Live Breaking News & Updates on Tasgola Bruner|Page 9
Stay updated with breaking news from Tasgola bruner. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382 Taipei – Today, after receiving PETA’s detailed scientific critique at the agency’s private request and more than 73,000 e-mails opposing animal testing from PETA supporters during a public comment period, the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration (TFDA) made the groundbreaking announcement that horrific drowning and electroshock tests previously conducted on scores of vulnerable animals are no longer allowed in order to establish anti-fatigue claims for marketing food and beverage products. According to the TFDA’s final anti-fatigue health claim regulation, companies’ marketing statements that consuming their food and beverage products may help consumers be less tired after exercising must now be based solely on safe and effective human studies. ....
10 hours ago U.S. Marines drink the blood of a king cobra as part of jungle survival training during exercise Cobra Gold 2020 at Ban Chan Khrem, Chanthaburi, Kingdom of Thailand, March 2, 2020. (Lance Cpl. Hannah Hall/Marine Corps) “If Girl Scouts could survive in the jungle without drinking snakes’ blood, eating live lizards, what’s wrong with U.S. Marines?” It was the opening line to a February press release from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA, sent by Media Manager Tasgola Bruner, sharing a petition by the animal-rights organization to stop what it calls “bloodlust” by the United States Marines. ....
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382 Oklahoma City – PETA fired off letters this morning to Joseph Harroz Jr. and Stephen Prescott, the presidents of the University of Oklahoma (UO) and the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF), respectively, calling on the institutions to stop buying chinchillas to experiment on. The letters come after a new PETA undercover video investigation into Moulton Chinchilla Ranch, a massive breeding mill in Minnesota that supplied chinchillas to the Oklahoma laboratories, revealed that chinchillas were suffering from open wounds, exposed bones, infections, and other painful injuries and untreated ailments. As a result of PETA’s findings, local officials executed a search warrant and are conducting a criminal investigation. ....
PETA filed a lawsuit against LSU concerning Biological Sciences Assistant Professor Christine Lattin, who is conducting a taxpayer-funded experiment on sparrows. The experiment allegedly involves trapping sparrows, pumping them with sex hormones, exposing them to terrifying calls from predators, and then killing them, according to Tasgola Bruner, media manager at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). PETA ranked LSU worse in its Failed Tests: Campus Cruelty Report, an interactive report … The lawsuit is requesting that the University disclose records related to the experiments being conducted, which is required by the Louisiana Public Records Act. âLouisianaâs residents have a right to know if their tax dollars are funding the abuse of birds in LSUâs laboratories,â PETA Senior Vice President Kathy Guillermo said. âPETA looks forward to receiving these records and learning how sparrows lived and died for Christine Lat ....
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382 Washington – PETA has obtained never-before-seen photographs and video footage taken by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) inspectors revealing deplorable conditions at facilities that operate out of public view and supply animals for use in the experimentation industry. The images show maggots crawling through animals’ food, green algae growing in water bowls, and animals left to suffer with open wounds. At Ruby Fur Farm in New Sharon, Iowa, ferrets, raccoons, foxes, and skunks were held in dilapidated cages with broken wires and forced to drink out of water containers teeming with algae and insects. Temperatures reached as high as 122 degrees, and raccoons were found to be “in serious heat distress,” panting while “lying on their sides, backs, and abdomens with their legs splayed.” Numerous animals were denied veterinary care, including a ferret covered with ticks and skunks with extensive hair loss. ....