| More
Home / Press Center / Press Releases


Posted On January 19, 2005
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


PETA President To Get a Taste of Her Own Medicine

Consumer Group Protests Ingrid Newkirk's Book-Signing, Blames PETA For Bankrolling “Unkind” Arsonist

PETA President To Get a Taste of Her Own Medicine New York City - Dressed as eco-terrorists, carrying comically large gasoline cans and matches, and holding a banner depicting an arson fire under the words "PETA's Kind Choice," representatives from the Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) will gather to protest the Manhattan book-signing appearance of Ingrid Newkirk. Newkirk, the president and co-founder of the radical group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, is promoting a new animal-rights book misleadingly titled "Making Kind Choices."

Date: Wednesday, January 19
Time: 6:00 pm
Place: Barnes & Noble Chelsea (New York City)
675 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Ave.) at 21st Street

A CCF spokesperson will be on-hand with leaflets detailing PETA's shameful history and tactics, and a list of Ingrid Newkirk's most controversial quotables. Meanwhile, other CCF advocates will appear dressed in the all-black garb of the PETA-funded Earth Liberation Front (ELF), a group of arsonists and violent saboteurs describes by the FBI as a "domestic terror organization." In 2001 PETA made a large cash contribution to the ELF, the only such donation ever publicly acknowledged.

"Ingrid Newkirk would love to rehabilitate her group's image by promoting tofu with a smile on her face," said CCF Director of Research David Martosko. "But PETA's own history shows that its idea of 'kindness' includes arson and other violent crimes."

In a 2002 animal-rights convention speech, Newkirk described PETA's overall goal as "total animal liberation." At the same event one year earlier, PETA vegetarian campaign director Bruce Friedrich endorsed "blowing stuff up and smashing windows" as "a great way to bring about animal liberation." Friedrich added that "it would be great if all the fast-food outlets, slaughterhouses, these laboratories, and the banks who fund them exploded tomorrow … Hallelujah to the people who are willing to do it."

PETA's own literature includes a leaflet describing the terrorist Animal Liberation Front (ALF) as "An Army of the Kind." The ALF has been responsible for over $100 million in arson damage, including a Michigan State University research laboratory fire in which Newkirk herself was implicated by a federal prosecutor.

"Americans shouldn't be fooled into thinking that PETA is warm and fuzzy," added Martosko. "It's a band of radicals intent on abolishing meat, milk, cheese, circuses, zoos, wool, leather, hunting, fishing, and the very medical research that will bring us a cure for AIDS. Even if you agree with this lunacy, PETA's so-called 'kind' choices shouldn't include bankrolling arsonists."

The Center for Consumer Freedom is a nonprofit coalition supported by restaurants, food companies, and consumers, working together to promote personal responsibility and protect consumer choices.

For media comment, contact our media department at 202-463-7112 ext. 115




printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list

Ad Campaigns

Lab Rats or Sick Kids Lab Rats or Sick Kids
"Even if animal research resulted in a cure for AIDS, we'd be against it." - Ingrid Newkirk, President and Co-Founder of PETA click to view »

Missing seeing eye dog Missing seeing eye dog
PETA is so radical that it even opposes seeing eye dogs for the blind. Animal rights groups that go to extremes shouldn't have the right to tell us what to wear, how to live, and what to eat. click to view »


OpEds

Should we go vegetarian for the holiday feast?
This year some Americans have little to be thankful for, other than the simple pleasure of enjoying their holiday meals. read more here »

Hard-boiled animal activists could threaten vaccine supply
In the post-9/11 world, the phrase "national security" conjures up images of dirty bombs, jihadists, white powder and biohazard labels. It should also bring to mind another picture: an egg. read more here »

Letters

There Goes the Neighborhood
When the animal-rights people at PETA announce where they'll set up shop in Los Angeles, their new neighbors may want to take a few precautions. read more here »

'Animal rights' goes too far
I'd like to correct some erroneous information presented in a recent Sun-Times editorial about my organization and its position on the treatment of animals. read more here »

Donation questioned
The Eagles are making a huge mistake in giving $50,000 to the deceptive Humane Society of the United States. read more here »


Copyright © 1997-2010 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.