August
2007: What should DDB do with
our Donated NFL Football Tickets?
We've
got 4 tickets to the Pittsburgh-Philly game on August 26th, but
what do we do with them now that many animal organizations are
boycotting the NFL until they take the Michael Vick charges seriously?
We had planned to raffle them off to raise some money for the
chained and penned dogs...but unless there's a major miracle heading
our way, we'll need YOUR better ideas! What should we do with
these great NFL tickets? Let
us know by clicking on the video and leaving a comment on our
YouTube site.
The
'skinny' on dog-fighting, bare-bones, matter of fact:
Having
read every word on the Michael Vick case, the founder, employees,
and volunteer area reps join the larger organizations such as
the Humane Society of the United States, Best Friends Animal Society,
In Defense of Animals, the ASPCA, and others in condemning all
those involved in dogfighting on the Michael Vick estate. All
those involved in dogfighting all across the U.S., the world.
We
also join the smaller organizations, both local and national animal
rights and animal welfare communities, as we stand united
to say 'No More!'
Finally,
we have an issue that even the AKC and 'owner' organizations stand
against. Dogfighting, it seems, has no defense even in
a society that has its share of humane issues still unacknowledged,
unaddressed. In a society where animals dying daily in
shelters goes ignored except by those valiant rescuers who kill
themselves saving the few they can, cry for those they cannot.
Where groups must fight for the right of dogs to live free of
chains, the right to be loved; the right to be part of a family,
a pack.
Quote
in a USA
Today article: Diane Jessup, a former Washington
state animal control officer, says, "With dogs that don't
win, it's not uncommon for them to be electrocuted, shot, hung
or burned." But what troubles her even more is "the
way the dogs are maintained, kept out in the mud on a short chain,
a lifetime of that. To me, that's crueler than the fighting."
We
are appalled and saddened for the senseless loss of life
implied in the indictments against Vick and his co-defendants;
the senseless breeding of dogs exclusively for
this blood sport, for viciousness; and, the senseless
chained conditions they endure up to the time of their
death in the ring or at the hands of their torturers for any unwillingness
to fight.
Dogfighting
takes our issue to its utmost extreme. We stand against
the chaining of dogs for life, whether that be in a typical American
backyard, a backyard breeder, or a dog fighting operation disguised
as a breeding kennel. To say the typical American chained
dog is 'luckier' than the dog fighter's dog would not be easy.
No chained dog has it easy, given that its basic instincts are
thwarted, basic needs go unmet. Dogs need to live as a
pack, move as a pack, and eat as a pack. Chaining a dog
for life goes against all that is inborn, all that is in his genes.
Quote
in a tcpalm.com
article: Two years ago, national dog fighting expert Mark
Kumpf visited Fort Pierce during a dog-fighting seminar. He
took a helicopter and flew over the city and found signs of
dog fighting.
“Anybody
who says there isn’t a problem here isn’t looking,”
Kumpf said afterward. What led Kumpf to believe dog fighting
is happening here is he saw dozens of plastic blue barrels set
up in people’s backyards with circular dirt paths around
them.
“The
flyover is one of the easy ways to identify dog fighting areas,”
Kumpf’s spokesman Jeff Kursman said. “If you’re
flying over you look for blue plastic barrels. They use them
as shelters for the dogs because they’re inexpensive and
rugged. They are the housing of choice.”
Dogs
bred for fighting are not only chained, often short-chained on
thick logging chains, but the focus is on making them
killers, making them fight to the death.
We
read that people in Michael Vick's town are puzzled, because he
never showed interest in dogs as a child. This very admission
lends further credence to the theory that dogs are just
property to dogfighters, merely a commodity with which to trade,
sell, bet, kill.
Any
claims of 'loving' these dogs cannot be taken seriously by anyone
who knows the meaning of the word 'love'.
'Love',
as described by Eddie Lama in The Witness, is 'wanting
the best' for your significant other, friend, companion
animal, etc. Dog fighters 'want the best' for their dogs
no more than spouse and child abusers 'want the best' for their
family as they rain fists upon broken bodies.
This
is not love; will never be love.
This
is our message to dogfighters: Get
out of the dogfighting business, get out of your peer group, get
out of your neighborhood if you have to. Get into counseling,
therapy, a job; do not take ONE more innocent dog's life, for
their blood is yours. America is waking up to the dangers of chaining
dogs, and the dangers of those who harm dogs in the name of sport.
We
await a day when all dogfighters will be caught and convicted
of this cruelest of all animal crimes, a day when society's conscience
is raised enough to make all thoughts of such a sport a thing
of the past.—Dogs Deserve Better
DDB
Press Release for Initial Hearing Rally, 7/26/07:
Dogs
Deserve Better to join Virginia Voters for
Animal Welfare rally at Michael Vick hearing
Founder
to attend, condemns dog-fighting as 'worst form of cruelty imaginable'
Tipton,
PA — July 25, 2007 — Dogs Deserve Better, a national
nonprofit working to end the suffering endured by dogs kept chained
or penned for life, announced today that the group will join the
Virginia Voters for Animal Welfare in a rally at the Thursday
court appearance for Michael Vick in Richmond, Virginia.
Tammy
Grimes, founder of the organization, will make the trip to Richmond
for the 3:00 p.m. rally. "This case is too crucial for those
of us who fight for humane treatment for dogs to miss, and I implore
all those who are in agreement to make the trip. Dog fighting
takes our issue to the utmost levels of cruelty imaginable; not
only are the dogs short-chained on thick logging chains to build
their muscles and frustration, but they are then subjected to
horrendous deaths for the enjoyment of sick individuals.
As
a rescuer, I've seen my share of unintended dog fights, and I
know many rescuers (including myself), who have been bitten trying
to break up a fight between two dogs who take a dislike to one
another. Those brief moments before you stop the struggle are
absolutely terrifying—I cannot imagine actually WANTING
dogs to fight, much less allowing it to continue to the death.
While
in New Orleans after Katrina, a well-meaning individual put a
pit covered in scars into the doggie play area...It took 7 people
to pry the trained fighter off the old, shaggy dog; his screams
filled the air for what seemed like hours. I will never forget
the distress of all those in attendance, all those who cared enough
about both dogs to put a stop to the attack.
I
implore dog lovers the world over to help us finally end this
intensely cruel practice."
Attendees
to the rally are asked to meet at 9th and Bank Streets, and wear
black business attire in remembrance of the fighting dogs of Surry
County. Members of Virginia's General Assembly have been invited,
and further information can be obtained from DDB/VVAW member Lisa
Hetrick at 804-306-0418.
Dogs
Deserve Better (www.dogsdeservebetter.org) is a 501c3 nonprofit
organization headquartered in Tipton, Pennsylvania, is the 2003
First Place Winner of the ASPCA Pet Protector Award, and currently
has over 150 area reps in 38 states as well as in Canada and France.
We
can now accept donations over the phone
using a major credit card at 1.877.636.1408.
If
you'd like to donate via regular USPS mail, you may print
out this
form in .pdf
format, and send to P.O. Box 23, Tipton, PA 16684