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More Info for Consumers > Consumer Products

Attention, Caring Consumers: PETA’s 2007 Shopping Guide for Caring Consumers Is Here!


Pam Anderson on the cover of the 2007 Caring Consumer Shopping Guide Whether you’re looking for animal-friendly fashions or humane household cleansers, PETA’s 2007 Shopping Guide for Caring Consumers is the ultimate go-to guide for every cruelty-free product imaginable. And with Pamela Anderson’s famous face on the front of it, our shopping guide is one of the only books that you should judge by its cover! After all, this angel for animals, who has given fur the cold shoulder in one PETA ad and touted vegetarianism in another, speaks out against animal abuse every chance she gets. Refusing to wear, eat, or exploit animals in any way, Pamela is as beautiful on the inside as she is on the outside of this guide.

You know what else is beautiful? Not having to labor over labels to determine which companies and products are animal-friendly. From steering you clear of clothing and accessories made with fur, leather, wool, silk, and down to directing you to completely compassionate companies that offer synthetic alternatives, this helpful handbook takes the confusion and mystery out of shopping and ensures that all your purchases will be cruelty-free. Starting out as a wallet-sized pamphlet listing a handful of cruelty-free companies 15 years ago, this guide now features more than 550 companies, including The Body Shop, Revlon, Method, and Mary Kay. All the companies that you’ll find in the guide have committed, in writing, never to test any ingredients or finished products on animals.

So that consumers can know which companies to avoid, the shopping guide also lists companies that continue to subject animals to painful tests in which substances are dripped into their eyes, smeared on their abraded skin, sprayed in their faces, or forced down their throats. These tests are not required by law, and as hundreds of other companies already know, a variety of faster, cheaper, more accurate, and more humane alternatives is available.

The guide also includes the following:
  • Companion-animal food manufacturers that don’t conduct nutrition tests on animals in laboratories
  • Companies that sell animal-friendly, nonleather shoes, clothing, and accessories
  • Catalogs and Web sites that offer cruelty-free products
  • Health charities that do not fund animal experiments
  • Companies that sell vegan products exclusively
  • Animal ingredients and their alternatives
  • Money-saving coupons from more than 30 cruelty-free companies
The shopping guide is a perfect gift for family and friends. Only $12.95, plus shipping and handling, order your copy today online or by calling 757-622-7382, extension 8300. It’s also available in bookstores and health-food stores.

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In This Section
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