BabyFidgette | 01-19-2008 02:16 PM | Quote:
Originally Posted by livingdustmops
(Post 1687096)
I agree it does not give someone the right - it is against the law but you are all assuming this guy loved this dog. Why? Because he continued to look for her? Maybe it is his ego saying "I am going to get that dog back no matter what". Maybe he wants her back as he could sell her for $$$ even if she is spayed. I don't have answers to any of this but I was still curious about the neighbor. I am sure she knew she was stealing personal property - what drove her to this? Maybe she wants all dogs spay/neutered? Maybe it broke her heart knowing this beautiful dog was only being used to breed over and over again. I would also like to know the timeline on all of this and how did they find out the neighbor took the dog. It has been over a year but has the original owner been fighting to get the dog back the whole time? or did he just find out? How did he find out? Was a reward offered?
Would you all think it is a good idea to return a dog to an original owner if the dog lived in a bad situation? Not that it really matters as again the dog is personal property and unless they can prove abuse the dog will be returned.
Just questions I have after watching the video. | To me she sounds like an extremist, i.e. people burning down pet stores (with animals in it) to stop the stores from selling. :rolleyes: These people don't make sense to me. I have a next door neighbor who keeps his dog outside a lot in the hot and cold weather, and believe me, the thought has crossed my mind about snatching up this guy, but I would never do it no matter what. If this owner was so bad, she should have called the ASPCA, cops, etc. It doesn't matter what was going through her mind, she shouldn't have done it, because what seems like "bad" care to some isn't necessarily bad.
And no, I wouldn't want the dog going back to bad conditions, but that's the law to decide, not us. |