PETA Calls To Ban Pregnant Women From Wing-Eating Contest, Cites Concerns Over Unborn's Penis Size

What PETA Has To Say About Your Unborn Son's Penis Size
Chicken wings on plate. Freshly baked, selective focus. Green background..
Chicken wings on plate. Freshly baked, selective focus. Green background..

PETA has urged the National Buffalo Wing Festival to ban pregnant women from its upcoming wing-eating contest because of a study linking poultry consumption to smaller penises in the unborn.

"Pregnant women may want to think twice before chomping on those chicken wings, or their sons could come up short," PETA Associate Director of Campaigns Lindsay Rajt said in a release.

The festival runs Saturday and Sunday in downtown Buffalo, N.Y.

PETA pointed to the Study for Future Families, which determined that phthalates, chemical compounds that can be found in chicken, may diminish genital size. The study gauged the amount of phthalates in pregnant women and measured their male offspring's sex organs between 2 months old and 3 years old.

However, expecting moms interviewed by Your News Now suggested PETA's warning was half-baked.

"I think that it’s silly," said Heather Albert of North Tonawanda. "I ate poultry when I was pregnant and I have two children and they are perfectly fine."

Festival founder Drew Cerza told the outlet he had no comment.

PETA also used the information as a jumping-off point to address alleged animal abuse.

"Chickens suffer every day of their abbreviated lives, including when they're hung upside down by their legs from conveyor belts before their throats are cut," the release notes. "They're also often submerged in scalding-hot water to be defeathered while still conscious."

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