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April 23, 2003
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Lies That Spread Like A Virus

With all the news coverage being devoted to the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), it was only a matter of time until the self-described "complete press sluts" at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) tried to use the epidemic to their advantage. On Monday PETA released a position paper of sorts about SARS, claiming -- despite all evidence to the contrary -- that "a vegetarian diet could have prevented this deadly disease."

Taking things one step further (did we expect anything less?), PETA activists are demonstrating today in front of a Toronto-area hospital that has been placed under a SARS-related quarantine. In a typically tasteless news release, PETA claims that SARS "is believed to have sprung from factory farms."

Believed by whom? Certainly not by the reputable scientific community. Dr. Julie Gerberding, who leads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told the media late last week that there is absolutely no scientific consensus about where the SARS virus came from:

Unfortunately the clues from comparing it to the animal viruses have not given us any real leads ... it just isn't similar enough to the known species to be able to draw those conclusions.

So where is PETA getting its "science"? From a single doctor named Michael Greger, who is publicly speculating that the SARS coronavirus originated in "the livestock industry." Of course, Greger himself is an animal-rights zealot on a permanent speaking tour, and was a featured speaker at the Animal Rights 2002 convention. Predictably, he recommends a "plant-based" diet as a way to combat SARS.

And which esteemed, peer-reviewed scientific journal has published Greger's wild guesses? None, actually -- it was posted this week on the "VegSource" website, a repository of animal-rights mythology closely connected with the radical group EarthSave International.

Michael Greger's involvement in this charade is strongly suggestive of another great health scare, involving Mad Cow Disease. A mixture of animal-rights and "sustainable-agriculture" zealots have tried for years to convince the American public of a human-health link between Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) and beef consumption. No link has ever been proven, but that hasn't stopped Michael Greger from suggesting otherwise on a web page that he moderates for the Organic Consumers Association.

In this morning's Wall Street Journal, a Johns Hopkins University professor of international health and epidemiology says that "there is a real possibility we can eradicate the [SARS] virus before it overwhelms global control efforts." However our best medical minds bring this about, it most certainly won't be through vegetarianism.

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Headlines


“Silliest Law Ever” Repealed! Consumers Win!
Posted On: Thursday 5/15/2008

Holy Veal!
Posted On: Friday 5/9/2008

PETA's Pet Death Toll Grows Again
Posted On: Tuesday 5/6/2008

Animal Rights Group Endorses Fresh Eggs. Just Kidding.
Posted On: Thursday 4/24/2008

Saving The Planet, One Empty Stunt At A Time
Posted On: Tuesday 4/22/2008

An Inconvenient Petri Dish
Posted On: Monday 4/21/2008

Animal Activists Can’t Handle The Truth About Veal
Posted On: Friday 4/11/2008

Animal Activists Hijack Dr. King’s Legacy
Posted On: Friday 4/4/2008

'Physicians Committee' Pledges To Include Actual Physicians
Posted On: Tuesday 4/1/2008


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Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
Background | Quotes | Financials
While PCRM presents itself as a doctor-supported, unbiased source of health guidance, the group’s own literature admits that 95 percent of its members have no medical degrees. read more here »

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
Background | Quotes | Financials
According to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, human beings are just another animal species, no more special or important than a snail darter or dairy cow. read more here »

Op-Eds

California Focus: The new animal-rights battleground
The animal-rights movement is far from harmless. And since California seems to be the current animal-rights Ground Zero, it's worth considering what the movement stands for. read more here »

N.C. case exposed PETA's hypocrisy
Norfolk-based PETA regularly orders its staffers to kill animals. Records from Virginia’s Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services indicate that between 1998 and 2005, PETA “put down” more than 14,400 pets. read more here »


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