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PETA and euthanasia

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Newsweek has posted an article online that says People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals ‘has practiced euthanasia for years.’

Nearly a decade later, Daphna Nachminovitch still remembers the rerelease of the Disney classic ‘101 Dalmatians’ and the tragedy that followed. First there was a spike in sales of the famous spotted breed. Then, in the months that followed, shelters took in hundreds of Dalmatians from disillusioned pet owners around the country. ‘As soon as the puppies outlived their cuteness and the kids didn’t want to scoop the poop anymore, the dogs were dumped in shelters,’ says Nachminovitch, vice president of cruelty investigations for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). ‘Many of them had to be euthanized, because there was simply no place for them to go.’ But what many animal lovers don’t realize is that PETA itself may have put down some of those unwanted Dalmatians. The organization has practiced euthanasia for years. Since 1998 PETA has killed more than 17,000 animals, nearly 85 percent of all those it has rescued.

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PETA, the Newsweek piece says, ‘has insisted that euthanasia is a necessary evil in a world full of unwanted pets.’ And it says that the Humane Society of the United States is an ally on this issue.

‘No one hates it more than we do,’ says Nachminovitch. ‘But we would rather offer these animals a painless death than have them tortured, starved or sold for research.’

--Alice Short

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