


Pajarita wrote:Let me know if you can think of one single problem that is not directly caused by our keeping them captive - I tried and couldn't come up with a single one.




Pajarita wrote:I don't think ALL domesticated animals suffer, some are pretty happy about their lot in life. It all depends on how they are treated -and that's another issue with the cruelty laws we have.




TooLove wrote:It might be impossible to achieve it, but the difference between yourself and someone else is that you are constantly looking for ways to improve your parrots quality of life. Not everyone does that. Granted, a captive-bred bird doesn't know what it's missing out on per se, but when you limit the capacity to perform natural behaviors that's when you run into problems. The solution is not necessarily to replicate nature to a T, but to find other ways and outlets for them to express these behaviors.
Also, I would be inclined to disagree with your statement that veterinarians oppose the term companion animals. I don't take classes on "pets" in vet school, I take classes on companion animals. Companion Animal Medicine, Clinical Behavior of Companion Animals, etc. I can show you my schedule if you'd like. I have yet to encounter a textbook that doesn't use the term companion animals either. And, as a future vet, I also have issues with calling animals pets. They are friends, family, and companions. The vast majority of veterinarians understand this.

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