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- From: sstover@sumax.seattleu.edu ( Wilde Dame)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats
- Subject: Re: A moral dilemma
- Date: 31 Dec 1992 19:05:49 -0800
- Organization: Seattle University
- Lines: 41
- Message-ID: <1i0cedINNbjt@sumax.seattleu.edu>
- References: <1hu6j1INN1cg@sumax.seattleu.edu> <1992Dec31.173415.4079@fsl.noaa.gov>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sumax.seattleu.edu
-
- In article <1992Dec31.173415.4079@fsl.noaa.gov> jkl@fsl.noaa.gov (Jennifer Longstaff) writes:
- (I had written:)
- >:>: My policy, and my advice, is to help the cats who need help, and
- >:>: simply enjoy those who are managing for themselves. :)
- >
- >I don't have any trouble with adult cats getting along by themselves "in
- >the urban wild", but the big problem with our promoting this, and not
- >"turning them in" to the shelter is that those streetwise strays *WILL* come
- >in heat and they *WILL* have kittens. I think we've got to make some
- >attempt to keep cat over-population down by adopting these cats and at least
- >having them neutered/spayed!
- >
- >- Jennifer (jkl@md.fsl.noaa.gov)
-
- I'm not sure what you mean by "at least." I don't mean for this to be a
- flame, but what I think you're saying, and what I'm sure would happen in
- many cases, is that the cats might escape their adoptive households in
- favor of being free to roam, but at least they'd be neutered/spayed.
-
- Cat 'overpopulation' is better evidenced by shelter adopt/euthanize
- statistics than it is by the local population of stray cats. Most shelter
- kittens get there because the owner of the adult cat was not responsible
- enough to spay or neuter the adult cat and didn't want to care for or
- could not find homes for the kittens. Most strays who survive on the
- streets were formerly domestic cats who were either abandoned or
- neglected, most likely when they were adults. Unless the mother cat finds
- an exceptional hiding place, her kittens (if she is a stray) will likely
- not survive their first week. Even then, their chances of survival are
- far lower than a shelter kitten's.
-
- My point is that while your support of neutering/spaying is admirable, it
- is far better aimed at present owners of domestic cats than at strays.
- Bringing an adult cat into a shelter usually gives it, at best, 50/50 odds
- for survival wherein the death, if not adopted by a certain date, is
- completely unavoidable for the cat, who cannot defend his/herself. Combining
- that fact with the drastic change in lifestyle for the cat, I can't condone
- it.
- --
- Sheryl Stover % If you ask me what I have come to do in the world,
- & Hemingway & Clio % I who am an artist, I will reply: "I am here to
- sstover@seattleu.edu % live aloud." -Emile Zola
-