A National Day of No Kill
Help make June 11 the safest day for animals in shelters ever.
The ASPCA takes in $140,000,000 per year. It needed only spend $33.06 to save a kitten.
Why is five the magic number? Why will it take an endless series of five year plans to achieve No Kill in New York City, to achieve a No Kill San Antonio, to achieve a No Kill Utah, to achieve a No Kill Atlanta, to achieve a No Kill Maricopa County, to achieve a No Kill Los Angeles, and to achieve a No Kill nation? Why five years, despite the fact that all of these communities are so different?
Amy Paulin is willing to sacrifice tens of thousands of animals every year to get it.
No Kill animal control not only makes good sense. It makes dollars and cents.
“Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. That is why it is called the ‘present.'”
Sgt. Karl Bailey of Seagoville Animal Services is an inspiration: a veteran of the police department, he took over a rural kill shelter in Texas with no experience, abolished the gas chamber on his first day, ordered that the killing come to an end, and last year saved roughly 98% of all the animals.
Amy Paulin amends the “Quick Kill” bill to remove “psychological pain” provision, but the fight for the safety of New York animals is far from over.
PETA is letting loose upon the world individuals who not only maniacally believe that killing is a good thing and that the living want to die, but who are legally armed with lethal drugs which they have already proven—25,000 times—that they are not adverse to using.