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ok.. go to google.com
and then type in "how much do small animals cost at pets mart"
then you should see a link that says www.peta.com?
go to in and look at the photos...get back to me if you saw what i saw...-_-

2007-02-23 02:36:49 · 11 answers · asked by johnny_girl1001 1 in Pets Other - Pets

this is really important

2007-02-23 02:44:02 · update #1

click on the picture!!!

2007-02-23 02:47:40 · update #2

11 answers

For years, petsmart has assured PETA that sick and injured animals in its stores are provided with veterinary care when they need it. We didn't take their word for it. During an undercover investigation at the petsmart store in Manchester, Connecticut, a store that has a Banfield Hospital right inside it and that petsmart boasts of as having an "outstanding pet care team" and an "exceptional pet care record," PETA documented more than 100 small animals—including hamsters, domestic rats, lizards, chinchillas, and birds—deprived of effective veterinary care and slowly dying, out of customers' sight.
The small animals sold at PetSmart cost the multimillion-dollar company next to nothing and make up a minuscule percentage of the company's total sales. So why does PetSmart buy them by the thousands only to leave them to die from disease and injury?

The answer is simple. Tiny, adorable hamsters—who can feel pain just as keenly as any dog or cat—are frequently bought on impulse when parents can't resist their child's pleading to bring a small animal home. The hamster may not cost much, but supplies add up quickly. Cages, bedding, food, and other paraphernalia—as well as future supplies (as long as the little animal stays alive)—amount to millions of dollars in annual profit. But these tiny animals victimized by this business mogul often pay the ultimate price—forgotten and neglected in a messy back room where they depend on untrained employees to guess what ails them, hamsters and other tiny beings suffer horribly and often die, unseen and untreated.

We alerted PetSmart's corporate headquarters to animal suffering at the Manchester store while our investigator was working at the store undercover. An e-mail message sent to PetSmart executive Bruce Richardson, reporting "animals … routinely deprived of veterinary care [who] often suffer and die as a result" yielded nothing but a meaningless, dishonest reply from Mr. Richardson in which he wrote: "This particular store has an outstanding pet care team and an exceptional pet care record. No pet that has required a vet has been deprived of that service."

Just three examples of many disturbing entries from the PETA investigator's daily log: "On October 23, 2006, a hamster in cage 10 in the sick room was found dead. This was one of the hamsters that I took to the vet on October 20, 2006, due to her having wet tail and crusty eyes. [The Pet Care Manager] had brought her back to the sick room before the vet could see her and told me that … she did not need to see the vet." "On October 26, 2006, E [a supervisor] brought out a long-haired hamster who had died in the sick room. She had been isolated on October 22 for wet tail, and the chart records showed her slow and painful death. Initially the hamster had diarrhea, but she continued to deteriorate and the night before she died the log notes stated, 'eyes shut, hard, dying.'" "On December 21, 2006, [PetSmart's corporate communications department] sent an e-mail to all store managers stating that there has been an outbreak of salmonella in a couple of stores."

The PetSmart back room log notes document the suffering of animals who are "diagnosed" by store employees. Over a three-day period, three different supervisors—including the pet care manager—in the Manchester store wrote on a dying calico hamster's chart, "[Day 1, morning] wobbly, dehydrated, diarrhea … [Day 1, evening] very lethargic/dehydrated, regressing … [Day 2, morning] very wobbly, dehydrated … [Day 2, evening] dehydrated/getting hard, very lethargic … [Day 3, morning] dying, no meds given, can't swallow, regressed … [Day 3, evening] dead" but did not take the animal to a veterinarian even to have her put out of her misery.

The photos of some of the animals treated for diseases such as wet tail and upper respiratory infections show just how miserable they were as they languished, untreated, in PetSmart's custody.

PetSmart's millions mean nothing but penny-pinching shortcuts and misery for the little animals neglected by the company, which is clearly unwilling to or incapable of caring for animals, period. Please do not buy anything from PetSmart until it stops selling all animals. Buy your supplies online or at a store that does not sell animals.

One lucky hamster girl, Gigi, was adopted from the Manchester store's sick room by PETA's investigator and has a “happily ever after” story.

IS THIS WHAT YOU SAW?--

2007-02-23 02:50:32 · answer #1 · answered by yogi123 3 · 0 0

awww...that's real upsetting. I don't trust many big stores anymore.

Like Wal-Mart, they get people from undeveloped countries to work for there factories for only 10 cents a day, but then 5 cents of there pay goes to a small one room apartment they're forced to live in for Wal-marts workers. it's horrible. I did a huge project on it last year. so sad......

2007-02-23 02:46:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Wow that was powerful stuff. I can't stand watching things like that. Even when they show thoes tv show about aboused animals i start crying. I have a little dog and he's part of my family, If anyone tried to hurt him. Well you know what i mean!!!! Animals have feeling too!!!

2007-02-23 02:44:36 · answer #3 · answered by janet 3 · 0 0

i have seen the Peta and how they sow how they treat poor animals i know alot about his kind of thing cause my husband is a spoke person for Peta he is a strict vegan he is a actor he has done two movies where he ask to where fake leather i was so glad he did not wear real leather for wtl and gladater

2007-02-23 02:49:51 · answer #4 · answered by disney_fan84 2 · 0 0

omg!!!! im never going to petsmart ever again!!!!! i've seen that!! about a month ago, we went to petsmart to get 2 gerbils, and we got 2 healthy boys. in the bottom cage were 3 gerbils, 2 of which were very sick. it was sad :(

2007-02-23 03:42:25 · answer #5 · answered by ferrets4ever 4 · 0 0

Yep, this video is the reason why I don't shop at Petsmart anymore. I go to Weber's now...they don't sell any animals.

2007-02-23 02:54:12 · answer #6 · answered by gobanana516 4 · 0 0

That's a great video! How smart is the doggy? Pretty simple even for a dog....Unless the dog built the machine!

2016-03-29 08:34:38 · answer #7 · answered by Kelly 4 · 0 0

E-mail the picture to me I couldn't get it!!

Copy and past it on a e-card then send it to me!!


newgirl101010@yahoo.com

2007-02-23 03:01:31 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

omg! that is sooo sad!!
that poor little gerbil looked pitiful!
people who do that to animals are stupid!!!!
thanxs for letting me know, now i know that petsmart isnt good!

2007-02-23 02:44:15 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

holy *&^%, i work at petsmart and we take amazing care of the animals, at least at my location.....i don't know where that was......

2007-02-23 02:46:13 · answer #10 · answered by chris 3 · 0 0

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