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Amiga Plus Extra 1996 #3
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peta
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1994-11-21
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PeTA's Statement on Companion Animals
Although most of us love the animals who share our lives, we
treat them with a kind of benign neglect. For instance, we leave
them at home while we work, go shopping, or go to school, and
when we return we feed them and take them out briefly or clean
out their litter boxes, but often neglect them for most of the
time we're at home, while we prepare a meal, talk on the
telephone, watch television, write letters, sleep, etc. Companion
animals eat when and what we want them to eat, and go out or stay
in when we want them to. As John Bryant has written in his book
"fettered kingdoms," they are like slaves, even if well-kept
slaves. Many guardians fail to treat their companion animals with
kindness and respect, leaving them outdoors in all kinds of
weather, neglecting to provide them with fresh water at all
times, etc.
In a perfect world all other-then-human animals would be
free of human interference, and dogs and cats would be part of
the ecological scheme, as they were before humans domesticated
them, and as they remain in some parts of the undeveloped world.
The world we live in is far from perfect, however, so in the
meantime we must take as good care of companion animals as
possible. Most of the PeTA staff members have at least one dog,
cat, bird, rat, horse, or other animal -- not from "pet" shops,
of course, but from shelters or the street.
Those of us who keep horses do ride them, sometimes without
a saddle or bridle, which the horse prefers, of course! (A
company called Wintec makes a nonleather saddle, which is
advertised in major horse magazines and is available in many tack
shops.)
We oppose any use of horses to make money, such as horse
rental business or horse racing, but we do not, in this imperfect
world, fault people who keep horses as companion animals and ride
them for exercise and "bonding," and who never abuse them by
riding them too long, using painful bits, soring their feet,
breeding them to sell their offspring, forcing them over high or
dangerous jumps, etc. In a perfect world, of course, horses,
dogs, and cats would never have been domesticated. Their dignity
and intelligence are so much better when they are in the state
nature intended them to be.
We are not opposed to humane, interactive obedience training
for dogs, because it protects them from harm and ultimately gives
them more freedom then a dog who must be constantly restrained
from running off into a street, etc. However, we oppose any
activity that puts unnatural stress on a dog, such as training
and using them as guard dogs on car lots, breeding and mutilating
them (docking and cropping) for "show," and so on.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
P.O. Box 42516
Washington DC 20015-0516
(301) 770PETA
This is the actual statement as faxed to me. AH