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Monday, March 23, 2015

Dogs Need Better Security from Theft



TIME TO MAKE CHANGES IN SECURITY FOR PETS

This is an unpleasant posting to read, but the reality is more horrible than a few words. Because the world is more dangerous for dogs it’s worth taking time to secure yours and tell your friends. I’m not posting photos and know some won’t want to even know about this, but that’s also part of the problem. Greater security is needed for pets. Many missing dogs aren’t lost but stolen. It’s time to be more diligent and protective of dogs as napping is on the rise. Dogs are taken, used as bait in fighting; sold to labs for experimentation; tortured; sexually brutalized. The world isn’t what it once was when a dog may be lost. Savagery has increased. Now, being a responsible pet owner/guardian requires more. Don’t leave dogs unattended outside even in a fenced yard. Make the effort to have a fence to afford some kind of barrier to slow down criminals-even a small fenced area. Don’t let someone tell you they can’t afford it and then talk about vacations, getting nails done or whatever that’s more important that the dogs safety. Accidents happen and a dog may get out and become lost but thousands are sold yearly to labs and so many are never seen again that die being torn apart by dogs forced to fight. Those who fight dogs love small dogs because they can be tossed in and as they try to run or defend their self they are literally ripped to death. In certain countries animal bordellos are legal and every kind of horrific act takes place with people flying from all over the world to indulge their perversions. A little precaution goes a long way. Scum patrols neighborhoods looking for dogs unattended and snatch them very quickly. Rarely are they caught. The days of letting a dog out a front door and waiting an hour or whatever are gone; the days of assuming a missing dog will be found because he/she is micro-chipped or wearing an ID is also gone. If a dog is truly lost those things certainly are necessary and can work. I’m talking about the majority of dogs that meet a agonizing fate.