Consumer Group Challenges Humane Society of the United States: Be Honest About Your Goals

See: [linkhttp://news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/20070508/pl_usnw/consumer_group_challenges_humane_society_of_the_united_states__be_honest_about_your_goals]http://news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/20070508/pl_usnw/consumer_group_challenges_humane_society_of_the_united_states__be_honest_about_your_goals[/link]
 
[size=3]To: NATIONAL EDITORS

Contact: J.P. Freire of Center for Consumer Freedom, +1-202-463-7112
WASHINGTON, May 8 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- During an animal-welfare
hearing today on Capitol Hill, the nonprofit Center for Consumer Freedom
(CCF) urged members of Congress to be skeptical of animal-rights activists
from the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and Farm Sanctuary, who
discourage Americans from eating meat no matter how "humanely" it is raised.
The $150 million HSUS and Farm Sanctuary both promote a vegan diet
(completely meat- and dairy-free).
CCF Director of Research David Martosko testified before the House
Agriculture Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry: "When the topic
of discussion is how to make livestock farming better, the complaints of
radical vegans should be seen for what they are: an attempt to dismantle
animal agriculture, not improve it. Thinking people should instantly
recognize their ulterior motives."
Last week HSUS ranked U.S. cities according to what it called a "Humane
Index." Its "Humane Eats" scorecard judges how "humane" a city's dining
options are by counting only the "number of vegetarian restaurants per
capita." Congress, Martosko said, should be alarmed at HSUS's apparent
judgment that only meatless eating can be called "humane."
CCF's message to Congress: No matter how much farmers take animals' welfare
into account, animal-rights leaders won't be satisfied until all animal
protein disappears from the human diet. "HSUS and PETA share the same
long-term goals," Martosko added. "No meat. No dairy. No animal agriculture.
Period. HSUS is basically PETA with a nicer wristwatch."
"Congress," Martosko continued, "could require U.S. farmers to supply every
pig, chicken, duck, and cow with private rooms, daily rubdowns, video iPods,
and organic meals catered by Wolfgang Puck. But even this wouldn't satisfy
activists who actually believe farm animals have the 'right' not to be
eaten."
Martosko pointed out that family veal farmers bear the brunt of constant
animal-rights attacks. And HSUS is working to completely outlaw foie gras,
which is raised on a very small scale.
"I've never tasted foie gras," Martosko conceded. "But who are these people
to decide I shouldn't have the chance to try it? When zealots ban books
because of their politics, millions of people rise up. Why isn't banning
food for political reasons viewed the same way?"
Complete text of Mr. Martosko's testimony is available. Contact J.P. Freire
at 202-463-7112 for an interview.
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.
SOURCE Center for Consumer Freedom[/size]