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Letters to the Editor



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12/16/06 Letter Writing Campaign
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer: When animal rights activists resort to phony letter-writing campaigns to promote meatless
12/15/06 Bird Flu is a Lesser Risk
The Pioneer Press: British researchers recently discovered that a widely available hand spray can kill the bird flu bug in less than 30 seconds.
12/13/06 Nothing original about 'meat' letters
The Tribune-Star (Terre Haute, IN): When animal rights activists resort to phony letter-writing campaigns to get their point across, they don't deserve to be taken seriously. Theo Mattson's Dec. 8 letter, "Save the Earth at grocery store," was a great example.
11/17/06 Puppy Power Is Fine, But ...
The Wall Street Journal: The Humane Society of the United States may have a much smaller and less powerful grassroots footprint than it advertises.
11/14/06 Don't-eat-fish letter part of U.S. campaign
The Times Colonist (Victoria, British Columbia): Anti-fish form letters are a project of the U.S.-based Farm Animal Reform Movement (FARM), an animal-rights organization that preaches strict vegetarianism.
11/13/06 Scam letter
The Concord Monitor: The Farm Animal Reform Movement sends thousands of duplicate letters to newspapers every year.
11/10/06 Scam Letter Published
The Austin Chronicle: Animal-rights zealots who resort to mass-produced phony letters to make their point don't deserve to be taken seriously.
11/8/06 Misnamed organization
Ventura County Star: Rather than thanking PCRM for its "Golden Carrot" award, Oak Grove School officials ought to return the money to avoid being publicly connected to this phony animal-rights organization.
9/30/06 Obesity's effects
The Chicago Tribune: In his rush to spread a good message about diet and exercise, John McCarron repeated some erroneous statistics.
9/26/06 Don't worry about the chips
The Oregonian: Before anyone gets too worried about acrylamide in potato chips, a little perspective is in order.
9/17/06 Sounds very familiar
The Naples (Florida) Daily News: A reader claims that vegetarian eating is a cure for obesity, but it's just another phony animal-rights form letter.
9/13/06 Group misleads with form letters
The Tuscaloosa News: Don't get taken in by The Farm Animal Reform Movement's 'astroturf' letter campaign.
9/2/06 Mass Mailing?
The Edmonton Journal (Alberta, Canada): In this world of tight deadlines and instant communications, it has become easy to slip an agenda-driven form letter into a newspaper's letters page. Farm Sanctuary did just that.
9/1/06 Don't let the name fool you
The Intelligencer Journal (Lancaster, Pennsylvania): Hugs For Puppies is the terrorist group SHAC's Pennsylvania branch office, not a warm and fuzzy animal-welfare charity. No one should negotiate with extremists like these.
9/1/06 Vegetarianism letter leaves bad taste
The Boston Globe: If animal-rights zealots at have to resort to mass-produced phony letters to make their point, they don't deserve to be taken seriously.
8/31/06 Warm, fuzzy name disguises extremism
The Lebanon Daily News (Pennsylvania): Hugs For Puppies is the terrorist group SHAC's Pennsylvania branch office, not a warm and fuzzy animal-welfare charity. No one should negotiate with extremists like these.
8/19/06 One Person's Trash . . .
The Washington Post: Whether "Freegans" like it or not, nourishing the human body involves affecting our environment.
8/18/06 Mercury not an issue
The Boston Herald: Today's parts-per-million mercury measurements in fish are practically inconsequential to human health.
8/7/06 Diet Advice
Saginaw News: PCRM's "Cancer Project" promotes "PETA-approved" diet.
7/15/06 Misplaced risk?
Rocky Mountain News: Issuing a health advisory when mercury levels hit 0.5 parts per million makes no sense, but it's exactly what the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment is doing.
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