Save More Dogs

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Introduction
Buying a puppy from the pet store might be one of the most phenomenal moments in a life. Unfortunately, puppy mills sell their malnourished dogs to pet stores. Puppy mills are huge kennels where pure bred puppies are crowded together in unsanitary housing with no food. Dogs who did no wrong to this world do not deserve to live in these conditions. The amount of puppy mills are increasing and must be stopped by adopting dogs from shelters, not buying puppies from pet stores and putting stronger laws into action.
Background Information
As more dogs are being sold, puppy mills are becoming larger. One of the main reasons that puppy mills have become such a big problem, is the high demand for a dog. People have a high demand for purebred dogs (Patience Coster, 34-35). Asking for a certain type of breed will encourage puppy mills to grow. It’ll just have them make more money. Since high demands have been giving puppy mills a reason to work, dogs have been started to be sold online. Buying a dog from the internet may get you ripped off. You would not know what conditions the dog was until you have received him and payed. Puppy mills have began to spread all around the world. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals estimates that there is as many as 10,000 puppy mills in the United States. In every puppy mill, there may contain more than 1,000 dogs. That is a total of 10,000,000 dogs living with unfair conditions. Out of those 10,000 puppy mills, only 2,000-3,000 are U.S. Department of Agriculture licensed breeders (Puppy Mill FAQ, www.aspca.org). That is only 20%. It is really impossible to track them all and know how many there really is. Pet stores are just as guilty as puppy mills. Pet stores will...

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...or do not end up making it. Elizabeth Parker said in her book Paw Prints in the Sand “A dog is not a thing. A thing is replaceable. A dog is not. A thing is disposable. A dog is not. A thing doesn’t have a heart. A dog’s heart is bigger than any “thing” you can ever own.” ( Parker, Paw Prints in the Sand)

Works Cited

Coster, Patience. Animal Rights. New York: Rosen Central, 2013. Print.

"Laws That Protect Dogs in Puppy Mills." ASPCA. Web. 13 Mar. 2014. .

"Puppy Mill FAQ." ASPCA. Web. 14 Mar. 2014. .

"Why You Should Never Buy a Puppy Online." ASPCA. Web. 13 Mar. 2014.

Yount, Lisa. Animal Rights. New York: Facts On File, 2004. Print.

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