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The Backyard Breeder Fallacy
by
Ms. Jade, TheDogPress
Legislative Reporter

I own purebred dogs. Once a year or so I breed a litter from DNA
profiled champion stock. For that, I will never apologize as I
truly have the best interest of my chosen breed foremost in my
mind. Am I an elitist? You betcha! Would I cringe if you went so
far as to call me a dog Nazi? No. Serious breeders mate dogs of
known background in order to reduce the chances of congenital
defects and predict with greater accuracy the positive outcome
of a planned litter of puppies. Therefore I probably seem like
an unlikely advocate for the guy advertising puppies in the
local newspaper. However, I am also a civil libertarian. And I
won't apologize for that either.
Proposed, pending and contested legislation around the United
States and abroad that is aimed at restricting our property
rights by targeting animal reproduction has become rampant at
every level of government. Forced spay and neuter, cost
prohibitive licenses for unaltered dogs and breeding permits,
micro chipping of our animals with their information (and ours)
in government data bases, warrant-less inspection of our
property, arbitrary limits on the number of animals we can
responsibly care for and mandatory husbandry practices are some
of the ways in which dog owners are being relieved of their
civil rights.
While our agrarian forefathers did not specifically guarantee us
the right to own and breed animals, they did guarantee us the
right to be treated equally under the law, the right to own
property, the right to be free from warrant-less search and
seizure of that property, the right to due process and the right
to commerce. With no respect for our Constitution, animal rights
supporters are working hard to relieve us of these rights by
packaging restrictive legislation in a way that is not only
palatable to dog owners, even some breeders, but misleadingly leaves them with the
impression that they have supported something beneficial. Far
too many animal owners and welfare advocates are buying into it
in one area or another.
Divide and conquer. By creating stereotypes and labels, like
“puppy mill” and “backyard breeder” and attaching a stigma to
those labels, the animal rights movement is trying to disgrace
the act of breeding animals. And they're doing a great job. The
media has been flooded with images of dogs being raised in
cages, in filth, in neglect. Sad faces of shelter animals behind
prison bars on “death row”. Images intended to produce an
emotional response instead of an intellectual one. And don't
forget the staggering statistics.
It's not a secret that animal rights mean no more domestic
animals. It's in their mission statements. HSUS president Wayne
Pacelle brags that “We have no ethical obligation to preserve
the different breeds of livestock produced through selective
breeding. One generation and out. We have no problem with the
extinction of domestic animals. They are the creations of human
selective breeding”. Allow me to translate, no animal breeding
means no more animals. Period. And while the general public
cannot be sold on such a radical concept, it's been surprisingly
easy to sell them on the concept of ever tightening
restrictions. Although united in our love of domestic dogs,
slick marketing by the enemy has created infighting. Breeders
both private and commercial, rescuers, shelter staff, animal
control, dog show exhibitors and pet owners are cleverly being
turned against one another to forward the animal rights agenda.
Each believing that their point of view is the only valid one
and everyone else's civil rights no longer matter.
Yes, I too personally find those images disturbing. They are the
product of gross human negligence and irresponsibility. I love
animals, I have been a shelter volunteer, and I believe in
animal welfare but I am also a realist. Things are rarely what
they appear on the surface. In order to end the animal surplus
and related suffering, I want to get to the actual cause, to
prevent the illness instead of treating the symptoms, so to
speak.
The demand for a product (puppies, for example) is driven by the
consumer. It's a simple case of supply and demand in a free
market economy. Don't blame the seller for being an opportunist.
It's only human nature flourishing in what is still a mostly
democratic society. An uneducated consumer has every right to
purchase an inferior product and suffer the consequences. Just
as the seller has every right to promote the benefits their
product, in order to influence the decisions of the consumer. If
breed purists and elitists like me are outraged at breeders who
turn a profit by selling what we consider to be an inferior
product, then we must only blame ourselves for failing to
educate the buyers.
Ignore the propaganda; dog breeding is not the cause of shelter
overpopulation. Animals end up in shelters for a myriad of
reasons. Behavior problems that result from a lack of training
and proper socialization along with normal breed characteristics
that the owner finds unacceptable top the list. Owner death, job
transfer/move, landlord/rental restrictions, insurance
discrimination, financial trouble and the inability to comply
with escalating pet ownership restrictions also contribute to
the problem. The system is designed to perpetuate it.
We live in a disposable society. As long as domestic animals are
viewed as a short term convenience, instead of a serious long
term commitment then change is unlikely. The problem is one of
perspective, information and education. Pointing fingers at each
other is cowardly and counterproductive.
According to a 2005 article in the HSUS magazine All Animals,
75% of the shelter population is comprised of mongrels. Now I'm
no math wizard, but I can extrapolate that only 25% must
therefore be purebred animals. If this is true, then random bred
dogs are the real cause of shelter overpopulation, not “puppy
mills”, breed enthusiasts or “backyard breeders” of purebred
dogs. Yet this same HSUS article praises the mongrel as superior
because of its' larger gene pool. One that may very well be
polluted with unknown genetic defects. They even go so far as to
market them as a “designer” product. Sort of a haute couture,
one of a kind canine fashion accessory.
Now, it occurs to me that if you truly want to reduce the animal
shelter population in a meaningful and dramatic way, than you
should advocate for the elimination of the mongrel, through
mandatory spay and neuter of random bred dogs with unknown
ancestry. (See, I am a dog Nazi!) Most dog breeders know that
you must have a firm grasp of the genetic past, in order to
improve the genetic future of your line. Many of the minority
purebred animals that end up in the local shelter may not have a
known origin either, and are therefore not an ethical choice for
perpetuation of their breed. The same “hybrid vigor” so highly
touted in the mongrel is just as easily achieved by crossing
healthy purebreds of known ancestry to create new breeds. Man
has done so since the beginning of domesticated dog breeding and
whatever we fancy, that breed was created by this process.
The beauty of purebred dogs is that there is something to appeal
to almost anyone. I don't have to agree with your choice but I
must respect your right to make it. I'm not going to advise that
consumers rush out and purchase a Puggle, Labradoodle, or
Cockapoo, anymore than I would suggest that everyone should
select my preferred breed. (Not everyone deserves one!) Whether
these designer hybrids stand the test of time or fade out with
other trends is not for me to say. Freedom of choice means the
freedom to make the wrong choice, and the freedom to make better
choices in the future.
Am I a “backyard breeder”? Well, by technical definition I guess
I am. I have also been a front yard breeder, a living room
breeder and a cab of my motor home on the way to the dog show
breeder. If that makes me a villain, then the animal rights
lunatics and the terrorists who support their ideology win. But
if you become an independent thinker, then freedom wins. We all
win.
Ms. Jade
Handy links:
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More Columns
by Ms.
Jade:
Backyard Breeder
I Vote on Behalf of My Dog
Media Bias - Pit Bull Sensationalism
"Chicken Soup" - Leaves a bad taste
Best Friends History Exposed!- Part One
Best Friends Part Two...
T'was the Night Before X-mas
Still Life Pets
Pass
The Ammunition
Dog
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