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CaptainObvious.Taking a dog in as part of your loving family...is rescuing it. No matter the method of obtaining.
Unless you stole it....then you're an asshole.
wolfbackpackFuck breeders imo. It's fucked up, they just breed animals and if theres a small inperfection they kill them. Why not rescue a dog or other animal that could already REALLY use the love? I kinda see it as a couple that wants to have kids but can't due to infertility, instead of getting a donator (either egg or sperm) why wouldn't you just adopt a kid?
CaptainObvious.Taking a dog in as part of your loving family...is rescuing it. No matter the method of obtaining.
Bart.ManNeither. Dogs are fucking animals. Why are you trying to live with a shedding, shitting, smelly beast in your house? God dammit I really hate dogs.
soulskierIn my experience, rescue dogs are either neglected and crave attention all the time or previously abused and afraid of everything
Obviously this is not always the case and it's a shame that this happens but getting a new dog allows to to start with a fresh slate, training your dog to be the dog you want instead of trying to mend a broken one
ScaredwhiteboyBuy 100%. If I'm getting a dog, I'm getting a mothafuckin puppy. No old dog bullshit.
ScaredwhiteboyBuy 100%. If I'm getting a dog, I'm getting a mothafuckin puppy. No old dog bullshit.
ScaredwhiteboyBuy 100%. If I'm getting a dog, I'm getting a mothafuckin puppy. No old dog bullshit.
caroline.There are still rescue puppies out there, lots of them. Moms and pups get rescued too. Those puppies are often too young to know they had a tough start.
ScaredwhiteboyBuy 100%. If I'm getting a dog, I'm getting a mothafuckin puppy. No old dog bullshit.
Chubbs.so... anyone know whether this would be under an inductive speech or a deductive... cause i have no clue how public speaking works..
ScaredwhiteboyBuy 100%. If I'm getting a dog, I'm getting a mothafuckin puppy. No old dog bullshit.
.Hugo.Buy. I want my dog to be a beast hunting dog, so I want a good bloodline.
Chubbs.Here's Lily
saskskierWe've had a few dogs over the years. Some rescue, some breeder. The first rescue dog was awful. He was mean and bit and we had small kids (foster kids) at the time so he went back to the pound. At that point it was a safety issue.
Had a German sheppard (from a breeder) about half a year before he was hit by a truck.
Had a black lab (from a breeder). Died of (what appeared to be) a heart attack when she was about a year old. We brought an old tractor back to a neighbours (a few km away) and she was running along (not driving fast at all). When we got to the neighbours, she couldn't even jump back into the truck lifted her in and she didn't get up again. She was a good dog (even though she was still a puppy).
We had another rescue (a collie) that was definitely abused and in bad shape. Super skittish and mangy and underfed. Absolutely terrified of linoleum. After little while he looked really healthy and, while still pretty jumpy, he was an amazing dog. We had him for a few years. The night he died (he slept inside in the living room), he dragged himself across the dining room/kitchen/hallway (all linoleum) to my parents bedroom in the middle of the night. My dad brought him to a vet (something was def. wrong), but he died. The vet think he had a brain aneurysm or something.
We had another collie and I think he was another rescue. Had him for a long, long time. He ended up going to a new home last year because no one was around (my siblings and I moved out a while ago) and both my parents are pretty busy.
All in all we've had some pretty great dogs, but pretty bad luck over the years regardless of whether or not they were rescue or bred.
CaptainObvious.Sorry dude, we didn't even do what you needed for the thread. Deductive vs. Inductive depends on the way you're going to argue your stance. Deductive would be a speech based on facts supporting your case. So You could get some credible sources talking about the percentage of dogs killed in a shelter vs the percentage killed by breeders. You could find some info on where unwanted breeder puppies go in the end. Maybe it's shelters, I don't know. But you would make a case for your argument based solely on supporting facts.
Inductive is actually a smarter approach. Especially given the fact that with the author's permission, you have 3 examples in this thread alone. You use specific instances to tie together a false conclusion. So you could talk about shelter dogs and how the instances above came as adult dogs and not puppies. Therefore all shelter dogs must be adult. Which is the common misconception.
You would then have to use further evidence to disprove this conclusion (refer to above stories) and make a persuasive case based on assumptions of shelter dogs not always being true, so ruling out those dogs is illogical and unfair to a possibly worthy dog.
El_Barto.Anyone who pays more than $100 for a dog is an asshole
El_Barto.Anyone who pays more than $100 for a dog is an asshole
Bart.ManNeither. Dogs are fucking animals. Why are you trying to live with a shedding, shitting, smelly beast in your house? God dammit I really hate dogs.
.Hugo.I have a friend whos dad has spent 3500+ at least 3 times that I know of, and another friend that just spent 2500
El_Barto.Your friends and their dads are assholes
El_Barto.Your friends and their dads are assholes
Chubbs.so for an inductive speech.. which is specific moving towards a general conclusion.. i would have three main bodies in which i would touch upon why it is better to rescue, why it doesn't really make a difference, and why it is better to buy, and then make my conclusion based on my personal opinion that poeple should rescue?
Mr.Huck... or they could be smart enough to realize that a dog is a part of your family. They will be with you for a long time. When I was a little kid we had a German Shepherd Doberman Pincher mix. My dad brought her home in his sport coat pocket. Her name was Lady. She lived to be eighteen. I was in college when she died. I will never forget that dog. Before that, we adopted a Norwegian Elkhound. It was about a year old when we got it, and one day the dog just wigged and tried to rip my sister's face off. Choosing a pet is a pretty big deal.