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What is Pet-Law
All About?
The United States
has made dramatic changes in the way we breed and keep animals over
the past decades. Many of those changes are good. Animals in this
country have it better than they ever had. Our pets are living longer,
healthier lives. The state cruelty and neglect laws, when enforced,
insure that we treat our animals well. Leash laws and voluntary
spay-neuter programs have solved the dog overpopulation problem.
We still have a "dog distribution" problem in which some
areas still have too many in shelters, but that is being addressed
by moving those dogs to places where there are not enough dogs.
Noise and nuisance ordinances in populated areas prevent dogs from
causing problems for neighbors. These changes are good and dog breeders
support them.
But a very few
Americans want radical changes that are designed to end the human-animal
relationship altogether. These are the animal rightists, and they
believe that animals should have the same rights as people, and
that to achieve these rights, they must live separately from people.
No one should be allowed to hunt, to eat meat or any food produced
by an animal, wear clothing made from animal products, use any animals
for medical research or even keep pets. These radicals recruit support
from millions of Americans who believe in one piece of the radical
agenda and send money to support that "cause." What they
don't know is that their checks are used to support the darker parts
of the animal rights movement. The money they send to help "poor
homeless animals" ends up funding an agenda they would never
condone. Unfortunately, the animal welfare movement has been hijacked
by extremists and those who believe in helping animals are doing
the opposite by funding national organizations such as the Humane
Society of the United States (HSUS) and People for the Ethical Treatment
of Animals (PeTA)
But the fight against
animal rights is growing as people begin to realize that the humane
movement has indeed been waylaid by extremists, as Patti and Rod
Strand told us more than a decade ago in their book, The Hijacking
of the Humane Movement. Animal rights is not about loving animals.
It's about hating people.
If you love animals and
want to see them continue to be a part of our lives, join the Pet-Law
email list, explore this site, and help us fight for the freedom
to own and breed pets. You might want to start with these quotations
from animal rights leaders. And the first step you can
take to help is to send your donations to your local shelter, where
they will be used to help animals, never to a national organization.
Winning
Through Resistance
Why a Defensive
War Against Animal Rights Can Succeed
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