Are Animals Getting Offended?
Do you call people “chicken,” “rats,” or “pigs?” PETA says animals are getting offended. Which raises the question: Are we getting dumber? More from AwakenWithJP.
ARVE error: need id and provider
Do you call people “chicken,” “rats,” or “pigs?” PETA says animals are getting offended. Which raises the question: Are we getting dumber? More from AwakenWithJP.
ARVE error: need id and provider
A DAY OF BACON
South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker get an assist from the piglet Macon in introducing an episode of Flashbacks. Warning: This episode does not carry the PETA seal of approval.
ARVE error: need id and provider
A California judge has tossed out a lawsuit filed by the radical animal activist group, PETA, seeking to prevent California dairy farmers from running their “Happy Cows” marketing campaign. PETA, or People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, had complained that the campaign was misleading, charging that “most California dairy cows are subjected to physical and psychological pain and stress caused by intense and uncomfortable dairying practices…”
But Superior Court Judge Lloyd G. Connelly in Sacramento dismissed the suit on the grounds that PETA failed to provide any evidence demonstrating that California farmers mistreat dairy cows. Connelly cited the findings of state agriculture inspectors and the state dairy board that California dairy farmers “are very concerned about the health, comfort and safety of their cows” and “adhere to some of the highest animal welfare standards in the U.S.”
Bully to Judge Connelly for taking a rational, adult stand, and for refusing to entertain PETA’s frivolous lawsuit. PETA is a litigious fringe group full of miserable and moo-dy human beings. About time they were held up for some barnyard ridicule. Score 1 for Happy Cows, 0 for laughing-stock extremists.
ARVE error: need id and provider
Meet the Rosaires, a 10th-generation circus family, still running their own traveling circus along with a sanctuary for exotic animals outside Sarasota, Florida. PETA might attack circuses for animal cruelty, but the Rosaires demonstrate a true 24/7 devotion to their charges, extending to once breastfeeding a baby chimpanzee whose mother had died. H/T Vice
ARVE error: need id and provider
Lady Gaga made headlines last week when she dared to wear fur, brushing back a harsh attack from PETA, which routinely slams and smears any celebrities seen in animal pelts. The flap brought to mind Penn & Teller’s classic broadside aimed at PETA, which first aired on Showtime in 2004 as part of the series Penn & Teller: Bulls**t! Chief among the stinging revelations:
Watch, but be forewarned: Penn & Teller not only wear leather and eat big, fat, juicy ribs, but Penn also drops quite a few cuss words and Teller drops his pants.
ARVE error: need id and provider
Corey Cogdell, a member of the US Olympic Shooting Team, has come under fire from anti-hunting moonbats. Cogdell’s crime? She enjoys big-game hunting and has posted photos on her Facebook page showing herself with her trophy kills.
Revealing themselves to be quite bloodthirsty despite masquerading as pacifist-minded humanitarians, the twits have taken to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, advocating violence against Cogdell and her family. Tweeted Konejira, “Please go shoot yourself in the knees. YOU ANIMAL MURDERER!! you’re a disgusting human being.” Someone else wailed, “These ppl need to be shot deheaded and posted on a wall.” A third party wrote, “I hope that someone someday shoot your whole familly just practicing.—”
Cogdell, a trap shooter from Palmer, Alaska, won a bronze medal at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing and is currently competing at the 2012 Games. Upon arriving in London, she did a Skype interview with the NRA News, discussing how she loves to use Twitter and Facebook to reach out to her fans. Wonder if her enthusiasm for social media has been tempered now that the haters have gone into hyperdrive to whip up their PETA-inspired hysteria? H/T Twitchy
ARVE error: need id and provider
PETA, or People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, was founded in 1980 in Virginia, but not too surprisingly, the radical animal rights movement first became a fad in California. Perhaps none of the activists to the cause was more eccentric than Lewis Beach Marvin III, wealthy heir to the S & H Green Stamp fortune, as his late father had served as the chairman of Sperry & Hutchinson Co. In the 1960s, Marvin established a 60-acre compound near Topanga Canyon above Malibu, where, emulating Noah, he gathered together and sheltered scores of animals of many different species, allowing them to roam freely. At his mountaintop retreat, he also built the Moonfire Temple, site of orgies, Acid Tests and pagan rituals involving countercultural figures ranging from The Doors to members of the Charles Manson Family.
What specifically did Marvin believe? We can get a sense of his hardcore dogma from this 1966 clip when he appeared in “the beef box” on The Joe Pyne Show to assail the slaughter of any animal for any purpose whatsoever.
ARVE error: need id and provider
Notice the distinctive skull and crossbones hat he’s wearing? He let Jim Morrison wear the same hat on the night of March 1, 1969 when The Doors performed in concert at the Dinner Key Auditorium in Miami, Florida — the infamous concert in which a highly intoxicated Morrison fondled himself on stage, leading to his arrest on charges of lewd and lascivious behavior in public after allegedly exposing his genitals. Did Morrison really whip it out? No known photographs prove that, but stills show the singer arriving on stage carrying a lamb — one of the creatures from Marvin’s menagerie. Watch this compilation (extreme language alert) to get a sense of what transpired that night.
ARVE error: need id and provider
The Doors had hooked up with Marvin in 1966 when they agreed to perform a benefit concert at Will Rogers State Park in California to raise money for Marvin’s campaign to ban weapons-related toys during the height of the Vietnam War. Marvin continued to press his activism, helping to establish the Animal Freedom Fighters in Venice, California, and addressing the throngs at Woodstock with an anti-meat message, again carrying a lamb on stage, and telling the masses, “The killing of animals causes the killing of men.” He died in 2005 at a monkey refuge in Panama.
Why bring up Marvin now? For starters, he plays a prominent role in Mondo Hollywood, today’s Trillion Dollar Movie, containing two extended interludes devoted to him. In the first segment, starting at 12:34, we meet the multi-millionaire shacking up with his pet monkey, Mr. President, in a rented garage for $10 a month while he builds the Moonfire Temple, having already dropped a bundle on acquiring his mountaintop. He resurfaces much later in the film, at 1:08:47, cavorting in the temple as he delivers a sermon that evolves into a full-blown rant: “The universalist, the pacifist, the vegetarian and the compassionate are smothered, are overwhelmed and driven to the place of death. Each of us must become a Christ. Each of us must die before we would take the life of another.”
Exploring Marvin’s life and his connection with The Doors brought to mind all of the recent celebrities going nude to publicize PETA’s militant broadsides against its latest targets. These celebrities actually aren’t as daring or shocking as they might think. In retrospect, they are simply upholding a tradition that’s now a half-century old, with roots tied to a pagan temple in California and a quixotic, early animal rights activist. Kinda figures.