Guest guest Posted September 30, 2005 Report Share Posted September 30, 2005 I received this from a friend, and I signed up. Just enter your contact information, and it will send this message to your local US representative: Dear Friend, Don't you think it's terrible that people were forced to leave their pets behind during Hurricane Katrina? Please ask your U.S. Representative to support the PETS Act, H.R. 3858, which would require state and local authorities to plan for evacuating people with pets the next time a disaster like Hurricane Katrina strikes. It's quick and easy to do. Just https://community.hsus.org/campaign/pets_act_house?rk=zdzjjP61WmI5W *************************************** Powered by GetActive Software, Inc. Member Relationship Management Solutions That Recruit, Engage, and Retain http://www.getactive.com *************************************** http://naturalperfumery.com The premier site on the Web to discover the beauty of Natural Perfume " The Age of the Foodie is passé. It is now the Age of the Scentie. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2005 Report Share Posted October 1, 2005 I have real mixed feelings about this. While I do think it's terrible many animals were left behind, I think I'd feel a little miffed if they couldn't get my ailing mother out in time because some goverment figure (IF they were even in the area in time) was forced to save their quota of dogs before helping me. Kirstin (owner of five beloved parrots, a labrador and 3 couch potato cats) --- rastapoodle <mccoy wrote: > I received this from a friend, and I signed up. Just > enter your > contact information, and it will send this message > to your local US > representative: > > Dear Friend, > > Don't you think it's terrible that people were > forced to leave > their pets behind during Hurricane Katrina? Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2005 Report Share Posted October 1, 2005 04 pm Human Cruelty-- To Animals and Each Other! by Claire Wolfe avburns2002 Offline Send Email Friends, I have rarely read anything which encapsulates so well the heartbreak we all feel as we watch the once humane, freedom based American culture, the culmination of 6000 years of the " upward reach " in the hearts of mankind, being destroyed around us. What have we allowed to happen to us? Al Burns P.S. The title is one I added to the article, not Claire Wolfe. ---- ---------- Human Cruelty – To Animals and Each Other by Claire Wolfe I CRIED MYSELF TO SLEEP LAST NIGHT. Then I woke up several times during the early hours, each time with the same unendurable image in my mind's eye. While researching for my upcoming Hardyville column, I'd run across a single paragraph describing an unforgivable cruelty to an animal and a human after Hurricane Katrina, and I just couldn't stand it any more. It was more heartbreaking than the images of that bloated, uncaring cop ripping Snowball from a crying little boy. I can't even stand to describe it this morning. But I have to so you'll know what I mean: some stories are almost unbelievable in a civilized nation. One man survived for five days in a tree with his 16-year-old dachshund--Chihuahua. His rescuers would not let him carry the dog onto a boat. He killed his beloved companion rather than leave her to starve in the tree. It's from this article. Maybe you already knew, but I hadn't heard about it until last night. This morning, I verified it and found details. For me, that one spare paragraph, that one bland, banal, business- as-usual bureaucratic cruelty, encapsulated everything that's wrong -- and increasingly wrong, I fear -- with the human race. If " one death is a tragedy, a million deaths a statistic, " then for me the single unspeakable refusal to rescue a tiny animal -- forcing a desperate man to kill the creature he'd loved and saved -- drew all the cruelties of institutionalized culture into one Goya-like image in my mind's eye. And I simply haven't found a way to go on conducting the ordinary business of life when I'm a member of a species that routinely behaves with such rottenness. This one tiny horror built on top of a world of horrors and I'd had all I could bear. Yet, once again, the utterly unnecessary ugliness of the world contrasts with the decency of my own world. Yesterday, as he did last week, my friend the Pyramid Man came over and helped me roof my garden shed. We got it totally done, except for a few small finishing details that I can easily do. A project that had weighed heavily on my mind all summer is done. Thanks to his help, it's safely roofed over before the fall rains come. I felt wonderful. I had a great, good day -- until I learned about that one tiny horror. Pyramid Man also loves dogs and never, ever could I imagine him telling a survivor of five days of terror and torment that a chihuahua -- a chihuahua, forchristsake! -- is too much of a burden to rescue after a desperate man had clung to her with such love. He gave her so much -- as she gave him. But that bond of love mattered nothing to The Institution. Only The Rules matter. I'm embarrassed to bleed all over you. I really am. And yet I'm having increasing trouble living in a world where government cruelty is becoming ever more dominant, while trying to live a life of personal peace and decency. I can't find a way to reconcile what is with what should be. I can't find my place; the world increasingly has no place for people like me. This is a world that would replace helpful, decent people like Pyramid Man with faceless, soulless bureaucrats. A world that would force a man to choose between dying himself and killing a beloved 10-pound dog because The Rules -- the Holy ******* Rules -- require it. The historic individual cruelty of human beings pales before the cruelty of humans who subsume themselves within institutions. And those are the humans of our future. Background checked, rule-ridden, numbered, stamped, chipped, tracked, surveilled, regimented, more loyal to The Institution than to their own conscience or their own heart ... and ultimately lacking in everything that makes human life worth living. How can anyone bear it? ================================ The price of freedom is eternal vigilance Click to join TruthAGAINSTtradition Come join a Christian community dedicated to research and resistance to the Dragons New World Order ---- Kirstin Key 09/30/05 21:53:03 Re: OT: help save pets from the next disaster I have real mixed feelings about this. While I do think it's terrible many animals were left behind, I think I'd feel a little miffed if they couldn't get my ailing mother out in time because some goverment figure (IF they were even in the area in time) was forced to save their quota of dogs before helping me. Kirstin (owner of five beloved parrots, a labrador and 3 couch potato cats) --- rastapoodle <mccoy wrote: > I received this from a friend, and I signed up. Just > enter your > contact information, and it will send this message > to your local US > representative: > > Dear Friend, > > Don't you think it's terrible that people were > forced to leave > their pets behind during Hurricane Katrina? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 2, 2005 Report Share Posted October 2, 2005 , Kirstin Key <kirstinkey> wrote: > I have real mixed feelings about this. While I do > think it's terrible many animals were left behind, I > think I'd feel a little miffed if they couldn't get my > ailing mother out in time because some goverment > figure (IF they were even in the area in time) was > forced to save their quota of dogs before helping me. > > > Kirstin > (owner of five beloved parrots, a labrador and 3 couch > potato cats) > Here is my .02 cents worth on this topic. It has come to my attention that we as a society in whole (not wanting to pick on any one in particlular) are getting more and more concerned over our animal pets then we are over our ederly members of the human race. We are placing laws in place to protect the animals and forgetting about our own families. There is more done when a dog is shot for the dog then to a child that has been mauled by a dog. People seem to have their priorities all mixed up. Dogs must be on leashes and yet cats are allowed to roam at will. And I could go on for pages on other issues. Please do not get me wrong I love my animal friends. They too have souls and can be of tremendous healing powers. But my human family must take first place in a crises. So my .02 cents worth is that I agree with Kirstin. When a human's fate takes second place to an animal we have missed the boat all together. After all most disasters are not an hour's notice away. Most of them give you time to get out of the way. Barbara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 2, 2005 Report Share Posted October 2, 2005 I would do for humans as I would do for my animals. I won't go there!!!!!!!!!!!! Julia Graber Girl By Julia Julia Graber Cregger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 2, 2005 Report Share Posted October 2, 2005 Barbara - I agree 110%. I do however, feel sorry for the poor soul that stands between me and my parrot, or my labrador/cats, etc. However, I just have to wonder - if we as a society placed HALF the energy/money into worrying about our own, we wouldn't be in the situation we're in now, and our country wouldn't be contemplating opening up state-run orphanages again due to the huge volume of street kids and wards of the state. While my heart goes out to the man (if the story is even TRUE and not some fabricated tale rendered to tug the heart strings) who ended his dog's life rather than to see her suffer, how many kids were orphaned by the hurricane? How many people had to live on their rooftops with corpses of family members swirling in the waters at their feet? How much more can we as a society, endure... while a select handful of our countrymen keep getting richer, and better tax benefits. If we chose to care for our own for a short while, we'd see that we need to focus our energies just on that, rather than continuing to spread ourselves too thin. Instead, we'd rather Just my opinion Kirstin > > I have real mixed feelings about this. While I do > > think it's terrible many animals were left behind, > I > > think I'd feel a little miffed if they couldn't > get my > > ailing mother out in time because some goverment > > figure (IF they were even in the area in time) was > > forced to save their quota of dogs before helping > me. > > > > > > Kirstin > > (owner of five beloved parrots, a labrador and 3 > couch > > potato cats) > > > > Here is my .02 cents worth on this topic. > > It has come to my attention that we as a society in > whole (not > wanting to pick on any one in particlular) are > getting more and more > concerned over our animal pets then we are over our > ederly members of > the human race. We are placing laws in place to > protect the animals > and forgetting about our own families. There is > more done when a dog > is shot for the dog then to a child that has been > mauled by a dog. > People seem to have their priorities all mixed up. > Dogs must be on > leashes and yet cats are allowed to roam at will. > And I could go on > for pages on other issues. Please do not get me > wrong I love my > animal friends. They too have souls and can be of > tremendous healing > powers. But my human family must take first place > in a crises. > > So my .02 cents worth is that I agree with Kirstin. > When a human's > fate takes second place to an animal we have missed > the boat all > together. After all most disasters are not an > hour's notice away. > Most of them give you time to get out of the way. > > > Barbara > > > Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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