Guest guest Posted June 25, 2004 Report Share Posted June 25, 2004 I sent a copy of the letter about pit bulls to PETA to ask for their explanation of their policy. This is the response I received. ------------------------- Thank you for checking with us for PETA's accurate position on pit bulls. Please be assured that we do not believe that every pit bull should be euthanized. We advocate a ban on the breeding of pit bulls (and indeed, we should surely ban all breeding of dogs, given the tragic overpopulation crisis that results in millions of unwanted animals' being killed every year in this country) but maintain that any ban should include a grandfather clause protecting all pit bulls living in caring homes. As you may know, before founding PETA, Ingrid <Newkirk> was the chief of Animal Disease Control and the director of the animal shelter in Washington, D.C. for many years. During her time there, she initiated the first-ever spay/neuter, adoption, and humane-investigation programs in our nation's capital. She waded into dangerous situations on a daily basis in an effort to help abused and neglected dogs, risking her safety countless times in the back alleys and slums of Washington. Over and over again, she rescued pit bulls from people who beat and starved them, chained them to metal drums as " guard " dogs, or trained them to attack people and other animals. This breed stands out as the most abused in " dogdom " . It is the relentless abuse of these animals that motivates us. Are some pit bulls loving companions? Absolutely, as I'm sure you and the <person who wrote the letter> know firsthand. But nice families rarely come to a shelter to adopt pit bulls. Almost without exception, those who want pit bulls are attracted to the " macho " image of the breed as a living weapon and seek to play up this image by putting the animals in heavy chains, taunting them into aggression, and leaving them out in all weather extremes to " toughen " them. In fact, there is so much fighting and abuse of pit bulls here in the Hampton Roads area that PETA's local community animal project provides free spay and neuter services to all pit bulls. I think you'll agree that this is not discrimination, but actually an extra benefit. Pit bulls offered for adoption to the public have a higher risk than other breeds of suffering a horrible fate. By advocating a ban on breeding this dog, PETA is trying to protect the dogs from people who would hurt them. This position would save dogs' lives overall, not take more lives. Any good person could still adopt a dog—just not a pit bull who could be abused or bred to make more animals to abuse. When shelters are destroying dogs by the tens of thousands, why breed pit bulls or any dogs? There are many, many wonderful dogs in shelters who need homes. PETA urges everyone who can provide a permanent, loving home to spay or neuter and adopt one of these animals. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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