~   Our TRULY wonderful  Humane Society of the United States ~

 

 HSUS President Wayne Pacelle
-in bed with Vick...

Look up "guilty as sin" in the dictionary, and you'll see this man's photo.

After Vick is released from jail he was still of course suspended from the NFL. It's time to play "let's make a deal". The Vick camp aligns itself with "The Humane Society of the United States" and president Wayne Pacelle, who sees the "Vick issue" as nothing more than a HUGE fund raising opportunity. We make Vick our "poster boy" we get airtime [CBS NEWS 60- Minutes] and the donations come pouring in by truck loads.
The last time the American people sent in contributions on this scale was after hurricane Katrina. Pacelle / HSUS moved into the area, collected all the stranded animals,, AND KILLED THEM ALL, EVEN BEFORE THEY COULD BE RETRIEVED BY THEIR OWNERS. They did this so they wouldn't have to feed, house, or otherwise maintain the animals. The animals were needlessly killed, never helped and never received a DIME of TENS OF MILLIONS sent in by the naive American public. Greed overpowers Pacelle... Would you believe negotiations over the rights to a reality TV show starring Michael Vick..?   can you imagine?

 POOF,, like a miracle happened, HSUS is helping a remorseful and totally reformed Michael Vick in his disgraceful ploy to regain wealth and fame. Two dirty hands wash each other. Pacelle could have JUST AS EASILY left Vick in the gutter with all the other slime-balls who fight dogs but saw this whole Vick issue as... "KA CHING!! ... "I've fooled the American public 1,000 times before, this one will be just as easy. I'll clean him up, put him in a 3-piece suit, do a photo op, get a spot on 60 minutes... it's like I just hit the LOTTO!

 Truly disgusting alliance, and all in the name of money and greed! After getting HSUS's dirty endorsement, Vick seeks and gains reinstatement in the NFL. Keep in mind that without H$U$ support, the Vick camp would have no credentials to apply for reinstatement. The way I see it, this makes HSUS 100% responsible for ANY and ALL future progress made by Vick.

Read below.. A Lengthily read but WELL worth it.

7 Things You Didn’t Know About HSUS
(The Humane Society of the United States)

1. The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) is a “humane society” in name only, since it doesn’t operate a single pet shelter or pet adoption facility anywhere in the United States. HSUS operates sanctuaries for large animals only, not shelters within the commonly accepted definition of shelter. During 2006, HSUS contributed only 4.2 percent of its budget to organizations that operate hands-on dog and cat shelters. In reality, HSUS is a wealthy animal-rights lobbying organization (the largest and richest on earth) that agitates for the same goals as PETA and other radical groups.

  2.  Beginning on the day of NFL quarterback Michael Vick’s2007 dog fighting indictment, HSUS raised money online with the false promise that it would “care for the dogs seized in the Michael Vick case.” The New York Times later reported that HSUS wasn’t caring for Vick’s dogs at all. And HSUS president Wayne Pacelle told the Times that his group recommended that government officials “put down” (that is, kill) the dogs rather than adopt them out to suitable homes. HSUS later quietly altered its Internet fundraising pitch.

3. HSUS’s senior management includes a former spokesman for the Animal Liberation Front (ALF), a criminal group designated as “terrorists” by the FBI. HSUS president Wayne Pacelle hired John “J.P.” Goodwin in 1997, the same year Goodwin described himself as “spokesperson for the ALF” while he fielded media calls in the wake of an ALF arson attack at a California veal processing plant. In 1997, when asked by reporters for a reaction to an ALF arson fire at a farmer’s feed co-op in Utah (which nearly killed a family sleeping on the premises), Goodwin replied, “We’re ecstatic.” That same year, Goodwin was arrested at a UC Davis protest celebrating the 10-year anniversary of an ALF arson at the university that caused $5 million in damage. And in 1998, Goodwin described himself publicly as a “former member of ALF.”

4.HSUS raised a reported $34 million in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, supposedly to help reunite lost pets with their owners. But comparatively little of that money was spent for its intended purpose. Louisiana’s Attorney General shuttered his 18-month-long investigation into where most of these millions went, shortly after HSUS announced its plan to contribute $600,000 toward the construction of an animal shelter on the grounds of a state prison. Public disclosures of the disposition of the $34 million in Katrina-related donations add up to less than $7 million.

5. After gathering undercover video footage of improper animal handling at a Chino, CA slaughterhouse during November of 2007, HSUS sat on its video evidence for three months, even refusing to share it with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. HSUS’s Dr. Michael Greger testified before Congress that the San Bernardino County (CA) District Attorney’s office asked the group “to hold on to the information while they completed their investigation.” But the District Attorney’s office quickly denied that account, even declaring that HSUS refused to make its undercover spy available to investigators if the USDA were present at those meetings. Ultimately, HSUS chose to release its video footage at a more politically opportune time, as it prepared to launch a livestock-related ballot campaign in California. Meanwhile, meat from the slaughterhouse continued to flow into the U.S. food supply for months.

6. According to a 2008 Los Angeles Times investigation, less than 12 percent of money raised for HSUS by California telemarketers actually ends up in HSUS’s bank account. The rest is kept by professional fundraisers. And if you exclude two campaigns run for HSUS by the “Build-a-Bear Workshop” retail chain, which consisted of the sale of surplus stuffed animals (not really “fundraising”), HSUS’s yield number shrinks to just 3 percent. Sadly, this appears typical. In 2004, HSUS ran a telemarketing campaign in Connecticut with fundraisers who promised to return a minimum of zero percent of the proceeds. The campaign raised over $1.4 million. Not only did absolutely none of that money go to HSUS, but the group paid $175,000 for the telemarketing work.

7. Research shows that HSUS’s heavily promoted U.S. “boycott” of Canadian seafood—announced in 2005 as a protest against Canada’s annual seal hunt—is a phony exercise in media manipulation. A 2006 investigation found that 78 percent of the restaurants and seafood distributors described by HSUS as “boycotters” weren’t participating at all. Nearly two-thirds of them told surveyors they were completely unaware HSUS was using their names in connection with an international boycott campaign. Canada’s federal government is on record about this deception, saying: “Some animal rights groups have been misleading the public for years … it’s no surprise at all that the richest of them would mislead the public with a phony seafood boycott.”

Want evidence? Visit www.AnimalScam.com • www.ActivistCash.com • www.consumerfreedom.com
Revised October 2008. Complete sources and documentation available upon request.
www.exposeanimalrights.com