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This is due to be signed into law before McGreevey steps down today.
1 posted on 11/15/2004 6:47:39 AM PST by Calpernia
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To: Calpernia

The new code is based off of what was inacted in Canada.





Animal Lovers and Others
by Alan Caruba
November 4, 2004

People say that all the really bad liberal ideas start in California and then ooze out from the left coast to cover the rest of the nation. Not so. I believe that New Jersey is ignored for its egregiously stupid, liberal ideas, and I want to set the record straight.

Until November 15, we still have a disgraced Governor, James E. McGreevey, who will leave in his wake a State whose bonds are approaching “junk” status and his very own Animal Welfare Task Force.
Recently, the State’s largest circulation newspaper, the Star-Ledger, got its hands on the nearly 200 pages of draft recommendations that are under review by the 30-member task force. One, I might add, a task force whose members largely represent the animal rights movement. In short, the task force, like just about every other government entity in the Garden State, is rigged.

Among the recommendations under consideration is the inclusion of animal abuse laws under the State’s criminal code, increasing penalties, and creating new prosecution units. This, by the way, would put animals on a par with humans, a status they do not enjoy anywhere else. Pained as they were, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, just tossed out a case representing the world’s whales, porpoises, and dolphins, saying they had no standing to sue the President over the U.S. Navy’s use of sonar equipment. Congress still shows no intention of granting animals the same status before the bar of justice as humans. This is a good thing.

One more reason for not giving criminal code status to animal abuse laws is the fact that every police force in the State would then have to enforce those laws and, in the process, might be distracted from things like homeland security or the pursuit of murderers, rapists, thieves, and drug dealers. Animal rights advocates, however, rarely show the slightest concern for the welfare of humans.

Another task force recommendation would ban chaining or tethering dogs for any reason. The next obvious step is to ban keeping them on a leash. Some dogs, though not the ones I know, need to be tethered. Even some dogs, if they could speak, would tell you this. However, they can only bark. They’re dogs, not humans.

The task force also wants state regulations that would permit people to create--get ready--free roaming, neutered feral (wild) cat colonies “to reduce euthanizing unwanted cats.” I am not sure how one goes about neutering a wild cat, but such details are of little concern to the task force. What is important is that the crazy old lady at the end of the street who feeds or keeps 30, 40 or 50 cats will be free to do so. Remember to stay down wind from her house.

It gets better or worse, depending on your point of view. The task force wants to make it a “mandatory duty” for veterinarians and everyone involved in animal care to report animal cruelty. This would put such behavior, despicable as it is, on a par with child abuse, a criminal act that most people believe is of far greater importance. Here again, law enforcement authorities would have to divert their personnel from crimes of considerably more significance.

And did I mention the task force wants to require towns to offer animal control services 24 hours a day, seven days a week? If you think property taxes are high now, just watch them rise if this recommendation becomes law. More than 120,000 stray animals are picked up annually from the streets of New Jersey. Animal shelters are filled to over-flowing, and, yes, most end up being euthanized because they will never be adopted.

The State’s Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection recently announced that bear hunters would be banned from all parks and wildlife management areas under the control of the DEP. New Jersey held its first bear hunt in 33 years last year to cull the estimated 3,200 bears roaming the most densely populated State in America. This year, though, DEP Commissioner, Bradley Campbell, has refused to process more than 3,000 applications filed by hunters. What is his and fellow animal rights advocates’ answer to the problem? A bear birth control program. You just cannot make up stuff like this. A longer bear-hunting season will have the same effect and actually put money into the State’s coffers. The ban is being challenged in the courts.

None of this even begins to deal with the estimated 170,000 deer that freely roam the State, a source of endless auto accidents that kill the deer and, occasionally, drivers and passengers. It doesn’t touch on the thousands of federally protected Canadian Geese that befoul parks, golf courses, and other campus settings.

I have no doubt that the departing Governor’s Task Force on Animal Welfare will spawn a raft of very bad legislation to make life miserable for animal owners and others. As it is, without waiting for the full report, the State’s Health Department has added an Office of Animal Welfare to insure that the over-worked personnel at shelters be properly certified and a raft of inspectors be hired to monitor the shelters.

If some of these animal rights recommendations become law in New Jersey, you can be sure that advocates in every other State will seize upon that fact to introduce them in yours. Meanwhile, in California, the beloved and much protected cougars will continue to make dinner of the occasional jogger. The condors, a specie of vulture, which the federal government spent millions to “save”, will no doubt clean up the mess the cougars leave behind.





Canada’s Law:



The House of Commons of Canada




BILL C-17


An Act to amend the Criminal Code (cruelty to animals, disarming a peace officer and other amendments) and the Firearms Act (technical amendments)





Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:



R.S., c. C-46


CRIMINAL CODE


1. The heading of Part V of the Criminal Code is replaced by the following:




SEXUAL OFFENCES, PUBLIC MORALS, DISORDERLY CONDUCT AND CRUELTY TO ANIMALS


2. The Act is amended by adding the following after section 182:




Cruelty to Animals


Killing or harming animals

182.1 (1) Every one commits an offence who





(a) causes or, being the owner, permits to be caused unnecessary pain, suffering or injury to an animal;





(b) kills an animal or, being the owner, permits an animal to be killed, brutally or viciously, regardless of whether the animal dies immediately;





(c) kills an animal without lawful excuse;





(d) without lawful excuse, poisons an animal, places poison in such a position that it may easily be consumed by an animal, administers an injurious drug or substance to an animal or, being the owner, permits anyone to do any of those things;





(e) in any manner encourages, promotes, arranges, assists at or receives money for the fighting or baiting of animals;





(f) trains an animal to fight other animals;





(g) builds, makes, maintains, keeps or allows to be built, made, maintained or kept a cockpit or any other arena for the fighting of animals on premises that he or she owns or occupies;





(h) promotes, arranges, conducts, assists in, receives money for or takes part in any meeting, competition, exhibition, pastime, practice, display or event at or in the course of which captive animals are liberated by hand, trap, contrivance or any other means for the purpose of being shot when they are liberated; or





(i) being the owner, occupier or person in charge of any premises, permits the premises or any part of the premises to be used in the course of an activity referred to in paragraph (e), (f) or (h).



Failing to provide adequate care

(2) Every one commits an offence who





(a) by a failure to exercise reasonable care or supervision of an animal causes it pain, suffering or injury;





(b) being the owner or the person having the custody or control of an animal, abandons it or fails to provide suitable and adequate food, water, air, shelter and care for it; or





(c) negligently injures an animal while it is being conveyed.



Punishment

(3) Every one who commits an offence under subsection (1)





(a) is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years; or





(b) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 18 months.



Punishment

(4) Every one who commits an offence under subsection (2)





(a) is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years; or





(b) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.



Order of prohibition or restitution

(5) The court may, in addition to any other sentence that it may impose under subsection (3) or (4),





(a) make an order prohibiting the accused from owning, having the custody or control of or residing in the same premises as an animal during any period that the court considers appropriate but, in the case of a second or subsequent offence, for a minimum of five years; and





(b) on application of the Attorney General or on its own motion, order that the accused pay to a person or an organization that has taken care of an animal as a result of the commission of the offence the reasonable costs that the person or organization incurred in respect of the animal, if the costs are readily ascertainable.



Breach of order

(6) Every one who contravenes an order made under paragraph (5)(a) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.



Application

(7) Sections 740 to 741.2 apply, with the modifications that the circumstances require, to orders made under paragraph (5)(b).



Definition of ``animal''

( In subsections (1) to (7), ``animal'' means a vertebrate, other than a human being, and any other animal that has the capacity to feel pain.



3. The definition ``child'' in section 214 of the Act is repealed.



R.S., c. 27 (1st Supp.), s. 38

4. Paragraph 264.1(1)(c) of the Act is replaced by the following:





(c) to kill, poison or injure an animal that is the property of any person.



5. The Act is amended by adding the following after section 270:



Disarming a peace officer

270.1 (1) Every one commits an offence who, without the consent of a peace officer, takes or attempts to take a weapon that is in the possession of the peace officer when the peace officer is engaged in the execution of his or her duty.



Definition of ``weapon''

(2) For the purpose of subsection (1), ``weapon'' means any thing that is designed to be used to cause injury or death to, or to temporarily incapacitate, a person.



Punishment

(3) Every one who commits an offence under subsection (1)





(a) is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years; or





(b) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 18 months.



R.S., c. 19 (3rd Supp.), s. 11

6. Sections 274 and 275 of the Act are replaced by the following:



Corrobora-
tion not required

274. If an accused is charged with an offence under section 151, 152, 153, 153.1 , 155, 159, 160, 170, 171, 172, 173, 212, 271, 272 or 273, no corroboration is required for a conviction and the judge shall not instruct the jury that it is unsafe to find the accused guilty in the absence of corroboration.



Rules respecting recent complaint abrogated

275. The rules relating to evidence of recent complaint are hereby abrogated with respect to offences under sections 151, 152, 153, 153.1 , 155 and 159, subsections 160(2) and (3) and sections 170, 171, 172, 173, 271, 272 and 273.



1992, c, 38, s. 2

7. The portion of subsection 276(1) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:



Evidence of complainant's sexual activity

276. (1) In proceedings in respect of an offence under section 151, 152, 153, 153.1 , 155 or 159, subsection 160(2) or (3) or section 170, 171, 172, 173, 271, 272 or 273, evidence that the complainant has engaged in sexual activity, whether with the accused or with any other person, is not admissible to support an inference that, by reason of the sexual nature of that activity, the complainant



R.S., c. 19 (3rd Supp.), s. 13

8. Section 277 of the Act is replaced by the following:



Reputation evidence

277. In proceedings in respect of an offence under section 151, 152, 153, 153.1 , 155 or 159, subsection 160(2) or (3) or section 170, 171, 172, 173, 271, 272 or 273, evidence of sexual reputation, whether general or specific, is not admissible for the purpose of challenging or supporting the credibility of the complainant.



9. The heading before section 444 and sections 444 to 447 of the Act are repealed.



R.S., c. 42 (4th Supp.), s. 2; 1996, c. 19, par. 70(j)

10. Section 462.47 of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:



Nullité des actions contre les informateurs

462.47 Il est entendu que , sous réserve de l'article 241 de la Loi de l'impôt sur le revenu, aucune action ne peut être intentée contre une personne pour le motif qu'elle aurait révélé à un agent de la paix ou au procureur général des faits sur lesquels elle se fonde pour avoir des motifs raisonnables de soupçonner que des biens sont des produits de la criminalité ou pour croire qu'une autre personne a commis une infraction de criminalité organisée ou une infraction désignée ou s'apprête à le faire.



1997, c. 16, s 6(1)

11. Subsection 486(2.1) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Testimony outside courtroom

(2.1) Notwithstanding section 650, if an accused is charged with an offence under section 151, 152, 153, 153.1 , 155 or 159, subsection 160(2) or (3) or section 163.1, 170, 171, 172, 173, 210, 211, 212, 213, 266, 267, 268, 271, 272 or 273 and the complainant or any witness, at the time of the trial or preliminary inquiry, is under the age of eighteen years or is able to communicate evidence but may have difficulty doing so by reason of a mental or physical disability, the presiding judge or justice, as the case may be, may order that the complainant or witness testify outside the court room or behind a screen or other device that would allow the complainant or witness not to see the accused, if the judge or justice is of the opinion that the exclusion is necessary to obtain a full and candid account of the acts complained of from the complainant or witness.



1997, c. 23, s. 19

12. (1) Subsection 810.01(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Appearances

(2) A provincial court judge who receives an information under subsection (1) may cause the parties to appear before a provincial court judge.



1997, c. 23, s. 19

(2) Subsection 810.01(6) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Variance of conditions

(6) A provincial court judge may, on application of the informant, the Attorney General or the defendant, vary the conditions fixed in the recognizance.



1993, c. 45, s. 11

13. (1) Subsection 810.1(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Appearances

(2) A provincial court judge who receives an information under subsection (1) may cause the parties to appear before a provincial court judge.



1993, c. 45, s. 11

(2) Subsection 810.1(4) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Judge may vary recognizance

(4) A provincial court judge may, on application of the informant or the defendant, vary the conditions fixed in the recognizance.



1997, c. 17, s. 9(1)

14. (1) Subsection 810.2(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Appearances

(2) A provincial court judge who receives an information under subsection (1) may cause the parties to appear before a provincial court judge.



1997, c. 17, s. 9(1)

(2) Subsection 810.2(7) of the Act is replaced by the following:



Variance of conditions

(7) A provincial court judge may, on application of the informant, of the Attorney General or of the defendant, vary the conditions fixed in the recognizance.



1997, c. 18, s. 115

15. The portion of Form 11.1 of Part XXVIII of the French version of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:







But this is linked through to the task force review in NJ.



Enforcement of Cruelty to Animals Sections of the Criminal Code

Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals ("SPCAs") have statutory mandates under their provincial Animal Welfare Acts to prevent cruelty to animals.

Many provincial statutes designate SPCA Inspectors as peace officers entitled to exercise the powers of a police officer where an animal is in distress. A number of senior Inspectors have law enforcement backgrounds as ex-police officers or RCMP officers.

Inspectors are trained to investigate crimes, to lay charges and to assist crown counsel to prosecute cruelty offence cases.

Training is provided by the RCMP, other law enforcement agencies, provincial humane societies and seminars conducted by the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies.

In various provinces, SPCA Acts allow SPCA Inspectors to exercise the powers of a police officer, to obtain search warrants and to issue Orders requiring people to take such action as is necessary to relieve animals of distress. Inspectors may seize animals in distress, and where necessary may destroy or sell them.

CFHS has developed an Inspectors' Manual educating Inspectors on Criminal Code issues, including criminal law procedures, evidence gathering, laying of charges, Charter rights, how to deal with an accused offender, assisting in preparation for trial and the trial itself.

CFHS is preparing a Prosecutors' Manual in cooperation with crown attorneys and criminal lawyers, to provide to crown prosecutors relevant criminal cases and principles applicable to prosecution of crimes against animals.

Less than 1/3 of 1% of all animal abuse complaints go to court. (See Enforcement Chart).

In 1993, the Alberta SPCA had investigations involving 61,734 animals and 21 court cases.

In 1997 - 98, 362 criminal charges were laid across Canada. Only 167 accused were found guilty (46%), 167 accused had their cases stayed or withdrawn (46%) and 8% were disposed of by other methods.

In 1996 - 97, there were 645 charges laid throughout Canada. 196 persons were held to be guilty (30%), 190 cases were stayed or withdrawn (29%) and 251 were acquitted (39%).

During 1995 - 97, Ontario SPCA inspectors/agents handled 12,824 - 15,827 complaints of animal abuse each year, giving rise to 35 - 52 charges per year and 11,000 - 16,000 animals removed from owners.

In Ontario there were 28 Inspectors and 350 Agents in 1998.

SPCAs have lost confidence in the ability of the criminal law system to properly address crimes against animals. Amended provisions of the Criminal Code are expected to raise these cases from summary convictions to hybrid offences, which will be treated much more seriously by Crown Attorneys and judges.

SPCAs often incur substantial costs to prosecute criminal cases. In several cases costs have amounted to $30,000 - $60,000. Cost recovery for veterinary care and sheltering of abused animals would assist SPCAs in carrying out their mandate.







In reading the Animals and the Criminal Code for Canada. The documents the task force in NJ is reviewing now is suppose to be based on this 'success story'.

The lanuage for hunting and meat livestock is open to interpretation. Our Canadian neighbors seem to have given themselves the opportunity to go Vegan. And now NJ joins them.


>>>>
It is a defence to any of the offences against animals that the accused acted with legal justification or excuse or with "colour of right." What constitutes a sufficient excuse or justification has to be decided on the facts of each case, and "colour of right" means an honest belief in a state of facts which, if true, would be a legal justification of excuse. For example, it has been held to be justified to kill an animal that is attacking or threatening to attack another animal (R. v. Fusell, 1920), but the tracking and killing of a dog that had frightened the accused's sheep without attacking and then left and ceased to pose any danger was not justifiable (R. v. Etherington, 1963). Statutory authorization also constitutes legal justification, so it is not an offence for example to kill an animal in accordance with provincial hunting regulations. <<<<<


2 posted on 11/15/2004 6:49:16 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia
How bizarre! If feral cat colonies are allowed to exist, are property owner allowed to shoot feral cats that destroy property or endanger "pets"?

Can I shoot my neighbor's unleashed rottie when she come tearing down the driveway toward my kid?

If dogs can't be used as deterrents on commercial properties then logically they can't be used for any purpose by governments, volunteer organizations or private citizens. Granny can kiss Fifi the therapy dog good bye and I guess Uncle Bob will go back to the flashing lights to tell him when someone knocks.

What these nuts don't understand is that when human beings have no immediate use for animals, those animals are eliminated in many cases. Which is the ultimately point, I guess.
5 posted on 11/15/2004 7:08:36 AM PST by Gingersnap
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To: Calpernia

Why do these people have to go so far overboard????

The problem with any commission or task force is that the only ones interested in serving and chosen seem to be animal rights wackos.

I deplore animal cruelty and neglect, but pushing such extreme measures insures that nothing useful will be accomplished.


10 posted on 11/15/2004 7:31:46 AM PST by berkeleybeej
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To: Calpernia; abbi_normal_2; Ace2U; adam_az; Alamo-Girl; Alas; alfons; alphadog; amom; AndreaZingg; ...
Rights, farms, environment ping.
Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this list.
I don't get offended if you want to be removed.
29 posted on 11/15/2004 1:00:47 PM PST by farmfriend ( In Essentials, Unity...In Non-Essentials, Liberty...In All Things, Charity.)
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When I read threads like this, some things come to mind. 

New Jersey surpasses all states in teenage abortion rate and in embryonic stem cell research and cloning and McGreevey and Codey, Catholics, and the rest of the Kooks in the Legislature want to elevate animals created by G-d for us to eat over which we have dominion to the stature of humans which are created in G-d's image and likeness!  In a state where SPCA officials charged Frank Balun of Hillside, NJ, for  killing a RAT! while the unborn are slaughtered daily;  we are sliding into moral relativism. It's just more left-wing, liberal democrat  incrementalism eating away at our liberties and rationality.  I'm hoping that now that the newspapers are aware of this and will be printing stories, things will be scaled down or stopped.

On Atheistic Communism, DIVINI REDEMPTORIS, ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XI ON ATHEISTIC COMMUNISM MARCH 19, 1937

9. The doctrine of modern Communism, which is often concealed under the most seductive trappings, is in substance based on the principles of dialectical and historical materialism previously advocated by Marx, of which the theoricians of bolshevism claim to possess the only genuine interpretation. According to this doctrine there is in the world only one reality, matter, the blind forces of which evolve into plant, animal and man. Even human society is nothing but a phenomenon and form of matter, evolving in the same way. By a law of inexorable necessity and through a perpetual conflict of forces, matter moves towards the final synthesis of a classless society. In such a doctrine, as is evident, there is no room for the idea of God; there is no difference between matter and spirit, between soul and body; there is neither survival of the soul after death nor any hope in a future life.

10. Communism, moreover, strips man of his liberty, robs human personality of all its dignity, and removes all the moral restraints that check the eruptions of blind impulse.

27. Man has a spiritual and immortal soul. He is a person, marvelously endowed by his Creator with gifts of body and mind

In 1973 two things happened:

1. The Endangered Species Act was enacted where animals, trees and scum in rain puddles became protected under law.

2. Roe vs. Wade where 9 mortals, allowed it to be made possible for Humanity to slaughter, burn, aspirate and sever Human Babies, created in God's image and likeness. Since then, humanity, and the USA,  spiraled in a downward trend.

Touch a turtle egg or its nest, Canadian goose or a spotted OWL and get a yr. in jail and a $50K fine, and don't cut down certain trees or fill in that puddle! abort a child, get paid $750.00. And we wonder why there is NO respect for HUMAN life created in God's image.

This is why we need to inculcate a culture of life in our society in general and in churches and schools (starting in kindergarten) . People tend to think of children as disposable items.

A pro-life education Program

It's a grievous sin that animals and turtle eggs are afforded more protections and rights than a human fetus and baby created in God's Image with a soul.

Genesis 9:3
Every creature that is alive shall be yours to eat; I give them all to you as I did the green plants.

Man:
Kill the humans (abortion) and save the Bears, the spotted owls, the Canadian Geese and the whales and don't crack that turtle egg!! And Give CPR to that dog and cat!

You can get fined up to $10,000 for messing with those eggs and baby-killing physicians get paid government and private money $$$ to kill humans! Go figure.

The Endangered Species Act of 1973

The Endangered Species Act of 1973
ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT OF 1973
Penalties and Enforcement

The number of species listed (plants and animals, NOT humans) as threatened or endangered
Species Information
Threatened and Endangered Animals and Plants

10 FALLACIES IN THE ABORTION DEBATE 
The Endangered Species Program

Page 4 Sec 3 (c)(8) don't crack those eggs, one might end the "life" of a bird, fish or turtle. I guess certain "mammals" (humans) do not apply.

Science and the ESA

The Govt. recognizes that a fertilized egg from an animal is "alive" and protected by LAW (The Endangered Species Act of 1973) and when an "alive" person created in God's image is growing and living in his mother, he's termed and given the moniker of just a blob of "unlive" or not-living protoplasm or tissue which can be aspirated if it's the mother's "choice" to do so with no protections under the 5th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution.

But I tell you that men will have to give account on the day of judgment for EVERY careless word they have spoken."--Jesus (Matt. 12:36)

In Florida, women dying in bed (Terri Schiavo) have less rights than turtle eggs! (FL Law 370, US ESA of 1973)

turtle sign 

 


32 posted on 11/15/2004 3:30:57 PM PST by Coleus (God gave us the right to life and self preservation and a right to defend ourselves and families)
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To: Calpernia

Has anyone ever tried to perform CPR on a cat?


39 posted on 11/17/2004 12:45:06 PM PST by Liberal Classic (No better friend, no worse enemy. Semper Fi.)
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To: Calpernia

It is comforting to see that New Jersey has apparently reduced the human crime rate to the point where they can afford to expend this many resources on "crimes" against animals. Congratulations to all Garden State Freepers - you apparently now live in an idyllic state free from crimes against the person.


45 posted on 11/17/2004 5:14:40 PM PST by asgardshill (November 2004 - The Month That Just Kept On Giving)
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To: Calpernia
I'm involved in cat rescue. Some of this article is good, most is crazy. Yes, there are people who horde cats and others who horde newpapers. Horders are everywhere. There are a lot of things that can be done to STOP the overpopulation besides what most rescuers, like myself, are doing and trying to legislate. For instance:

All pet stores should be prevented from selling animals unless those animals are already neutered. Now, I'm really talking about cats, bunnies and dogs more than anything else. I don't see too many guinea pigs on the streets peeing on our cars' tires.

Irresponsible pet owners buy a cute little bunny for their children or grandchildren for Easter and then, after the first cage cleaning, dump it on the streets. I have three that I have rescued. (No "shoot 'em and eat 'em stories, please.) :-) These are domesticated bunnies for pets.

I believe that trapping, neutering and returning a feral cat is much smarter than removing it to be euthanized. Why? Because they'll maintain the cat colony that already exists, especially when there's a food source such as a dumpster. If you remove the cats you'll just get more in their place. If you trap/neuter/return it's a win, win. You won't have the males crying all night for the females, you won't have cats looking for food (especially if you have someone like me who feeds them at night.) The cats actually control our mice and roach population which I can prove from the treasures one of mine have brought home.

For those of us who love animals and watch how badly they are treated and abused, we understand that something has to be done. I do believe in euthanasia for the hundreds of thousands that the shelters can't house, but there are ways that aren't being implemented that can reverse this over-population. If you don't like animals, or cats, then you probably couldn't care less.

Animals should never be revered the same as human life, but that doesn't mean they deserve to suffer either. I have a soft heart for cats especially so I'm currently working on my own little corner of the world (the alley). Have had two breeder female cats spayed and returned and I'm in the process of finding homes for two litters. Feral kittens are easily socialized if caught early enough, and feeding ferals only helps to keep them healthier. Most of them suffer horribly from mange and ear mites and end up dying from upper respiratory infections. It's actually rather sad.

The other issue is breeders. It's out of control and needs to be better controlled.

These people have their hearts in the right place but, like PETA, tend to become overly emotional and/or militant. We do need some changes to current laws about selling fertile animals and there are many from other cultures who haven't got a clue. A dog is purchased to sit on a rope forever. They throw a little food and water at it and that's it. A bunny sits in a cage too small to even move around in and they think that's humane. Come on......

51 posted on 11/18/2004 5:56:40 PM PST by libertylass
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To: Calpernia
Animal Welfare Taskforce Report

56 posted on 03/02/2005 1:37:46 PM PST by Coleus (Abortion and Euthanasia, Don't Democrats just kill ya! Kill babies, Save the Bears!!)
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