Butts are coming out of my monkeys.
From July 1998 through the end of 2005, PETA killed over 14,400 dogs, cats, and other "companion animals" -- at its Norfolk, Virginia headquarters. The group put to death over 90 percent of the animals it took in during 2005 alone. And its angel-of-death pattern shows no sign of changing.
PETA president Ingrid Newkirk complained that actually taking care of animals costs more than killing them. PETA raked in nearly $29 million last year in income, much of it raised from pet owners who think their donations actually help animals. Instead the group spent it defending arsonists and other violent extremists of the Animal Liberation Front, a group the FBI ranks as the largest domestic terror threat in the United States.