Win An iPod Shuffle By Helping Stop Deadly Training Exercises On Animals! August 26, 2009
Posted by Pulin Modi at August 26, 2009 5:09 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 16 ) | TrackBackThe U.S. military has declared war on animals by burning, stabbing, and shooting them in unnecessary training exercises, and it's time to fight back! Animals need you to enlist in the army of animal lovers willing to speak out against these cruel exercises. If you go above and beyond the call of duty for this mission, you'll be in with a great chance to win an iPod Shuffle (see details below).
Enlist Now
Join the battle for animals by signing the Facebook petition to end military trauma training on animals.
Recruit Your Friends
Click "Ask Friends to Sign" on the petition page to recruit your friends to this cause. The more invites you send out, the more people you will recruit. Tell them how live pigs are shot, stabbed, and burned; live goats have their legs broken with bolt cutters and cut off with shears; and live monkeys are poisoned with harmful chemicals!

Go Home Victorious
The individual who recruits the most petition signatures by September 10th wins the iPod Shuffle (we'll let you know if you're the winner by the 14th).
Share the petition on your Facebook wall, and everywhere else you can. The harder you fight the larger the impact you'll make and the greater the chance you'll go home with an iPod in hand.
Please take action today for all the monkeys, pigs, sheep, and other non-human victims killed in military training. Humane, responsible training is essential in our effort to work towards a peaceful world. Learn more about this campaign at peta2.com/trauma.
Heads up: By entering the contest you're acknowledging that you've read and agreed to our privacy policy and the contest terms and conditions.
Good luck, soldier!
URGENT: Why Is the Military Torturing Animals? August 19, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at August 19, 2009 6:05 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 22 ) | TrackBack
TAGGED:
trauma trauma training military trauma
If it's not enough that both medical tests and product tests on animals are unreliable, wasteful and cruel, the U.S. military continues to shoot pigs, cut apart goats, and poison and burn monkeys in the name of war.
Animals don't start wars, and can't choose to fight, and there is simply no reason for the U.S. to continue torturing animals in the name of experiments that are outdated—while reliable, modern and effective alternatives and treatments exist.
Even though other countries have decided that, obviously, chopping up animals and experimenting on their dead bodies—which aren't the same as ours—is not effective, the Department of Defense and military bases in the U.S. haven't heard our voices clear enough.
Check out peta2's new Military Trauma campaign site and help us end military experiments now!
Monkeys Need Your Help July 16, 2009
Posted by Pulin Modi at July 16, 2009 9:17 AM | Permalink | Comments ( 52 ) | TrackBackYou're probably all familiar with our Animal Testing Breaks Hearts campaign against product testing on animals, but let's not forget that animals are being experimented on elsewhere, too.
Did you know that the U.S. Army conducts a lot of animal experiments? The U.S. Army is currently injecting toxic drugs into live monkeys and bacteria directly into their eyelids! And records show that chemical and biological casualty care training exercises have caused monkeys' internal organs to burst.
It's probably more horrifying than you or I could ever imagine, so we're asking the U.S. government to limit funding to only non-animal experiments (there are plenty of humane ways to conduct research without torturing animals).
If you're a U.S. resident, please contact your representative today.
Thank you!
peta2 <3's Bolivia July 14, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at July 14, 2009 3:19 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 9 ) | TrackBack ![]() |
Remember Bolivia? A few months ago, we told you about their trauma training exercises where dogs were being cut into and having their insides torn out. We told you, and the Bolivian government. Within a month, Bolivia's President Evo Morales banned the use of all animals in military exercises.
Now, the day has finally arrived when "It is forbidden to use wild and/or domestic animals in circuses throughout the country." in Bolivia. As far as we know, Bolivia is the first country in the world to enact such a landmark measure for animals abused in circuses.
With the passage of this new law, elephants, lions, tigers, horses, dogs, and all other animals who are forced to live in shackles or cages—and are routinely beaten into submission in order to perform unnatural circus "tricks"—will no longer be subjected to these cruelties in Bolivia.
And as if that weren't enough, PETA is now working closely with the Bolivian government on the country's first national animal protection framework law. If the measure is adopted, it would make Bolivia a global leader in animal welfare.
On behalf of animals in Bolivia, muchas gracias to President Morales, Member of Congress Ximena Flores, and concerned citizen Ana Serrano Revollo for all their hard work in making this law prohibiting animal circuses a reality! And thanks to all of you, who continue to help show the world that you care!
Military Trauma Experiments are Torture July 8, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at July 8, 2009 2:12 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 7 ) | TrackBackRemember a couple of months ago when Bolivia banned the use of animals in all military tests? Well for years PETA has been pushing the United States to do the same.
Through the Freedom of Information Act, the Physicians Committeee for Responsible Medicine (PRCM) has obtained video footage of several Department of Defense military trauma training exercises, and if you've ever needed anymore evidence as to just how cruel, unusual and outright disgusting these needless tests are, see below.
In training exercises that are supposed to simulate the effects of a nerve agent attack, monkeys experience seizures and difficulty breathing. Using monkeys in this exercise is profoundly inhumane, and it also distracts military personnel from the real-world, clinically valid training they need to treat chemical casualties.
Every year, thousands of live animals are shot, stabbed, dismembered, burned, and poisoned in Department of Defense (DoD) training exercises designed to train medics and infantry in how to treat various human battlefield injuries.
What can you do to help? Ask the Department of Defense to act now to end military trauma testing on animals.
Victory: Bolivia Ends All Military Combat Exercises on Animals! April 1, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at April 1, 2009 1:30 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 90 ) | TrackBackAfter seeing a video of Bolivian soldiers violently stabbing and torturing live dogs for trauma training last month—and hearing that it was supposedly what the U.S Army taught them to do—most of us were left with two things: an upset stomach, and the question of why this ever has to happen to any animal in the name of war.
Thousands of you wrote to Bolivia and asked them to immediately end all use of animals in military combat exercises. And because of you, dogs and other animals in this country—for the very first time—are protected under a brand new regulation that puts to an end the torture and killing of animals in military exercises!
On Monday, the Minister of Defense in Bolivia, Walker San Miguel, issued a resolution to prohibit the abuse and killing of animals in military exercises. San Miguel declared that "we are issuing a Resolution 217, by which we prohibit all acts of violence, exploitation, mistreatment that provokes the death of animals".
There's no excuse for any country to torture and kill animals—and we want the Department of Defense in the U.S to hear this message loud and clear. Tell the United States to follow Bolivia's lead and stop burning, shooting, poisoning and stabbing live animals in medical-training exercises now.
On behalf of animals everywhere—thank you!
Dogs Being Stabbed in Military Combat Training? March 11, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at March 11, 2009 2:45 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 10 ) | TrackBack
TAGGED:
dogs military Bolivia trauma trauma training
The video below terrifies me. Not only because it's a video of soldiers stabbing live dogs and then biting their organs, but also because this is what the Bolivian soldiers state the US Army taught them to do to prepare for war. This training partnership is confirmed by a written agreement signed by the two countries. In the U.S., the Department of Defense currently stabs, shoots, poisons, burns, and cuts the limbs off thousands of living animals each year in medical-training exercises. The U.S. exercises differ from those used by the Bolivian military, but the victims are the same—innocent animals.

In these military exercises, Bolivian soldiers state that stray dogs are kidnapped, restrained, violently stabbed and killed. And in the video, the soldiers are seen cutting open the animals and removing their organs. One of the instructors in the video removes a dog's heart, and rubs it on soldiers' faces. Another soldier cuts open a dog's chest and inserts his head into the wound to remove the dog's insides.
This sounds like a bad horror movie, but instead it's the disgusting truth of what is happening to dogs and other animals for military combat training while other more humane and less horrific methods exist.
Please send a letter to the Bolivian government asking them to end trauma training on animals immediately.
Meet Noelia. She's From Bolivia. March 5, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at March 5, 2009 5:33 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 3 ) | TrackBackNoelia is hardcore. A few weeks ago she let us know about one of her protests against animal testing and the fur industry in her home country of Bolivia, and we were blown away! There was a huge crowd of people, props, and fake blood—so of course we loved it!
Check out a short interview I did with her about all of the work she's doing for animals on the peta2 Street Team.
First of all, animals are not ours! Animals are a miracle, humans think that we can just use anything and anyone around us for whatever we want, no matter how much they suffer. Animals shouldn't have to suffer because we want to look prettier or younger. You wouldn't agree to donate your dog or cat to a lab, would you?
What has been your most successful protest?
Our last protest was the first of it's kind here in Cochabamba, Bolivia. It was so successful because it is a new subject that no one's really familiar with. We used Facebook, and got 20—30 people to come out and speak out against fur and vivisection with our animal organization ADDA-BOLIVIA (Asociacion para la Defensa de los Derechos Animales).

I heard you're also interested in educating people on why they shouldn't pay to see animals abused for the circus—what got you interested in that?
I was 11 or 12 when I realized how cruel the circus was. The lions were in small cages and had chains around their legs. I could see that the animals were traumatized because they were walking around in circles inside their filthy cages. When I was 16, I joined peta2 and started to leaflet, and now Cochabamba—my city—doesn't allow circuses with animals!
Are you vegetarian? If so, what made you go stop eating animals?
YES! I remember that it was lunch time and I was eating with my brother and I said "I don't think I will eat eggs, they could be baby chickens" and my brother said "Then don't eat that piece of meat because it for sure was a baby cow, DUH!" He was thinking that I would agree, but continue eating. I stopped eating meat right then. I realized that cows, chickens, pigs and other animals suffer the same way my kitties would. Now my conscience feels free because my body isn't a walking cemetery!
What great advice do you have for young activists who feel alone sometimes fighting for animals?
Don't feel alone, because you're not! I used to feel alone here in Bolivia—I thought that I was the only crazy girl who loved animals, but doing some research I found some amazing and interesting people that had the same ideas, and Facebook helped a lot!
Do you have any animal companions?
I have three beautiful cats, two females and one male. They were all adopted and are all spayed or neutered! My babies names are Kitty and Nina and Batman!
Noelia brings up a great point—sometimes it's really easy to feel alone, and as you can see, there are people all over the world fighting for the same things you are! Find them by joining the peta2 Street Team, getting on the peta2 boards, and using Facebook and MySpace! Great job Noelia!
Obama: Ban The Torture Of Animals! January 30, 2009
Posted by Rachel-O at January 30, 2009 12:56 PM | Permalink | Comments ( 10 ) | TrackBackIf you've been living under a rock for the past couple of weeks, you might not know that President Obama has been taking some pretty big steps to push a ban on the torture of human beings.
Every year, animals including cats, dogs, monkeys, pigs, goats, and even dolphins are used in military training experiments that can only be described as torture. From starving, shooting, burning, stabbing, dismembering or electrocuting—animals used in military testing suffer in the name of science and war in some of the most senseless "tests" I've ever heard of. Seriously—shooting pigs and burning monkeys with chemicals, is this really the most humane thing we can do in 2009? All of that only to be killed in the cold hands of an experimenter. These animals need your help!
We're asking President Obama to extend the ban to animals as well. Click here to send a letter to your Congressperson and your Senator in favor of ending shocking military tests on animals.









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