The PETA Coffin
You can help your furry friends from beyond the grave thanks to a New Mexico company that is building coffins in a partnership with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. The coffins range from $620-$670, which includes a $75 PETA contribution. They are earth-friendly, being made of wood with no screws, nails, hinges or animal-based glues. Michael McGraw, a PETA spokesman in New York, said, "We expect a healthy interest. It's the best way for people to continue to use their voice for animals in death." I would think that being fed to animals upon your death would be the most environmentally friendly thing to do, but what do I know?
They bear painted slogans, such as "Lifetime PETA Member"
I can't help but think that phrase is a little bit inaccurate when posted on a coffin.
This sig is false.
Someone should start the PETP (People for the Ethical Treatment of Plants), those guys at PETA think that animals are superior beings than plants (and for that matter to humans as well) and they are freaking wrong, murdering innocent trees so they could bury their dead bodies is just plain stupid.
* No wood for coffins! cremate your body after you no longer need it (remember to do this in a facility where you can store the energy, a AA battery is more useful than a dead tree and a dead human decomposing in a soil that will never been planted with other than decorative grass)
* No dead trees for storing knowledge! eInk devices and public keys for all.
* Ban christmas trees!
* Ban vegetarianism! Plants are higher beeings and should not be consumend, they been in the earth for more time than vertebrate animals and they deserve to live fully.
</sarcasm>
DON'T PANIC.
Okay animal-based glues I could understand, but screws, nails and hinges? What's wrong with metal?
I can't believe it's not here already. But I always preferred the orginization.
People for the eating of tasty animals.
âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
Metal is recyclable, though.
It can be re-used, it doesn't have to biodegrade.
Disregard the above.
huh? what do you think rust is?