USSRGirl wrote:Oh good Lord...a PETA person....I didn't see you there when I posted, O' Tree Hugger of Infinite Wisdom.
:: Rolls over and dies of an overdose of environMENTALism ::
bweh? o.O who are you adressing?
USSRGirl wrote:Oh good Lord...a PETA person....I didn't see you there when I posted, O' Tree Hugger of Infinite Wisdom.
:: Rolls over and dies of an overdose of environMENTALism ::
GhostontheNet wrote: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.
And so I agreed with you on that one, and wrote so. I complain that on the sum of all consequences the combination of puppy mills, dog breeders, failure to spay and neuter, pet abandonment, and the like contribute to a "pet" (for such a term is no appropriate term for the strays) overpopulation which the shelters must, against their will very often solve with lethal measures with consistency in an organized system. The pounds are not themselves bad or evil for doing this, but rather, they are stuck in a less than ideal cleanup of a system which is still maintaining a distorted stability due to these factors outside of their control. For this reason, I advised against even the use of a breeder to avoid playing a hand in the problem on the micro-scale. On the larger scale, my complaints of decadence and waste is an indictment of the tendency in industrial societies like ours to both produce and purchase more goods than we can actually need or can use, with vast surpluses of waste left over to cause harm one way or another - not for no reason had I previously cited the unrelated example of textiles and used clothes in Africa, itself caused by on a few steps up the chain by a codified overproduction in our own clothing industries. I do indeed think far too many things of our industrial way of life are all too highly questionable from their beginnings in history to the present, and I cannot help but wonder about the lengths of longsuffering of God for all our nations' abominations and greed and selfishness and opressions and sacrilege within and exported.SirThinks2Much wrote:That's...what I was saying, to NOT buy from puppy mills.
WHOA IT'S HOS, UNBANNED
Question for all enviornmentalist: What do you do when an endangered animal is eating an endangered plant? :0\
USSRGirl wrote:Question for all enviornmentalist: What do you do when an endangered animal is eating an endangered plant? :0\
Go with a mutt! they are the coolest and you get interesting combinations! ^_^
We have a Golden Retriever, and she's great. But they're not all as nice as she is. I know a girl whose family has a Golden that's really wild. Ours is extremely calm.
Don't buy a pit bull. I've heard too many horror stories and I believe there is NO way to get rid of their killer instinct.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 161 guests