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- Path: sparky!uunet!well!moon!ggcs!paul.moor
- From: paul.moor@ggcs.org (Paul Moor)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.dogs
- Subject: Humankind's inhumanity
- Message-ID: <983.236.uupcb@ggcs.org>
- Date: 2 Jan 93 20:57:00 GMT
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Golden Gate Computer Society BBS - Marin, CA - 415-927-1216
- Reply-To: paul.moor@ggcs.org (Paul Moor)
- Lines: 73
-
- [National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" broadcast this on
- New Year's Day.]
-
- The Humane Society of the United States estimates that in
- pounds and shelters around the country, 8,000,000 animals, mostly
- cats and dogs, are killed every year - "put to sleep", as the
- saying goes.
- That's almost 22,000 animals every day.
- The job of killing the animals that are sick or homeless falls
- to people like Carrie Bowe, an animal control officer in Santa
- Barbara, California:
-
- "I guess I see myself as sort of an animal advocate, in that
- someone's got to help them, and I do it in my way. I feel like I
- can't save all the animals, but I can make this as pleasant an
- experience for them as possible, and I . . . I would like to hope
- that when I'm old, or suffering, or . . . that death should be as
- peaceful for me as it is for these animals here."
- [Background, barks, metal door opening.] "It's pretty smelly
- in here. This is where all the dead animals are kept. This is
- about five days' worth here. That barrel we put to sleep yester-
- day - there's probably seven dogs in there and three cats, so,
- depending on the size . . . there's probably forty animals in
- there now.
- "I was trained as a veterinary nurse, and to find . . . it was
- hard to put animals to sleep that were .sick., that people wanted
- us to do - and then to come to this job, where we were putting
- healthy .puppies. and .kittens. to sleep - it was just really hard
- to take. We try to place as many as we can in homes, but people
- just don't neuter their animals, and there's just a constant
- overflow, and not enough good homes.
- "It's just amazing how many people find reasons for not keeping
- their animals, and I feel sometimes that being put to sleep is the
- best alternative for a dog that's just going to be stuck in a
- little backyard and never paid any attention to, and yelled at if
- it barks, and the food thrown out the door - that's no life. I
- feel like the animals in a shelter situation are the innocent
- ones, they're the victims of bad homes or neglect, or whatever,
- and that they deserve the very best - that because they're here
- doesn't mean they're prisoners or criminals, and when it does come
- time to have them put to sleep, I think it's really important to
- talk to them, lovingly, and to pat them and reassure them . . .
- and that's the best I can do, for those animals. . . ."
-
- "Okay. We've checked all the cards and found the ones that are
- to be put to sleep, and now we're just getting ready to bring the
- dogs into this room, where it's a little bit more peaceful than
- doing it in the kennel situation, where the other dogs would be
- excited and barking and causing all sorts of commotion. So we
- have a card for each dog, and we'll go get a dog, and I'll get the
- syringe ready. . . .
- [Murmured, almost inaudible:] "Hey, boy - how's it going'?"
- [Barking.] "Come on, baby." [Whimpering.]
- "It's so distressing - they seem so active and happy. . . .
- This is one that's been a real happy dog in the shelter, and I'd
- hoped that the owner would come, or that someone would be inter-
- ested in adopting it. I've held it a couple of extra days,
- and . . . it's just one of those kind of dumb and happy sweet dogs
- . . . but no home for it. . . .
- "Usually they're just so happy to be out of the cage, it takes
- a little bit to calm them down. . . . And we just do an intrave-
- nous injection of a dose of sodium pentobarbital. . . .
- [She murmurs reassuringly.] "Uh-.huh. - real good dog. . . .
- Okay. . . . Yes. . . . Good boy, old man. . . .
- "The needle slips into the vein and the solution's inject-
- ed. . . . [Long pause.] Okay. . . .
- "As you can see, it just takes a matter of seconds for the dog
- to fall asleep and be dead. . . .
- "That's it."
-
- ---
- . OLX 2.2 . Ancient Greeks made dolphin-killing punishable by death.
-
-