Kennedy 0 #1 April 23, 2005 pee - tah spelled PITA: for Pain In The Ass; written as PETA (1) a group of lunatics and terrorists who value animals over humans After knowing people who work at NIH, and hearing about the constatnt threats to researcher's lives and labs, this really shouldn't surprise me, but it still does. http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20050420-085928-8527r.htm QuoteAttack on medical research By David Martosko Last week the world celebrated an historic medical research milestone, the 50th anniversary of the polio vaccine. But Hollywood glitterati — including Alec Baldwin, Noah Wyle and Emmylou Harris — dishonored that life-saving moment by celebrating another milestone — the 20th birthday of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM). This is an organization which opposes the very research that made the polio breakthrough possible. In 1949, Science magazine explained to readers that animals (including mice, oxen and rhesus monkeys) were needed in every phase of polio research. Polio researcher and Nobel laureate Frederick Robbins later wrote that "all we learned about the disease came from studies with animals." And Albert Sabin, the biomedical research veteran who developed the oral polio vaccine, wrote in 1992 that animal experiments "were necessary to solve many problems before an oral polio-virus vaccine could become a reality." Mainstream medical professionals understand that today's animal-research models are crucial to finding tomorrow's cures. The American Foundation for AIDS Research funds these tests. So do the Pediatric AIDS Foundation, the Alzheimer's Association, the March of Dimes, the American Red Cross, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation (Race for the Cure), the American Lung Association, the National Kidney Foundation, and on and on. PCRM advises the public to withhold donations from all of these charities, and nearly 100 others. In order for humans to live, some animals must die. But this group has decided such a trade-off just isn't worthwhile. Taking this position requires willful blindness. Researchers whose work called for the use of animals have received 69 Nobel Prizes in physiology and medicine. One of these awards went to the scientist who laid the foundation for everything we understand about mad cow disease. Animal research has led to vaccines for rabies, smallpox, rubella, measles and anthrax. Insulin diabetics owe their quality of life to animal models — which also brought us heart bypasses, organ transplants and the minimally invasive surgical techniques we now take for granted. Throw it all out, says the Physicians Committee. These advocates of "responsible" medicine view research like this as "unnecessary." If this anti-science position sounds familiar, it should. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) — those protest-happy lunatics who believe your life is worth no more than that of a cow or a chicken — have a sympathetic take on nearly every message PCRM promotes, including a "do not donate" policy toward health charities that fund animal research. PCRM founding president Neal Barnard, a psychiatrist with no medical practice, is also president of the PETA Foundation (which owns PETA's real estate and manages its books). PETA has steered more than $1.3 million to PCRM so far. Animal People News, an insider publication for animal-rights activists, writes that the PETA Foundation exists primarily "to enable PETA and PCRM to evade public recognition of their relationship." So, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is really an animal-rights front group wearing the sheep's clothing of the medical profession. And "responsible" medicine apparently means no animals may be harmed to save the life of your child, your parent, or your spouse. How could doctors write such a prescription? Very few do, which is why people with no medical degrees comprise more than 95 percent of this group's membership. The animal-rights theme carries over into PCRM's activism on food issues as well. Dr. Barnard has written that feeding kids meat and milk "is a form of child abuse." He has also compared meat-eating and milk-drinking to smoking. In a 2003 FDA hearing, he tried to convince federal regulators that cheese was (literally) an addictive narcotic, calling it "morphine on a cracker" and "dairy crack." PCRM's animal-rights sympathies are clear. Some of its most public figures have participated in PETA's naked street protests, acted as spokespersons for "direct action" protesters outside research labs, sued school districts over field trips to the rodeo and threatened lawsuits against dairy producers. At a recent animal-rights convention, one activist (then a PCRM spokesperson) even endorsed the idea of "political assassination" directed at doctors who test tomorrow's miracle drugs on animals. Dr. Jerry Vlasak was billed on the "Animal Rights 2003" conference program as a PCRM representative. Dr. Vlasak spoke his mind, and it wasn't pretty. "I don't think you'd have to kill — assassinate — too many vivisectors," Dr. Vlasak told a room full of activists, "before you would see a marked decrease in the amount of vivisection going on. And I think for five lives, 10 lives, 15 human lives, we could save a million, 2 million, 10 million non-human lives." The misnamed Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine's dream of prohibitions against beef, chicken, pork, fish and cheese are merely irksome to Americans who see through its clever disguise. But the group's agenda for the future of medical research makes it particularly dangerous. Its birthday is no cause for celebration. witty subliminal message Guard your honor, let your reputation fall where it will, and outlast the bastards. 1* Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sinker 0 #2 April 23, 2005 I work in the drug research industry and have seen some of the PETA fanaticism close up. I used to work for a company that had an animal research lab outside of London. One day when a lab tech was leaving work, a PETA demonstrator hit her in the head w/ a brick hard enough to cause brain damage. Just infuriating. It's tempting, unethical but tempting, to say to these people that if/when they get ill, they CANNOT have those very medications that will save them, since ALL of them were first tested on animals. I wonder how long they'd maintain their radical stance then. Kinda like the old saw "there aren't any atheists in foxholes." PETA: People Eating Tasty Animals. -the artist formerly known as sinker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
KevinMcGuire 0 #3 April 23, 2005 QuoteI work in the drug research industry and have seen some of the PETA fanaticism close up. I used to work for a company that had an animal research lab outside of London. One day when a lab tech was leaving work, a PETA demonstrator hit her in the head w/ a brick hard enough to cause brain damage. Just infuriating. It's tempting, unethical but tempting, to say to these people that if/when they get ill, they CANNOT have those very medications that will save them, since ALL of them were first tested on animals. I wonder how long they'd maintain their radical stance then. Kinda like the old saw "there aren't any atheists in foxholes." PETA: People Eating Tasty Animals. Penn and Teler did a outstanding piece on PETA look for it on the BS series. I highly recommed it Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sinker 0 #4 April 23, 2005 Penn and Teler did a outstanding piece on PETA look for it on the BS series. I highly recommed it *** I will... thanks! -the artist formerly known as sinker Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bdog 0 #5 April 23, 2005 i thought PETA stood for The Eating of Tasty Animals._________________________________________ ---Future Darwin Award recipient- Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lawrocket 3 #6 April 23, 2005 I'd be interested to know whether anyone in PETA has ever used any protectivce suits from the cold or used sulfa drugs for the treatment of tissue infections. Whether any of them ever participated in artificail insemination. What about flying in a pressurized aircraft? Much of the initial data on human survivability in extreme conditions comes from Nazi experimentation on human subjects. I wonder if they have a problem using that data? It turns out that a number of scientists had ethical concerns using Nazi scientific data. A Professor Hayward said that despite his concerns, he had no choice but to use the cold water survival data from Nazi experiments to help develop data on effectiveness of survival suits for Arctic fishermen. Ethically, he could not get any other data I don't believe that PETA people have ever expressed the same concerns about receiving medical treatment as a Christian Scientist. I don't believe I've read about a PETA member ever going to court to ensure that his/her children are not given antibiotics at a hospital because they were animal tested. I don't believe I've ever read about a PETA member refusing to use fossil fuels - they are animal products, right? I don't believe I've read about PETA members arguing against the wholesale slaughter of bugs and rodents in farming operations. In fact, I wonder why you don't find PETA members arguing that humans are animals, too. I've got the image in my mind of this guy arguing for assassination as "K-K-K-Ken" from a Fish Called Wanda. A sociopathic assassin who feels worse about the dead dogs than the dead humans... My wife is hotter than your wife. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites