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tv   Documentary  RT  April 19, 2020 7:30pm-8:01pm EDT

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is you'll be a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe. isolation for you to see. you going the wrong way or are you being led so. what is truth. is. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the death. or a mate in the shallows. there are a lot of lawmakers in the state of missouri that we know receive huge financial contributions
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from agricultural industry groups those are the groups that opposed proposition b. and there is no doubt in our minds that those same groups pressured lawmakers to overturn proposition b. and before the session even started there were bills that were pretty filed to do just that you feel bad because it was repealed but you know all of your work paid off as made a dramatic difference for this i mean just the fact that almost half these facilities are out of business who could have envisioned that things are definitely much improved with many of the worst operations but you still have chronic while others who are operating you still have treatment of animals and you still have this defiant attitude that some folks believe they can do whatever they want there are so many issues on the show many porton issues and everybody is struggling in the only way you.
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church. responsible. i think for the public. to try to fix it. if you can't. the problem down the
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street. at 1st it was i wanted to educate people. when they 1st started.
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my few friends and i started going around to the males in iowa experiencing it firsthand so our local store is diabetics pet shop and we went in there and we saw the puppies and asked them and at 1st they were like from a breeder and they were very open about it and so we asked if we could contact them so they gave us their card and we made an appointment and we went and we visited the mill and it was it was almost all. well and iowa in general we have the negative temperatures and the very very high temperature and the dogs are forced to live in that 247 and so our protests are every single week and no matter what the weather today we are very thankful to positive temperatures when i left my house this morning with the wind chill it was negative 40 this is cold it's not one of our coldest it is average when 00 but usually air protagonists are between 2
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people and 10 people every lead just depends on the weather and what we all have going on it is a priority of everybody we have several people travel from out of town to get here 2 years is a long time to think that we've been trying to hear this when we hang out with young people hang out in front of 5 stars on saturdays and we only have to be out here for 2 hours and the dogs are have to be out here all the time. dogs in the shelters. are at. risk with different lives. and i think it's going to take an interest people become more aware of what what a probably no means and what starts in the store actually do or i like to say that it's a ripple effect if i educate one person who knows how many other people they will tout and so if we can all educate our little corner of the earth then someday we will not have these problems. because once the public really knows what's going on
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they will not support it. no matter how upset i am i know dogs how to work so i never even consider giving up it's never been an option and i will use my voice behaving on how i will keep doing it and out there are no more money. until recent changes the only federal regulations governing commercial dog breeding dates back to the passing of the animal welfare act or a.w.a. in 1966 the a.w.a. defined a commercial dog breeder as one who maintains 4 or more breeding female dogs and sells the offspring into wholesale channels any breeder or retail pet store engaged in the direct sale of dogs to the public was exempt from the a.w.a.
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. let me clarify that a little bit the animal welfare act only requires that we do annual inspections on research facilities so there is no requirement for the other entities that we regulate. but every facility that's either licensed or registered with us is assigned a minimum inspection frequency we have a risk based inspection system so based on the risk of finding noncompliance risk of animal welfare concerns the facility may be assigned a frequency of once a year twice a year 3 times a year whatever that system a science to it the a.w.a. does not require yearly vet check ups access to exercise socialization or protections against extreme heat or cold and allows both wire flooring and stackable cages. for the animal welfare act is passed and it requires humane standards of care for dogs raised in commercial breeding establishment and it requires that the department of agriculture go out and inspect these facilities and
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make sure that they're complying with these regulations i always refer to the regulations that we have today with the u.s.d.a. is survival standards if you comply with the centers of care the dogs will probably but is it humane no right now and u.s.d.a. regulations a dog requires 6 inches of living space bigger than the dog itself and you're talking about a dog that's living in that space for its entire lives and that are part of agriculture really is there promote american agriculture it's not an impartial sort of entity that is neutral the overseeing the laws and for years u.s.d.a. was allied with the very interests that it was supposed to regulate including these folks within the agriculture sector who you know started raising puppies and started operating puppy mills never in the state of ohio has any breeder been forced out of this and speak. with long. standing violations of the animal welfare
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act if they choose to no longer be u.s.d.a. license it's because they chose not to renew their license not because inspectors came out to actually revoke that license i never heard of a regulator coming to pennsylvania no one was getting shut down the feeling of the industry was very we don't have to worry about it so frankly their doors were pretty open the so often if a breeder some violation of the animal welfare act they get a slap on the hands and when they get the slap on the hands. off and it is months following the violation and they're given an opportunity to correct the violation and sometimes it may be days. before that inspector returns to ensure that the violations been corrected on it's very rare that they will be given a fine that is truly impactful to their bottom line so they factor it in as a cost of doing business in the animal welfare it has been horrendous in the end
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for many many years and just 2008 of their own office of inspector general issued a very doable report on how terrible their inspections were they documented inspectors walking by dogs and just leaving of their you know that right enough these people and putting them out of business has been really really bad the inspector general found several major problems with them foresman of the a.w.a. including finding a massive loophole that allowed breeders to sell puppies over the internet without a license and delaying confiscation of suffering animals to give violators a final opportunity to take corrective action before confiscation can occur even in extreme cases where animals are dying it is called the animal welfare you know it's not the the kennel really well for it it's the animals and yes even some of the good inspectors were there in this building inspectors in made sure that the building was clean and they had good shelter from the extreme. temperatures but the
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dogs of. the photo a lot of the focus of that was on inconsistency in some of the things our inspectors were citing and the length of time it took to get to enforcement so we put. some an intensified training in place for our inspectors some a different oversight of our inspection process and work with our branch to find different ways to expedite the enforcement process since and we've also worked on some nontraditional or non regulatory solutions if we can help somebody come into compliance without having to resort to enforcement action and get those animals in a better welfare situation quicker and that's what we're going to do. since being elected in 1907 senator dick durbin has introduced legislation in every session that would dramatically improve the lives of dogs in commercial kennels and would close the internet loophole. the way people sold dogs changed and has it
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changed it was no longer going to the individual breeder oh longer just going to the store now was online sales and they were exempt from the kind of regular inspection that would protect the puppies and their mothers so we had to make sure that our bill really filled the scale up and provided the protection for those online sales and the pups that were part of it even in the midst of the hyper partisanship of the u.s. senate on the issue of puppy mills senator durbin found willing partners on the republican side of the aisle my 1st co-sponsor was rick santorum one of the most conservative republicans from pennsylvania he was on this but with me and then after he left the senate i had senator vitter from louisiana another very conservative senator so it turns out that when it comes to humane treatment of animals and dogs in particular this is very bipartisan if a bill like pups went to the floor of the house of the senate it would be an
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overwhelming yea vote for the measure there would be $9095.00 yes votes in the senate you know be 400 or so yes votes in the house out of 430 but the problem is on an a wall for legislation the congress is that many of the bills they get tracked to the house and senate committees on agriculture and those committees are populated by the most rural lawmakers aligned with the biggest agribusiness interests in the united states. has changed american lives but pharmaceutical companies have a miraculous solution. based drugs about the people who are chronic pain and the believe that their prescription is working for them in the remedy. he said to the
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price that they pay closer dependency and addiction to opiates is the long term use that really isn't scientifically just right now study actually suggest that. the long term effects might not just be absence of benefit but actually that they might because they want to. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm showbusiness i'll see that. throughout the years members of the senate agriculture committee have received enormous campaign contributions from agriculture giant including month sento tyson smithfield and cargill the sides these direct contributions each of these corporations spent millions of dollars each year lobbying congress. seemingly
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afraid of how a theoretical slippery slope protecting dogs in puppy mills could hurt their operations corporate agriculture sided with commercial breeders they get loads of campaign cash from these agribusiness groups because that's the funnel for the legislation that these agribusiness groups want who doesn't want to protect docs and yet somehow interest to find a way to twist it around and make you scared into voting against those commonsense positive public policy is they typically oppose any animal welfare legislation because they think they're going to be next and they think that if you have a society that is incrementally building animal welfare standards it's eventually going to lead society to examine their thought even with strong public support for common sense changes to the animal welfare act none of these bills were allowed out of committee recognizing the original intentions of the a.w.a.
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and the advent of commercial breeders selling exclusively over the internet the u.s.d.a. moved on their own to update the regulations. so the administration seeing the enormous number of senators and u.s. representatives backing of legislation and getting hundreds of thousands of comments from h.s. u.s. members and other animal welfare advocates they finally passed a rule to bring these internet sellers under the regulatory authority of us to before the change in regulations nearly $7500.00 facilities across the united states were subject to inspection besides commercial breeding facilities this includes research facilities zoos circuses marine parks transport vehicles television and film productions involving animals state fairs camel right petting zoos elephant right and traveling and or roadside zooms. in
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201-3115 u.s.d.a. inspectors conducted between 101-1000 inspections on these various facilities approximately 3000 of those inspections were conducted on commercial dog breeding facilities since this change in policy will now also require commercial breeders selling on the internet to obtain a license the u.s.d.a. estimates that there will be up to $4600.00 additional new facilities under their inspection umbrella based on their own projections a total of between 101-2000 facilities will now fall under the inspection provisions of the animal welfare act this change will increase the workload of their 115 inspectors buying nearly a 3rd. the u.s.d.a. has no plans to add additional inspectors i think since the real big came into effect the number one way that we've gotten contacts are people's names as people
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suffer porting we do we have looked at breeder registries to get i did get numbers we watch the internet a look at. marketing promotional things from folks that sell over the internet so this is a good move for dogs that it's now part of the animal welfare act but again our question's going to be how are you going to enforce it because you're having a very difficult time in forcing a law that was already in place and now we've just added a new dimension to it we've got 115 people. stationed across the country to do our inspections. there workload is prioritized by risk based systems so we get them to those places where they're most needed and at this point in time we do feel like we have resources to be successful in doing this you know i worry about that were the time we were coming back and spending appropriations in every direction and they
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say they have enough to get started but i want to keep an eye on it even document us yea inspectors who had their old puppy mill themselves documented supervisors of inspectors who were out working as roofers during the day they're supposed to be out check you know their inspectors i mean enforcement was absolutely atrocious and has bad since the inception of the and it was just recently in the last couple years that u.s.d.a. has really turned around and started to in force the law is put on the books since 1007 were seeing a closing of this loophole that allows internet sellers and we just have to continue now with our effort to educate the public that the best place to get holes is a shelter or rescue group or a responsible breeder who is really treating the other dog like a pet and not a breed. machine. usually have a number so he actually has a tattoo on his ear as he's optioned and that's my bird it's not that my business
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name once we got him he was shaking a lot because he didn't know what to do he was trapped in this tiny little wired cage. we don't need a crate with him he will stir freaking out and she won't let us read even anywhere near an. autism naming. lot of email. me ask me i am going on well now camarines i'll be known as i guess that's me at least i want to know one out there let me know. and i said well so are these really really cute baby stuff these are all you know your body your skull and these 2 in here came from a hoarding situation in philadelphia and we took in 39 little blue joie lock box that makes this. guy. our
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our. dog was probably about 9 months old even months old and the dog was so full of joy and just wanted to get out run around and the dog was down in salvos playing and it was in a rabbit hutch standing on wire but it desperately wanted to get out and i can we take this dog no i just got the dog we're breeding the dog i'm just starting to breed or so this was years ago and then every time we went back i would see this dog and the dog was getting older and older and he didn't want to anymore because she wasn't a good breeder and i was looking at her and her eyes were dead and within i would say about a month beast she started to come around and i could see the dog that i remembered from before and it's a shame that she had to go through all that you know her entire life just consisted of this misery.
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and we need people to start realizing that these poppy mills exist these puppies and pet stores come from puppy males whether you believe it or not that's where your dog came from a puppy. thing that he's really crossed because they're not rescuing or saving a puppy by by buying that dog what they're doing is they're sentencing the mother of that dog to a lifetime of misery you know you know the general public does stop by poppy's stop going to change it's just it's not going to stop i'll be down as the day i die and i owe a lot and i hope i hope i don't have to spend my days to save dogs we americans are treating dogs like members of the family we allow them in their beds to sleep at night we spend money on them we give them life saving better a care a society that values dogs is not an aside it's going to tolerate this abuse of dogs on puppy mills. until the public is willing to forgo the purchase of
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a puppy on the internet or in pet stores no regulation will end the suffering of thousands of breeding dogs trapped in commercial mills across the united states and humane societies rescues impounds millions of dogs are awaiting the chance to join a family if the general public decides to adopt and not shop the factory farming of puppies would and. the power really does lie in the people what we have as a movement is a 1000000 households who care about animals and who are willing to pick up the phone and being able to tap that power that is what should make any puppy miller terrified the other side has a much more difficult task they've got to convince people that keeping dogs in confinement for their entire laws denying. that you are exposing your true to the
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cold is an acceptable way to treat go these are alike to officials and they work for us and we're going to make sure they work for us we know we're up against a lot of corruption and consumer fraud and animal cruelty but i think it's every time you educate that one person that could be the next person who makes a difference at the state house or at the local level or even at the federal level such a case may gone. home i do think that it's really important people if they see something going on especially i mean i mean just as they should bring it to people's attention and people to know what's going on out there and. they just feel otherwise change is not possible. 20 years from now we'd all like to look back and we know what's going to happen we're going to what back and we're going to say thank god we don't have anymore i can't believe the way we allow people to treat these dogs.
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god. god . god.
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my god. i have. my. my. little own little or are. all. on burkman man.
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that is used every small cycle don't listen. in the. phone via making the seizure good in the pleading for me. to take the safe cruel shots walk next you don't. give a solution safety feature. the sort of the. right
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. i'm action are times when you're watching going underground the whole team here hope you're all safe we're away until wednesday the 22nd of april but in the meantime we're screening something a favorite episodes of the coming up in this show are you comfortably numb close to 10 years since collateral murder revealed nato nations indiscriminate targeting of journalists and civilians form of pink floyd front man what you'll watch is slamming the british government persecuting wiki leaks founder julian assange plus
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agreed in an industry exposed by wiki leaks is on the.

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