Written by PETA
Many of us have had a peek into the bizarre world of hoarding courtesy of reality television. Accumulating piles and piles of household junk is bad enough, but when hoarders collect living animals, the results are extreme neglect, suffering, and death.
According to the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF), "It is likely that up to a quarter million animals—250,000 per year—are victims of hoarders. What's more, records kept by ALDF indicate that in the last four years, the number of reported hoarding cases has more than doubled. In terms of the number of animals affected and the degree and duration of their suffering, hoarding is the number one animal cruelty crisis facing companion animals in communities throughout the country."
Alarmingly, as a result of public pressure to avoid euthanasia at all costs, the hoarding mentality has infiltrated animal shelters. MSNBC.com reports that groups calling themselves "rescues" and "shelters" currently account for one-fourth of the estimated 6,000 new hoarding cases annually reported in the U.S. This is just one more way that trying to become "no-kill" before becoming "no-birth" hurts animals.
When animal shelters and rescue groups—such as South Carolina's terribly inaccurately named Sacred Vision Animal Sanctuary—aren't themselves hoarding animals, they sometimes farm out animals to anyone who will take them, including hoarders, in order to reduce the number of animals they euthanize. Here are just two examples:
Please help keep animals out of hoarders' hands by volunteering to help your local animal shelter screen potential placement partners, rescue groups, and adopters. Contact PETA for free placement partner applications and agreements. Please also spay and neuter all your animal companions—it's the only real way to prevent animals from being born only to end up homeless or hoarded.
Written by Lindsay Pollard-Post
Sorry but I have to say that I think no kill is the way to go. Being Buddhist, putting an animal down because of limited space is still killing. The only way to stop the problems that can be seen here are to spay and neuter. I do not believe that it is fair to kill any living creature simply because someone thinks that it's "more humane". Murder is still murder no matter how you slice it. Sorry if this upsets any of you, but it's just the way I feel.
It’s true that we should give animals a decent life and a decent death, ONLY WHEN THE NEED TO DIE. It is not correct to kill animals only because they have is place to live or because the treatment to recover the animal is expensive, healthy animals shouldn’t be killed, animals with a chance of recovering, SHOUDLN´T BE KILLED. We must concentrate all our efforts in sterilizations; this is the answer to all the problems.
I posted my comment aout the ribnon on the other page. I asked peta for help with a south carolina shelter an was turned down :(
All you can do to ensure theyre truly safe is adopt them yourselves, if youve room, and can keep them happy and comfortable then you should! Personally, the operation alleycat idea is the only way to ensure towncats are healthy, and alive. Its proven to work, dont see why it isnt the first option.
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