3 comments to “Cats, the same the world over. People… not so much.”

  1. Tracey | March 14, 2010 | Permalink

    Well put Shel, welcome back!

  2. Margaret Dalziel | March 14, 2010 | Permalink

    The Victorian ‘Who’s For Cats’ program is shameful indeed and I cannot tell you just how much it means to me that you have put these issues in so plain a light.

    I am ashamed that this could happen in our country when there are so many progressive and humane actions taken in others.

    What the Victorian program has done is to mess with people’s heads, influence those who might be swayed to believe this is a viable way to address the problem and to encourage others to think it is alright to be cruel because cats have been painted as vermin.

    It is not alright to be cruel to any living creature.

    How thankful am I that there are people who do not accept blindly what governments or animal welfare shelters tell them they should believe.

  3. Colin | March 15, 2010 | Permalink

    The immoral and unethical senseless indiscriminate murder of cats to solve a perceived problem (perceived by a vocal minority but foisted on to the less vociferous majority) is doomed to failure. Such programs have never worked in the past and only open up space for other animals to move into, removing competition and allowing less desirable (also introduced) species to proliferate.

    If we destroyed their environment no doubt we could kill off cats – after all, we have managed to kill off much of Australia’s natural animal population already using this method. Why stop there? I suppose the fact that the cat’s environment is also ours might be a drawback – though there are those that think, with some justification, that we are as much of a verminous pest on these shores as the animals we brought with us and so would look on any depopulating force with favour.

    I prefer the Thai/Buddhist approach – we have no more right to be here than the cats and sharing, loving and caring enrich our ‘souls’ whereas trapping and destroying clearly do not. As the article above demonstrates, the way societies treat the animals that share their space says much about them. Better by far to achieve a balance, encouraging more responsible community support for neutering control measures and approving the caring for strays rather than painting fellow travellers as evil competitors and adding to their torment.

    I am a veterinarian and am ashamed that others in my profession, sworn to care for the welfare of animals, consider the death of thousands of otherwise healthy creatures is an appropriate response. I am a citizen and I am outraged that my elected representatives consider legalised slaughter is in their mandate to impose on the society they supposedly represent. Where is our humanity? Where are our consciences? Do people actually feel good about the forced killing of cats?