PETA’s Ozempic Love Affair EXPOSED — And the Gila Monster Connection Big Pharma Doesn’t Want You to Know
By DC Infowarrior | November 7, 2025
“Animal testing for me, but not for thee!”
— Former PETA VP Mary Beth Sweetland (allegedly, if she were honest)
The House of Cards Is Falling
The very group that built its empire on virtue-signaling, fake blood, and tofu dogs is now caught red-handed cozying up to Big Pharma — and worse, endorsing a class of drugs rooted in animal exploitation.
That’s right. PETA, the supposed guardians of animal life, just published an article essentially promoting the use of Ozempic, Wegovy, and other GLP-1 receptor agonists — all derived, initially, from the venom of the Gila monster, a now near-threatened species.
You can’t make this stuff up.
“Compassion for All Animals!” (Unless Big Pharma Pays)
GLP-1 drugs, used for diabetes and weight loss, mimic a natural hormone in the body that regulates blood sugar. But what most people don’t know — because media refuses to talk about it — is that these drugs were originally inspired by and modeled after a protein found in Gila monster venom. That’s right: venom.
This venom (exendin-4) was isolated, studied, and tested using lab animals — many of whom were killed or maimed in the process. The synthetic version is now a billion-dollar cash cow for companies like Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly.
And what does PETA say?
Instead of condemning the animal testing and wild exploitation, they published a fluff article about how vegan diets are “still important” if you’re taking Ozempic. Not a peep about animal cruelty in drug development.
Because Big Pharma is funding everything.
And PETA knows who really butters their no-egg vegan toast.
Mary Beth Sweetland: The Smoking Syringe
Let’s not forget former PETA Vice President Mary Beth Sweetland, a diabetic who publicly admitted to using animal-derived and animal-tested insulin. Yes, the same PETA VP who once led campaigns against animal research.
Instead of acknowledging the contradiction, she doubled down in interviews — even justifying the use of the very kind of insulin tested on lab animals.
Her logic?
“I need to live. My insulin keeps me alive.”
Well, guess what? That’s the same justification used by every patient who relies on animal-tested medication.
So who gets to be ethical? Only the elite at PETA?
The rest of us?
We’re just peasants expected to “obey and comply.”
Hypocrisy in High-Def: PETA’s Two-Faced Agenda
“We oppose all animal testing!”
— PETA’s mission statement“Unless it’s for weight-loss drugs inspired by lizard venom that make people skinny enough for the cover of Cosmo. Then it’s totally fine.”
— PETA’s real stance (if you read between the tofu lines)
They want your donations, your loyalty, your social media virtue points — but behind the curtain? They’re bending over backward for the same pharmaceutical overlords they once claimed to fight.
Let’s be real: if Gila monsters were being skinned alive for fur, PETA would be nude and screaming in the streets.
But if their venom is used in billion-dollar GLP-1 weight loss drugs?
Crickets. Not a single squeal from Ingrid Newkirk.
The Real Victims: Animals and Truth
This isn’t just about hypocrisy. It’s about selective ethics, elite privilege, and a movement hijacked by corporate interests.
GLP-1 drugs were born from:
- Wild reptile study
- Painful animal testing
- Pharmaceutical patent mining
- And millions of dollars in government‑backed biomedical grants
But you won’t hear that from PETA.
You won’t hear about the Gila monster’s decline.
You won’t hear about the mice and monkeys injected with venom analogues until their pancreases exploded.
Because it’s all about controlling the narrative.
Final Warning: Do Not Trust the “Compassion Industrial Complex”
This is the compassion industrial complex in action — where virtue is weaponized for cash, and dissent is punished.
Today it’s Ozempic.
Tomorrow?
It could be a gene therapy derived from the blood of dolphins or an Alzheimer’s cure involving the brains of octopuses.
And PETA?
They’ll say nothing.
Because silence is golden — when funded by pharmaceutical gold.
But if you sell dietary supplements independent of Big Pharma? That’s another story.
Remember Prevagen? The memory supplement supposedly derived from jellyfish protein — namely, a compound called apoaequorin?
That company got raked over the coals by watchdogs and animal rights groups — including scrutiny from PETA — because they dared to test their supplement on animals.
Never mind that it was a dietary supplement, not a prescription drug.
Never mind that they were trying to test safety and efficacy — which, by the way, is exactly what Big Pharma does with FDA-approved drugs.
But Prevagen?
They don’t have Big Pharma money.
They’re not part of the cartel.
So PETA attacks.
But when it’s Ozempic — an ultra-expensive GLP‑1 agonist derived from lizard venom, tested on lab animals, and now pushed like candy for off-label weight loss?
👉 PETA writes blog posts reminding people to “eat more fiber” while praising the results.
So let me get this straight:
- Prevagen = Supplement company → Attacked for animal testing
- Ozempic/Wegovy = Billion-dollar weight loss drugs with reptile venom origins → Promoted by PETA
- Mary Beth Sweetland = Ex-VP of PETA → Uses animal-tested insulin and gets a pass
- You = Vegan who dares ask questions? → Labeled a crank or “not a real activist”
Smell that?
That’s not jellyfish.
That’s Big Pharma–funded hypocrisy, marinated in Gila monster venom and served up on a silver platter of silence.
Stay Awake. Stay Angry.
If you want real compassion, start by demanding consistency.
If animal testing is wrong, then it’s wrong — even when it benefits the elite.
DC Infowarrior out.
And to the folks at PETA?
“Animal testing for me, but not for thee!” isn’t just a meme.
It’s your legacy.