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![]() | #76 | |
Donating YT Addict Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Missouri
Posts: 903
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Her message about all BYBers was inappropiate.
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![]() | #77 | |
Resident Yorkie Nut Donating YT 20K Club Member Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 27,490
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I honestly do not think one can sum up what the author was trying to impart into 5 lines or less. I also do not see where she made any harmful statements. She made some very good points. Her article is focusing on the part that backyard breeders play in the problem. I don't see her saying that they are the only problem. Bottom line: there are far more people breeding dogs in this world than need be.
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![]() | #78 | |
I ♥ Joey & Ralphie! Donating Member | ![]() Quote:
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![]() | #79 | |
Resident Yorkie Nut Donating YT 20K Club Member Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 27,490
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![]() | #80 | |
Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Mississippi
Posts: 2,564
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![]() | #81 | |
I ♥ Joey & Ralphie! Donating Member | ![]() Quote:
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![]() | #82 |
Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Mississippi
Posts: 2,564
| ![]() I checked the link you posted and it says estimates are 6-8 million cats and dogs enter shelters every year with 3-4 million being euthanized. This is a lower number than the article the OP posted indicates and also lower than the estimates I've seen. In all cases, though, these are estimates and no one seems to have a really accurate number. No matter whose numbers you use, it's way too many but the range of estimates does underscore the need for a database. Also, in any estimate, cats outnumber dogs and the link you posted lumps them together to get the number they use. The estimate of 25% being pure bred is about dogs but every other number is about dogs and cats. I'm wondering if these estimates are about shelters only or if they include rescues. I know neither one of us is trying to be argumentative and we would all like to see something done about this. I'd just like to see a more accurate compilation of data before legislative solutions are offered since that seems to be the direction being taken lately. Pet over-population wouldn't be such a problem if people had more of a sense of responsibility but that seems to be sorely lacking in society these days. It's really a shame. |
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![]() | #83 |
Resident Yorkie Nut Donating YT 20K Club Member Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 27,490
| ![]() These two links seem to support what Nancy is saying about the numbers. They both indicate that the larger number of pure bred dogs come from backyard breeders. Puppy Mills and Backyard Breeders vs Responsible Breeders - VeterinaryPartner.com - a VIN company! Backyard Breeders & Puppy Mills : Tovik Siberians The one mentions that the AKC stated that years ago, but I cannot find those stats. Will keep looking. Actually, it makes sense to me. We all see puppy mills as being a problem because of the overwhelming amount at each facility. We do not see those amounts in individual homes, but the numbers of individuals breeding probably are astronomical.
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![]() | #84 | |
megan - g Donating Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: South Texas
Posts: 2,324
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![]() | #85 | |
Princess Poop A Lot Donating Member Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Colorado
Posts: 6,728
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If you want more accurate compilation of data then you have to be ready to pay hugh amounts of $$$ or pass laws to incorporate all organizations to get to these numbers...it will never happen. Animals are just property and frankly few people really give a darn. Pet over-population starts with the breeders/owners as they are the ones putting together a male and a female dog or not fixing their dogs. End of story. It also starts with "volume breeders" which AKC endorses some of them. ![]()
__________________ Cindy & The Rescued Gang ![]() Puppies Are Not Products! | |
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![]() | #86 |
megan - g Donating Member Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: South Texas
Posts: 2,324
| ![]() I would LOVE to only be able to buy my yorkie from a LISCENCED breeder, that has to account for EVERY aspect of breeding since they are taking (not making) money for a service. A business has to be held accountable, payroll taxes, licences, benefits, and what not, why not a breeder!? This is not a product that is being debated, this is a live animal. How in the world can laws protecting LIFE not be celebrated by breeders everywhere? If it becomes hard for me to buy a yorkie someday because laws got tough on people I will be thrilled! It is too easy to just pick up the local paper and buy a pure breed dog at the drop of a hat. I am so sorry to all the "hobby breeders" out there that don't classify themselves as BYB's. I hope you can find a new hobby. If you don't breed your dogs to standard than you don't even come close to understanding those who do and should not be placed in the same category. If rescues and animal shelters become extinct in my life time it would be just about the most amazing thing that could ever happen. If it takes legislation getting tough on EVERYONE then so be it! If you don't have the resources and time to jump throughout the hoops that future breeders will have to than stop breeding!
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![]() | #87 |
Donating Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Mississippi
Posts: 2,564
| ![]() The links you posted don't speak to the number of dogs entering shelters and/or being euthanized. The HSUS link that Nancy posted shows that 25% of dogs in shelters are pure bred. This means that 75% of dogs in shelters are not pure bred. I know that in my local shelter the kill rate is about 40+% for dogs and much higher for cats. If that is a typical ratio, you could take that to mean that, if the number of shelter dogs could be halved, then you are left with not an ideal situation but at least a manageable problem. So, if only 25% of dogs in shelters are pure bred, how can they be the biggest source of the problem whether they come from mills, BYBs or even reputable breeders? It seems to me that the numbers point to mixed breeds being the biggest problem and that goes directly back to irresponsible pet owners, not breeders of any stripe. Again, I'm not being argumentative, only trying to make some sense of these statistics. Bringing up puppy mills and BYBs is fine when talking about breeder ethics, but the numbers suggest they are much less of a problem in terms of pet over-population than careless and irresponsible pet owners are. |
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![]() | #88 |
Donating YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: San Jose, CA, USA
Posts: 2,883
| ![]() excuse me, but i don't see the point in having to prove the numbers blah blah blah... i don't care about the exact number of unwanted dogs that is contributed by BYBers. even contributing just one more dog and selling it to irresponsible owners like themselves is one too many. i was going to do some research to find out how big of a problem BYBers are, but decided that that's not even really the point. i think it's self-evident that BYBers are contributing to the problem. for the people that are arguing against BYBers being part of the problem, where are you coming from. what is your logic? puppy mills have received a lot of bad press, but there are a lot of backyard breeders that run similarly to puppy mills. i mean, don't they both have the same goal? produce dogs for money. and no education on what they are doing but just carelessly breeding? i do not understand why people are arguing for BYBers? please point out your logic. because you are not making any sense. earlier in my other post i pointed out that if you are worried that it will become exclusive and only selected few will be able to breed, then do all that is necessary to breed, then you will not be called a byber. plus, with the kind of over populating problems we DO have with pets, you know what, yea, probably only selected few should be breeding. it might just be a great idea that it IS more discrimitory on who should be breeding dogs. |
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![]() | #89 | |
Donating YT Addict Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Missouri
Posts: 903
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I realize this is a very sensitive issue - and that is why I don't respond to these types of posts. For the record, I don't disagree with the author's overall goal in bringing awareness to the issue that average people ought not breed their pets. In fact, I have discouraged several of my friends from doing just that (friends who have wanted to recover their purchase costs). I just disagree with how the author made her point. As Woogie Man said, I don't mean to be agrumentative - I believe we are all on the same page when it comes to animal suffering.
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![]() | #90 |
Donating YT 1000 Club Member Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: San Jose, CA, USA
Posts: 2,883
| ![]() once upon a time, barbers can be doctors, because there are no laws to say that they couldn't. no laws to say that you must have gone through the education and training before you can perform surgeries. so since barbers have sharp knives and scissors, they also performed surgeries on people. once upon a time, anyone could build a bridge if they had the money. they do not need to have gone to engineering school, have the education or training, they can just simply build a bridge. how would you feel about that if that was still true today? BYBers do not have the education, training, or qualification to breed dogs. if they did, they would not be called a back yard breeder. don't let your selfish wants allow you to support what is NOT RIGHT! backyard breeder are basically barber-surgeons. it's kind of barbaric if you think about it. |
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