| More
Home / Letters To The Editor


Posted On May 29, 2009
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


FARM activists getting lazy

By: By David Martosko
Newspaper: St. Joseph News-Press

The recent H1N1 outbreak was a field day for all kinds of Chicken Little opportunists. But animal rights activists continue to act as the pacesetters. Not only were the claims in Stewart Slate's recent letter wrong-headed, but it wasn't even his own letter to begin with. ("More dangers than swine flu," May 23)

That same letter -- word for word -- also appeared in more than 30 other newspapers in May. In each case, a different "author" signed it. This isn't a coincidence. It's a program of the Farm Animal Rights Movement (FARM), a Maryland-based group that hijacks hundreds of editorial pages every year.

It's no big deal if a few lazy activists want to clutter opinion pages with poorly masked PETA talking points. But as health experts from every major organization across the globe have stated time and again, it's impossible to contract the "swine flu" virus from eating or handling pork products.

The letter's environmental claims weren't any more convincing: While the United Nations claims that global livestock production may account for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, data from the Environmental Protection Agency show that here at home, domestic meat production contributes only 2.4 percent.

If animal activists want to twist the facts to promote their fringe diet, the least they could do is take 10 minutes to write something original.

David Martosko Director of Research, The Center for Consumer Freedom Washington, D.C.



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

Letters

Misinformation about high fructose corn syrup
Dr. Oz's recent column calling for readers to ditch products with high fructose corn syrup whips up a tornado of misinformation and drops a house on sound nutritional science. read more here »

FARM activists getting lazy
The recent H1N1 outbreak was a field day for all kinds of Chicken Little opportunists. But animal rights activists continue to act as the pacesetters. read more here »

ACRYLAMIDE: Takes huge amount to cause health risk
Scaring people about acrylamide will have the paradoxical effect of making people less healthy by turning them away from olives, almonds, asparagus, spinach, beets and prune juice -- all acrylamide-rich foods. read more here »

OpEds

Obesity not for pols to cure
Once again Mississippi is numero uno in America when it comes to obesity, with over 33 percent of residents officially obese. And once again Colorado is the slimmest, coming in just under 20 percent. read more here »

Group's goal is for an egg-less America
Everyone with a head on his shoulders believes in the humane treatment of animals. But egg farmers and American consumers will soon face a choice between what's actually humane and what some animal rights radicals claim is humane. read more here »


Copyright © 1997-2010 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.