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STOP ANIMAL CRUELTY
Puppy Mills: Breeding Tremendous Trouble for Dogs
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A puppy mill is
a breeding operation,
a commercial
breeding operation that's
breeding dogs for profit,
plain and simple.
The problem
with that industry
is it's an unregulated,
unchecked industry.
The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However, we have to
show the truth about
cruelty to animals,
praying that
you will help to stop it.
This is the
Stop Animal Cruelty series
on Supreme Master
Television.
The subject
of this week’s program
is the absolutely heartless,
callous treatment
of canines in puppy mills.
We’ll hear from
a number of individuals
committed to stopping
these horrific operations
in the US, including
Paul Berry, president
and chief executive officer
of Humane Associates,
a consulting collective
dedicated to optimizing
the effectiveness
of organizations serving
the needs of animals,
Meera Nandlal,
public relations manager
for the Houston Society
for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals,
Dr. Elliot Katz,
a veterinarian
and founder of
In Defense of Animals,
which seeks to
end animal exploitation,
cruelty and abuse and
devoted animal-rights
advocate Ady Gil,
a successful businessman
who founded the Ady Gil
World Conservation
Foundation.
When we visit a pet store
and see the adorable
puppies for sale, it’s hard
to resist the temptation
to take one home.
However, it is best
to avoid purchasing
a canine from such places.
Besides the fact
that there are
vast numbers of dogs
already in animal shelters
desperately needing homes,
many innocent
pet-store babies
come from puppy mills,
where their helpless mothers
are confined in tiny cages
and forced to produce
litter after litter, strictly
for the financial gain
of the owners
of these wretched places.
The US is home
to many such,
often illegal, businesses,
with an estimated 1,500
in the state
of Missouri alone.
In puppy mills, food,
shelter, and veterinary care
are typically
grossly inadequate.
But Paul Berry,
who has been involved
in animal-welfare work
for almost two decades,
shares another
major concern
about puppy mills.
About 17 years ago,
my wife and I were working
in the corporate world and
wanted to take a year off
and get married
and volunteer for a year
for our long honeymoon.
So that first year,
that was our journey,
learning and researching,
and volunteering
for animal concerns.
And, we started out
in New Orleans (USA),
which is my hometown.
And I started helping
some animal groups there,
and got into animal rights
cruelty investigations.
And we ended up
getting into a project
where we purchased
a mobile veterinary clinic
for a non-profit group to
provide free and low-cost
spay-neuter services
to low-income people
in New Orleans.
And the idea was that
if we could get more
spay-neuter services out
to folks
who didn't have access
or couldn't afford it,
that we could help reduce
pet overpopulation.
That's a huge issue,
pet overpopulation.
Let's talk about
why puppy mills are bad.
Puppy mills put
a huge number of dogs
into a market where
dogs are being killed
every year because
there aren't enough homes
for them all.
Right now, there are
about 5- to 7-million
animals being killed
every year in shelters,
dogs and cats.
And the puppy-mill industry
is impacting that
pretty significantly.
The puppy-mill industry
puts out 2- to 3-million
new dogs on the market
every year.
And that's almost as many
that are being killed
every year.
So it’s a really vicious
cycle that's happening
in the marketplace.
The puppy mills,
people buy them.
They are in business
because their dogs
are simply commodities.
They breed them and
try to convince people
to buy them.
And then you end up with
millions of animals killed
in this nation’s shelters.
By nature, dogs are
highly intelligent,
friendly and cheerful,
and actively seek
social interaction
with one another
and their caregivers.
They enjoy eating
different types of foods,
going out for walks
and being in
stimulating environments.
Devoted and loving,
dogs will even
lay down their lives
to save their caregivers
if necessary.
Imagine
what it must be like
for these sensitive,
noble animals
to live 24 hours a day,
seven days a week
in small,
terribly cramped cages
under dreadful conditions.
A puppy mill is where
you’re going to find
a lot of these animals
in confined areas.
They're not going
to get the proper food,
water, or shelter,
and maybe there are
several in an area.
You'll also find the mothers
confined in an area
where they never leave.
And they just have puppy
after puppy after puppy.
And a lot of times,
the puppy mills
that I've actually gone to
are very horrendous.
They're never clean.
There's feces and urine
that have been there
for a while.
You'll see the food.
They actually never
have cleaned out
the food bowl, just
keep adding more food.
The water is usually
very dirty.
So those are
my experiences
of what I've seen in these
puppy-mill situations.
They've been in areas
that are not ventilated.
It’s very hot in the area,
or in the winter,
it's been very cold.
It's a very sad thing.
They’re
very closed-off spaces.
There's never sunlight
coming in.
The animals
don't come out to walk.
Just having puppy
after puppy after puppy.
And never going outside,
never walking on the grass,
or seeing the sunlight
or knowing what it means
to play, or to have
their tummies rubbed,
or to have a treat,
or to know
that sort of affection.
Basically, the animals
live in a confined area.
And they never leave
that confined area.
They are breeding animals
all the time, and
the puppies are for sale.
Lot of times
in these facilities,
the animals
eventually get old.
And when they get old
and they can’t
have puppies anymore,
they’re just discarded
in many ways.
And it’s very traumatic.
In March 2010,
the Ady Gil World
Conservation Foundation
partnered with
Animal Rescue Corps
to free canines imprisoned
in a Tennessee, USA
puppy mill.
We got
a tip on a puppy mill
in Tennessee (USA).
We collected evidence;
we had an undercover
investigation –
as you can see
in this video here.
We finally
got our search warrant
and we had a crew.
We went to Tennessee.
We had about 14 people
with the sheriffs.
The District Attorney
was there with us.
We did not know
how many dogs actually
were in the puppy mill.
We thought
between 100 to 200.
As we walked in, we
found horrific conditions,
exactly how
the informer told us.
There were dogs
living there on feces.
It was unbelievable.
They had disease,
skin disease, they were
never been bathed,
they were never been
fed correctly,
they were dehydrated.
It was terrible.
I’ve never seen
anything like it.
Treating other species
as nothing more than
property or objects
or commodities or things
is extremely demeaning.
If one thinks to oneself,
“This is my piece
of property.
This is something
I just bought and sold,”
you are not going
to have that same feeling
of respect, treat that animal
with dignity,
do the responsible care
when you think,
“Well I bought it.
I can sell it.
It’s not worth keeping.”
That’s the motive
that opens up,
allows that callousness
and insensitivity
because the dogs
or animal companions
are just seen
as things, commodities.
We must treat the animals
the way we would like
to be treated because
they deserve respect
and understanding
and love and affection.
They’re not for profit.
They have emotions.
They feel happy and sad.
And they grieve.
They feel just like you.
So treat them how you
would like to be treated.
If a person wishes to
adopt a dog companion,
where’s the best place
to go?
Anybody
that's thinking about
helping with the cause
or wanting to get a dog
for their family
or as a friend or a pal,
please go to a shelter.
Go to your local shelter.
Ask them about
what dogs are available
for adoption,
if you have a name
of a specific breed,
ask the local shelter
about any breed rescues
that work with
specific breeds.
But please,
don't go to a pet store
that's peddling dogs and
cats from puppy mills
and cat mills.
In an interview with
journalist Louise King
published in the
December 16, 2009 issue
of the Irish Dog Journal,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
discussed the reasons
it’s best to adopt
a canine companion
from a no-kill shelter.
It is advised not to try to
buy a pet from a breeder
and especially
the pet shop, because the
way they get the puppies
is just too often
terribly inhumane,
like the mother and father
dogs being treated like
machines to bear puppies
until they are driven
exhausted and insane,
get crippled, or die.
They and the puppies
are miserably kept
in tiny, filthy cages
indoors or outdoors,
exposed to the elements.
We mustn’t support
this practice.
As many experts have
recommended, adoption
from an animal shelter
is the most humane and
loving option for bringing
an animal into our life.
Also, we should make
sure the animal shelter
is a non-kill shelter,
to support
the non-violent way.
Adopting from a sanctuary
is also possible and good,
but the non-kill shelters
are the most desperately
in need of homes.
Many thanks
to all those featured
on today’s program
for working to end
the deep suffering
of exploited mother dogs
and their babies
trapped in puppy mills.
Your efforts to protect
the lives of these precious
canine co-inhabitants
demonstrates
true humanity,
and we join you
in praying for a world
where all beings
are soon treated
with the highest dignity
and respect.
For more information
on organizations working
to close puppy mills,
please visit
the following websites:
Ady Gil
World Conservation
www.AGWC501.org
Houston Society
for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals
www.HoustonHumane.org
In Defense of Animals
www.IDAUSA.org
Thank you
for joining us today on
Stop Animal Cruelty.
May the light and grace
of Heaven forever
embrace our world.
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