HwaRang777 wrote:AND NOT FOR DINNER!!! (it's an asian joke)
My parents and I are considering buying a dog as a pet. Now I do understand that it's not a toy and it's a responisibility yadda yadda, but what I want to know is where and how can I buy one. If I wanted a purebred, then can I only go to a breeder? or could I go to the local animal shelter? plus, even though I've read a bit on this which is better: a puppy or older dog? I'm a HS senior going on to college and my parents don't have much else to take care of/to do at home. And are beagles a decent choice?
Indeed. Try owning a pure-bred pomeranian male who was never neutered.shooraijin wrote:Quite. Male dogs are annoying, even if you neuter them early.
Da Rabid Duckie, concerning Gypsy wrote:Gypsy doesn't realize this, but she's ditching whomever she's with and we're getting married. Uh huh. Yeah. Lil bro Zilch can be the best man, it'll be an explosive ceremony. Everyone is invited! We'll serve poutine at the reception, Straylight can DJ, and Shatterheart can start a mosh pit!
Hey... she said it... :pGypsy, in acceptance wrote:Explosives and poutine? Alright!
Very true, plus a lot of mutts look very close to the breeds they are part of so there's not much of a tradeoff in appearance. I used to have a Beagle/Fiest/Jack Russell Terrier that ended up looking like a really little Jack Russell with vertical ears. He was a cute lil bugger.Slater wrote:I second the idea that you get a mutt. They are much more healthier than purebreeds due to the fact that the interbreeding among them eliminates a lot of genetic mutations that many breeds suffer from (eg, sight-loss in dalmations), and they have stronger immune systems against sicknesses which they may encounter. A mutt won't be any less affectionate or cute, and it'll cost you less.
Da Rabid Duckie, concerning Gypsy wrote:Gypsy doesn't realize this, but she's ditching whomever she's with and we're getting married. Uh huh. Yeah. Lil bro Zilch can be the best man, it'll be an explosive ceremony. Everyone is invited! We'll serve poutine at the reception, Straylight can DJ, and Shatterheart can start a mosh pit!
Hey... she said it... :pGypsy, in acceptance wrote:Explosives and poutine? Alright!
Better not methinks, pet overpopulation is already a very large problem in the cities without delibrately adding to it - the pounds would definately be the best bet. To be sure, those puppy mill scum don't know the first thing about "humane" in the least, it's just more of the application of the cold dehumanizing (for it cuts both ways) industrial process to victimize everyone involved. By no means go to a pet store for your dog, fpr if you contributed to the collapse of the puppy mills, it would be a joyous day indeed, much better to save one from the reluctant canine concentration camps, the pounds who are forced to do violent cleanup of our senseless decadence.SirThinks2Much wrote:If you have a friend or a neighbor who has a dog, who is breeding, you could ask them for one.[....]
Look in your local PennySaver or the paper and look for ads for dogs. They tend to be less expensive, and local, so you can make a better assessment of how they've been raised (pet shops tend to sell "puppy mill" dogs, where they're just bred and bred like a machine and not trained in the slightest how to be around people).
Yeah, whatever you say. I will admit PETA goes overboard, but even so, it is true that the morality or immorality of killing an animal depends on what use its life goes torwards. For this reason, when I pray before a meal, I thank God for the lives that were ended in order to feed me. In this case, the pounds are forced against their will by economic "forces" into a host of systematic liquidations (although at least painless) of an overpopulation of dogs after concentrating unwanted ones in a confined area of the size of their affording. In sociology this would be what is called a latent function, not the reason for the founding of the institution, but a definate part of its operation - that of offsetting the dysfunction created by the infrastructure of the cultural boundaries and customs concerning pets, even if through killing. It is in much the same way as charitable organizations recieving clothing donations have unwittingly and indirectly almost wiped out the textile industry (itself one of the major first steps in the process of self-directed industrialization) in Africa.Slater wrote:ugh... don't use the word concentration camps... reminds me of PETA's retarded campaign a while back.
HwaRang777 wrote:AND NOT FOR DINNER!!! (it's an asian joke)
My parents and I are considering buying a dog as a pet. Now I do understand that it's not a toy and it's a responisibility yadda yadda, but what I want to know is where and how can I buy one. If I wanted a purebred, then can I only go to a breeder? or could I go to the local animal shelter? plus, even though I've read a bit on this which is better: a puppy or older dog? I'm a HS senior going on to college and my parents don't have much else to take care of/to do at home. And are beagles a decent choice?
Da Rabid Duckie wrote:Dude!! Get a Welsh Corgi!! XD
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