@Loafing_SnowLeopard
You right but also the law regarding the animal's protection is full of loopholes:
- for exemple there was a famous case sometime ago about a family that lost his dog. The laws said that an animal shelter has the right to "dispose of/ suppress" any stray animal if nobody recognize or reclaim them, after 72 hours, especially if they are old and sick.
So this family lost their dog. They start looking for him immediately after realizing he was lost, but sadly it was not so easy to finde it. A couple days later they finde the news that he may have been taken to a certain shelter, so they hurry there just to be told that it was already after the closing time and ask to come back the next morning. When the next day came before they have time seen the dog they were inform that the dog in question was already suppress a few hours ago because he was old and sick and they need to make space for a new stray dog.
So in this kind of situations who should be the culprit?? The shelter?? The family?? Or the laws??
Stray animals basically don't belong to anyone's, it's like I have no rights, and that also means they are not protected.
You right but also the law regarding the animal's protection is full of loopholes:
- for exemple there was a famous case sometime ago about a family that lost his dog. The laws said that an animal shelter has the right to "dispose of/ suppress" any stray animal if nobody recognize or reclaim them, after 72 hours, especially if they are old and sick.
So this family lost their dog. They start looking for him immediately after realizing he was lost, but sadly it was not so easy to finde it. A couple days later they finde the news that he may have been taken to a certain shelter, so they hurry there just to be told that it was already after the closing time and ask to come back the next morning. When the next day came before they have time seen the dog they were inform that the dog in question was already suppress a few hours ago because he was old and sick and they need to make space for a new stray dog.
So in this kind of situations who should be the culprit?? The shelter?? The family?? Or the laws??
Stray animals basically don't belong to anyone's, it's like I have no rights, and that also means they are not protected.