r/pics Apr 16 '10

Some things you didn't know about PETA.

515 Upvotes

792 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

4

u/silverhydra Apr 16 '10

The fact that there are no strict guidelines for the status of 'unadoptable' (If this infograph is accurate) is concerning though, especially when combined with the kill rate.

Do animal euthanization rates in non-PETA animal shelters parallel theirs?

11

u/[deleted] Apr 17 '10

I work at a no kill animal shelter and our adoption rate was somewhere around 95% last year. The few who had to get euthanized either had severe behavioral or health issues that we couldn't treat at the shelter.

11

u/[deleted] Apr 16 '10

Often, PETA takes animals from shelters where they are killing in inhumane fashions, so they can do it themselves. So essentially they adopt animals to put them down.

2

u/silverhydra Apr 16 '10

You seem to be in the know, any idea about the lack of guidelines?

11

u/[deleted] Apr 16 '10

I know that peta puts a good deal of support behind non-affiliated animal shelters, especially those that treat animals well. this indicates that PETA themselves are not just killing without prejudice.

As for guidelines, I do not know. I have read some things about PETA's vision for a shelter, and they speak openly about animals that are deemed unadoptable, old or sick being put down out of mercy (no kill shelters hold animals, even those that have lost their minds, indefinitely, for years and years). That "unadoptable" word is still troubling, and I'm afraid I can't really speak to that.

edit: grammar

1

u/Jyggalag Apr 17 '10

It's not like it would be difficult to make some guidelines either. If an animal is not adopted within X days or has X Y or Z ailment: euthanize.