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FAILING THE AMERICAN PITBULL TERRIER
By
Nathan J. Winograd
“Teach Compassion.”
It is perhaps the most important job we have as animal
protectionists. In the mission statement of every animal welfare
and animal rights group, every private and public shelter, and within
the credo of every activist is a calling to raise awareness of animal
suffering and to ultimately encourage more humane treatment. From
the earliest days of our movement’s founding, we have heeded
the call to change the hearts and minds of the public, knowing that
doing so is a precursor to changes in laws and practices that result
in animal suffering. But we have our blind spots.
There is no breed of dog in American
more abused, maligned, and misrepresented than the American Pit
Bull Terrier. There is no breed of dog more in need of our compassion;
in need of our call to arms on their behalf; and in need of what
should be the full force of our enduring sanctuary. But we have
determined that they are not worthy of it.
We have determined that they do
not deserve to live. The more circumspect among us might not say
so publicly. We may couch it in more benign terms, shifting the
blame to others, claiming that no one will adopt them, convincing
ourselves that only a ban will keep them out of harm’s way,
but the end result is exactly the same. By our actions, by our words,
by our policies, by our failure to speak out on their behalf, we
stoke the fire that has at its core only one end for Pit Bulls:
their mass killing.
To a breed abused for fighting,
victimized by an undeserved reputation, relegated to certain death
in shelters, add one more torment: those who should be their most
ardent protectors have instead turned against them. We have joined
the witch hunt.
| The
very agencies whose officers seek out dog fighters and abusers
in order to “save” the poor creatures relegate Pit
Bulls to locked and barren corridors away from public view.
Ultimately, all of them—the healthy and friendly ones,
side-by-side with the hopelessly sick or vicious—are uniformly
put to death. |
One of the nation’s leading
humane newspapers lauds a city not only for outlawing Pit Bulls
but for proactively enforcing the ban on them—a ban that leads
to their execution. The editors, who have also called for consistency
in ethical practices by encouraging shelters to serve only vegetarian
food and who applaud other animal rights causes, apparently see
no moral ambiguity when officers go door-to-door seizing happy and
friendly pets sleeping on beds and couches, taken from their families
upon threat of arrest, while animal control shelter workers wait,
“euthanasia kits” at the ready.
In an Oregon county,
Pit Bulls are killed en masse in a shelter with an avowed No Kill
goal by misusing temperament testing as a de facto ban on the breed.
In Denver, Colorado, they are simply outlawed and
executed. And People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals, the nation’s most outspoken
animal rights group, has joined the battle to exterminate these
dogs—supporting a ban on the breed, and agreeing with
a policy that all Pit Bulls who enter shelters seeking sanctuary,
instead be killed.
Ending the tragic plight of the
American Pit Bull Terrier should be among our most ardent goals.
Our advocacy must remind people that at one time, the Pit Bull was
the most popular pet in America because of their reputation as a
friendly, family dog. We must educate people that the Pit Bull’s
misfortunate is in finding themselves the favored breed of the dog
fighter at this time in history—a distinction shared at one
time by the German Shepherd, Doberman, and Rottweiller. And
a distinction that will shift to another breed if we ban Pit Bulls
but do not bring about an end to the scourge of dog fighting.
We must rally against the injustice
of politics which condemn an entire breed of dog—in practical
terms, literally hundreds of thousands of dogs a year—to death,
because of the unfortunate characteristics of a few of them.
Where there is
vilification, we should teach compassion. Where there are scare
tactics, we should preach temperance. Where there are lies, we should
speak the truth. Otherwise, the animal welfare movement will have
failed the Pit Bull completely.
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"powerful and inspirational," "ground-breaking,"
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Nominated as the Best Book of 2007 (General Interest) by the Dog
Writers Association of America, the book shatters the notion that
killing animals in U.S. shelters is an act of kindness.
RECIEVE A FREE COPY OF THE BOOK "REDEMPTION"
by Nathan J. Winograd: Anyone who donates $50 or more to the No
Kill Advocacy Center will receive a copy of Redemption, personally
signed by the author.
Note: This book is not published by the No Kill
Advocacy Center and the No Kill Advocacy Center is not responsible
for its content. To attend the author's free "Building a No
Kill Community" seminars at a city near you, click
here.
And more. For more information,
a sample past issue, and/or to subscribe, go to www.nokillsolutions.com
and click on "What's New?"
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Nathan J. Winograd, the president of No Kill Solutions,
is a graduate of Stanford Law School and a former criminal prosecutor
and corporate attorney. He has helped write legislation at the state
and national level, has spoken nationally and internationally on
animal sheltering issues, has created successful no-kill programs
in both urban and rural communities, and has consulted with a wide
range of animal protection groups, including some of the largest
and best known in the country. No Kill Solutions is a full-service
consultant agency. By providing consulting, strategic planning,
conferences, newsletters, and community-specific lifesaving blueprints,
No Kill Solutions can help shelters, rescue groups, animal control
agencies and coalitions achieve no-kill in their own hometowns.
Nathan J. Winograd
No Kill Solutions
P.O. Box 74926
San Clemente, CA 92673 www.nokillsolutions.com
(949) 276-6942 telephone
(949) 276-6943 fax |
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