we see it like Snoopy-❤️🙏

And…a good way to start is by not eating them

regards and good night, Venus

 

England: 1st February – Remembering Jill Phipps.

England: 1st February – Remembering Jill Decades Later, Your Death Is Never Forgotten. – World Animals Voice

Warrior of the Rainbow.

Good news from France! 🐱🐶

In the coronavirus pandemic, the demand for dogs and cats has risen sharply in many countries in Europe.
Numerous animals were acquired during the first lockdown.

However, after the travel warning was lifted, owners left them at the animal shelter or simply put them on the street.

They often underestimate the responsibility and the time it takes to look after dogs, cats, birds, or other small animals.
They are overwhelmed.

Members of Parliament in France want to increase the barriers to getting a pet and make sure they get in the best possible hands.
A draft law on a new animal welfare law was passed in France this Wednesday. 🇫🇷

The changes at a glance:
– There will be higher penalties for mistreatment of animals, namely three years imprisonment and a fine of 45,000 euros.

– When purchasing an animal, a certificate must be signed for information, in which duties as a holder, such as vaccinations, necessary doctor visits, and appropriate feeding are listed.

– Only professional breeders and animal shelters are allowed to sell online.

– Animals are no longer allowed to be sold in pet shops.

https://www.nw.de/umwelt/22944905_Frankreich-moechte-Online-Verkauf-von-Hunden-und-Katzen-verbieten.html

And I mean...If you want to have an animal roommate with you, you should ask yourself whether you are willing to give the animal enough time and care.
Whether you even have the resources for it.

And then, if you are sure, always contact the local animal shelter.

There you get the best advice and the employees are very concerned about the welfare of the animals.

Anyone who has ever taken in someone from the shelter knows:

Sometimes the best friends come from the shelter.
🐶🐱🐰🐹🐭❤️

My best regards to all, Venus

 

February 1: Dia de Galgos – Day of Shame for Spain

The hunting season in Spain is officially over on February 1st.

At the end of the season, thousands of hunting dogs lose their use and thus their raison d’etre every year.

Galgos, Podencos, Bretons, and other dogs.

Bred to be acquired by hobby hunters for precisely this purpose – and to be used for mostly one hunting season.

Then it will be disposed of again, as cheaply as possible.

From this, a terrible custom has developed, they are hung up, mostly in trees.

The “best” dog hangs highest, the others below.

Dogs that have proven to be less successful hunters are often made to “dance” out of mockery.

So panicked, the animals dance for hours (up to 2 days) from one rear paw to the other until they run out of strength in their legs and their air is choked off.

A cruel and long agony, full of fear and pain.

This procedure is called “playing the piano” by the hunters and these loyal and intelligent animals are humiliated to the point of death.

So the brutal, painful massacre is repeated. Every year.

The hunters use the most barbaric methods to “get rid of” the innocent dogs they no longer need.

The 190,000 Spanish hunters who practice this cruelty each year consider dogs to be disposable items.

From this point of view, they breed the dogs excessively and uncontrollably. This negligence is followed by the massive killing and abandonment of the galgos.

For more…at https://worldanimalsvoice.com/2021/01/31/february-1-dia-de-galgos-day-of-shame-for-spain/

And I mean…Spain is not just about sun, sand and sea, sangria and flamenco.

Spain is hell on earth for those who have no voice, whose agony is mocked in the ole screams of the arenas, whose cadavers rot in the stinking perreras that are hung on the cork oaks.

Abuse of animals is the order of the day in Spain, there are no limits to the perversity, but what can we expect from a country that regards bullfighting and bull spectacle as a culture, legalizing the abuse of bulls, where the Sunday excursion of the arch-Catholic Spaniards to a bullring after going to church is a matter of course.
Even from small children, they learn that torturing animals is a sensible, legitimate pastime.

Education in cruelty from childhood.

Corruption and nepotism rule, there are hardly any controls, the judiciary works slowly, and unsustainable conditions are repeatedly discovered in animal reception centers (Perreras).

The situation of the hunting dogs is particularly dramatic, they suffer like no other animal in Spain.

Spain is now the only country in the European Union where hunting with Galgos is still allowed.

Galgos are drowned in wells, thrown into rivers, burned alive, or doused with acid. Some have their legs broken and then abandoned in the forest so that they cannot walk home.

Many of the dogs are not chipped. And even if they do, the Galgueros cut out the microchips before they “dispose of” their dogs. Many rescuers often fail to report such incidents because they fear retribution.

Hunting is a popular sport and acquiring a license to kill is easy. Everything that moves is blasted, trapping is also popular, a “real” Spanish man spends his free time in this way.

Centuries ago the galgos were a symbol of wealth and prosperity.

Nowadays they are a symbol of abuse and for many Spaniards, it is a shame that something like this still happens and is tolerated in their country.

Perhaps one day our children can experience a world free from this sadistic bond, from this wretched, cowardly, and murderous hunter rabble, that has no place in a civilized society.

My best regards to all, Venus