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Biographies
Dick
Gregory
Dick Gregory is no stranger to fighting injustice. This comedian,
author, and activist has been an influential figure in the civil rights
movement for more than 40 years and was an outspoken advocate for
peace during the Vietnam War. As an ethical vegetarian, Gregory has
often penned letters and made public service announcements in defense
of animals.
In a letter to the Marin Independent Journal, Gregory wrote,
“Under the leadership of Dr. King, I became totally committed
to nonviolence, and I was convinced that nonviolence meant opposition
to killing in any form. … When I look at animals held captive
by circuses, I think of slavery. Animals in circuses represent the
domination and oppression we have fought against for so long. They
wear the same chains and shackles.”
More recently, Dick Gregory sent a letter to David Novak, CEO of KFC’s
parent company, Yum! Brands, urging the company to adopt the animal-welfare
improvements recommended by PETA and approved by KFC’s own advisory
panel. The new standards would eliminate some of the worst abuses
that chickens raised and killed for KFC’s menus are subjected
to by the company’s suppliers.
“Greed is all that is stopping KFC from improving the lives
of 750 million birds every year,” says Gregory. “How can
we hope to achieve a peaceful and just society when basic, human decency
continues to take a back seat to the bottom line?”
Now in his 70s, Gregory’s vegetarian diet keeps him healthy
and active in his ongoing fight to help people and animals.
Traci
Bingham
Traci Bingham—who has appeared on Baywatch, Comedy
Central’s Strip Mall, and a host of shows on BET and
MTV—knows that animals raised for their flesh, including chickens,
have personalities and feelings and that they form families and friendships
if given the chance, so she has volunteered with the nonprofit organization
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals to help promote vegetarianism.
According to Bingham, “Vegetarians are leaner than meat-eaters,
so being a vegetarian is not only good for animals, it’s good
for your girth, too!”
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