| Animal Rights Group Dupes Donors |
Animal
Rights Group Dupes Donors Into Believing It Takes Care of Animals
(Columbus) -
When regional retailer, Meijer, received pressure
from sportsmen to sever ties with the animal rights extremists in the Humane
Society of the Unites States (HSUS), some questioned why the U.S. Sportsmen’s
Alliance (USSA) acted to oppose the partnership.
“Most people simply don’t know that the HSUS is actually an animal rights
organization that is opposed to any use of animals for the benefit of humans,”
said USSA president and CEO Bud Pidgeon. “The public deserves to know the
hidden agenda behind this is to deceive them.”
On April 24, 2008, HSUS, the world’s largest animal rights organization,
announced a partnership with Meijer, a regional discount retail chain to raise
$5,000 for the organization’s fund to address the purported problem of abandoned
pets as a result of the national home foreclosure crisis.
The USSA, a national organization founded to protect the rights of sportsmen,
responded with an alert asking hunters to contact the retailer to protest the
partnership. Meijer quickly responded by canceling the arrangement. Since that
time, some animal welfare activists have questioned why USSA would oppose a
partnership alleged to benefit pets.
The Washington DC-based HSUS, raised $100 million dollars according to its 2006
IRS filing. Despite a name that seems tailor made to animal shelters, HSUS is
in fact an animal rights organization. Its main function is to change laws that
permit Americans to gain any benefit from animals. It advocates for
restrictions on livestock farmers, bans on life-saving medical research
performed on animals and opposes zoos, circuses and rodeos. Of course HSUS also
opposes hunting. The HSUS does not operate or represent the local dog and cat
shelters that exist across the United States.
“With a name like the Humane Society of the United States, it’s easy to see why
some people believe that there is a connection between it and local animal
shelters, which struggle every year to make ends meet,” explained Pidgeon.
“HSUS spends the bulk of its money on making contributions to politicians,
lobbying, lawyers and expensive 30-second advertisements to promote voter issues
aimed at banning various uses of animals.”
The Humane Society uses campaigns, such as the Meijer campaign, as a public
relations tool to help it raise its $100 million dollar war chest for its animal
rights crusade. Evidence of this is contained within its leadership. Wayne
Pacelle, CEO of the organization, is the former executive director of the Fund
for Animals, which was the nation’s leading anti-hunting group. Upon accepting
the executive job at HSUS, Pacelle announced a merger with the Fund for Animals
and quickly hired its most ardent hunting opponents as his top management staff.
The HSUS then swallowed several anti-livestock organizations, hiring their
leadership as well. Its takeover of the Doris Day Animal League has given it
access to Hollywood dollars, previously the home turf of the radical People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).
Unlike PETA, however, Pacelle and HSUS are not interested in making a large
public relations spectacle using naked models or making outrageous statements
comparing the Holocaust to the slaughter of chickens. Instead, HSUS has
launched a series of campaigns that put it in a positive light with animal
lovers in general.
Such was the case in 2005, when HSUS created a fund to aid animals stranded as a
result of Hurricane Katrina. Later, the Louisiana Attorney General’s office
launched an investigation of HSUS when allegations surfaced that the money never
made it to the pets in need.
In 2007 it launched a campaign to address the issue of so-called “puppy mills,”
abusive large-scale commercial dog breeding operations. Using sentimental
images of suffering puppies, the organization is backing legislation in
Pennsylvania that would devastate small hobby breeders, dog show kennels and
sporting dog enthusiasts. The legislation is so radical that it has been
opposed by the American Kennel Club, United Kennel Club and even dog rescue
shelters in the state.
“Taking advantage of the American people’s love for their pets, HSUS is able to
deceive donors and the public into believing that the organization is in the
mainstream of American values,” said Pidgeon. “It is this mainstream image that
allows HSUS to raise its 100 million dollar budget to take our hunting and
fishing rights away. At the same time, by deceiving animal lovers, HSUS robs
financially strapped dog and cat shelters of critical funds needed to actually
look after abandoned and abused pets.”
The U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance recommends that people who want to help real
animal shelters give to their local shelter organizations.
“Some animal rights groups masquerade as pet shelters, so donating to a local
organization gives the contributor the opportunity to determine how their funds
will actually be spent,” said Pidgeon.
The U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance is a national association of sportsmen and
sportsmen’s organizations that protects the rights of hunters, anglers and
trappers in the courts, legislatures, at the ballot, in Congress and through
public education programs. For more information about the U.S. Sportsmen’s
Alliance and its work, call (614) 888-4868 or visit its website,
www.ussportsmen.org.