All language subtitles for Breaking.The.Chain.2020.1080p.WEBRip.x264.AAC-[YTS.MX]

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch Download
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew Download
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese Download
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish Download
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:00:11,344 --> 00:00:13,380 [Dogs barking] 4 00:00:16,282 --> 00:00:17,584 It’s upsetting when people say things 5 00:00:17,851 --> 00:00:19,619 and they don’t understand what we do. 6 00:00:19,853 --> 00:00:20,820 They’ve never come to visit, 7 00:00:21,121 --> 00:00:23,223 or they’ve never posed any questions. 8 00:00:23,556 --> 00:00:25,392 They look at numbers on a piece of paper, 9 00:00:25,658 --> 00:00:26,726 and they make assumptions. 10 00:00:27,694 --> 00:00:29,295 I think it’s very important for people 11 00:00:29,529 --> 00:00:30,563 to look behind the numbers, 12 00:00:30,864 --> 00:00:32,766 at the individual animals that we encounter 13 00:00:33,066 --> 00:00:35,402 in the field and what their stories are. 14 00:00:35,902 --> 00:00:37,837 Every one of those numbers is a story. 15 00:00:38,304 --> 00:00:41,241 Every one of those numbers is an individual animal. 16 00:00:41,508 --> 00:00:43,410 [Makes kissy sounds for dog to come] 17 00:00:43,610 --> 00:00:44,577 It’s OK. 18 00:00:44,844 --> 00:00:46,379 [Indistinct chatter] 19 00:00:52,652 --> 00:00:54,120 [Makes kissy sounds for dog to come] 20 00:01:06,699 --> 00:01:07,534 [Intriguing music fades in] 21 00:01:07,567 --> 00:01:08,768 I know you like this. 22 00:01:11,838 --> 00:01:13,473 I know. I know. 23 00:01:15,742 --> 00:01:16,676 I know, sweetheart. 24 00:01:17,610 --> 00:01:18,845 Just give me a second. 25 00:01:26,586 --> 00:01:27,787 -[Rachel] You all right? -[Daphna] Yeah. 26 00:01:30,290 --> 00:01:32,592 -That was an enthusiastic grab. -[Rachel] Yeah. 27 00:01:33,226 --> 00:01:35,628 That was an enthusiastic grab. 28 00:01:36,229 --> 00:01:37,564 Glad you like it, though. 29 00:01:42,669 --> 00:01:44,137 I’m gonna look at you. I’m gonna look at you. 30 00:01:44,337 --> 00:01:45,004 Come here. 31 00:01:45,405 --> 00:01:47,240 Come on. It’s OK. No one’s gonna hurt you. 32 00:01:47,707 --> 00:01:49,809 Generally speaking, in terms of the 33 00:01:50,043 --> 00:01:51,478 sorts of areas we visit 34 00:01:51,778 --> 00:01:54,347 and the predicament of the dogs that we help, 35 00:01:54,881 --> 00:01:56,282 it’s a fairly typical day. 36 00:01:56,549 --> 00:01:59,185 She has lost quite a bit of weight 37 00:01:59,552 --> 00:02:01,488 since I was here in June. 38 00:02:02,088 --> 00:02:04,624 And her hair loss is more severe, 39 00:02:04,891 --> 00:02:07,293 and you can see she’s very hungry. 40 00:02:07,694 --> 00:02:10,530 And I can see the fleas crawling all over her body. 41 00:02:10,997 --> 00:02:13,199 And the flies are eating her ears up alive. 42 00:02:13,633 --> 00:02:16,402 I don’t know that she's fed on a regular basis. 43 00:02:16,936 --> 00:02:18,705 This is her life every day. 44 00:02:19,005 --> 00:02:22,275 Every second of every minute of every hour of every day, 45 00:02:22,575 --> 00:02:23,243 this dog lives here. 46 00:02:23,543 --> 00:02:25,812 The woman across the street is the sister 47 00:02:26,045 --> 00:02:27,847 of the man who owns this dog. 48 00:02:28,681 --> 00:02:29,749 And I think it’s 49 00:02:30,817 --> 00:02:33,786 very important for us to try and get her out of here 50 00:02:34,454 --> 00:02:35,655 very, very soon. 51 00:02:43,429 --> 00:02:46,366 [Intriguing music fades out] 52 00:02:46,900 --> 00:02:50,336 [Uplifting music starts] 53 00:02:53,640 --> 00:02:55,575 PETA moved to Norfolk in 1996. 54 00:02:55,875 --> 00:02:58,945 It was a fiscal decision. Cost of living here was low. 55 00:02:59,312 --> 00:03:01,314 We have a building here on the Elizabeth River, 56 00:03:01,581 --> 00:03:03,716 downtown Norfolk, and a dog park, 57 00:03:04,017 --> 00:03:04,851 which is more than an acre. 58 00:03:05,251 --> 00:03:08,254 We actually have two dog parks, a big one and a small one. 59 00:03:13,059 --> 00:03:14,561 We’ve been growing by leaps and bounds, 60 00:03:14,894 --> 00:03:16,596 and so this building allowed us to 61 00:03:16,863 --> 00:03:18,765 have a shelter on the fourth floor. 62 00:03:19,232 --> 00:03:22,735 CAP stands for the “Community Animal Project.” 63 00:03:23,069 --> 00:03:24,003 It is a division of PETA’s 64 00:03:24,270 --> 00:03:26,239 Cruelty Investigations Department 65 00:03:26,472 --> 00:03:28,308 that was born out of necessity 66 00:03:28,675 --> 00:03:29,976 after PETA moved down to 67 00:03:30,577 --> 00:03:33,613 southeastern Virginia in the mid-’90s. 68 00:03:36,349 --> 00:03:37,684 Bye! 69 00:03:40,053 --> 00:03:42,422 Over the months and years after we arrived, 70 00:03:42,689 --> 00:03:44,390 calls from the community for help 71 00:03:44,691 --> 00:03:46,492 increased from week to week. 72 00:03:47,026 --> 00:03:48,895 And it didn’t take us very long at the time 73 00:03:49,195 --> 00:03:52,498 to realize that there was a dire need in the community, 74 00:03:52,799 --> 00:03:54,267 not just our immediate community 75 00:03:54,567 --> 00:03:56,569 here in Norfolk and Hampton Roads 76 00:03:56,903 --> 00:03:59,672 but far beyond that into counties that are rural, 77 00:04:00,039 --> 00:04:02,442 impoverished and even over the border 78 00:04:02,675 --> 00:04:04,644 in northeastern North Carolina, 79 00:04:04,978 --> 00:04:07,513 where there are entire jurisdictions 80 00:04:07,847 --> 00:04:09,515 where there are no services at all. 81 00:04:10,049 --> 00:04:13,686 One county we work in doesn’t even have a veterinarian in it, 82 00:04:14,187 --> 00:04:16,623 let alone a low-cost spay/neuter program. 83 00:04:17,490 --> 00:04:18,591 [Chris] When I was an animal control officer, 84 00:04:18,891 --> 00:04:20,727 I saw the problems that were out there 85 00:04:21,194 --> 00:04:22,528 and had a friend that worked at PETA, 86 00:04:22,829 --> 00:04:25,331 and it seemed like a job where you could actually 87 00:04:25,665 --> 00:04:27,033 get out there and get your hands dirty 88 00:04:27,400 --> 00:04:28,735 and make a difference. 89 00:04:29,269 --> 00:04:30,903 [Jes] After my internship here, 90 00:04:31,204 --> 00:04:33,773 I was inspired by the work that CAP does. 91 00:04:34,073 --> 00:04:38,444 So I decided to stay and continue to work in CAP. 92 00:04:39,379 --> 00:04:40,813 [Kate] I started volunteering in the winter 93 00:04:41,114 --> 00:04:42,315 to do the straw delivery. 94 00:04:42,615 --> 00:04:43,816 And I kind of fell in love with seeing 95 00:04:44,117 --> 00:04:46,452 the impact of what you do immediately for the animals. 96 00:04:46,753 --> 00:04:48,988 And I like being out in the field, getting dirty. [Chuckles] 97 00:04:49,288 --> 00:04:50,623 Sitting at a desk isn’t my thing. 98 00:04:50,923 --> 00:04:51,858 [Emily] As long as I can remember, 99 00:04:52,158 --> 00:04:53,726 I’ve always known about PETA 100 00:04:54,027 --> 00:04:56,462 and I’ve always had a desire to work at PETA. 101 00:04:56,963 --> 00:04:57,730 [Daphna] I was living in Chicago, 102 00:04:58,264 --> 00:05:01,834 and there was a very disturbing pet store called Animal Jungle. 103 00:05:02,135 --> 00:05:03,369 It was just one of those places 104 00:05:03,670 --> 00:05:05,538 that’s a pure nightmare for animals. 105 00:05:05,838 --> 00:05:07,874 And I called PETA to see what I could do. 106 00:05:08,174 --> 00:05:09,976 I ended up speaking with a caseworker 107 00:05:10,410 --> 00:05:12,945 and sort of followed the steps that she gave me to do, 108 00:05:13,246 --> 00:05:14,814 went back in there with a video camera, 109 00:05:15,048 --> 00:05:16,082 sent some information. 110 00:05:16,416 --> 00:05:17,950 But when I would call after hours 111 00:05:18,251 --> 00:05:20,420 to give the caseworker updates, 112 00:05:20,987 --> 00:05:22,455 one time I heard that it said, 113 00:05:22,755 --> 00:05:24,891 “For job opportunities, press 7.” 114 00:05:25,191 --> 00:05:27,493 So I pressed 7. And that’s that. 115 00:05:27,794 --> 00:05:28,461 [Inspiring music fades out] 116 00:05:29,062 --> 00:05:32,398 [Chris] A typical day is usually going out to North Carolina, 117 00:05:32,832 --> 00:05:34,600 where we help out people with their dogs 118 00:05:34,901 --> 00:05:35,401 that need assistance 119 00:05:36,069 --> 00:05:37,637 that don’t have money to take care of their dogs. 120 00:05:37,937 --> 00:05:38,971 The people are really poor, 121 00:05:39,405 --> 00:05:40,740 and usually the dogs are chained out, 122 00:05:41,040 --> 00:05:42,575 and people forget about their dogs. 123 00:05:42,875 --> 00:05:44,077 [Kate] We always have to be given permission 124 00:05:44,377 --> 00:05:45,078 to be on somebody’s property. 125 00:05:45,378 --> 00:05:46,479 So we’ll go and knock. 126 00:05:46,813 --> 00:05:49,749 [Knocking] [Dog barking] 127 00:05:51,451 --> 00:05:52,985 [Jes] Hey! My name’s Jes. I’m from PETA. 128 00:05:53,286 --> 00:05:55,488 We had stopped by before about Brownie. 129 00:05:55,788 --> 00:05:56,823 [Guardian] Mm-hmm. 130 00:05:56,856 --> 00:05:57,890 [Jes] We had tried to catch you a couple of times, 131 00:05:58,191 --> 00:05:58,991 but maybe you weren’t home. 132 00:06:01,627 --> 00:06:02,495 [Jes] Oh, OK. 133 00:06:02,729 --> 00:06:03,196 Well, we just stopped by 134 00:06:03,563 --> 00:06:04,764 because when I was here last time, 135 00:06:05,064 --> 00:06:07,166 it was in February and he was kind of thin, 136 00:06:07,467 --> 00:06:09,669 so I was just checking to see if things were, 137 00:06:09,902 --> 00:06:10,670 how things were going. 138 00:06:12,638 --> 00:06:13,940 [Jes] He does? He’s doing good? 139 00:06:14,240 --> 00:06:14,807 [Guardian] Yeah. 140 00:06:15,374 --> 00:06:17,643 [Jes] I know we had also talked about maybe moving him 141 00:06:17,877 --> 00:06:19,145 to some shade. 142 00:06:19,712 --> 00:06:22,014 Today it’s a little mild, but you know, 143 00:06:22,315 --> 00:06:25,051 the other day was like 90 degrees and without shade. 144 00:06:25,351 --> 00:06:27,186 Did I wake you up? You have a headache? 145 00:06:29,722 --> 00:06:30,690 [Jes] Aww, I’m sorry. 146 00:06:31,057 --> 00:06:33,659 Well, I can see that he doesn’t really want me messing with him, 147 00:06:33,960 --> 00:06:35,161 but I’m gonna give him a couple treats. 148 00:06:35,394 --> 00:06:36,229 [Guardian] OK. 149 00:06:36,262 --> 00:06:37,163 [Jes] Will you just make sure that he has 150 00:06:37,396 --> 00:06:38,898 plenty of water out here? 151 00:06:42,602 --> 00:06:45,905 [Jes] OK, where? Oh, in the jugs? OK. 152 00:06:46,139 --> 00:06:48,207 [Light music fades in] 153 00:06:48,508 --> 00:06:52,912 [Dogs whining and barking] 154 00:06:57,150 --> 00:06:59,619 [Daphna] Tethering is tying up your dog 155 00:06:59,919 --> 00:07:02,121 or other animals 24 hours a day, 156 00:07:02,421 --> 00:07:06,125 365 days a year no matter what the weather is 157 00:07:06,425 --> 00:07:09,796 no matter, you know, whether they have shelter. 158 00:07:10,229 --> 00:07:13,466 [Dog whining] 159 00:07:13,733 --> 00:07:15,234 It could be pouring rain or snow. 160 00:07:15,601 --> 00:07:18,204 It could be freezing cold to the point where their water bowl 161 00:07:18,504 --> 00:07:22,475 becomes a frozen piece of ice and is therefore not drinkable. 162 00:07:23,042 --> 00:07:25,011 Ice storms and hurricanes are very common 163 00:07:25,278 --> 00:07:27,914 in this area as are thunderstorms. 164 00:07:28,214 --> 00:07:30,183 And in the summer months, temperatures here can exceed 165 00:07:30,483 --> 00:07:32,185 100 degrees Fahrenheit. 166 00:07:32,585 --> 00:07:36,589 Some people will tether or chain their animals with, you know, 167 00:07:36,823 --> 00:07:38,558 an old refrigerator for cover 168 00:07:39,025 --> 00:07:40,993 or a wire crate for shelter, 169 00:07:41,294 --> 00:07:42,962 which, of course, doesn’t do anything. 170 00:07:43,196 --> 00:07:44,764 Or just inadequate shelter like 171 00:07:45,064 --> 00:07:47,200 a plastic doghouse that comes apart, 172 00:07:47,500 --> 00:07:49,869 or the dogs are very bored, so they chew at them, 173 00:07:50,169 --> 00:07:53,105 and eventually the doghouses don’t serve a purpose at all. 174 00:07:53,606 --> 00:07:54,874 [Kate] Dogs are social creatures, 175 00:07:55,174 --> 00:07:56,909 and they want to be inside with their families. 176 00:07:57,210 --> 00:08:00,246 And unfortunately, the dogs we see most chained are pit bulls. 177 00:08:00,546 --> 00:08:02,148 Where we go, dogfighting is a thing, 178 00:08:02,415 --> 00:08:05,051 so we see dogs that are stolen, used as bait. 179 00:08:05,351 --> 00:08:07,520 People let their dogs run at large as well, 180 00:08:07,820 --> 00:08:09,121 so we see dogs that are on chains 181 00:08:09,422 --> 00:08:11,657 attacked by dogs that are running at large. 182 00:08:12,091 --> 00:08:13,526 And because their guardians may not 183 00:08:13,793 --> 00:08:14,827 go out and check on them every day, 184 00:08:15,127 --> 00:08:17,263 they can be left to suffer for days with wounds. 185 00:08:17,763 --> 00:08:19,765 And after a certain point, those dogs aren’t always 186 00:08:20,066 --> 00:08:22,201 in a position that they can be adopted back out. 187 00:08:22,501 --> 00:08:27,240 [Dogs whining, wincing, struggling] 188 00:08:33,880 --> 00:08:35,848 [John] When we was growin’ up, we had a dog like a poodle. 189 00:08:36,148 --> 00:08:37,850 A poodle was left in the house. 190 00:08:38,351 --> 00:08:39,986 And when we got other dogs like 191 00:08:40,953 --> 00:08:41,520 collies and stuff like that, 192 00:08:42,088 --> 00:08:45,091 pit bull or German shepherd, they were put outside. 193 00:08:47,293 --> 00:08:49,595 -[Jes] All dogs are house dogs. -[John] Hmm? 194 00:08:49,896 --> 00:08:51,764 All dogs are house dogs. 195 00:08:54,267 --> 00:08:56,202 What, what makes a dog not a house dog? 196 00:09:00,206 --> 00:09:00,907 Yeah? 197 00:09:01,340 --> 00:09:01,807 I mean, so you— 198 00:09:02,708 --> 00:09:04,210 I know you’re supposed to keep them in there when it’s hot. 199 00:09:04,810 --> 00:09:06,979 You’re supposed to keep them in there all the time. 200 00:09:07,246 --> 00:09:08,648 I mean dogs are pack animals. 201 00:09:08,948 --> 00:09:09,849 Keeping ’em chained outside, 202 00:09:10,116 --> 00:09:11,651 it breaks down their mental health. 203 00:09:11,884 --> 00:09:13,019 It’s not good for them. 204 00:09:16,222 --> 00:09:17,256 OK. [Laughs] 205 00:09:17,490 --> 00:09:18,824 Like I said, the way that, like, 206 00:09:19,125 --> 00:09:22,028 these dogs are set up, I mean, it isolates them. 207 00:09:22,361 --> 00:09:24,630 When they’re inside and they're with their pack, 208 00:09:24,931 --> 00:09:26,165 -they’re happier. -[John] Mmm. 209 00:09:26,465 --> 00:09:28,034 [Somber music fades in] 210 00:09:28,334 --> 00:09:30,903 [Daphna] I’ve asked people why they have dogs 211 00:09:31,203 --> 00:09:32,772 when they keep ’em a certain way. 212 00:09:33,205 --> 00:09:35,608 I think in many of the cases that we deal with, 213 00:09:35,908 --> 00:09:37,977 it’s a very deeply ingrained 214 00:09:38,277 --> 00:09:41,147 traditional way in which people were raised 215 00:09:41,514 --> 00:09:43,749 that dogs belong outside or 216 00:09:44,083 --> 00:09:45,918 it’s a possession that allows you to say, 217 00:09:46,218 --> 00:09:49,388 “Well, I have 20 pit bulls, and I breed my pit bulls.” 218 00:09:49,689 --> 00:09:50,823 I’ve heard, 219 00:09:51,123 --> 00:09:53,159 “They’re out there to let me know 220 00:09:53,459 --> 00:09:55,161 when someone comes into my yard.” 221 00:09:55,461 --> 00:09:57,797 So they’re pretty much little alarm systems. 222 00:09:58,097 --> 00:09:59,832 Sometimes the people with bigger dogs, you know, 223 00:10:00,132 --> 00:10:02,735 they don’t want their dog to ruin their furniture or 224 00:10:03,069 --> 00:10:04,036 they didn’t want to put up with a puppy 225 00:10:04,337 --> 00:10:05,972 peeing on the carpet and things like that. 226 00:10:06,272 --> 00:10:07,273 They don’t wanna have the patience 227 00:10:07,573 --> 00:10:08,641 to go through potty training. 228 00:10:08,874 --> 00:10:09,642 [Puppy whining] 229 00:10:10,009 --> 00:10:12,712 [Thomas] I grew up in a rural part of Virginia where 230 00:10:13,012 --> 00:10:14,981 most normal kids were riding their bikes, 231 00:10:15,281 --> 00:10:17,650 and then I was just out there with a pack of dogs. 232 00:10:17,917 --> 00:10:20,119 And always going to their houses and 233 00:10:20,419 --> 00:10:22,221 just offering to do something with them 234 00:10:22,521 --> 00:10:24,957 because a lot of people kept them chained. 235 00:10:25,424 --> 00:10:26,993 [Jes] One of the struggles 236 00:10:27,293 --> 00:10:29,295 that we really face is just general lack 237 00:10:29,595 --> 00:10:32,398 of education and knowing what they really need. 238 00:10:32,965 --> 00:10:36,202 [Kate] So we try to educate people as much as possible, 239 00:10:36,502 --> 00:10:39,438 but it’s hard to take someone coming in who 240 00:10:39,739 --> 00:10:41,807 is telling you everything you’ve been doing is wrong, 241 00:10:42,108 --> 00:10:43,676 and you need to start doing it this way. 242 00:10:43,976 --> 00:10:45,411 [Katina] Is she in heat? 243 00:10:48,047 --> 00:10:49,348 [Katina] Yeah, it looks like she’s in heat. 244 00:10:51,984 --> 00:10:53,886 Do you put her inside when she’s in heat? 245 00:10:54,820 --> 00:10:55,488 [Guardian] Uh 246 00:10:56,122 --> 00:10:57,957 [Heather] ’Cause otherwise, if she’s not pregnant now, 247 00:10:58,190 --> 00:10:59,158 she will be very soon. 248 00:10:59,392 --> 00:11:00,126 [Katina] That’s that the song 249 00:11:00,526 --> 00:11:02,695 “my milkshake brings all the boys to the yard.” 250 00:11:03,963 --> 00:11:06,232 [Laughing] 251 00:11:06,632 --> 00:11:08,200 [Chris] The communities that we go to, 252 00:11:08,434 --> 00:11:09,068 they’re all very poor. 253 00:11:09,402 --> 00:11:11,437 Most of the people are really low-income. 254 00:11:11,704 --> 00:11:13,339 I think it’s important to remember that 255 00:11:13,639 --> 00:11:16,242 you have to have compassion for them, for their situation, 256 00:11:16,542 --> 00:11:17,143 for the reason that they’re there. 257 00:11:17,810 --> 00:11:19,745 Because they don’t wanna be in that situation, either, 258 00:11:20,046 --> 00:11:22,848 and they were taught from their family to be this way, 259 00:11:23,149 --> 00:11:23,749 to treat animals that way. 260 00:11:24,283 --> 00:11:25,951 So, you know, all we can really do is go out there 261 00:11:26,252 --> 00:11:28,287 and help their animals the best that we can. 262 00:11:30,322 --> 00:11:31,891 All righty, it’s good to meet you all. 263 00:11:32,224 --> 00:11:34,427 [Somber music fades out] 264 00:11:35,327 --> 00:11:38,264 [Uplifting music fades in] 265 00:11:39,031 --> 00:11:39,598 [Daphna] Each day, 266 00:11:40,032 --> 00:11:42,768 the fieldworkers are assigned certain cases. 267 00:11:43,069 --> 00:11:46,806 It may be that they also remember cases from the area 268 00:11:47,106 --> 00:11:49,108 or they’ve asked to go back to a certain case. 269 00:11:49,408 --> 00:11:50,476 And then they go out in the field, 270 00:11:50,709 --> 00:11:51,177 usually on their own. 271 00:11:51,677 --> 00:11:54,046 Sometimes two fieldworkers go together. 272 00:11:54,680 --> 00:11:56,282 Could be that they are delivering doghouses, 273 00:11:56,582 --> 00:11:59,485 it could be that they are taking an animal back home after spay. 274 00:11:59,785 --> 00:12:02,121 It could be that they’re picking up an animal to be spayed. 275 00:12:02,421 --> 00:12:05,224 It could be that they are going out because somebody called us 276 00:12:05,491 --> 00:12:06,959 because their dog fell, 277 00:12:07,460 --> 00:12:09,795 you know, off the balcony and needs to be looked at. 278 00:12:10,229 --> 00:12:12,064 It could be a frequent flyer, if you will, 279 00:12:12,364 --> 00:12:15,501 where we go out once a month and give flea prevention. 280 00:12:15,768 --> 00:12:17,436 [Chris] You know, we bring out dog food. 281 00:12:17,736 --> 00:12:19,405 We bring out tie-outs to people that have dogs 282 00:12:19,705 --> 00:12:21,507 in backyards and won’t bring them in their house. 283 00:12:21,841 --> 00:12:23,008 The flies bite their ears 284 00:12:23,342 --> 00:12:25,177 ’cause the owners never clean up the feces, 285 00:12:25,478 --> 00:12:27,213 so the flies will actually eat their ears off. 286 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:29,281 Like, I’ve seen ears that are gone. 287 00:12:29,582 --> 00:12:32,518 We do a lot of education in terms of teaching people 288 00:12:32,852 --> 00:12:35,221 we need to get a little bit of vet help here 289 00:12:35,521 --> 00:12:37,790 or alternately this is how you trim nails. 290 00:12:38,023 --> 00:12:38,891 This is better nutrition 291 00:12:39,191 --> 00:12:40,793 or just kind of trying to improve 292 00:12:41,060 --> 00:12:42,561 the lives of the animals that we meet. 293 00:12:42,962 --> 00:12:44,330 [Chris] You can see where the quick is right there. 294 00:12:44,563 --> 00:12:45,064 [Guardian] Right, right. 295 00:12:45,431 --> 00:12:46,398 [Chris] If you go further than that, 296 00:12:46,632 --> 00:12:47,366 she’s gonna bleed. 297 00:12:47,600 --> 00:12:48,534 [Guardian] Oh, yeah. 298 00:12:53,572 --> 00:12:54,540 [Chris] I mean, we’ll come out and do it for free, 299 00:12:54,840 --> 00:12:56,842 but just we need to get on it more often, 300 00:12:57,176 --> 00:12:58,511 because the more that they grow, 301 00:12:58,844 --> 00:13:00,212 then the quick will keep going out. 302 00:13:00,446 --> 00:13:01,113 And as they keep getting longer, 303 00:13:01,480 --> 00:13:02,982 it’s harder to get them where they need to be. 304 00:13:03,215 --> 00:13:03,849 You know what I’m saying? 305 00:13:06,585 --> 00:13:08,921 [Chris] Oh, man. She loves you, doesn’t she? 306 00:13:09,755 --> 00:13:11,056 [Chris] You want a couple cans of dog food? 307 00:13:13,592 --> 00:13:14,493 [Chris]And I'll get the fleameds. OK. Be back in a sec. 308 00:13:14,860 --> 00:13:17,029 [Chris] We’ll stop back out in, you know, like, you know, 309 00:13:17,329 --> 00:13:19,465 six weeks and check back in and do the nails again, 310 00:13:19,732 --> 00:13:20,366 see how she’s doin’. 311 00:13:22,134 --> 00:13:23,002 Yeah. 312 00:13:27,339 --> 00:13:29,508 Oh, yeah, I can give you—I can give you a card. No problem. 313 00:13:31,544 --> 00:13:33,279 Well, like I said, we appreciate it, man. 314 00:13:33,779 --> 00:13:35,281 Well, I’m glad we could help you out. 315 00:13:35,781 --> 00:13:37,149 [Uplifting music fades out] 316 00:13:45,658 --> 00:13:46,358 [Daphna] The first time I came here, 317 00:13:46,692 --> 00:13:48,594 she didn’t come out of the doghouse at all. 318 00:13:49,028 --> 00:13:51,897 It’s taken several visits, you know. 319 00:13:52,198 --> 00:13:53,165 [Camera operator] Mm-hmm. 320 00:13:55,301 --> 00:13:57,303 Last time I tried to pet her, she flinched. 321 00:13:57,603 --> 00:13:59,638 You know, she’s not used to being touched. 322 00:14:01,507 --> 00:14:02,608 You see? 323 00:14:04,610 --> 00:14:05,377 She doesn’t know what it is. 324 00:14:05,711 --> 00:14:08,013 She doesn’t... she’s not familiar with petting. 325 00:14:08,280 --> 00:14:10,149 She’s not... she's just afraid. 326 00:14:16,388 --> 00:14:19,225 It’s always, you know, the loneliness, the fear, 327 00:14:19,558 --> 00:14:22,027 struggling with the flies, with the mosquitos, 328 00:14:22,294 --> 00:14:23,929 with the fleas, with the ticks. 329 00:14:24,296 --> 00:14:26,498 And being chained, some of these dogs that we saw, 330 00:14:26,799 --> 00:14:31,537 in full sun in this weather, it’s absolutely horrific. 331 00:14:32,004 --> 00:14:34,139 Nobody would stop by Zena’s house 332 00:14:34,873 --> 00:14:38,177 by happenstance and stumble upon the dog who’s 333 00:14:38,477 --> 00:14:42,147 so sorely neglected that she’s not long for this world. 334 00:14:42,448 --> 00:14:45,351 The bottom line is that it’s about what these animals need, 335 00:14:45,718 --> 00:14:48,420 and most of these animals have never had someone hold them 336 00:14:48,921 --> 00:14:51,457 and kiss them and tell them that they’re wonderful 337 00:14:51,924 --> 00:14:54,126 and give them a good meal and a clean, 338 00:14:54,360 --> 00:14:55,928 soft blanket to lie on. 339 00:14:56,195 --> 00:14:57,396 For most of the animals we deal with, 340 00:14:57,696 --> 00:14:59,531 that’s the first time they've ever had a kind word. 341 00:14:59,832 --> 00:15:03,068 You can see that all over Zena’s face when we deal with her. 342 00:15:03,369 --> 00:15:06,038 That no one has ever bent down and told her she was beautiful 343 00:15:06,272 --> 00:15:07,506 or she was a good girl. 344 00:15:07,806 --> 00:15:10,175 No one has ever bothered to treat her for fleas 345 00:15:10,509 --> 00:15:12,411 that she has by the thousands. 346 00:15:12,745 --> 00:15:13,979 No one has 347 00:15:14,013 --> 00:15:16,615 bothered to take her for a walk so she could roll in the grass. 348 00:15:16,949 --> 00:15:20,386 Nobody’s bothered to give her a meal that she appreciates. 349 00:15:20,653 --> 00:15:23,122 She’s basically been kept alive 350 00:15:23,589 --> 00:15:26,292 with food, water, and a doghouse we gave her. 351 00:15:28,661 --> 00:15:30,429 [Guardian’s sister] Oh, OK. 352 00:15:38,437 --> 00:15:40,005 [Guardian’s sister] OK, thank you so much. 353 00:15:40,039 --> 00:15:40,506 [Daphna] Thank you. 354 00:15:41,040 --> 00:15:42,074 [Guardian’s sister] You are so welcome. 355 00:15:42,675 --> 00:15:45,744 [Daphna] That dog was living in fear of everything, 356 00:15:46,045 --> 00:15:48,380 so I hope we can do something special 357 00:15:48,747 --> 00:15:51,417 and give her a chance to enjoy life and find happiness. 358 00:15:51,650 --> 00:15:52,284 It’ll take a little while, 359 00:15:52,785 --> 00:15:56,121 but perhaps she’ll be able to be rehabilitated. 360 00:16:13,772 --> 00:16:15,007 [Makes kissy sounds] 361 00:16:15,307 --> 00:16:17,076 We’re not taking the flies with us, Zena. 362 00:16:17,876 --> 00:16:19,578 We’re gonna leave the flies here. 363 00:16:20,279 --> 00:16:23,482 Beautiful dog. Beautiful girl. 364 00:16:24,650 --> 00:16:25,451 [Makes kiss sound] 365 00:16:27,353 --> 00:16:30,356 [Van door closes] 366 00:16:30,756 --> 00:16:33,459 [Light music fades in] [Van sliding door opens] 367 00:16:33,992 --> 00:16:35,427 [Chris] When the animal is surrendered, 368 00:16:35,661 --> 00:16:36,729 the form is signed by the owner. 369 00:16:37,029 --> 00:16:38,297 We bring the animal back. 370 00:16:40,599 --> 00:16:41,700 We take the animal upstairs. 371 00:16:42,101 --> 00:16:43,569 They get, like, a really nice guest room. 372 00:16:43,869 --> 00:16:46,672 We give them food and treats, and they even get music. 373 00:16:46,905 --> 00:16:47,806 It’s a nice stay. 374 00:16:48,273 --> 00:16:50,342 My job at the PETA animal shelter 375 00:16:50,642 --> 00:16:54,279 is to help take in animals and provide their evaluation 376 00:16:54,580 --> 00:16:56,181 and make sure they’re comfortable for the stay, 377 00:16:56,482 --> 00:16:58,484 whether or not it’s overnight or for several days, 378 00:16:58,784 --> 00:17:00,819 and see them through to their next step. 379 00:17:01,220 --> 00:17:03,255 [Jenny] By far of any shelter I’ve worked in, 380 00:17:03,589 --> 00:17:05,357 the rooms are really nice. 381 00:17:05,657 --> 00:17:08,127 We lay down the floors with thick blankets 382 00:17:08,427 --> 00:17:11,463 and put toys in there, food and water obviously. 383 00:17:11,730 --> 00:17:13,532 Usually, we’ll play some classical, 384 00:17:13,832 --> 00:17:15,467 relaxing music for them. 385 00:17:15,768 --> 00:17:17,503 One of the rooms is bigger than my first 386 00:17:17,803 --> 00:17:20,706 apartment bedroom and bathroom combined. [Chuckles] 387 00:17:21,006 --> 00:17:23,642 [Daphna] Most of the animals that we have come in 388 00:17:23,909 --> 00:17:25,744 we try to transfer out quickly 389 00:17:26,211 --> 00:17:28,714 to some of our placement partners 390 00:17:28,981 --> 00:17:30,849 that do have traditional shelters, 391 00:17:31,150 --> 00:17:33,819 and we also use foster homes as part of our shelter. 392 00:17:34,086 --> 00:17:36,288 We are a shelter under Virginia law, 393 00:17:36,655 --> 00:17:39,091 and even though the number of animals that we helped 394 00:17:39,391 --> 00:17:42,694 through the shelter last year was roughly 2,000 animals, 395 00:17:43,028 --> 00:17:44,663 the number of animals’ lives that we touched 396 00:17:44,963 --> 00:17:46,565 through the local program was more than 397 00:17:46,865 --> 00:17:49,735 20,000 animals—to give you an idea of how 398 00:17:50,035 --> 00:17:54,440 the sheltering part of our work is vital to those animals. 399 00:17:54,740 --> 00:17:56,175 But so is everything else that we’re doing. 400 00:17:56,475 --> 00:17:58,777 [Katina] When we bring all animals into the shelter 401 00:17:59,078 --> 00:18:02,281 either for a surrender or for spay or for neuter, 402 00:18:02,581 --> 00:18:04,850 we do a health assessment form on all the animals. 403 00:18:05,150 --> 00:18:06,518 We check from head to toe—you know, 404 00:18:06,852 --> 00:18:09,521 their ears, their mouth, their teeth. 405 00:18:09,822 --> 00:18:11,557 Are there any sores or any cuts 406 00:18:11,857 --> 00:18:14,293 or anything like that on them that is notable? 407 00:18:14,560 --> 00:18:16,428 Are they eating? Did they go potty? 408 00:18:16,829 --> 00:18:18,230 PETA takes in all animals. 409 00:18:18,630 --> 00:18:22,434 We have had mice. We’ve had pigs, ducks, 410 00:18:22,768 --> 00:18:26,305 of course, your dogs and your cats, iguanas, rats. 411 00:18:26,572 --> 00:18:27,506 So all animals. 412 00:18:28,440 --> 00:18:30,442 [Light music fades out] 413 00:18:31,877 --> 00:18:38,383 [Chain hitting metal scale] 414 00:18:39,852 --> 00:18:41,587 This chain came off of a puppy 415 00:18:41,887 --> 00:18:44,490 whose neck vertebrae can’t hold the weight of it 416 00:18:44,790 --> 00:18:46,792 but also makes it so that the puppy usually gets 417 00:18:47,159 --> 00:18:49,661 tangled or lethargic, where they’re not able to move. 418 00:18:49,928 --> 00:18:51,430 They can’t get to food and water. 419 00:18:52,164 --> 00:18:54,533 [Daphna] Most of the dogs that we see, when we find them, 420 00:18:54,900 --> 00:18:56,568 they’re trapped at the end of a heavy chain. 421 00:18:56,869 --> 00:18:58,437 Sometimes, the chain is heavy on purpose 422 00:18:58,737 --> 00:19:00,639 because someone is trying to build their neck muscles. 423 00:19:00,939 --> 00:19:02,508 You know, the people who do that think that it looks 424 00:19:02,975 --> 00:19:03,509 quote unquote “tough.” 425 00:19:03,976 --> 00:19:05,744 And so essentially, tethering is chaining. 426 00:19:06,044 --> 00:19:08,847 It’s just staking out an animal as if they were, 427 00:19:09,281 --> 00:19:11,250 you know, an old bicycle. 428 00:19:11,583 --> 00:19:14,353 Tethering is something that we work very hard to outlaw. 429 00:19:14,653 --> 00:19:17,289 We’ve been able to get tethering banned or restricted in every 430 00:19:17,589 --> 00:19:19,825 single city in the Hampton Roads area here in Virginia, 431 00:19:20,158 --> 00:19:21,860 and we’re also working in North Carolina 432 00:19:22,160 --> 00:19:22,861 to make it so that 433 00:19:23,195 --> 00:19:26,298 you can’t leave your dog tethered or chained 434 00:19:26,532 --> 00:19:27,766 24 hours a day. 435 00:19:28,033 --> 00:19:30,335 At the moment, it’s totally legal to do that 436 00:19:30,636 --> 00:19:33,705 in most of the North Carolina jurisdictions that we visit. 437 00:19:34,006 --> 00:19:37,309 We have been able to get it restricted and/or 438 00:19:37,576 --> 00:19:38,677 banned in some jurisdictions, 439 00:19:38,977 --> 00:19:39,545 and so we’re kinda trying 440 00:19:39,811 --> 00:19:41,513 to have a ripple effect with that. 441 00:19:41,747 --> 00:19:42,848 [Dogs whimpering] 442 00:19:42,881 --> 00:19:44,249 [Chris] Some areas do have chaining ordinances where 443 00:19:44,550 --> 00:19:45,884 you can’t have your dog chained out at all. 444 00:19:46,485 --> 00:19:48,220 In other places, you can have your dog chained out for, 445 00:19:48,520 --> 00:19:51,323 like, three hours a day, which is kind of frustrating because 446 00:19:51,623 --> 00:19:52,791 there’s no animal control officer that’s 447 00:19:53,025 --> 00:19:54,526 gonna sit there for three hours. 448 00:19:54,826 --> 00:19:57,229 They’ll come back, and the dog is inside or chained out. 449 00:19:57,496 --> 00:19:59,431 They can’t really enforce the law. 450 00:20:00,465 --> 00:20:01,533 [Heather] The other thing we found 451 00:20:01,833 --> 00:20:04,269 is that the people who live in a place 452 00:20:04,703 --> 00:20:06,305 where there is an anti-tethering ordinance, 453 00:20:06,605 --> 00:20:07,873 they’ll sometimes put them in pens, 454 00:20:08,173 --> 00:20:10,842 and the pens will be just as small as their tether. 455 00:20:11,143 --> 00:20:12,844 so there needs to be stricter enforcement 456 00:20:13,078 --> 00:20:14,880 of how big a pen can be. 457 00:20:15,180 --> 00:20:18,016 So that it doesn’t become the same as chaining a dog up. 458 00:20:18,317 --> 00:20:20,953 [Wind blowing rapidly] 459 00:20:22,087 --> 00:20:24,923 [Van rolling over gravel] 460 00:20:29,528 --> 00:20:30,529 [Van door closing] 461 00:20:35,067 --> 00:20:36,435 -[Kate] Hey! Are you David? 462 00:20:37,302 --> 00:20:39,538 [Kate] Oh, hi! I met your brother Dennis yesterday. 463 00:20:40,172 --> 00:20:42,307 [Kate] So we brought out a plastic house for— 464 00:20:42,507 --> 00:20:43,909 do you call him Jack or Jake? 465 00:20:46,345 --> 00:20:46,845 [Kate] Anything. OK. OK. 466 00:20:47,679 --> 00:20:50,649 Um, so yeah, I set up a plastic house for him 467 00:20:50,916 --> 00:20:52,317 because that metal thing was off. 468 00:20:53,418 --> 00:20:55,020 Um, did you guys talk about 469 00:20:55,320 --> 00:20:56,989 do you think you wanna get him neutered? 470 00:20:59,891 --> 00:21:00,759 OK. 471 00:21:01,727 --> 00:21:02,961 Nooo. 472 00:21:02,995 --> 00:21:03,695 Nooo! 473 00:21:06,698 --> 00:21:09,568 I know, but I talked to Dennis yesterday. 474 00:21:09,835 --> 00:21:11,970 Pit bulls do not have it easy out here. 475 00:21:18,377 --> 00:21:20,012 Well, I know. That’s what everybody says, though, and 476 00:21:20,045 --> 00:21:20,846 I mean, half these dogs end up being fought. 477 00:21:23,715 --> 00:21:24,616 [Kate] You never know about the people 478 00:21:24,650 --> 00:21:25,784 that you’re gonna give the puppies to. 479 00:21:26,918 --> 00:21:29,621 [Kate] And especially for him with being, like, a male dog, 480 00:21:29,921 --> 00:21:32,391 he’s gonna get older and the longer he’s chained 481 00:21:33,025 --> 00:21:35,427 being unneutered, the more frustrated he’s gonna get. 482 00:21:35,727 --> 00:21:37,062 So yeah, if you guys decide to neuter him, 483 00:21:37,295 --> 00:21:37,929 we’ll be happy to do it. 484 00:21:38,530 --> 00:21:40,799 We might be able to bring out one of the wooden doghouses. 485 00:21:41,133 --> 00:21:42,534 He’s so big, I have a feeling he’s gonna 486 00:21:42,834 --> 00:21:45,470 break that two-tone in half in, like, five minutes. 487 00:21:45,704 --> 00:21:46,471 [Upbeat music fades in] 488 00:21:46,738 --> 00:21:48,373 [Daphna] PETA employs carpenters 489 00:21:48,640 --> 00:21:49,808 through our Operations Department 490 00:21:50,108 --> 00:21:53,645 that build these doghouses that come in different sizes. 491 00:21:53,979 --> 00:21:56,381 We do try to not give doghouses 492 00:21:56,682 --> 00:21:58,350 unless the animal has been spayed or neutered, 493 00:21:58,650 --> 00:22:00,552 so that’s a real bargaining chip for us, 494 00:22:00,786 --> 00:22:01,453 as a foot in the door. 495 00:22:01,787 --> 00:22:04,656 The doghouse program is a phenomenal program 496 00:22:04,923 --> 00:22:06,558 for the dogs who get the doghouses. 497 00:22:06,858 --> 00:22:08,827 Many of them have never had shelter. 498 00:22:09,161 --> 00:22:09,628 For many of them, 499 00:22:10,362 --> 00:22:12,097 that’s as close as they’re going to get to a home. 500 00:22:12,964 --> 00:22:14,032 It’s very sad to say. 501 00:22:14,332 --> 00:22:17,069 I mean, a doghouse is not the end-all solution, 502 00:22:17,369 --> 00:22:19,771 but it makes a tremendous difference 503 00:22:20,072 --> 00:22:22,607 in the winter especially but also in the summer 504 00:22:22,841 --> 00:22:24,042 if the dogs don’t have shade. 505 00:22:24,376 --> 00:22:26,011 Our doghouses have an overhang. 506 00:22:26,311 --> 00:22:29,648 The opening is off to the side. They have a flap. 507 00:22:30,015 --> 00:22:31,883 They’re just big enough for the dog to go in 508 00:22:32,217 --> 00:22:34,753 so that in the winter the body heat is contained inside. 509 00:22:35,220 --> 00:22:36,555 They have a little hook in the back 510 00:22:36,855 --> 00:22:39,391 so that we can put the water bucket onto it. 511 00:22:39,791 --> 00:22:41,927 And they also have our 800-number on the side, 512 00:22:42,260 --> 00:22:44,062 so heaven forbid, if an animal is sick 513 00:22:44,496 --> 00:22:47,933 or an animal is dying or an animal gets hit by a car, 514 00:22:48,233 --> 00:22:49,701 the person who has that animal 515 00:22:49,968 --> 00:22:52,003 doesn’t have an excuse not to call us, 516 00:22:52,237 --> 00:22:53,505 because that phone number is 517 00:22:53,805 --> 00:22:55,540 right there on the side of the house. 518 00:22:59,911 --> 00:23:03,415 [Emily] We deliver probably about 300 doghouses every year 519 00:23:03,882 --> 00:23:07,586 and it helps make dogs’ life a little bit less hellish, 520 00:23:07,819 --> 00:23:08,987 especially in the wintertime. 521 00:23:09,221 --> 00:23:10,155 It’s like a last resort. 522 00:23:10,489 --> 00:23:11,056 Like, I try to talk people into 523 00:23:11,323 --> 00:23:12,758 getting their dogs in the house. 524 00:23:13,191 --> 00:23:13,959 And if that can’t happen, 525 00:23:14,426 --> 00:23:17,195 then the doghouse is obviously the best resort for that. 526 00:23:36,248 --> 00:23:37,115 [Camera clicks] 527 00:23:46,725 --> 00:23:49,127 We’ll set it up for you even if it’s in, like, a pen or a fence. 528 00:23:49,427 --> 00:23:51,463 We’ll flip it over the fence for somebody. 529 00:23:51,763 --> 00:23:53,231 [Daphna] I can’t tell you how many cases we have 530 00:23:53,532 --> 00:23:57,002 discovered by virtue of offering this doghouse program, 531 00:23:57,302 --> 00:23:59,938 because people will hear about it and they will call. 532 00:24:00,205 --> 00:24:00,806 Or they’ll ask their cousin, 533 00:24:01,139 --> 00:24:02,240 “Where did you get your doghouse?” 534 00:24:02,707 --> 00:24:04,142 “Oh, it was free—I got it from PETA.” 535 00:24:04,442 --> 00:24:06,478 And then they call us for a doghouse, 536 00:24:06,812 --> 00:24:08,046 and we’re able to ask them questions, 537 00:24:08,346 --> 00:24:10,649 go and visit with the dogs, assess the situation, 538 00:24:10,949 --> 00:24:13,685 talk to them about spay/neuter, talk to them about flystrike, 539 00:24:13,985 --> 00:24:15,520 talk to them about heartworm disease, 540 00:24:15,821 --> 00:24:17,956 talk to them about just basic necessities of life 541 00:24:18,256 --> 00:24:21,626 that the dog needs if there’s no water or there’s no water bowl. 542 00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:24,262 So the doghouses are, for PETA, they’re very expensive, 543 00:24:24,529 --> 00:24:26,097 but they make a tremendous difference, 544 00:24:26,398 --> 00:24:28,667 a world of difference for the recipients. 545 00:24:34,906 --> 00:24:37,075 [Drilling] 546 00:24:43,748 --> 00:24:48,720 [Upbeat music fades out] [Highway traffic sounds] 547 00:24:49,821 --> 00:24:53,225 [Indistinct chatter and laughing] 548 00:24:54,125 --> 00:24:56,661 [Daphna] PETA has a straw-delivery program, 549 00:24:56,995 --> 00:25:01,566 and every winter we deliver straw to needy “backyard dogs.” 550 00:25:01,867 --> 00:25:05,570 We have a pallet in our parking lot with bags of straw. 551 00:25:05,937 --> 00:25:08,273 People can come and take free straw, and they do. 552 00:25:08,573 --> 00:25:11,810 We also have our staff volunteer on the weekends 553 00:25:12,110 --> 00:25:14,112 to go out into given areas 554 00:25:14,579 --> 00:25:15,146 where we know there is a 555 00:25:15,814 --> 00:25:19,684 high concentration of chained dogs and offer free straw. 556 00:25:19,985 --> 00:25:22,821 The straw in the winter, it’s bedding for dogs. 557 00:25:23,121 --> 00:25:25,991 People thoughtlessly give them things like a blanket. 558 00:25:26,291 --> 00:25:29,127 Well, if it rains and then it’s 32 degrees, 559 00:25:29,427 --> 00:25:32,097 you know, the blanket is basically a giant piece of ice. 560 00:25:32,464 --> 00:25:35,267 So that’s not very helpful. But the straw will remain dry. 561 00:25:35,567 --> 00:25:38,904 The dogs love it. They love to roll in it. 562 00:25:39,204 --> 00:25:41,172 When we put it down, they get very excited. 563 00:25:41,473 --> 00:25:44,809 And it does help contain their body heat in the doghouses. 564 00:25:45,110 --> 00:25:46,811 We wish we didn’t have to give straw away 565 00:25:47,112 --> 00:25:48,680 because we don’t want dogs to be outside, 566 00:25:49,314 --> 00:25:51,883 but the reality is that a lot of dogs do live outside 567 00:25:52,183 --> 00:25:53,985 and the straw makes a big difference for them. 568 00:25:54,219 --> 00:25:57,022 [Straw rustling] 569 00:25:59,090 --> 00:26:00,191 [Heather laughing] 570 00:26:00,492 --> 00:26:01,026 [Heather] That’s your spot now? 571 00:26:01,426 --> 00:26:02,694 [Kate] She’s, like, “I like this.” 572 00:26:04,796 --> 00:26:06,698 [Heather] Here, do you want that one in there? Yeah? 573 00:26:06,932 --> 00:26:07,699 [Kate] Aww. 574 00:26:11,102 --> 00:26:15,607 [Trucks zooming by on highway] 575 00:26:18,076 --> 00:26:22,080 [Van pulling up] 576 00:26:22,447 --> 00:26:25,250 [Jes] The thing is, is that if your dogs are outside 577 00:26:25,517 --> 00:26:27,919 and they’re not getting treatment for it, 578 00:26:28,486 --> 00:26:29,654 they’re gonna get heartworms. 579 00:26:29,955 --> 00:26:32,390 It’s a parasite that wraps around the heart. 580 00:26:32,724 --> 00:26:34,025 They will {end-italic} get it in our area. 581 00:26:36,294 --> 00:26:38,663 Yeah. I think so. I’ll check, but I think so, 582 00:26:38,964 --> 00:26:41,633 ’cause I think he was at the end stages of heartworm. 583 00:26:42,867 --> 00:26:44,736 [Jes] Hi, Whitey. Is he, he’s friendly? 584 00:26:44,936 --> 00:26:45,537 [Guardian] Yeah, he’s friendly. 585 00:26:45,837 --> 00:26:47,405 [Jes] Hey, bud. You look very friendly. 586 00:26:47,639 --> 00:26:51,643 Hi. Hi. Hi. What up, bud? 587 00:26:56,114 --> 00:26:58,984 [Jes] I’m not gonna give you another dog to tie out here. 588 00:27:02,187 --> 00:27:05,023 [Jes] So we only adopt to inside. 589 00:27:05,323 --> 00:27:08,059 You know, it’s just when they live inside, they’re happier. 590 00:27:08,360 --> 00:27:09,661 So when they’re tied outside, 591 00:27:09,961 --> 00:27:11,997 that’s not the life that we encourage. 592 00:27:12,263 --> 00:27:14,132 Exactly why what happened to Brownie. 593 00:27:14,432 --> 00:27:16,868 They get diseases, and things happen to ’em. 594 00:27:17,168 --> 00:27:19,004 Everybody here has been neutered already. 595 00:27:19,304 --> 00:27:20,572 Yeah. 596 00:27:20,605 --> 00:27:23,708 Wonderful, that’s great. OK, I’m gonna unload the doghouses. 597 00:27:24,376 --> 00:27:26,878 Do you have a spot, though, that we could maybe move him 598 00:27:27,345 --> 00:27:29,280 where he’d have a little bit more shade? 599 00:27:31,816 --> 00:27:33,018 Yeah, let’s... I think that would be great. 600 00:27:33,318 --> 00:27:35,920 [Doghouse on dolly rolling] [Dog barking] 601 00:27:45,530 --> 00:27:46,998 [Jes] He’s just having some good fun. 602 00:27:47,332 --> 00:27:49,134 Whoa, he’s gonna take you out there. 603 00:27:49,467 --> 00:27:50,301 Hi, bud. 604 00:27:52,103 --> 00:27:53,038 Hi. 605 00:27:53,805 --> 00:27:54,839 Hi. 606 00:27:59,444 --> 00:28:00,445 Good. 607 00:28:04,182 --> 00:28:06,951 You just have to wash them out every so often. 608 00:28:08,153 --> 00:28:10,055 [Hose water pouring] 609 00:28:10,455 --> 00:28:12,390 [Dog panting] 610 00:28:19,531 --> 00:28:20,832 Here you go. 611 00:28:25,336 --> 00:28:28,206 [Jes] I meet thousands of cats and dogs. 612 00:28:28,540 --> 00:28:32,510 So obviously, I have connections with all or most of them. 613 00:28:32,944 --> 00:28:34,079 [Jes to dog] All right, see you later. 614 00:28:34,813 --> 00:28:37,048 It’s definitely hard to leave them 615 00:28:37,348 --> 00:28:40,018 after visiting the animals in the field. 616 00:28:40,452 --> 00:28:42,754 But as much as it’s hard to leave, 617 00:28:43,054 --> 00:28:44,189 I know there’s someone else out there 618 00:28:44,422 --> 00:28:46,424 waiting for us to get there. 619 00:28:47,292 --> 00:28:48,827 [Camera clicks] [Uplifting music starts] 620 00:28:49,127 --> 00:28:52,130 [Jes] I met Edith when she was just a year old. 621 00:28:52,430 --> 00:28:54,299 She was one of the “backyard dogs” 622 00:28:54,532 --> 00:28:56,234 that we checked on regularly. 623 00:28:56,568 --> 00:28:58,937 She was chained at an address that had 624 00:28:59,237 --> 00:29:01,840 several pit bulls chained on the property with her. 625 00:29:02,574 --> 00:29:05,076 We tried for years to get her surrendered, 626 00:29:05,343 --> 00:29:07,779 and we educated her owners. 627 00:29:08,113 --> 00:29:10,849 We provided a doghouse. We spayed her. 628 00:29:11,282 --> 00:29:12,851 You know, every time that I was in the area, 629 00:29:13,118 --> 00:29:14,986 I would go and visit Edith and 630 00:29:15,553 --> 00:29:18,823 try to talk her owner into giving her to me. 631 00:29:19,190 --> 00:29:22,393 At one point, she was no longer on the property, 632 00:29:22,660 --> 00:29:25,296 and I assumed that she had died 633 00:29:25,763 --> 00:29:29,467 because that’s what happens to dogs who are chained outside, 634 00:29:29,767 --> 00:29:32,303 either from the heat—she’s a black chow mix, 635 00:29:32,570 --> 00:29:35,507 so it’s harder for them than other dogs. 636 00:29:35,773 --> 00:29:37,308 I mean, of course, I was, 637 00:29:39,410 --> 00:29:42,413 yeah, I mean, I was devastated when we lost her. 638 00:29:43,014 --> 00:29:45,150 You meet these guys, and they’re your friends, 639 00:29:45,416 --> 00:29:46,951 and you tell them all the time, you know, 640 00:29:47,218 --> 00:29:47,919 “I will be back for you.” 641 00:29:48,453 --> 00:29:51,156 You know, we’re trying as hard as we can to get them. 642 00:29:51,422 --> 00:29:52,857 We didn’t know where Edith had went. 643 00:29:53,158 --> 00:29:56,528 She must have been around seven or eight years old. 644 00:29:56,928 --> 00:30:00,498 We don’t visit a lot of dogs that get to be that age. 645 00:30:00,899 --> 00:30:04,502 “Backyard dogs” just do not have a long life span. 646 00:30:04,769 --> 00:30:06,171 You know, her being older, 647 00:30:06,638 --> 00:30:09,307 generally being neglected for so long, 648 00:30:09,541 --> 00:30:11,042 I assumed that she was dead. 649 00:30:11,342 --> 00:30:13,478 [Uplifting music fades out] 650 00:30:14,979 --> 00:30:19,250 [Van rumbles on gravel] 651 00:30:26,424 --> 00:30:28,126 [Daphna] Four years we’ve been visiting this dog, 652 00:30:28,359 --> 00:30:29,294 for four years. 653 00:30:29,527 --> 00:30:32,197 He called us to get a doghouse. 654 00:30:32,564 --> 00:30:33,097 This dog has had 655 00:30:33,731 --> 00:30:36,434 several litters of puppies until he let us spay her. 656 00:30:36,734 --> 00:30:40,038 I don’t even remember where I was, you know, 657 00:30:40,371 --> 00:30:43,908 four years ago, you know, what was going on in my life. 658 00:30:44,209 --> 00:30:46,945 Every day is a different day, you know, 659 00:30:47,212 --> 00:30:50,215 and exciting things happen, and I travel, 660 00:30:50,448 --> 00:30:52,517 and I enjoy myself 661 00:30:53,618 --> 00:30:55,153 sometimes. [Chuckles] 662 00:30:56,154 --> 00:31:00,225 And you know, this dog has had the same patch of dirt, 663 00:31:01,092 --> 00:31:02,660 the same doghouse, 664 00:31:03,294 --> 00:31:07,932 the same flies, the same fleas, mosquitos. 665 00:31:08,333 --> 00:31:12,303 Nothing to give her joy. There is nothing. 666 00:31:12,670 --> 00:31:16,608 She has been maintained in order to survive physically, 667 00:31:17,041 --> 00:31:19,911 and emotionally she was just broken. 668 00:31:20,345 --> 00:31:23,214 I mean, she was so poorly socialized. 669 00:31:24,482 --> 00:31:25,483 She never went for walks. 670 00:31:25,783 --> 00:31:30,088 Where she had to eat is where she had to urinate and defecate, 671 00:31:30,388 --> 00:31:33,091 and that’s where she also had to sleep. 672 00:31:33,358 --> 00:31:36,261 And that was her life every day, every day. 673 00:31:36,527 --> 00:31:39,364 And I think about this dog a lot. 674 00:31:39,664 --> 00:31:42,267 I thought about this dog a lot because 675 00:31:43,234 --> 00:31:45,637 when it’s storming—last night, there was a storm. 676 00:31:45,903 --> 00:31:47,005 And my dogs, 677 00:31:48,006 --> 00:31:49,474 my dogs at home were terrified. 678 00:31:49,741 --> 00:31:51,109 I had to stay up with my dogs, 679 00:31:51,376 --> 00:31:54,178 who are inside and have security. 680 00:31:54,545 --> 00:31:57,248 This dog doesn’t have anybody to tell her that it’s OK 681 00:31:57,482 --> 00:31:58,249 and the storm will pass 682 00:31:58,750 --> 00:32:02,420 and to hug her and just make her feel a little bit better. 683 00:32:02,854 --> 00:32:06,024 She’s alone, and all she's got is that doghouse we gave her 684 00:32:06,257 --> 00:32:06,891 and our visits. 685 00:32:07,358 --> 00:32:11,162 So it’s a wonderful day that she’s out of this 686 00:32:11,496 --> 00:32:14,999 life sentence she was serving for no reason at all. 687 00:32:20,071 --> 00:32:21,439 [Dog barks] 688 00:32:22,040 --> 00:32:23,541 -[Daphna] What? -[Indiscernible chatter] 689 00:32:23,775 --> 00:32:25,009 You wanna throw it? 690 00:32:25,276 --> 00:32:26,477 -[Kid] I wanna throw it. -[Daphna] OK. 691 00:32:27,312 --> 00:32:28,413 [Kid] I wanna throw it. 692 00:32:28,713 --> 00:32:31,482 Let’s, let's let her play with it for one second. 693 00:32:40,425 --> 00:32:45,330 [Branches rustling] 694 00:32:47,699 --> 00:32:49,100 -[Manfred] More cats. -[Daphna] Cats. 695 00:32:51,602 --> 00:32:53,204 -[Manfred] It’s quite small. -[Daphna] You see all the... 696 00:32:53,838 --> 00:32:55,006 [Manfred] It’s not really healthy. 697 00:32:56,274 --> 00:32:56,774 [Kitten meows] 698 00:32:57,041 --> 00:32:58,176 [Manfred] Aww, yeah, yeah. 699 00:32:59,010 --> 00:33:00,545 [Daphna] You see all the infection in his eyes? 700 00:33:00,812 --> 00:33:02,246 [Manfred] In the eyes. I saw. 701 00:33:06,551 --> 00:33:07,251 [Kitten meows] 702 00:33:07,485 --> 00:33:08,252 I know, buddy. 703 00:33:09,354 --> 00:33:09,821 [Kitten meows] 704 00:33:09,854 --> 00:33:11,055 I’m sorry. 705 00:33:11,556 --> 00:33:13,591 She said there are a lot of wild cats 706 00:33:14,125 --> 00:33:15,760 and they have babies all the time. 707 00:33:18,830 --> 00:33:20,531 [Daphna] He’s got a couple of maggots I think on his nose. 708 00:33:20,798 --> 00:33:22,266 [Manfred] The eyes, the eye look... 709 00:33:22,667 --> 00:33:24,135 [Daphna] Yeah, his eyes are sealed shut. 710 00:33:24,769 --> 00:33:26,037 [Kids] Can we come back there? 711 00:33:26,671 --> 00:33:29,207 No, why don’t you guys wait because I don’t, 712 00:33:29,474 --> 00:33:31,175 it’s a lot for these little guys. 713 00:33:31,542 --> 00:33:33,144 [Indiscernible chatter] 714 00:33:36,581 --> 00:33:37,081 [Somber music fades in] 715 00:33:37,615 --> 00:33:39,484 [Daphna] Bye, young man. Thanks for your help. 716 00:33:39,851 --> 00:33:42,387 [Hannah] “Outdoor cats” that live outside 24/7, 717 00:33:42,687 --> 00:33:45,523 they tend to contract diseases from each other. 718 00:33:45,823 --> 00:33:48,593 Outdoor or feral cats that are not vaccinated, 719 00:33:48,826 --> 00:33:50,194 which most of them are not, 720 00:33:50,695 --> 00:33:54,165 they can carry feline leukemia and feline AIDS, 721 00:33:54,465 --> 00:33:55,800 and they can spread it to other cats. 722 00:33:56,100 --> 00:33:59,404 They are exposed to the dangers of Mother Nature. 723 00:33:59,737 --> 00:34:01,506 [Jenny] The “outdoor cats” that are kept out 724 00:34:01,806 --> 00:34:04,542 typically don’t have a very long life span. 725 00:34:04,876 --> 00:34:08,246 If they get hurt, there isn’t much vet care, 726 00:34:08,546 --> 00:34:11,149 so you see a lot of wounds, a lot of infection. 727 00:34:11,382 --> 00:34:13,151 If a cat does get hit by a car, 728 00:34:13,418 --> 00:34:15,420 it’s really sad because a lot of times 729 00:34:15,720 --> 00:34:18,256 they won’t check and make sure the animal has even passed. 730 00:34:18,556 --> 00:34:21,325 And so they can languish on for days and days. 731 00:34:21,659 --> 00:34:24,429 [Ashley] “Outdoor cats”—I mean, they’re more prone to injuries. 732 00:34:24,729 --> 00:34:27,198 We see where they’ve been attacked by other animals, 733 00:34:27,398 --> 00:34:28,199 by wildlife. 734 00:34:28,499 --> 00:34:30,735 We’re always telling the clients who we deal with 735 00:34:30,968 --> 00:34:32,537 to please spay and neuter. 736 00:34:33,070 --> 00:34:34,772 Please keep their animals inside. 737 00:34:35,039 --> 00:34:36,140 [Adam] There are so many of them, 738 00:34:36,407 --> 00:34:37,675 and they aren’t spayed or neutered. 739 00:34:37,909 --> 00:34:39,610 One unspayed cat can produce 740 00:34:39,911 --> 00:34:43,648 over 200 cats in one year just from them, 741 00:34:43,948 --> 00:34:46,551 you know, mating and having litters upon litters of kittens. 742 00:34:46,851 --> 00:34:50,254 You might get a call for, like, five or six cats, 743 00:34:50,555 --> 00:34:53,558 but really, when you show up, there’s 18 or more. 744 00:34:53,858 --> 00:34:57,195 And cats, they start reproducing when they’re a lot younger 745 00:34:57,462 --> 00:34:59,597 than dogs and faster. 746 00:34:59,897 --> 00:35:04,202 Because there is such a huge number of cats out there, 747 00:35:04,502 --> 00:35:06,270 definitely having them spayed and neutered 748 00:35:06,571 --> 00:35:09,774 will help prevent unwanted litters and help save cats. 749 00:35:10,141 --> 00:35:11,843 [Somber music fades out] 750 00:35:12,677 --> 00:35:16,414 [Van pulls up] 751 00:35:16,814 --> 00:35:19,283 [Jes] Uh, you have a couple cats for spay/neuter, right? 752 00:35:19,517 --> 00:35:20,218 Yeah. 753 00:35:20,485 --> 00:35:21,652 OK. How many you have? Two? 754 00:35:22,253 --> 00:35:22,854 Two. 755 00:35:22,887 --> 00:35:24,856 Two. OK. Are they inside? 756 00:35:26,824 --> 00:35:28,292 OK, well, I’ll give you the kit. 757 00:35:28,659 --> 00:35:29,827 Do you need my help catching ’em, 758 00:35:30,127 --> 00:35:32,430 or are they gonna run more when they see me? 759 00:35:35,600 --> 00:35:36,367 Don’t let 'em out here. 760 00:35:37,568 --> 00:35:38,436 Yeah. Let’s... 761 00:35:39,070 --> 00:35:42,640 OK. Well, let’s... is your dog friendly? 762 00:35:42,840 --> 00:35:43,574 Oh, yeah. 763 00:35:45,009 --> 00:35:47,678 OK. All right. Let’s take 'em in then. 764 00:35:48,346 --> 00:35:49,780 [Jes] Where’s all this girl's hair? 765 00:35:50,081 --> 00:35:51,749 -[Guardian] Huh? -[Jes] Where’s all her hair? 766 00:35:54,952 --> 00:35:56,721 [Jes] Does she have flea meds on now? 767 00:35:58,823 --> 00:36:00,725 [Jes] OK, we better put some on her. 768 00:36:01,726 --> 00:36:02,927 -[Jes] Where is your white cat? 769 00:36:03,961 --> 00:36:06,964 [Jes] She’s pregnant now? You don’t wanna get her spayed? 770 00:36:08,966 --> 00:36:10,434 [Jes] OK, you wanna wait ’til after? 771 00:36:11,936 --> 00:36:13,871 [Jes] OK, how far along is she? 772 00:36:16,941 --> 00:36:18,242 [Jes] Ay. [Dog barking] 773 00:36:18,576 --> 00:36:19,844 [Jes] You just have the one other cat? 774 00:36:20,745 --> 00:36:21,612 [Jes] OK. 775 00:36:23,281 --> 00:36:26,384 [Jes] Well, soon-to-be babies, right? OK. 776 00:36:29,320 --> 00:36:30,488 [Jes] Well, where are those babies? 777 00:36:31,856 --> 00:36:32,890 What’s your plan for 'em? 778 00:36:33,124 --> 00:36:34,125 You wanna keep ’em, 779 00:36:34,158 --> 00:36:35,793 or you want us to find somewhere for them to go? 780 00:36:37,662 --> 00:36:38,296 How many? 781 00:36:39,864 --> 00:36:43,701 You’re—OK, so you’re gonna have three, 782 00:36:45,336 --> 00:36:47,705 seven cats, plus the babies on the way? 783 00:36:48,506 --> 00:36:50,841 Well, the thing is if, I mean, if they’re kittens, 784 00:36:51,175 --> 00:36:52,977 it’s easy enough to find them homes. 785 00:36:53,177 --> 00:36:53,644 Yeah. 786 00:36:54,345 --> 00:36:54,579 [Jes] Especially, you’re gonna have a whole nother 787 00:36:54,879 --> 00:36:56,614 litter of kittens. 788 00:37:00,484 --> 00:37:01,319 Who’s “her”? Your wife? 789 00:37:01,519 --> 00:37:01,986 Yeah. 790 00:37:02,019 --> 00:37:02,954 Where’s she at? 791 00:37:04,889 --> 00:37:07,258 Ah. When’s she get out? 792 00:37:09,026 --> 00:37:10,328 That’s a long time. 793 00:37:12,430 --> 00:37:13,698 How old... 794 00:37:13,731 --> 00:37:16,334 See the kittens are gonna—you talk to her when you see her. 795 00:37:16,867 --> 00:37:19,937 And the person who brings these cats tomorrow will ask you. 796 00:37:20,237 --> 00:37:22,640 It’s just if you're about to have more kittens, 797 00:37:23,507 --> 00:37:24,542 that’s a lot of kittens. 798 00:37:24,742 --> 00:37:25,443 Yep. 799 00:37:25,843 --> 00:37:28,479 [Somber music fades in] [Dogs barking] 800 00:37:33,818 --> 00:37:34,418 [Daphna] Well, there’s a tremendous 801 00:37:34,952 --> 00:37:37,655 overpopulation and homelessness problem for animals, 802 00:37:37,922 --> 00:37:40,057 and there has been for many, many years. 803 00:37:40,358 --> 00:37:42,793 It’s still a crisis, but over the years, 804 00:37:43,027 --> 00:37:44,629 due to spay/neuter efforts, 805 00:37:44,996 --> 00:37:47,765 the number of animals affected has diminished 806 00:37:47,999 --> 00:37:49,400 but is still astronomical. 807 00:37:49,700 --> 00:37:52,403 So the estimate is that more than six million animals 808 00:37:52,670 --> 00:37:54,505 go into animal shelters every year. 809 00:37:55,006 --> 00:37:56,974 And roughly half of those have to be euthanized 810 00:37:57,274 --> 00:38:00,444 because there is not a good home out there for them. 811 00:38:00,845 --> 00:38:02,513 So this is a national epidemic. 812 00:38:02,913 --> 00:38:05,783 Every single community has an overpopulation crisis. 813 00:38:06,017 --> 00:38:08,819 By virtue of affluence and laws, 814 00:38:09,120 --> 00:38:13,491 some communities’ problems may be less significant than others. 815 00:38:13,924 --> 00:38:15,826 The area where we happen to be located, 816 00:38:16,093 --> 00:38:18,362 the problem is very pervasive, 817 00:38:18,729 --> 00:38:19,964 and there are studies that show that 818 00:38:20,264 --> 00:38:23,567 animals in low-income areas are more likely to reproduce. 819 00:38:23,934 --> 00:38:26,070 And that’s why our clinics focus so heavily 820 00:38:26,437 --> 00:38:28,873 on low-income areas and indigent populations, 821 00:38:29,640 --> 00:38:30,474 the elderly poor, 822 00:38:30,741 --> 00:38:31,976 so that animals who would otherwise 823 00:38:32,343 --> 00:38:35,012 have no services get services from us. 824 00:38:35,346 --> 00:38:37,481 But the overpopulation and homelessness problem 825 00:38:37,715 --> 00:38:38,949 remains an epidemic, 826 00:38:39,250 --> 00:38:44,555 and that is the reason why PETA advocates always adopting, 827 00:38:44,855 --> 00:38:48,693 never buying, banning breeding of dogs and cats, 828 00:38:48,926 --> 00:38:50,561 mandating spay/neuter, 829 00:38:50,861 --> 00:38:51,862 because there are animals literally 830 00:38:52,129 --> 00:38:54,098 dying for homes in animal shelters 831 00:38:54,398 --> 00:38:57,501 because people are still buying and people are still breeding. 832 00:38:57,802 --> 00:39:00,471 [Dog barking and growling] 833 00:39:00,738 --> 00:39:02,540 [Katina] Animal overpopulation happens 834 00:39:02,840 --> 00:39:05,576 because people don’t spay and neuter their animals. 835 00:39:05,976 --> 00:39:09,013 And, like, for cats, they just let them roam outside, 836 00:39:09,246 --> 00:39:12,016 reproduce, and keep on roamin’. 837 00:39:12,516 --> 00:39:14,118 [Guardian] He was mad at me for a while. 838 00:39:14,385 --> 00:39:16,454 [Heather] [Laughs] For the neuter? 839 00:39:16,754 --> 00:39:17,988 [Kate] It’s better for him long-term though. 840 00:39:18,255 --> 00:39:18,856 [Guardian] Yeah. I know it is. 841 00:39:19,323 --> 00:39:19,857 [Heather] But it’s hard to explain that to him. 842 00:39:20,558 --> 00:39:22,526 [Guardian] We probably shoulda got rid of mine years ago. 843 00:39:22,727 --> 00:39:23,761 [Laughter] 844 00:39:24,028 --> 00:39:25,796 We make it really easy for people 845 00:39:26,030 --> 00:39:27,098 to spay and neuter their animals 846 00:39:27,398 --> 00:39:30,601 because not only will we offer the service for free 847 00:39:30,935 --> 00:39:33,671 but we will go to their house and pick up their animals, 848 00:39:33,904 --> 00:39:34,505 bring them to the clinic, 849 00:39:35,072 --> 00:39:36,974 have them spayed and neutered, and return them home. 850 00:39:37,274 --> 00:39:39,510 You don’t have to do anything. You don’t have to go anywhere. 851 00:39:39,744 --> 00:39:40,211 You don’t have to get up. 852 00:39:40,644 --> 00:39:41,879 All you have to do is sign this form. 853 00:39:42,179 --> 00:39:43,681 Bam, poof, it’s done for you. 854 00:39:43,914 --> 00:39:45,950 [Upbeat music starts] 855 00:39:46,417 --> 00:39:49,754 [Daphna] Welcome to PETA’s first-ever 24-hour Spayathon. 856 00:39:50,121 --> 00:39:52,523 We’ve been here since 5:00 p.m. last night. 857 00:39:52,823 --> 00:39:54,892 We’ve had hundreds and hundreds and hundreds 858 00:39:55,126 --> 00:39:56,627 of dogs and cats show up. 859 00:39:56,894 --> 00:39:58,095 People are really taking advantage 860 00:39:58,362 --> 00:40:00,664 of the 25 dollar 24-hour Spayathon, 861 00:40:00,965 --> 00:40:03,167 which is amazing because one of our vets told me that 862 00:40:03,634 --> 00:40:06,904 at least 60% of the animals she’s seeing she can tell 863 00:40:07,338 --> 00:40:09,173 would have not been done had we not done this special. 864 00:40:09,473 --> 00:40:12,476 We have waves and waves and waves of activity coming. 865 00:40:12,843 --> 00:40:14,812 We had one at 5:00 p.m., one at 9:00 p.m., 866 00:40:15,112 --> 00:40:17,214 one at 1:00 a.m., and one at six in the morning. 867 00:40:17,448 --> 00:40:18,916 And then our 9:00 a.m. check-in. 868 00:40:19,183 --> 00:40:21,552 [Guardian] I have a German shepherd. 869 00:40:21,786 --> 00:40:23,053 She’s gonna be two in April. 870 00:40:23,487 --> 00:40:26,924 She’s 77, 78 pounds, 871 00:40:27,258 --> 00:40:28,092 and if I would have had to take her to the vet, 872 00:40:28,392 --> 00:40:28,826 it would have been, like, 873 00:40:29,527 --> 00:40:32,663 $200 and something or above, so it is appreciated. 874 00:40:32,963 --> 00:40:36,901 Lori-Jo, our clinics’ manager, has been here the whole time. 875 00:40:37,334 --> 00:40:39,470 She hasn’t sat. She hasn’t taken a break. 876 00:40:39,904 --> 00:40:43,674 We spayed and neutered over 400 animals in that amount of time. 877 00:40:44,175 --> 00:40:47,211 It was something that probably has never been done before, 878 00:40:47,444 --> 00:40:49,079 but it was a good experience. 879 00:40:49,747 --> 00:40:51,048 [Daphna] In many cases when an animal 880 00:40:51,315 --> 00:40:52,616 is matted or needs grooming, 881 00:40:52,850 --> 00:40:54,018 we will shave them down. 882 00:40:54,285 --> 00:40:55,920 We trim their nails. We look at them. 883 00:40:56,220 --> 00:40:58,489 A lot of the animals we see in the field have issues 884 00:40:58,789 --> 00:41:00,090 that our clinic can help treat. 885 00:41:00,491 --> 00:41:03,127 We just amputated the leg of a dog who 886 00:41:03,427 --> 00:41:06,697 was thrown off the balcony by a child to another child 887 00:41:06,964 --> 00:41:08,132 who said she could catch the dog, 888 00:41:08,365 --> 00:41:10,568 and she didn’t catch the dog. 889 00:41:10,868 --> 00:41:13,137 And the dog’s wrist just clean broke. 890 00:41:13,437 --> 00:41:14,905 And the vet recommended amputation. 891 00:41:15,206 --> 00:41:17,708 And our vet amputated the dog’s leg on our clinic. 892 00:41:18,008 --> 00:41:20,277 So our clinic is a spay/neuter clinic, 893 00:41:20,578 --> 00:41:23,681 but we’re also able to do some other limited things that 894 00:41:24,114 --> 00:41:26,083 help the community and help animals. 895 00:41:34,825 --> 00:41:39,797 [Upbeat music fades out] [Cars passing by] 896 00:41:47,204 --> 00:41:49,840 [Water pouring] [Van door closing] 897 00:41:55,913 --> 00:41:57,681 [Daphna] Watch. She’ll figure this out. 898 00:41:59,817 --> 00:42:00,684 [Rachel] Yeah. 899 00:42:01,952 --> 00:42:03,254 [Daphna] Give her a little excitement later. 900 00:42:08,392 --> 00:42:13,030 [Dog drinking water] 901 00:42:23,307 --> 00:42:24,241 [Daphna] It’s a picnic. 902 00:42:24,541 --> 00:42:25,876 [Manfred] I cannot decide to play or... 903 00:42:26,143 --> 00:42:27,211 [Daphna] I don’t know what to do first. 904 00:42:27,544 --> 00:42:29,647 All right, let’s look at this situation. 905 00:42:38,155 --> 00:42:40,224 Oof. Not standing in a good place there. 906 00:42:40,457 --> 00:42:41,358 [Manfred] Mm-hmm. 907 00:42:42,192 --> 00:42:42,893 He’s so decomposed. 908 00:42:43,327 --> 00:42:45,195 Entomologists can usually tell the kind, you know, 909 00:42:45,462 --> 00:42:47,164 the age of the insects and things. 910 00:42:47,598 --> 00:42:49,333 That’s why I wanted to find this man at home 911 00:42:49,633 --> 00:42:51,335 so that we could ask him some questions, 912 00:42:51,635 --> 00:42:53,938 and if he doesn’t want the other dog, 913 00:42:54,605 --> 00:42:56,640 I don’t want her to suffer the same fate. 914 00:42:58,042 --> 00:42:58,909 [Chris] The major problem is 915 00:42:59,510 --> 00:43:01,979 people have animals that they can’t take care of. 916 00:43:02,379 --> 00:43:04,315 They don’t care for them. They don’t feed them. 917 00:43:04,615 --> 00:43:07,051 They chain their dogs out like a yard ornament. 918 00:43:07,318 --> 00:43:09,920 Any being being chained out 24/7, 919 00:43:10,287 --> 00:43:12,856 left to die—I think that’s the worst thing. 920 00:43:13,090 --> 00:43:15,192 [Flies buzzing] 921 00:43:16,760 --> 00:43:19,163 [Puppies whimpering] 922 00:43:26,804 --> 00:43:28,238 [Somber music fades out] 923 00:43:28,539 --> 00:43:31,275 [Daphna] One very unique service that PETA offers in this area 924 00:43:31,575 --> 00:43:33,344 is that we always have two people on call. 925 00:43:33,777 --> 00:43:37,014 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, 926 00:43:37,281 --> 00:43:38,749 if an animal needs help, we’re here. 927 00:43:39,049 --> 00:43:41,785 One of the people on call is a certified euthanasia technician 928 00:43:42,219 --> 00:43:44,188 because we do get calls after hours 929 00:43:44,488 --> 00:43:48,025 about actively suffering animals whose misery needs to be ended 930 00:43:48,325 --> 00:43:49,360 as soon as possible. 931 00:43:49,660 --> 00:43:52,830 That can be an end of life for a companion animal. 932 00:43:53,197 --> 00:43:56,667 It can be a rabbit or a raccoon who had been hit by a car. 933 00:43:56,967 --> 00:43:59,903 In December, we got a pager call at ten o’clock 934 00:44:00,204 --> 00:44:01,872 from a very nice lady in Suffolk, 935 00:44:02,106 --> 00:44:03,807 which is a couple towns away, 936 00:44:04,274 --> 00:44:05,676 and that woman had called the police department, 937 00:44:05,976 --> 00:44:07,878 animal control, and was told to call back 938 00:44:08,212 --> 00:44:09,813 the following day at 11:00 a.m. 939 00:44:10,381 --> 00:44:12,049 And what she was calling about was a dog 940 00:44:12,282 --> 00:44:13,784 who was confined to a pen, 941 00:44:14,251 --> 00:44:17,788 who was paralyzed probably by virtue of having very, 942 00:44:18,055 --> 00:44:19,423 very advanced heartworm disease. 943 00:44:19,723 --> 00:44:22,426 And what happens with congestive heart failure is that 944 00:44:22,793 --> 00:44:24,762 the belly fills with fluid, 945 00:44:25,095 --> 00:44:27,297 and this dog’s belly was so filled with fluid 946 00:44:27,598 --> 00:44:31,835 and so distended that he didn’t have the strength to stand, 947 00:44:32,069 --> 00:44:33,370 and it was pouring rain. 948 00:44:33,771 --> 00:44:36,940 I was on call with another CAP staffer 949 00:44:37,408 --> 00:44:39,410 and we drove out there around 10 o’clock at night, 950 00:44:39,877 --> 00:44:41,912 and this poor dog was in a pen. 951 00:44:42,246 --> 00:44:44,314 He was trapped in a hole 952 00:44:44,681 --> 00:44:47,184 that I have no doubt he dug for himself over the summer 953 00:44:47,418 --> 00:44:48,952 when he was trying to stay cool. 954 00:44:49,253 --> 00:44:52,389 Dogs dig holes to sort of be against the cool earth. 955 00:44:52,689 --> 00:44:55,359 It was pouring rain, so the hole was filled with water. 956 00:44:55,726 --> 00:44:59,930 And so he had been sitting like that for probably a day or two, 957 00:45:00,264 --> 00:45:01,498 according to the caller, 958 00:45:01,765 --> 00:45:03,801 and he couldn’t get to the doghouse. 959 00:45:04,034 --> 00:45:04,768 He couldn’t get to the food. 960 00:45:05,135 --> 00:45:07,738 The food he had was like little pieces of sponge 961 00:45:07,971 --> 00:45:09,306 because it was all soaking wet. 962 00:45:09,606 --> 00:45:12,042 And he couldn’t do anything but just sit there and 963 00:45:12,276 --> 00:45:13,110 wait for something. 964 00:45:13,444 --> 00:45:16,747 And the police department was going to let him wait, 965 00:45:17,147 --> 00:45:19,516 you know, another 14, 15 hours. 966 00:45:19,983 --> 00:45:21,418 And he might not have made it. 967 00:45:21,785 --> 00:45:22,352 And so we went out there, 968 00:45:23,053 --> 00:45:26,323 and we were able to carefully pick him up out of the hole, 969 00:45:26,657 --> 00:45:27,791 put him on a stretcher, 970 00:45:28,092 --> 00:45:29,526 and drag the stretcher to our vehicle, 971 00:45:29,860 --> 00:45:34,064 put him in the vehicle, dry him ’cause he was soaking, 972 00:45:34,398 --> 00:45:35,532 and give him something to eat. 973 00:45:35,833 --> 00:45:38,769 And had to explain to the guardian in the home, 974 00:45:39,036 --> 00:45:40,437 who was developmentally disabled, 975 00:45:40,871 --> 00:45:43,841 that the dog was suffering and needed to be euthanized. 976 00:45:44,141 --> 00:45:46,009 And our emergency pager system 977 00:45:46,310 --> 00:45:47,945 prevented this dog from suffering 978 00:45:48,178 --> 00:45:50,080 for an extra 15 hours. 979 00:45:54,618 --> 00:45:58,522 We were paged by someone who had given a dog to somebody else 980 00:45:58,789 --> 00:46:00,224 and then went to check on that dog, 981 00:46:00,491 --> 00:46:02,493 and the dog was essentially abandoned 982 00:46:02,793 --> 00:46:05,095 but also had a collar grown into his neck. 983 00:46:05,429 --> 00:46:06,797 And so two of our folks went out, 984 00:46:07,097 --> 00:46:08,165 and they were able to get the dog and 985 00:46:08,432 --> 00:46:10,067 take him to the emergency vet clinic. 986 00:46:10,334 --> 00:46:11,568 His collar was very deeply embedded, 987 00:46:11,869 --> 00:46:14,438 and he needed to have it surgically removed. 988 00:46:14,705 --> 00:46:16,140 And he was just a sort of a puppy. 989 00:46:16,406 --> 00:46:18,142 I mean, the collar had been left on him, 990 00:46:18,442 --> 00:46:21,478 and then he was allowed to grow around the collar essentially. 991 00:46:21,812 --> 00:46:24,248 [Slow-paced music starts] But his spirit was unbroken. 992 00:46:24,481 --> 00:46:24,982 He was a great dog. 993 00:46:25,315 --> 00:46:26,917 We were able to get him fostered, 994 00:46:27,151 --> 00:46:28,552 and then he found a home. 995 00:46:28,852 --> 00:46:31,555 And that was really wonderful to see him go from 996 00:46:31,889 --> 00:46:35,959 the hell that he was in to just being very, very loved. 997 00:46:37,227 --> 00:46:39,296 [Emily] The most exciting part about the job 998 00:46:39,530 --> 00:46:41,565 is seeing the before-and-afters. 999 00:46:41,865 --> 00:46:45,269 When we take an animal in, they usually come to us. 1000 00:46:45,602 --> 00:46:49,439 They’re skinny or emaciated. They’re scared. They’re hungry. 1001 00:46:49,706 --> 00:46:52,176 They don’t know kindness in people yet, 1002 00:46:52,442 --> 00:46:53,043 and over time, I mean, 1003 00:46:53,577 --> 00:46:55,412 even after they’re with us just a couple of days, 1004 00:46:55,712 --> 00:46:58,015 their personality really starts to come out. 1005 00:46:58,248 --> 00:46:59,583 We may have given them a bath, 1006 00:46:59,883 --> 00:47:01,485 or they’ve put on a little bit of weight. 1007 00:47:01,718 --> 00:47:03,554 Just knowing how scared and, 1008 00:47:03,854 --> 00:47:06,223 you know, maybe unsocial they were when we first took ’em in 1009 00:47:06,456 --> 00:47:07,991 and then seeing them in their 1010 00:47:08,325 --> 00:47:11,628 new homes months later where you wouldn’t even recognize 1011 00:47:11,929 --> 00:47:13,864 them from both their physical appearance 1012 00:47:14,231 --> 00:47:15,232 and their personality. 1013 00:47:15,532 --> 00:47:17,100 And you know, they’ve gone from being 1014 00:47:17,401 --> 00:47:19,903 chained in someone’s backyard where they’re just forgotten 1015 00:47:20,170 --> 00:47:21,905 to sleeping on a couch, you know, 1016 00:47:22,206 --> 00:47:24,441 and getting Christmas presents under the tree and just having 1017 00:47:24,675 --> 00:47:27,110 their lives totally transformed. 1018 00:47:29,146 --> 00:47:31,882 [Slow-paced music fades out] 1019 00:47:35,986 --> 00:47:36,653 It’s OK. 1020 00:47:37,054 --> 00:47:39,056 I know you’re very worried, but it’s OK. 1021 00:47:39,623 --> 00:47:43,293 [Rachel] Come on. Come on, girl. Good girl. 1022 00:47:46,964 --> 00:47:49,566 [Daphna] We tried to get her owner to let us have her 1023 00:47:49,800 --> 00:47:51,368 on every single visit. 1024 00:47:51,735 --> 00:47:53,904 You know, we can’t make people do the right thing, 1025 00:47:54,204 --> 00:47:56,940 and the only reason that we got her in the end is because of her 1026 00:47:57,241 --> 00:48:00,143 health issues and because she was very clearly at that point 1027 00:48:00,377 --> 00:48:02,045 practically a cruelty case. 1028 00:48:03,547 --> 00:48:04,181 [Rachel] Oh, she’s pooping. 1029 00:48:04,581 --> 00:48:07,684 Oh, she is? Oh, right on the blanket. Oh, well. 1030 00:48:08,485 --> 00:48:10,020 Aww, poor baby. 1031 00:48:10,554 --> 00:48:13,090 [Rachel] That water went right through her, didn’t it? 1032 00:48:13,657 --> 00:48:15,259 [Rachel] Yeah. [Chuckling] 1033 00:48:15,826 --> 00:48:17,060 [Daphna] Poor thing. 1034 00:48:17,494 --> 00:48:20,130 Well, you know, at least she did it on the floor. 1035 00:48:20,764 --> 00:48:22,499 I’ll just fold it up. [Indiscernible] 1036 00:48:23,066 --> 00:48:25,068 [Zena crunching food] 1037 00:48:26,703 --> 00:48:29,273 [Dogs barking in the background] 1038 00:48:33,744 --> 00:48:35,178 [Daphna] There’s a serious misconception 1039 00:48:35,412 --> 00:48:36,680 with the term “no-kill.” 1040 00:48:37,047 --> 00:48:37,648 There are some shelters that 1041 00:48:37,981 --> 00:48:39,416 perhaps call themselves “no-kill.” 1042 00:48:39,716 --> 00:48:41,485 I think there are also shelters that 1043 00:48:41,918 --> 00:48:44,354 practice what would be considered “no-kill” policies 1044 00:48:44,655 --> 00:48:47,357 but may not be straight-up “no-kill” shelters. 1045 00:48:47,658 --> 00:48:51,261 The term itself is very appealing to everyone, 1046 00:48:51,628 --> 00:48:52,696 for good reason, 1047 00:48:52,729 --> 00:48:55,732 because nobody wants to have to euthanize animals. 1048 00:48:56,133 --> 00:48:59,569 The problem with so-called “no-kill” policies is that 1049 00:49:00,070 --> 00:49:02,172 they cause animals to suffer. 1050 00:49:02,606 --> 00:49:05,108 That’s the short answer. How do they do that? 1051 00:49:05,442 --> 00:49:07,678 The animals are out there, and they need help. 1052 00:49:08,078 --> 00:49:10,547 Shelters are under so much pressure 1053 00:49:10,847 --> 00:49:14,284 by usually small but very vocal people 1054 00:49:14,751 --> 00:49:17,487 who are opposed to euthanasia under any circumstance 1055 00:49:17,788 --> 00:49:21,625 and target shelters for having to practice euthanasia. 1056 00:49:21,992 --> 00:49:24,061 So what they do is they pressure shelters to 1057 00:49:24,361 --> 00:49:28,165 change their admission policies so that animals who would have 1058 00:49:28,465 --> 00:49:32,169 to be euthanized under normal circumstances are turned away. 1059 00:49:32,402 --> 00:49:34,771 [Light music fades in] 1060 00:49:36,707 --> 00:49:37,574 [Investigator] OK. 1061 00:50:28,859 --> 00:50:31,228 The intake rate drops, 1062 00:50:31,461 --> 00:50:34,531 and by the intake rate dropping or changing, 1063 00:50:34,931 --> 00:50:37,167 the euthanasia rate also drops. 1064 00:50:37,534 --> 00:50:41,238 PETA could only take in animals who are placeable, 1065 00:50:41,671 --> 00:50:44,641 and then our what’s called a “save rate,” if you will, 1066 00:50:44,975 --> 00:50:46,243 would be 100%. 1067 00:50:46,476 --> 00:50:47,344 That would be very easy. 1068 00:50:47,711 --> 00:50:50,280 But that would mean that we would have to turn our back 1069 00:50:50,714 --> 00:50:52,149 on all the feral cats 1070 00:50:52,482 --> 00:50:53,817 that people perceive as a nuisance 1071 00:50:54,050 --> 00:50:56,286 and put poison out or shoot at. 1072 00:50:56,686 --> 00:51:00,190 That we would have to turn our back on all the aggressive dogs 1073 00:51:00,524 --> 00:51:01,224 who have gone mad 1074 00:51:01,825 --> 00:51:04,227 from being trapped at the end of a chain their entire lives. 1075 00:51:04,528 --> 00:51:07,164 It would mean we’d have to turn our back on the destitute people 1076 00:51:07,431 --> 00:51:08,865 who bring us animals in their arms 1077 00:51:09,199 --> 00:51:11,234 who are suffering who need to be euthanized. 1078 00:51:11,668 --> 00:51:13,870 Because all of those things contribute to 1079 00:51:14,137 --> 00:51:15,839 what ends up being our statistics. 1080 00:51:16,139 --> 00:51:19,776 Our statistics reflect who we take in and who we help. 1081 00:51:20,277 --> 00:51:23,613 [Guardian] About 17 years ago, I saved a dog, 1082 00:51:24,014 --> 00:51:25,849 a wild dog, that was on the street. 1083 00:51:26,483 --> 00:51:30,120 I took her in and took care of her best I could. 1084 00:51:30,754 --> 00:51:34,157 And old age has caught up to her, 1085 00:51:34,491 --> 00:51:37,894 and I decided it was the humane thing to do 1086 00:51:38,195 --> 00:51:40,330 is to have her euthanized. 1087 00:51:41,064 --> 00:51:45,335 I’m glad they’re around. I really appreciate it. 1088 00:51:45,769 --> 00:51:47,137 [Daphna] The problem with “no-kill” 1089 00:51:47,370 --> 00:51:48,538 is that it’s just a shell game. 1090 00:51:48,805 --> 00:51:50,807 [Katina] They pick and choose who comes, 1091 00:51:51,041 --> 00:51:51,675 who doesn’t come. 1092 00:51:52,108 --> 00:51:54,377 People get really frustrated when their animal 1093 00:51:54,678 --> 00:51:56,780 isn’t accepted into a “no-kill” shelter. 1094 00:51:57,047 --> 00:51:58,548 They’re put out into the streets. 1095 00:51:58,849 --> 00:52:01,418 They’re given just willy-nilly to anybody. 1096 00:52:01,685 --> 00:52:03,386 [Daphna] It leaves animals abandoned, 1097 00:52:03,653 --> 00:52:05,255 to fend for themselves very often. 1098 00:52:05,522 --> 00:52:07,791 It also is very dangerous in that it 1099 00:52:08,091 --> 00:52:10,794 misleads the public into believing 1100 00:52:11,027 --> 00:52:12,796 that “no-kill” is possible. 1101 00:52:14,764 --> 00:52:15,899 In Virginia last year, 1102 00:52:16,266 --> 00:52:19,836 there were more than 230,000 animals who went into shelters, 1103 00:52:20,136 --> 00:52:21,271 public and private. 1104 00:52:21,505 --> 00:52:22,172 That’s the problem. 1105 00:52:22,839 --> 00:52:26,443 The problem isn’t how many of those 230,000 were euthanized. 1106 00:52:26,676 --> 00:52:28,845 The problem is that 230,000 were 1107 00:52:29,112 --> 00:52:31,314 unwanted or homeless to begin with. 1108 00:52:31,715 --> 00:52:32,816 That’s where the focus has to be, 1109 00:52:33,116 --> 00:52:35,218 and that’s why we have four spay/neuter clinics. 1110 00:52:35,552 --> 00:52:36,319 [Lori-Jo] Spaying and neutering 1111 00:52:36,720 --> 00:52:39,456 gets to the root of the problem of animal homelessness. 1112 00:52:39,956 --> 00:52:42,192 There are so many born every year 1113 00:52:42,626 --> 00:52:44,861 and end up in shelters or no place to go. 1114 00:52:45,161 --> 00:52:46,596 So spaying and neutering prevents those 1115 00:52:46,897 --> 00:52:48,798 animals from being born in the first place. 1116 00:52:49,132 --> 00:52:51,368 So when you mislead the public into thinking, 1117 00:52:51,735 --> 00:52:53,503 well, look, this shelter is “no-kill” 1118 00:52:53,937 --> 00:52:57,674 and you compare that shelter’s rate to PETA’s rate of intake, 1119 00:52:57,974 --> 00:53:00,577 adoption, euthanasia, transfer, what-have-you, 1120 00:53:00,877 --> 00:53:02,846 of course, the percentages are gonna look different. 1121 00:53:03,146 --> 00:53:04,848 One shelter only takes animals that 1122 00:53:05,348 --> 00:53:07,851 fly out the door because they’re puppy-mill rescues 1123 00:53:08,151 --> 00:53:10,654 or they’re small purebreds or they’re kittens or puppies, 1124 00:53:11,054 --> 00:53:14,658 and one shelter is taking in animals who are not adoptable 1125 00:53:14,958 --> 00:53:18,428 and is making the difficult decision to euthanize them. 1126 00:53:18,728 --> 00:53:20,830 [Chris] Well, I think a lot of people that are against 1127 00:53:21,064 --> 00:53:21,565 euthanizing animals, 1128 00:53:22,032 --> 00:53:23,800 especially the animals that we euthanize, 1129 00:53:24,234 --> 00:53:26,369 they don’t see what we do on a daily basis. 1130 00:53:26,670 --> 00:53:28,505 They don’t see where the animals come from. 1131 00:53:28,805 --> 00:53:31,775 The animals that we pull out that do end up being euthanized, 1132 00:53:32,008 --> 00:53:32,909 they’re in really bad shape. 1133 00:53:33,209 --> 00:53:34,244 The owners have 1134 00:53:34,277 --> 00:53:35,812 basically had them chained out their whole lives. 1135 00:53:36,046 --> 00:53:36,479 They’ve been in fights. 1136 00:53:37,080 --> 00:53:39,549 They have infections all over them, bite wounds. 1137 00:53:39,883 --> 00:53:42,352 I get emotional, but really when we euthanize an animal, 1138 00:53:42,586 --> 00:53:43,420 it’s for the best for them. 1139 00:53:43,887 --> 00:53:45,355 Most of the time, they’re in a lot of pain or suffering, 1140 00:53:45,622 --> 00:53:46,823 or they’re chained out all the time 1141 00:53:47,157 --> 00:53:48,592 and have had the worst life ever. 1142 00:53:48,892 --> 00:53:51,428 So these animals aren’t going to be going through this 1143 00:53:51,728 --> 00:53:53,296 pain and suffering anymore. 1144 00:53:53,563 --> 00:53:54,297 We love every single one of them, 1145 00:53:54,864 --> 00:53:56,833 and just having the opportunity to be with them in their last 1146 00:53:57,067 --> 00:53:58,435 moments is an honor. 1147 00:53:58,735 --> 00:54:01,037 [Soft music fades out] [Somber music fades in] 1148 00:54:01,338 --> 00:54:03,440 [Daphna] You know, if you look at Zena inside and out, 1149 00:54:03,707 --> 00:54:06,409 everything about her showed neglect. 1150 00:54:06,710 --> 00:54:09,713 She had lost a bunch of hair. Her skin was inflamed. 1151 00:54:10,013 --> 00:54:11,881 Her teeth were worn down to the roots. 1152 00:54:12,182 --> 00:54:16,319 She was anxiety-ridden. She was terrified of human beings. 1153 00:54:16,620 --> 00:54:19,856 Her insides were chewed through by parasites. 1154 00:54:20,156 --> 00:54:22,859 This is what happens to dogs who are chronically neglected 1155 00:54:23,126 --> 00:54:25,462 when they are kept outdoors 24/7. 1156 00:54:25,829 --> 00:54:28,632 And this is why our program is so important because it serves 1157 00:54:28,932 --> 00:54:32,769 these dogs whose owners are unkind or neglectful or ignorant 1158 00:54:33,136 --> 00:54:35,639 and can’t even tell when their animals need basic 1159 00:54:35,872 --> 00:54:37,073 necessities of life. 1160 00:54:37,774 --> 00:54:41,077 I’m thankful that she got to experience 1161 00:54:41,411 --> 00:54:42,078 a little bit of kindness, 1162 00:54:42,412 --> 00:54:44,848 even if she didn’t quite understand it 1163 00:54:45,248 --> 00:54:47,384 before she moved on. 1164 00:55:01,831 --> 00:55:03,933 [Somber music fades out] [Uplifting music fades in] 1165 00:55:04,567 --> 00:55:07,837 Never ever, ever buy an animal anywhere. 1166 00:55:08,138 --> 00:55:09,906 Don’t buy an animal from a pet store. 1167 00:55:10,206 --> 00:55:11,541 Don’t buy an animal from a breeder. 1168 00:55:11,841 --> 00:55:14,477 If you are ready to make that commitment to an animal, 1169 00:55:14,844 --> 00:55:16,980 it’s so easy to adopt these days. You just go online. 1170 00:55:17,280 --> 00:55:18,615 You don’t even have to go to the shelter, 1171 00:55:18,915 --> 00:55:20,884 although we certainly encourage people to do so. 1172 00:55:21,117 --> 00:55:23,086 So never buy—always adopt. 1173 00:55:23,453 --> 00:55:26,556 Always spay or neuter. You know, don’t wait. Don’t delay. 1174 00:55:26,856 --> 00:55:28,391 It’s not just the right thing to do 1175 00:55:28,692 --> 00:55:30,694 for all dogs and cats because of 1176 00:55:30,927 --> 00:55:32,429 overpopulation and homelessness, 1177 00:55:32,829 --> 00:55:34,397 it’s also the best thing to do for that 1178 00:55:34,698 --> 00:55:36,933 particular animal from a health perspective. 1179 00:55:37,634 --> 00:55:39,469 If you see something, say something. 1180 00:55:40,070 --> 00:55:41,971 If there is an animal at the end of a chain, 1181 00:55:42,405 --> 00:55:45,942 if there is an animal in a pen, if something doesn’t seem right, 1182 00:55:46,176 --> 00:55:47,477 you don’t have anything to lose. 1183 00:55:47,777 --> 00:55:48,378 Call local authorities, 1184 00:55:48,712 --> 00:55:49,345 and if you don’t get action there, 1185 00:55:49,713 --> 00:55:52,449 call us, and we will do our very best to help. 1186 00:55:52,749 --> 00:55:55,085 But never be silent. Pick up that phone. 1187 00:55:55,318 --> 00:55:55,785 Go on the computer. 1188 00:55:56,352 --> 00:55:58,388 You can report things anonymously to almost 1189 00:55:58,621 --> 00:55:59,589 every organization. 1190 00:56:00,123 --> 00:56:02,125 Don’t think that somebody else is doing the right thing, 1191 00:56:02,425 --> 00:56:04,694 because a lot of people are afraid to get involved. 1192 00:56:05,462 --> 00:56:07,063 PETA’s an animal rights organization. 1193 00:56:07,363 --> 00:56:10,433 We did not move down to the Norfolk/Hampton Roads area 1194 00:56:10,667 --> 00:56:12,502 to do sheltering or fieldwork. 1195 00:56:13,069 --> 00:56:15,138 We would be thrilled if we didn’t have to do it. 1196 00:56:15,438 --> 00:56:18,575 We do it by necessity. We do it because we have to. 1197 00:56:18,975 --> 00:56:21,644 And I think that if people are perplexed 1198 00:56:21,945 --> 00:56:25,582 as to why we do what we do and about why we euthanize, 1199 00:56:25,882 --> 00:56:28,518 because I understand, you know, euthanasia is upsetting. 1200 00:56:28,785 --> 00:56:30,920 It’s upsetting that it has to happen. 1201 00:56:31,287 --> 00:56:34,724 The people who criticize us are not the people that we help. 1202 00:56:35,125 --> 00:56:36,626 If you went in the field with 1203 00:56:36,893 --> 00:56:39,028 any of the folks on our staff, 1204 00:56:39,462 --> 00:56:40,930 the reception we get in the field, 1205 00:56:41,231 --> 00:56:43,199 with few exceptions, like anything else, 1206 00:56:43,500 --> 00:56:46,803 is, you know, hugs and thank-yous. You know, yesterday 1207 00:56:47,103 --> 00:56:48,805 I came home with a bag of cucumbers [laughs] 1208 00:56:48,838 --> 00:56:50,106 the other day. 1209 00:56:50,140 --> 00:56:50,940 You know, people are appreciative, 1210 00:56:51,274 --> 00:56:54,210 and they give us thanks the best way they know how. 1211 00:56:54,477 --> 00:56:56,045 And we are dealing with people who 1212 00:56:56,312 --> 00:56:57,981 struggle to put food on the table. 1213 00:57:03,186 --> 00:57:04,554 [Laughing] Mm-hmm. That’s right. 1214 00:57:10,293 --> 00:57:11,227 [Heather] Beautiful babies. 1215 00:57:11,261 --> 00:57:12,128 [Heather and Katina laughing] 1216 00:57:13,563 --> 00:57:14,764 [Daphna] This is a national issue. 1217 00:57:15,064 --> 00:57:18,134 PETA is used by advocates of “no-kill” because 1218 00:57:18,368 --> 00:57:19,202 we’re well known. 1219 00:57:19,736 --> 00:57:21,805 But we are always going to do what’s right 1220 00:57:22,038 --> 00:57:23,573 for individual animals, 1221 00:57:23,907 --> 00:57:25,909 from our perspective of assessing the animals 1222 00:57:26,142 --> 00:57:28,111 and making decisions for them. 1223 00:57:28,545 --> 00:57:31,915 We always make the decision that is the best decision 1224 00:57:32,215 --> 00:57:34,751 we can make for that animal at that particular moment, 1225 00:57:35,251 --> 00:57:38,188 and that’s not an easy thing to do all the time. 1226 00:57:38,488 --> 00:57:39,823 [Uplifting music fades out] [Inspiring music fades in] 1227 00:57:40,089 --> 00:57:42,025 [Jes] You know, I try to stay very realistic 1228 00:57:42,325 --> 00:57:44,761 about what we can do at each address, 1229 00:57:45,061 --> 00:57:48,097 and part of the work that we do is living on hope. 1230 00:57:48,398 --> 00:57:50,033 You know, we hope we can get them surrendered. 1231 00:57:50,333 --> 00:57:53,203 We hope that we can educate people to do better for them. 1232 00:57:53,903 --> 00:57:55,605 I’ve been doing this for 15 years. 1233 00:57:55,905 --> 00:57:59,108 If I didn’t have hope that things were gonna get better, 1234 00:57:59,342 --> 00:58:01,511 I would be in a deep depression. 1235 00:58:03,079 --> 00:58:06,216 Edith was missing for about three years. 1236 00:58:06,716 --> 00:58:09,786 Myself and Emily were going through pictures 1237 00:58:10,086 --> 00:58:12,522 from the straw delivery over the weekend, 1238 00:58:12,889 --> 00:58:15,825 and Emily said to me, “Hey, come here,” 1239 00:58:16,092 --> 00:58:17,627 you know, “look at this picture.” 1240 00:58:18,294 --> 00:58:20,263 And so I got up, and I went over and looked. 1241 00:58:20,563 --> 00:58:23,199 And sure enough, instantly I knew that it was her. 1242 00:58:23,433 --> 00:58:25,301 So I went out to the address, 1243 00:58:25,602 --> 00:58:29,005 and it turned out that her guardian had just moved 1244 00:58:29,305 --> 00:58:32,242 I talked to her about Edith getting older and, 1245 00:58:32,542 --> 00:58:33,676 you know, basically, 1246 00:58:33,710 --> 00:58:36,279 that it’s just not fair to her to be chained outside. 1247 00:58:36,546 --> 00:58:38,047 I mean, it was never fair to her, 1248 00:58:38,348 --> 00:58:40,250 but at this point, she’s 10 years old. 1249 00:58:40,683 --> 00:58:42,852 You know, every time it gets hot or it gets cold, 1250 00:58:43,086 --> 00:58:44,854 it affects her arthritis. 1251 00:58:45,555 --> 00:58:48,725 And she ended up telling me that I could have her. 1252 00:58:53,863 --> 00:58:57,000 She tried to tell me that Edith didn’t like being inside, 1253 00:58:57,233 --> 00:58:58,935 which is absolutely not true. 1254 00:58:59,235 --> 00:59:02,038 Edith loves to be snuggled on the couch or the bed. 1255 00:59:02,338 --> 00:59:04,340 Anywhere you are, she wants to be there. 1256 00:59:05,775 --> 00:59:08,111 I instantly knew I wanted to adopt her. 1257 00:59:08,344 --> 00:59:08,978 I had known her for so long, 1258 00:59:09,245 --> 00:59:11,214 and she was just such a wonderful girl. 1259 00:59:11,514 --> 00:59:13,850 Every moment, she’s just more and more perfect. 1260 00:59:14,284 --> 00:59:16,019 Edith probably makes me happier 1261 00:59:16,319 --> 00:59:17,787 than anything else in this world. 1262 00:59:18,087 --> 00:59:20,056 I mean, you know, I’ve got kind of a hard job, 1263 00:59:20,290 --> 00:59:21,224 and it’s, like, man, 1264 00:59:21,624 --> 00:59:23,192 hanging out with her is the best. 1265 00:59:23,493 --> 00:59:25,361 She makes my life better every day. 1266 00:59:25,995 --> 00:59:29,165 Oh, and hopefully I make her life a lot better as well. 1267 00:59:45,315 --> 00:59:48,985 [Inspiring music fades out] 1268 00:59:51,788 --> 00:59:55,792 [Uplifting music starts] 1269 01:01:46,335 --> 01:01:48,171 [Uplifting music fades out] 95190

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.