
Why Does The RSPCA
Encourage People To Eat Animals?
Vernon Coleman
If you care about animals then the RSPCA is one organisation
you really shouldn't support.
Regular readers will know that I have
frequently attacked the RSPCA for refusing to condemn animal experiments. (There
is more about this on this website and in my book Animal Experiments:Simple
Truths.)
But the December/January 2007 edition of the RSPCA magazine
`Animal Action' really does take the dog biscuit.
`Animal Action' is a
magazine intended for children. `Trot into Animal Action,' screams the front
cover. `It's animal friendly and animal fun.'
I don't think it's
either.
Here's why.
In an article headlined `Talking Turkey' the
magazine says this:
`Since the 1950s many British people have sat down to
a traditional turkey lunch on Christmas Day, and roast turkey is still the most
popular festive meal today.'
`So with turkey farms being big business, the
RSPCA's higher welfare food labelling scheme, Freedom Food, decided to get
involved and offer turkey producers the chance to improve the way they rear
turkeys.'
Farms which want the RSPCA seal of approval have to provide turkeys
with (among other things) `fresh water and a healthy diet'.
But they
can still slaughter their turkeys for food.
The children's magazine then
goes on to give a list of stores where freedom food turkeys can be
bought!
And the RSPCA boasts that farmers rearing and selling pigs,
cattle, dairy cows, ducks, salmon, laying hens and sheep can all get their
approval.
In my view any organisation which really cares about animals
would recommend a vegetarian diet.
And would be aware that the evidence
conclusively shows that a vegetarian diet is far, far healthier than one that
involves eating meat.
Eating meat causes cancer in humans.
The
RSPCA sucks.
If you care about animals do not give money or support to
the RSPCA.
Why, oh why, is the RSPCA such a bloody useless organisation?
Why does the RSPCA not encourage people to stop eating
animals?
The letters RSPCA stands for Royal Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals.
Isn't eating them cruel?
Please ask
animal loving friends to read this article on www.vernoncoleman.com
Copyright Vernon Coleman 2006
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