Cook county recently released a new ordinance prohibiting pet stores from selling dogs that were born in puppy mills. Puppy mills are dog breeders that put profit over dogs, and breed dogs with inhumane and unsanitary conditions. Usually, dogs from pet stores come from puppy mills. This regulation came after affect from countless complaints in the Chicagoland area that pets are obtaining diseases and dying within weeks of adoption. In a report from Mrs. Bagby’s 8th graders, 89% of students know someone who has had a dog or cat from a pet store. Lea Karpov, a student in Mrs. Bagby’s class exclaimed “Puppy mills are cruel and unfathomable.” This regulation came after affect from countless complaints that pets are obtaining diseases and dying within weeks of adoption. …show more content…
This leaves us all in confusion: how are the other 7,000 puppy mills functioning without oversight? Well, there are no regulations on how these puppy mills operate. Picture this: A huge dark room with small metal cages stacked on top of each other, the air filled with the whimpering and crying of the puppies trapped inside them. When puppies are bred in these unsanitary conditions, there is usually just a sole survivor out of a litter of 8, similar to Hunger Games in which only the strong prevails. According to the Puppy Mill Project, an outgoing campaign to stop for-profit breeders (breeders who put money over dog welfare), over 2 million puppies are sold from puppy mills each year, with 1.2 million slaughtered in the mills due to overpopulation. In fact, some puppies from the mills are sold on the black market, to be a part of dog fighting and
Puppy mills have been notorious for keeping the puppy trade industry alive and as big as it is today. With thousands of puppy mills, both known and under the radar, they provide easy access and cheap puppies to sell at pet stores at inflated prices. While they do keep the business booming and keep pure breeds that may specialize in important roles, they continue to put countless numbers of dogs through terrifying pain. To stop the agonizing torture the lovable pups go through, stricter rules must be applied to these puppy mills, a new license regulation must be used, regular inspections, and awareness of alternative options must be made.
Proposition B Brittany Woolsey Specific Purpose: To persuade my audience to change Proposition B. Thesis Statement: Proposition B: the puppy mill law needs changed due to the harsh conditions breeders have their dogs in, dog socialization, and the current law doesn't cover Introduction I. Whenever people order a puppy off of next day pets or online through a breeder and have it shipped all they see is their new little ball of fluff, missing out on everything that goes on A. What they fail to see is the mother and father of this pup in a 3 by 2 feet metal cage with B. Getting no attention whatsoever, barely getting enough food and II.
There are many places in the world that have puppy mills, but Missouri is the number one state so far known as the top puppy mill sellers. In Missouri there was a case where a woman named Barbara Neubert would slaughter sick cows and feed the dogs raw flesh
The dogs in puppy mills get little to no special attention of any kind (Activists Go Undercover). Investigators found poor puppy mill conditions with dogs infested with ticks. Injured dogs in puppy mills have wounds and are not being treated because mill owners don’t want to pay for medical (Jalonick). Specialist say that "The physical wounds, horrific as they may be, are treatable. Tougher to heal are the psychological ones." about the dogs in puppy mills (Activists Go Undercover). Puppy mills owners never show attention to, care for , or protect the dogs. Also, these dogs have to live in gruesome
Imagine being locked and crammed into a small cage that is never cleaned, with hardly no food and water, little to no attention or exercise, and being outside in the heat all summer and the cold all winter. As awful as this all sounds, these are the horrific conditions puppies experience while at puppy mills. This is why we need to raise awareness to the fact that puppy mills should be banned.
Puppy mills usually house dogs in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions without adequate veterinary care, food, water or socialization. In order to maximize profits, female dogs are bred at every opportunity with little-to-no recovery time between litters. Puppy mill puppies, often as young as eight weeks of age, are sold to pet shops or directly to the public over the Internet, through newspaper ads and at swap meets and flea markets.
Puppy Mills influence the lives that everyone lives. There are many environmental, economical, and personal side affects of puppy mill production. The pollution to our air stream and public water sources from the facilities is immense and uncontrolled. Most communities do not have viable funds to discover and handle the puppy mills, which can affect local economies. Like humans, emotional and physical stress affects the puppies, which can develop behavioral issues. This can further influence future interactions and the dog’s temperament. The impact the puppy mills have on the world needs to be recognized to spark change.
To passers-by it looks like a normal shed, run by normal people. But inside this “normal shed” is a scene so horrific, it beggars belief that it has been legalised. Inside, cages upon cages of dogs are kept in squalid conditions, with barely any human contact. Puppies are wrenched away from their mothers at birth and are kept alone with only each other for company. Disease and illness are rife, leaving the dogs in pain and discomfort, and, in some cases this can lead to death. This hellish scene is disgustingly designated a puppy farm.
Despite the Animal Welfare Act, puppy mills and backyard breeders still exist today. The act has been interpreted in ways that exclude backyard breeders from being required to follow the guidelines the act sets forth. This is because the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia decided that a backyard breeder does not sell its product from a retail store so they do not have to follow any rules. This makes it impossible for the U.S.D.A. to regulate them.
A: Pet mills put money and profit, before the health of the animals they are breeding. Animals from these mills are usually living in disgusting conditions, and not getting the medical care that they need (Sheeter, n.d.). Because of this, the animals can get very prone to sickness, and have behavioural problems. They are left in small crates, squished together, have terrible diets, and dirty water (Sheeter, n.d.). A lot of dogs have been neglected or abused and have had little attention, interaction with humans or other animals, or obedience trainings. They were not treated with any sort or respect or appreciation or care, and they deserve that. The mums of the puppies are caged and constantly bred until they no longer can, they do not get
Many American households own a pet, but their pets may have originated from a cruel background. Especially dogs, for many of them stem from one of the ten thousand puppy mills located across the United States. Puppy mills are large commercial breeding facilities that specializes in maximizing profit over the welfare and conditions of the animals. Animals live in unsustainable conditions which they are provided with the minimum amount of food, water, exercise, shelter, protection, and veterinary care; yet, these animals are forced to continue breeding for the sake of providing beautiful pets for our own personal expenses. The government should step in to advance regulations and inspections of large commercial breeding facilities because old rules no longer fit the current time anymore. For us to take home a new healthy family member, we should all know it comes from a safe place.
I am here to convince you on why puppy mills should be illegal in the United States
- Puppy mills are large factory-style breeding facilities where profit is prioritized over the well-being of animals.
Dog breeding is dangerous because to make a perfect dog they too often inbreed and cause birth defects and other health issues in dogs. Terry Allen, an “In These Times” senior editor who has written the magazine’s monthly investigative health and science column since 2006, argues in “We’re Breeding Dogs to Death” that “neither price, pedigree nor being loved like a member of the family can shield a dog from the pain, breathing difficulties, cancer, panoply of debilitating genetic disorders, mental illness, crippling physiognomy and shortened life span that disproportionately plague purebreds.” The article “Selective Breeding or Artificial Selection” explains that in dogs, the “frequency of being homozygous for rare recessive disorders increases when inbreeding occurs, potentially causing severe
In addition to pet owners being irresponsible with breeding practices, some owners believe that they can breed the animals for a profit. They do not take into consideration the moral or