Kill- free shelters don't have the restrictions against animals that normal shelters have. They are fun. They actually keep animals until they are adopted. But there are some shelters that are not that. Some animal shelters along with pounds are murderous. They kill an animal if they can't find a home for it soon enough. Sounds unfair, doesn't it? And it's horrible when you put thought into it. If an animal shelter can't keep up with all of the animals it's getting, it should offer some to kill- free shelters with room for more. If that doesn't work, they could try giving them to kill- free dog pens (fences in which stray dogs are kept).
But what if an animal shelter ends up with an animal that is given short tests and hasn't been proven able to associate with humans? What should they do? First of all, it takes years for some animals to associate with each other. The animal shelter should take at least three years of many different tests. At last choice, though, there could be reserves enforced by the government, that are designed for stray dogs. Even though it's better not to release a dog into the wild, reserves for stray dogs may be able to be as tame as reserves for so- called "endangered" species if they both had the same kind and the same level of enforcement and a wild dog is a much more humane and reasonable option than a dead dog. Whatever the solution for an animal that doesn't like humans is, faith that there is a better way than killing them is reasonable and we have even figured out the reasons so no one needs to have faith in that. And perseverance that includes reasoning is the number 1# solution to keeping animals alive.
Saturday, 16 May 2009
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