Why We Euthanize | PETA

Posted: October 2, 2022 at 5:05 pm

The word euthanasia comes from two Greek wordseu meaning good and thanatos meaning death. Euthanasia is defined as a merciful release from life in order to end suffering.

Like any responsible open-admission, socially conscious shelter, PETA provides a peaceful, painless release from life for animals who cannot be safely or humanely placed in a new home or who are sick, injured, dying, or otherwise suffering (physically or psychologically) and whose guardians often cant afford the service at a private veterinary practice.

At PETA, we will never turn our backs on animals in needand sometimes the most humane thing we can offer them is a peaceful release from a world that has betrayed them.

Every day, PETAs fieldworkers help abused and neglected dogsmany of whom are pit bulls kept outside 24/7 on chains heavy enough to tow an 18-wheeler. We provide them with food, clean water, lightweight tie-outs, parasite prevention and treatment, free spay or neuter surgeries, sturdy wooden doghouses stuffed with straw bedding, and much-needed affection.

What we see on a daily basis is enough to make you lose faith in humanity. The vast majority of the animals we take in were never treated as companions but instead spent their entire lives penned or chained up outside in all weather extremes. They were never socialized or allowed out of the small dirt circles to which they were confined, let alone allowed inside a home. They exist in perpetual fear and anxiety, struggling to cope with the daily challenge of surviving in inadequate living conditions. Others are indeed beloved companions who are elderly, ailing, injured, dying, aggressive, or otherwise unadoptable, and PETA provides them with a gentle release from suffering, always at no charge to their guardians. The adoptable animals we take in are placed through our adoption program or transferred to trusted local shelter partners.

So, how does euthanasia fit into PETAs work to alleviate suffering? One pit bull we gained custody of, namedAsia, looked like a skeleton covered with skin when PETA released her from the 15-pound chain that had weighed her down for years. She suffered from three painful and deadly intestinal obstructions, which prevented her from keeping any food down, and faced an agonizing, lingering death, so a veterinarian recommended euthanasia to end her suffering. We pursued criminal charges against those responsible for her condition, leading to their conviction for cruelty to animals. And that was just one of the dozens of sad cases that we see every month.

Almost all the animals we take in have been living in abysmal conditions, and we frequently work with local law-enforcement agencies to pursue charges against their abusers to prevent them from owning and harming animals again.

To combat suffering and animal homelessness, PETAs low- to no-cost spay-and-neuter mobile clinics have sterilized nearly 197,000 animals since 2001, preventing hundreds of thousands of unwanted puppies and kittens from being born, neglected, abandoned, abused, or euthanized. And on a national level, PETA focuses on the root of the problem through ourcelebrity spay/neuter and adoption campaigns and other efforts.

As long as companion animals are still bred on purpose and people arent spaying and neutering their dogs and cats, open-admission animal shelters and organizations like PETA will have to deal with the results in a caring and humane manner. PETA is proud to provide a safe haven for animals who have no other place to turnhere, they are welcomed with open arms.

Please, if you care about animals, help prevent more of them from being born, only to end up chained and left to waste away in someones backyard, suffering on the mean streets where people just kick them or shoo them away, tortured at the hands of animal abusers, or having to be euthanized to prevent them from coming to further harm. If you want to save lives,have your animals spayed or neutered, and when youre ready to welcome a new companion into your home,adopt, dont buy.

Originally posted here:

Why We Euthanize | PETA

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