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Dear Friends,
What makes me think that PETA can convince McDonald's to
rewrite its corporate animal welfare policies? Burger King. Wendy's.
Canadian KFCs. Denny's. Hardees. Carl's Jr. Safeway. Albertsons. Harris Teeter.
Winn-Dixie.
These are some of the biggest grocery and restaurant
chains in the U.S. and Canada, and PETA has brought them all to the
bargaining table and won some of the most sweeping improvements for farmed
animals ever. Because of our efforts, fewer factory farms are using cruel
gestation crates to confine pregnant sows or "battery cages," in which hens are
crammed so tightly together that they cannot spread a single wing.
Now
we're taking on McDonald's. Its reforms will lead the way for the greatest
changes in the industry. We can win
this battle and others—but only with your support.
Chickens
killed by McDonald's suppliers are dumped from their crates and violently
shackled by workers, often as their limbs are broken or torn off. Many have
their throats cut or are scalded to death in tanks of boiling water while still
conscious.
The terror that these animals endure can be easily eliminated
by switching to controlled-atmosphere killing (CAK)—the least cruel form of
poultry slaughter ever developed. With CAK, an inert gas puts the birds to sleep
quickly and painlessly while they are still in their transport
cages—eliminating much of the suffering that they endure during the
slaughter process.
Many of the other companies that PETA staff
members have worked with—including Burger King, Canadian KFCs, Wendy's, and
Popeye's—are agreeing to push their suppliers to switch to CAK. But McDonald's
is refusing to do so. It's even ignored its own study, which showed that CAK
would both reduce the suffering of chickens and save the company money.
But that
can change with your help today.
As the largest seller of
chicken flesh in the U.S., McDonald's has both the responsibility and the
ability to pave the way for this important reform to take hold in
slaughterhouses across the country.
PETA has the investigators, the
activists, the know-how, and the determination to win this campaign. But
McDonald's is as formidable an opponent as we've ever faced, and we need your
immediate help to turn up the heat. Please make a
tax-deductible donation for the countless chickens and other animals facing
a painful death without our action today.
Thank you for all
that you do to help animals.
Very truly yours,
Ingrid
E. Newkirk President
P.S. We must work right now to stop the most
egregious abuses of countless chickens, pigs, and other wonderful, vulnerable
animals on factory farms and in slaughterhouses. I hope I
can count on you today to help us take on McDonald's and other
companies that are responsible for so much animal suffering.
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