(11-26-2024, 08:50 PM)HiloJulie Wrote: It is no surprise to me that is how you feel.
Obviously easier said than done, but for real, the heartlessness which which you suggest criminalizing other people’s behavior and inflicting trauma on animals willy nilly when it suits is phenomenal. You might ask yourself if there's a better way?
When I was young, Hamakua side, we had transfer stations, but for the most part the gulches worked just fine, and they were usually closer at hand. There was a lot more rain back then, the streams washed all our woes.. and the garbage.. away. And besides nobody saw anything, the streams were full of mud that washed off the fields. But I thought the transfer stations were a better idea, although I had to learn not to bring the kids along because, inevitably, if I did we’d be taking another litter of abandoned kittens home. And you know, even if you did, there’d always be another when you came back next time.
Years later when lava swept through Kalapana a small group of us who advised Harry who should be evacuated and when realized folks were leaving their domestic animals behind. So we went to the Humane Society and explained to them what was happening and they feigned lack of funds and refused to help. But Seeske, at Kilauea Veterinary Services, offered her’s and her staff’s unqualified, and amazingly boundless, help.
Before the crisis passed we had trapped and hauled off the lava fields well north of 500 abandoned domestic animals, and most of them were cats. And we, again with a lot of help from Seeske, fixed and nurtured back to good health and found homes for every animal we gathered.. and some folks took several. They were a celebrated tribe.. the Kalapana refugees.
The interesting thing is when the Trib made mention of the effort the Humane Society offered a seat on their board to one of us, and she took it, and then followed a number of years where the humane society and the other animal advocate groups were able to work together, and some good stuff happened. Remember Dog Day Afternoons? But it didn’t last.. people move on.. and somehow the government's efforts here always fall short..
The feral cat problem on this island is endemic. It’s baked in. And the only way it will be addressed is through government with an island wide, state wide, effort and a whole lot more funding than has ever been considered.
People created this condition. People abandon their domestic animals here as if it’s the right thing to do. They do it as readily as they go to church. People are the bad guys in the story.. and it will take a collective of people to fix it. A collective far larger than any group. Government. But for anyone to suggest inflicting trauma as a solution.. of not feeding hungry beings? That's a sickness. It is inhumane. That we, collectively, should be very worried about.