02.04.11
Interesting article from former H$U$ employee
http://www.examiner.com/borzoi-in-washington-dc/animal-rights-vs-breeders
Diana Culp
It’s happened again. My previous employment with a particular company has brought challenges for me both in my personal life and at work. I was the Director of Education for HSUS from 2006-2009. My lifelong work with animals brings me into contact with people from all walks of life. HSUS, the Humane Society of the United States, has decidedly become a formidable Animal Rights Lobby and that is reason for concern, and the reason I resigned.
In general, lobbyists are well funded extremists who fight for their issue regardless of the arguments on the other side. The way our system works, it is expected that the “other side” has just as strong support and the battle will balance the issue to the will of the people. That is not how this is working out. The other side of this issue is neither well funded nor well informed. Dog breeders are not always aware that they are under attack and pet owners have no idea that animal rights may take away their right to have a cat as a companion or eat an egg.
First, I must acknowledge that animal rights advocates come in all denominations. There are people who use no animal products in food or products including silk and wool, and who eschew the ownership of pets of all kinds. Any use of an animal is a moral issue for them. There are others who keep companion animals they would defend to the death and mainly strive to end animal cruelty by harshly punishing humans for the wrong they have done. No excuses.
How has this caused me conflict? Working in law enforcement I was confronted with questions about the tactics of activists who disregard the law with an ends justifies the means mentality. In my personal life, my affinity for working animals puts me at odds with misinformed animal lovers who believe that 4 million pets are killed annually in shelters and this is caused by dog breeding.
I am not a breeder, although I have a purebred dog as well as a mixed breed. I have trained dogs to do things I want them to do that they wouldn’t do of their own accord, like come when I call. Heavens, I even have a parrot who actually lives in a cage for her own safety. I do wildlife rehabilitation under a proper state permit. All of these things have become increasingly controversial because of lobbying and misinformation.
This is an important issue because all good people defend the “right” of an animal to live a life as free from suffering as possible, and this should include humans. This is NOT what Animal Rights is about. This is Animal Welfare, which does include actual welfare programs such as shelters for homeless pets. What to do wtih the unwanted pets is at the crux of the conflict.
Animal Welfare supporters would like to see them all saved, even if that empties the public coffers with consideration for people in need. Animal Rights advocates support mandatory neutering for domesticated animals that humans have allegedly created until there are no more.
If we truly want to respect animals (human and non human) then we would respect the choice to join forces as companions and work mates. Believing that humans engineered the dog, for example, is the epitome of arrogance. And the animal rights argument that follows, to end their existence, is the epitome of disregard for what nature has taken eons to perfect.
Continue reading on Examiner.com: Animal Rights vs. Breeders – Washington DC Borzoi | Examiner.com http://www.examiner.com/borzoi-in-washington-dc/animal-rights-vs-breeders#ixzz1D21p0eVj
