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They’re
Selling Puppies at the Mall - What’s Wrong With That?
Right now, it’s trendy to have a designer dog or a tiny
little purebred that you can carry in your purse, like
Paris Hilton’s Chihuahua. So it’s no surprise that
boutique shops selling specialty dogs are popping up
around the country, and even right here in Champaign.
What’s wrong with that?
Puppy retailers pronounce that they obtain their dogs
only from high quality breeders with whom they have
“relationships.” However, they also tell customers that
they can get “any breed” of dog the customer wants and
they maintain a steady inventory of puppies of a variety
of breeds. Regardless of the claims of puppy retailers,
it is impossible to maintain this type of puppy
inventory without acquiring puppies from large scale
commercial breeders. Such breeding facilities are often
referred to as “puppy mills.” Retail pet stores and
their customers keep commercial breeders in business.
What’s wrong with that?
In a (circa 2000) Dateline (NBC) investigative report, a
former employee of a commercial dog breeder told
reporter Chris Hanson that when she returned from a
delivery run with puppies that were too sick to be sold,
the proprietor told her to toss them in the trash
burner. The puppies were still alive.
That kind of decision can only be made when a puppy is
considered nothing more than merchandise. As in any
commercial enterprise, the goal of a commercial dog
breeder is to make money and the quality of life of the
breeding dogs as wells as puppies takes a backseat to
the bottom line. To put it bluntly, life for a breeding
dog at a commercial breeding facility is horrific. These
dogs live out their entire lives in small, often
over-crowded cages. At many facilities, the cages are
outdoors where the dogs are exposed to extreme weather
conditions. The floors of the cages are often made of
wire, so that feces and urine can fall through. The
females are bred repeatedly, often ever heat cycle so
frequently that they are unable to maintain the
nutritional stores required to produce strong healthy
puppies. To further keep costs down, breeding dogs
receive only minimum veterinary care – that which
enables them to continue to reproduce. The health of the
breeding dogs is not as important as getting more
puppies to market. Dogs that are no longer capable of
breeding are killed.
Any doubt that keeping a dog in a small cage twenty-four
hours a day, day after day, is inhumane evaporates when
you witness the neurotic coping behaviors many of these
dogs develop. Some engage in self-mutilation, others
obsessively pace or jump, repeating the exact same
patterns over and over and over. Whether physical,
mental, or emotional, the suffering is apparent and in
many cases, extreme.
Anyone who has ever loved a dog knows that dogs form
strong attachments to their human companions, thrive on
exercise and mental stimulation, and experience physical
pain. Anyone who has ever loved a dog would be repulsed
by the living conditions found at commercial breeding
facilities. Anyone who has ever loved a dog should
oppose the inhumane business of mass producing puppies
for retail sale. |