Sentences with phrase «cage for one's entire lives»

Keep in mind that even facilities with mostly healthy puppies and problem - free inspection reports may be keeping dozens or even hundreds of breeding dogs in cages for their entire lives.
Some commercial dog breeders keep breeding females in tiny, wire cages for their entire lives.
For example, it's legal for licensed breeders to own 1,000 or more dogs, keep them in very small cages for their entire lives and breed them as often as possible.
In most states, a breeding kennel can legally keep dozens or hundreds of dogs in cages for their entire lives.
They live in these tiny cages for their entire lives, and most have never walked on solid ground.
They're often kept in ramshackle outdoor pens, exposed to the elements, or in tiny, filthy cages for their entire lives.
Close to 170,000 breeding adult dogs are kept caged for their entire lives, rarely getting exercise, human attention or mental stimulation.
«These kennels can legally have hundreds of dogs in one facility, and confine them to tiny, crowded cages for their entire lives, breeding them continuously to produce as many puppies as possible for the pet trade.
As the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) notes on its website, «under USDA standards, it is legal to keep dozens or even hundreds of breeding dogs in small wire cages for their entire lives with only the basics of food, water and rudimentary shelter.»
Caging her for her entire life stripped her of ever having enough strength in her legs to experience the joy of running.
In most states, large - scale breeding operations can legally keep hundreds of dogs in cages for their entire lives for the sake of selling puppies, as long as the animals have basic food, water and shelter.
The standards for USDA licensing are ridiculously low and allow keeping animals caged for their entire lives.
The breeding dogs in these facilities will never know anything but a rusty cage for their entire lives, if they are lucky they will have access to fresh water and food on a few occasions in their lives.
I think most people want to believe that their chickens get to run around in a big open space like these chickens do, though in reality, they are generally packed 6 to a small cage for their entire lives.
Shocking as it is, this practice is not illegal — the Humane Society mentions that «in most states, a breeding kennel can legally keep dozens, even hundreds, of dogs in cages for their entire lives, as long as the dogs are given the basics of food, water, and shelter.»
At their core, puppy mills are large - scale breeding facilities where adult dogs are caged for their entire lives and turned into puppy machines.
Unfortunately, most USDA - licensed breeders house dozens or even hundreds of breeding dogs in small wire cages for their entire lives — and sadly, this is legal under current USDA regulations, which require only minimal standards of food, water and shelter.
For example, the act does not say you can not have 300 dogs confined to cages for their entire lives; never to be taken for a walk or receive any personal attention, let alone be a part of a family.
The adults are confined to cages for their entire lives and bred until their bodies give out, and then they're killed or sold at auction.
It's an industry where keeping animals confined to a cage for their entire lives is completely legal, and where facilities are allowed to continue operating despite repeated violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
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