Resize Font Increase Font Size Decrease Font Size Reset Font Size

Home / Animal Rights / Headlines

April 11, 2008
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


Animal Activists Can’t Handle The Truth About Veal

Animal Activists Can’t Handle The Truth About Veal

If you subscribe to Newsweek and you enjoy reading creative fiction, check out page 71 in this week’s issue (dated April 14th). It’s a full-page ad from the Humane Farming Association. This group really doesn’t like veal, and it’s not above lying to make a point (and raise money). Yesterday our Director of Research FedExed a letter to Newsweek’s top brass, demanding to know how such a clearly false and misleading advocacy ad made it past the due diligence of the magazine’s lawyers. We documented a half-dozen glaring falsehoods—and that was just the “low hanging fruit.”

I would be keenly interested in learning whether Newsweek ever asked the Humane Farming Association to substantiate [its] claims—and if so, what sort of evidence the group provided that could have satisfied the attorneys performing due diligence prior to publication. The only explanation I can imagine is that perhaps someone on your central advertising staff is so blindly sympathetic to the cause of animal “rights” that he or she was willfully blind to an obviously false and deceptive ad.

In the many years I have been studying the animal protection movement, I have never encountered a more baseless, dishonest, and disingenuous advertisement than the one you published this week. Newsweek owes a sincere apology (or at least a proper explanation) to veal farmers, to members of the public who choose to eat veal, and to its readers in general.

Click here to read the rest of our letter to Newsweekwith all the details.

Why make such a fuss about the Humane Farming Association’s fascination with tarring and feathering veal farmers? The group has a long history of fudging, faking, and phonying. In 2000, the Humane Farming Association distributed copies of a five-minute “hidden camera” video to reporters, claiming that it documented illegal animal abuse at a meat processing plant in the state of Washington. But the Washington Department of Agriculture determined that the original (200-minute-long) video actually showed workers behaving appropriately. The video’s final cut, wrote investigators, was heavily “edited to delete workers’ actions to correct problems.”

In other words, the Humane Farming Association doctored its footage to show slaughterhouse employees in the worst light possible. The state's lead prosecutor investigating the meat producer ended up concluding that the group “manufactured the evidence in order to fulfill their own agendas.” But it appears that this stinging public rebuke never slowed the Humane Farming Association down. Its latest advertising demonstrates that animal rights activists -- even publicly discredited ones -- will stop at nothing to force their worldview on the rest of us.

email us comments



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


Oprah’s Meaty Fallout
Posted On: Wednesday 10/15/2008

Livestock’s Shrinking (U.S.) Shadow
Posted On: Friday 10/10/2008

Hot Dog! Let's Be Frank About Animal-Rights Deception
Posted On: Wednesday 10/8/2008

Animal Rights Update: SHAC Is Back
Posted On: Tuesday 10/7/2008

It’s Cartoon Friday! (With a Twist)
Posted On: Friday 10/3/2008

Quote Of The Week
Posted On: Monday 9/22/2008

The new PETA: 'Presidential Election Thrills Anglers'?
Posted On: Wednesday 9/17/2008

Memo To The Vegan Fringe: 100-Person Studies Are A Two-Edged Sword
Posted On: Tuesday 9/16/2008

Quote of the Week -- And We’re Citing Ourselves!
Posted On: Friday 9/12/2008


ActivistCash.com

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

Put Helmsley's billions to use in animal shelters
PETA and HSUS have announced their intentions to claim big slices of the $8 billion bounty. But neither one has the track record to handle such a responsibility. read more here »

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 »


About Us | Contact Us | Please Help Us | Site Map
Ad Campaigns | Press Center | Daily News Archive | Email Subscription | Op-Eds | Cartoons | Games | Link To Us
Copyright © 1997-2008 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.