June 25 and 26, 2011, the ASPCA and Joplin Humane Society (JHS) opened the doors and got busy finding homes for the little survivors.
After just a few hours, we were almost clean out of animals.
But what happened next? According to JHS, those animals stayed in their homes; very few made their way back to the shelter, and all ultimately found forever homes. The dogs now live in surrounding communities, as well as in states as far away as California, New York and Illinois. We’ve heard tons of happy adoption stories, one of them from Tiffany Paige of Chicago.
“I volunteered in Joplin after the tornado, and after spending so much time with all the homeless animals, I felt it was the right time to adopt,” says Paige. “Not only was I getting the dog I had longed for, I was also making room for another animal to potentially find a home.”
She adds: “I knew he was the one when I looked into his crate at JHS and saw him cowering and shivering in the corner. He had such sad eyes and was really, really scared. When I picked him up for the first time, he licked my face and wiggled in my arms. He stopped trembling, and I knew he was mine. I named him Joplin to honor those who lost so much in the tornado and as a reminder of my time spent there.”
Today, Joplin comes to work every day with Paige at her furniture and home goods boutique in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood. He’s one lucky pup—and so are the hundreds of others who found loving homes at the Joplin adoption event.
Did you adopt an animal from the Joplin adoption event? Tell us about it at happytails@aspca.org.

Victory—U.S. Horse Slaughter Rejected by U.S. House Committee!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012 - 3:30pm
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Horse
Horse lovers across America can celebrate a big victory. The U.S. House Appropriations Committee just approved an amendment that will prevent taxpayer dollars from being used by the U.S. Department of Agriculture to inspect U.S. horse slaughter facilities. By blocking this federal funding, the House has taken its first step to ensure that horse slaughter facilities cannot legally operate on U.S. soil. We will need your help to ensure this provision gets through the whole House and the Senate, so stay tuned for upcoming advocacy alerts.
While our current Congress has prided itself on reducing government spending, last year's agriculture funding bill actually omitted this provision—opening the U.S. market to the horse slaughter industry.
"Using taxpayer dollars to fund this abhorrent industry is a wildly unpopular decision," says Nancy Perry, ASPCA Senior Vice President of Government Relations. "At a time when funding for many vital programs is being cut, it is imperative that Congress not use $5 million of taxpayers' money to fund horse slaughter, a cruel practice that benefits only foreign interests."
Take Action!
Rep. Moran’s amendment to the Agriculture Appropriations bill protects American communities from the devastating environmental and economic impact of horse slaughter facilities, but the bill still has to pass the full House of Representatives. The House will vote on the bill on Tuesday, June 26. Please contact your U.S. representative today and urge him or her to pass the bill with the Moran Amendment intact and reject any attempts to fund horse slaughter during fiscal year 2013!

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

   Dear Jennifer,

For two years, Tilikum lived the wondrous life of a free orca infant, swimming without restraint in the waters of the Atlantic Ocean. This tranquility was soon interrupted when a capture crew traumatically separated him from his family and the ocean and dumped him into a tiny pool. Tilikum has been enslaved for more than 30 years since he was first trapped, eventually being sold into a SeaWorld prison, where he is forced to perform tricks and has little to look at other than the cement walls of his tank.

You can help support PETA's groundbreaking work for Tilikum and other exploited and abused animals by making a much-needed gift today.

Enraged from his constant confinement and lack of anything natural or pleasant to do, Tilikum acted out in 2010 and violently attacked and drowned his trainer. In fact, Tilikum has caused three human deaths during his decades of enslavement. But instead of recognizing the tragedy as a sign that Tilikum is an intelligent animal who is suffering immensely from captivity, his SeaWorld captors punished the massive orca with a year of total isolation in an even tinier tank. For some of that time, Tilikum languished in a concrete tank just 2 feet longer than his own body.

Beyond the physical stress of confinement, imprisoning orcas causes them severe psychological distress. Orcas are among the most social animals on the planet, many spending their entire lives in close-knit matriarchal groups that communicate through family-specific dialects. To be locked up and forced to work against one's will is awful for any living being. But for orcas like Tilikum, the abuse is mind-numbingly cruel.

Orcas are the largest animals held in captivity—Tilikum himself weighs more than 12,000 pounds. In the wild, orcas are in near-constant motion, even when they are resting. They travel up to 100 miles every day and spend up to 90 percent of their time under the water's surface—something that's nearly impossible at SeaWorld, where only two of the seven tanks are even as deep as Tilly is long.

We need to do all that we can to free Tilly and other animal prisoners like him, and I hope you'll help. Please make a generous donation online right now.

PETA recently put Tilly's case on the map by taking groundbreaking action: We sued SeaWorld on behalf of Tilikum and four other wild-caught orcas who are imprisoned there. For the first time in history, a federal judge listened to arguments that the definition of slavery does not depend on the species of the slave any more than it depends on race, ethnicity, or gender. Although the case did not move forward, the significant media coverage that it received and academic and legal debate that it stirred have generated a public outcry against SeaWorld and other entertainment-industry slaveholders. This landmark case mirrors the many court decisions that, in our past, denied certain humans rights that we now accept as fundamental. Each step was crucial to the expansion of rights.

Your help today will strengthen PETA's efforts for all animals and help us do even more to get SeaWorld to release Tilikum and the other animals it enslaves and move them to coastal wildlife sanctuaries, where some can eventually make the transition back to the ocean, where they belong.

No animal deserves the loneliness, confinement, and denial of nearly all that is natural and important to them that Tilly has endured for more than three decades. Thank you for standing up for orcas and other animals who are yearning for freedom.

Kind regards,
Ingrid Newkirk
Ingrid E. Newkirk
President

P.S. Tilikum and animals like him need PETA and our millions of dedicated supporters to free them from a lifetime of confinement and exploitation. Please help us do even more for them with your secure gift today.

   
PETA logo Tilikum: milan.bores/cc by 2.0 | Orca in tank: wendypiersall/cc by 2.0
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