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Bears are powerful, majestic animals who face numerous threats.

Dogs are the canine companions who have shared our lives for millennia.

Mice and rats are curious, social animals who can make excellent pets.

To save wildlife from being killed just for bragging rights.

To stand against the most egregious abuses of wildlife.

To stop the barbaric practices of dogfighting and cockfighting.

Because beauty should be kind.

To make sure there’s a family for every pet—and help keep pets in the loving homes they have.

To help reduce needless cruelty to animals.

To keep wild animals where they belong—in the wild—and out of zoos and circuses.

By honoring the love people have for their pets.

To encourage peaceful coexistence with wild animals.

To end the cruel treatment of dogs in mass breeding operations.

To keep animals safe in their natural habitat.

To reduce⁠—and eventually end⁠—harmful animal experiments.

WASHINGTON—Approximately 20 million pets in the U.S. experience poverty with their families and 70% have never seen a veterinarian*. According to a new Harris Poll survey conducted on behalf of the Humane Society of the United States**, only around one in four Americans (28%) are even aware of this...

During the summer of 2022, our Animal Rescue Team, with the support of our shelter and rescue partners, removed nearly 4,000 beagles from a mass breeding facility

To shed light on this tail … er … tale, let’s rewind a bit. Last summer, the Humane Society of the United States stepped in at the request of the U.S. Department of Justice to transport nearly 4,000 beagles from a facility that bred dogs for the animal testing industry and had numerous animal...

The Humane Society of the United States has completed its historic mission to remove nearly 4,000 beagles from a mass breeding facility which bred dogs to be sold to laboratories for animal experimentation. The last group of 312 beagles was removed from the facility earlier today and of that, 52 are...

The mountain lion known as P-47 survived fires, freeways and hostile ranchers. But in March, the 3-year-old big cat—tracked by California biologists since his kitten days—succumbed to a hidden hazard: an insidious form of food poisoning. Six anticoagulant compounds—chemicals used to kill rodents...