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Vegetarians launch protest of McDonald's

2,200 sign petition urging that restaurant be ousted from union

By Dana Cetrone

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Published: Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Updated: Wednesday, September 30, 2009

McDonald's

Jaclyn Borowski/The Diamondback

VegTerps, a student group, and peta2, an offshoot of PETA for young adults, are protesting the presence of McDonald’s in the Stamp Student Union.

The McChickens and McNuggets served in the Stamp Student Union are a supersized problem for some campus activists.

A petition created by two animal-rights groups aims to expel McDonald’s from the student union. Over 2,200 carnivores and vegetarians alike have signed the petition, which was created by VegTerps, a campus vegan and vegetarian activist group, and peta2, a youth offshoot of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Administrators said if a student advisory board recommended the move, Mickey D’s could get the boot, a goal the organizations believe will be beneficial to the university.

“We think it drags down the reputation of a well-respected university to have a low-grade restaurant on campus,” said Ryan Huling, the senior college campaign coordinator for peta2.

PETA has long been critical of fast-food chains from McDonald’s to Kentucky Fried Chicken, which they have dubbed “Kentucky Fried Cruelty.”

Michelle Carr, President of VegTerps, said her group and peta2 are going to do everything possible to help raise awareness about the campaign, called “No McCruelty on Campus.” They are focusing on McDonald’s because the chain’s suppliers use what the petitioners say are unethical slaughtering practices that cause the chickens to suffer while they are still alive.

“By working with peta2, VegTerps hopes to replace McDonald’s with a restaurant that is not only animal-friendly but also a better choice for everyone involved,” Carr said. “I started VegTerps in August, and to already have over 2,000 petition signatures for this campaign amazes me.”

The groups' petition stated that they want to see the McDonald’s removed from the student union until chicken suppliers in the U.S. and Canada change to a more humane method called “controlled-atmosphere killing,” which reduces the birds’ suffering because they die painlessly from a lack of oxygen.

VegTerps and peta2 have been distributing literature, stickers and DVDs showing undercover investigations of the slaughtering practices to garner support from the campus community.

“We've been getting support from average students, not just vegetarians,” Huling said, citing the DVDs as particularly compelling to signers.

The groups are not asking for students to become vegan, Carr said, just to make informed choices about what to eat at the food court. 

“Besides, why would anyone want to support such a company that sees the chickens as nothing more but profit and not as living animals?” Carr said.

Stamp Student Union Director Gretchen Metzelaars said students could force a change by convincing members of a student advisory board, who she said make decisions on what restaurants go in the food court.

“With 2,200 signatures we'd start a discussion,” Metzelaars said. “The next step for them is to bring it to a discussion with the board of students.”

Metzelaars hadn’t heard about the current petition, but said there was some controversy when students made the decision to replace a Roy Rogers with McDonald’s in the union 11 years ago.

“Since McDonald's was one of the top choices, they'd have to come up with a petition compelling enough to present to the student body since they put McDonald's there in the first place,” Metzelaars said.

While the petition has gathered momentum, some students lamented the possible departure of one of their favorite restaurants.

“I don't want them gone,” said Anna Emmons, a sophomore communication major. “I think it's one of the most popular and it stays open the latest.”

Sophomore letters and sciences major Neelam Patel agreed.

“I think most places get chickens from the same place so it doesn't really matter what restaurant is there,” Patel said.

Carr said VegTerps is planning to meet with the food service company the university uses to discuss when the McDonald’s contract is up and what could replace it.

VegTerps was the first group to bring the cause to campus, and, along with peta2, they say they plan to keep the effort going until it succeeds. 

“It's surprising that a national campaign was just launched and dozens of groups have already contacted us about it,” Huling said. “UMD was the first to take charge but there are dozens of other groups lining up too.”

cetrone@umdbk.com

Comments

46 comments
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 18:58
FTA:

“We think it drags down the reputation of a well-respected university to have a low-grade restaurant on campus,” said Ryan Huling, the senior college campaign coordinator for peta2."

Food nazi alert! Mind your own business Huling and leave the rest of us alone. Why do your delicate sensibilities trump the right of some other student to eat McDonald's if they feel like it?

Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 18:49
Our immune system is constantly killing bacteria...yes killing it....so by being alive we are harming these poor defenseless bacteria...so as long as we are alive PETA can not be happy....hey how was your cheeseburger
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 17:46
Doesn't the animal kingdom also include insects, more specifically ants, spiders, worm and other sidewalk creepy crawlers, which by our unfortunate act of walking, undergo suffering and death as well. Hey, by us no longer walking outside, PETA will no longer have to worry about customers patronizing any kind of fast food establishments. Therefore this animal ethics argument can go beyond eating. So how about a world of living inside a bubble, not taking any footsteps and feasting on alfalfa sprouts and granola bars all day. Then will PETA finally be happy?
With this being said, I am off to Mickey Dees for a Quarter Pounder with Cheese.
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 16:59
You are saying not to eat any creature with a nervous system or a consciousness or however you want to put it. They can suffer, so we shouldn't harm them. Well certainly plants can suffer too, albeit not in a way that we can readily understand. Plants respond to negative stimuli even if they don't feel pain in the same way. So why not take your argument a step further and say we shouldn't eat anything that responds to negative stimuli? Please do, because then you couldn't eat anything, and you would STARVE TO DEATH AND STOP BOTHERING THE REST OF THE REASONING RATIONAL WORLD WITH PETA BULLCRAP
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 16:54
animals might have feelings, but they also have flavor.
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 15:46
You stupid people! You just think about yourselves and your "right to choose"! What about the rights of other beings to live and not to suffer? Animals are sentient and conscious and therefore there is no reason to consider that their lives are less important than yours or mine! Please stop being so selfish and start thinking about the others (human or not).
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 15:34
Jenny: I'm French and i can assure you we don't think PETA is ridiculous.

Bravo and keep up this good work! Animal liberation is on the way!

Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 14:45
foooood-

Sure they do. But they have to control everyone else's options, not just make their own decisions on where and what to eat.

foooood
Wed Sep 30 2009 14:43
dont they know there is a goddamn co-op downstairs.
Jenny
Wed Sep 30 2009 14:38
Kandace, it's not just McDonalds that does those things, it's pretty much the entirety of human industry and commerce. Singling out the one McDonalds in the Union is entirely arbitrary. I hate McDonalds, I think their food is disgusting, but I think the restaurant should stay. PETA is a much more reprehensible organization that McDonalds is. Do you wonder why 99% of the world thinks that PETA is ridiculous?
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 14:34
Kandace-

You'd do the world (and yourself) a favor to keep your idealistic, uninformed opinions to yourself.

Kandace
Wed Sep 30 2009 13:49
After reading the above comments I'm pretty sickened by the people who are so attached to their fatty hamburgers and fried chicken parts that they refuse to see the truth about McDonalds. It is not just about chickens, it is about the 70% of the rainforest cut down to raise cows for, guess what, your hamburger, it is about the employee unions shut down by the evil corporation, it is about the growing obesity epidemic in the United States. Get a life, get over yourself, and learn to live without chemical filled disgusting McDonalds food. You'll do the world and yourself a favor.
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 12:34
Seriously? WOW, PETA you absolutely suck. The only reason the chicken they kill are alive is because they want them to be alive, those chicken are born and raised to be eaten by people and for no other reason. Did the chickens tell you that they felt like they way they are being killed hurts more? No. Also, how do they actually know that suffocating them is a more humane killing and less painful? If you don't like McDonald's, go elsewhere. I would gladly and instantly join a petition against PETA (and the absolute stupidity they bring to everything they do). By the way, I don't care for McDonald's food much but I hate PETA and everything they are along with their ridiculously stupid campaigns. I bet if you polled the entire university, the VAST majority of students would gladly keep McDonald's and oust PETA instead.
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 12:24
It's kind of cute that this group believes that their efforts will really result in the removal of the McDonald's. To be that young again . . .
Mike
Wed Sep 30 2009 11:59
I am a vegetarian and do not support mcdonalds in any way. However, I dont think these petitioners took into account that the people who will be most directly affected are low paid employees struggling to make ends meet. Many of these workers have families to support and work very hard for very low wage. And you are fighting to basically make these people unemployed.

The majority of them do not have parents to pay for everything like most of these priveleged student protesters.

PETA is stupid
Wed Sep 30 2009 11:25
This is silly, an d I'd join any counter protest that was start. First of all, choice is choice. If you don't like McDonald's, don't eat there. I don't, but firmly believe it's anyone's choice. Secondly, PETA is silly. It's that simple. PETA is silly.
Eat Mor Chikin
Wed Sep 30 2009 11:07
Are you seriously telling me that McDonald's allows practices that are more cruel than every other restaurant in the Union?

'“We think it drags down the reputation of a well-respected university to have a low-grade restaurant on campus,” said Ryan Huling, the senior college campaign coordinator for peta2.'

Yeah buddy, because Panda Express and Taco Bell cater to far more upscale clientele.

Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 10:37
McDonalds, really?

Of all the things that people can do to make a difference on campus, these people care about whether or not we have a McDonalds?!'

Jonesy
Wed Sep 30 2009 10:20
Keith, 2200 students signing it does not show "pretty clearly" that they want McDonalds gone....there are something like 35,000 students on the campus....PETA is a ridiculous organization that detracts from its cause by attracting outlandish and obnoxious people
Your name
Wed Sep 30 2009 10:19
While students should have a right to eat where they choose, there are many other reasons to evict McDonald's aside from their policy on chickens. For more on this, read Fast Food Nation.

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