To the PETA supporters here. just a few points that I wish to make:
1. As I mentioned, I initially thought of PETA as a radical animal protection group with perhaps too large a "heart" and too extreme, but with goals that basically sought to protect animals from harm. After time I came to be convinced that these were not PETA's ultimate goals at all, and that they were far more focused on a philosophical concept: no species has a right to interfere with the actions of any other species. A lot of this is not pro-animal, let alone pro-human, and manifests as a an ideology focused on a philosophical goal that is not to limit harm to animals as much as to eliminate "specieism." As such, I would far rather give my money to the SPCA, Humane Society, etc. who are much more dedicated to protecting animals from harm than an abstract, heartless, philosophical "ideal" that has never been part of the natural world, and in fact if ever implemented (and I don't see how to keep mountain lions from killing deer) would hurt both non-human and human animals.
2. We are all people, and will therefore tend to selectively read what we see as supporting our prior conclusions. It usually takes a lot of evidence to cause someone to re-think their basic views. So I don't ask that PETA supporters believe my spin on things: just to read more about what PETA itself states as to its views, and an assortment of appropriate but other groups. You may still strongly support exactly what PETA proposes, or a defined portion of the whole, after this closer view. But please first find out exactly what PETA's views are, do not rely on your existing general "impression" of who you think that they are. I once did, and when I investigated the facts, including PETA's own statements, I dramatically changed my mind dramatically.
3. More specifically: it took me no time at all to find the public statement on the PETA site saying that they were philosophically against pets keeping, specifically citing pet breeding. As already pointed out, what do PETA supporters believe would happen to pets (companion animals) if all "pet breeding" was eliminated? I certainly don't think that PETA means that we should instead capture all our pets from the wild, and turn mountain lions and wolves into house pets!
If PETA achieved their stated goals, in 20 years the only remaining pets would be a few turtles and parrots. They are against the keeping of pets, plain and simple, and they have stated this publicly in more than one fashion (look it up). They are "generously" willing to allow pre-existing pets to die off naturally, but they are against replacing them. Period. If you agree, fine. But don't think that PETA only objects to orca and elephants in SeaWorld and zoos: they don't like the idea of you keeping Fluffy in your house either because (as already quoted quoted by others) PETA views this as demeaning to the pet and a fundamental violation of the rights of the animal to be independent in all ways. The fact that house cats and dogs do not exist in the wild means, as PETA itself knows, their eventual (20 years?) complete elimination as species. And PETA has publicly indicated that as a goal they hope can be achieved.
Yes there are a lot of commercial breeders who treat their animals poorly, but PETA is not focused on improving the level of care, but eliminating pet breeding completely. And if you read what they publicly advocate, this is not just breeders of fancy pure-bred cats and dogs- all breeding, informal and voluntary to formal and arranged. No new cats and no new dogs, period.
4. Once again I will ask that if PETA cared about animals as radically and strongly as they like to portray themselves (and as many people like to see them), then why on earth are they accepting contracts to round up dogs and kill them? And without even the grace period that almost all shelters provide to allow owners to find their pets or others to find potential adoptions? I couldn't do this and sleep at night- could you? This is not to say that euthanasia is not sometimes necessary and sometimes in the animals best interest, but isn't this a fundamental hypocrisy on the part of PETA, given their holier than thou public face as the True Scotsman animal lovers?
Of course keep your pet indoors and to put ID on them! But if your pet got outside and onto your porch- would you think "Oh well, they picked it up and killed it within a matter of hours without me having a chance to rescue it, but it had it coming?"
I don't know the laws where the pet was lured off its porch and killed, but it could have been a legal violation if, as in many cases, under law shelters have to keep the animal for a fixed length of time before euthanasia. Even if not, PETA may still be subject to a civil suit even if they did not break a criminal statute. But even if there is no violation of law at all, PETA still killed a pet without even giving the owner a chance to save it. Immoral and disgusting as I see it, even for an animal-hating organization let alone one claiming to love animals.
I also re-iterate what others have stated in this thread: it should have been easy for PETA to tell this little dog was a cared-for pet and not a sheep killing, starving stray. But did they even care?