Friday, January 6, 2012

Regret Isn't Enough to Save This One

> Article Here <

This caught my attention because, well, it infuriated me.

It's a rather long article, but the short version is that a woman brought her dog to the shelter, changed her mind a short time later, (she claims ten minutes), and went back, to hear that the dog has been euthanized.

Sounds bad, doesn't it. You think, oh how horrible the shelter did that.

Until you actually look at the details.

I feel NO pity for this woman, ONLY for the dog, who never had a chance with this asshat.

Let's look at WHY.

"-based on information Nott provided, the dog had severe separation anxiety that caused it to chew into carpet, furniture and drywall."

The dog has very serious issues.

"Nott chose not to pay a $30 fee that would have given her the option to reclaim the dog, and she signed the part of an agreement that said she chose not to retrieve the animal, Janzen said."

Owner is a cheap ass.

"Nott got Lucy as a gift from her daughter about nine months ago. While Nott worked, the dog was home alone at least eight hours a day, and Nott thought the dog had developed separation anxiety. Lucy began digging at carpet and destroying household items."

This dog was never even given a chance.

Seriously. So, this dimwit buys a gift puppy, which is never a good idea to begin with, but then doesn't even begin to think, hey, I work eight hours a day, is that a good environment for a growing LABRADOR puppy?

So of course puppy is left all alone in a house, presumably without being crate trained at all, no walks during the day, no stimulation, and naturally begins to eat the house in bored desperation.

And the owner blames the dog. What happened to personal responsibility?

Do you think animal shelters are falling over themselves to adopt out your destructive young dog? Especially one of a breed that's been so over bred and is just filling up shelters everywhere. Cage room in a shelter is at a premium. There are hundreds of thousands of perfectly well behaved dogs out there looking for homes . . . sadly, the shelter cannot afford to feed and house a dog that is highly unlikely to be adopted.

Does it suck? Absolutely. But the blame here likes squarely with the owner. This puppy was allowed to develop behaviors that made it adoptable, and then dumped at the shelter and put to sleep because the owner couldn't be bothered to fix those issues.

And now she wants to go on the news blathering about how EVIL the shelter is and how they should have done this or this or this. Maybe this stupid bitch should volunteer some time in the shelter and see how things WORK before she goes running her mouth blasting the shelter for her own stupidity.

Drives me mad, it does.

Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/2012/01/01/2158855/wichita-woman-upset-with-kansas.html#0_undefined,0#storylink=cpy"


Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/2012/01/01/2158855/wichita-woman-upset-with-kansas.html#0_undefined,0#storylink=

3 comments:

  1. I had a pretty similar reaction myself. My only real issue with the shelters in these kinds of situations is that i think they should be honest and upfront at the time with what is going to happen to the animal. Because i hate when people surrender their animal to the shelter then go on with their life convinced they did Fluffy a favor by ditching them since they are just SURE that the shelter found them a wonderful home. I think they should know that they are dropping their unwanted animal off to die, maybe then they will think twice before rushing right out to get a replacement that they will just sentence to the death penalty 9 months later.

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  2. People suck. They want to just dump their pets and not think about it, but then throw a fit when they change their minds. Maybe if they'd think things through more, like BEFORE they buy the puppy, this shit wouldn't happen.

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  3. Our humane society has a scrolling sign that says that they euthanize animals every day and that they are usually full. It also says that signing the pet over is a permanent decision.

    I really don't see the problem with euthanizing the dog. It's not like it hurt her; she just went to sleep. This woman should have explored all options before giving up her dog. Stupid people. Did she really think they HS would place a dog with severe separation anxiety?? Any person that would have adopted would have brought her right back. Separation anxiety SUCKS! But if this lady didn't want her dog euthanized she should have worked on it.

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