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The Truth About Pet Store Puppies

 
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Brooke Faulder

Ever wonder why so many pet store puppies are sick or become sick within weeks of bringing them home?

The truth about pet store puppies is disturbing. If you're an animal lover, the following paragraphs will be difficult to read, but simply doing just that could potentially spare a life.

It's hard to imagine that in this country where dogs are considered valuable members of the family, have their very own telelvision and radio shows and people dress them in designer clothes and treat them like children, that a grave place called a puppy mill could still exist.

A puppy mill or puppy farm is a breeding operation with the sole purpose of making money. Adult dogs live their entire lives in cages. They are not screened for potential genetic health defects or even given basic medical care, and sick and injured dogs are still expected to breed.

A puppy mill can be a sign along the road advertising puppies, an ad in your local newspaper or they can even have a nice website, but they are almost always behind those cute puppies you've seen in pet shop windows.

You'd never know by looking at those puppies the deplorable conditions from which they came. You'll see how excited they get when you approach their cage. You might even slip your hand through the bars despite the posted warning not to and entertain the thought of bringing home the one who seemed most eager, but it's what you won't see that would leave you gasping.

For that puppy's mother, life (if you can call it that) is a desperate struggle. Her body is used up from years of overbreeding. She is always dirty and matted. She has never been shown love or compassion and probably has no idea what it might feel like to run in the grass.

She exists only for the purpose of breeding and has lived her entire life in the same small cage. She's not let out to relieve herself, she does it where she eats and sleeps and where she's probably given birth to several litters.

But that doesn't matter to the owner of the puppy mill. He only sees dollar signs when he looks into her dark, sad eyes. Every six months he'll breed her once again for the sake of filling his wallet and the puppies will be shipped around the country to various pet stores and puppy brokers and the morbid cycle will continue.

When she's no longer able to breed, she'll finally be put her out of her misery- if she's lucky enough. The sad truth is that she will probably still be worth a few dollars to a testing facility: A laboratory that uses dogs for the sake of testing new products.

There is no hope of ever stopping this morbid cycle of abuse as long as we keep buying puppies from pet stores.

Don't be fooled by AKC papers. Although the AKC doesn't condone puppy mills, almost anyone can register a new litter providing both parents are registered purebreds.

Please help put an end to this torture. Join the fight to eliminate puppy mills by refusing to purchase a puppy from a pet store... or from anyone other than a reputable breeder. There are countless rescue groups to choose from and many are breed specific.

Please refer this article to a fellow animal lover or anyone who might someday be in the market for a purebred puppy. Learn more by visiting www.small-breed-dogs.com.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

My name is Brooke Faulder. I've made it my business, my passion and my mission in life to put an end to the exploitation of animals. Learn more about the plight of small breed dogs and what can be done to save them by reading through the pages of www.small-breed-dogs.com

Article Tags: puppy [See Dictionary], puppies [See Dictionary], pet [See Dictionary]
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Article published on October 15, 2008 at Isnare.com
 
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