by Michael » Fri Apr 24, 2015 12:30 pm
You don't want a bureaucratic government agency telling you what you can and can't do with your bird. You can be certain that the people who make the laws will know even less about parrots than the most incompetent parrot owner you've ever met. Most of it will just be fines to collect money for the government with no interest to actual animal welfare.
Other laws may even be a danger to the animals just because somebody thinks it's a noble cause. For example, in a few European countries wing clipping has been outlawed. While I am one of the strongest proponents of not clipping, I don't think it would be safe for that to just become a mandated law overnight. It's fare more important that people come to realize that flight is good and learn to manage it safely than to follow the law, not clip wings, and condemn the bird to life in cage or let it get lost. You cannot make a law that people have to treat their pets with respect. You can only make laws pertaining to certain actions and those actions are entirely arbitrary.
If the government has power to regulate this, then they can also come up with absurdly restrictive laws. In some countries they regulate cage size. What's to stop the animal rights fanatics from raising the cage size limit to an absurd point that makes ownership entirely impossible? Who is to actually say that a 20x20 cage is too small but a 24x24 cage is legal for the same bird? Why not 48x48 or an aviary the size of a house? Once you let the bureaucrats in, you can be certain it will cost money but you cannot be certain of anything good ever coming out of it.
Education is the only way. Showing people how intelligent and valuable these creatures are, educating them on good care, shining the light, helping them actually make it work. That's the only way to actually improve parrot welfare.