wow. i found that very thought provoking.
Why is it not considered cruelty to restrictively breed dogs to have flat faces which make it difficult for them to breathe?
The writer did a good job of presenting troubling aspects of breeding and designer crossbreeding, and ultimately, of the human condition.
I remember when i was a kid in early elementary school, there was an albino child at the school, and somehow it ended up being explained to me that close relatives were not allowed to have children together because terrible health problems would result, deformities and other conditions that would happen if people who were too close were mixed together.
i liked how the writer contrasted the fairly uniform looking show dogs to the "motley" group of people who were involved in the show.
Also the way in which some purist breeders conflate strict breeding to type with caring behaviors and virtue, an unjustified conflation of caring about the breed with caring about the dogs. Interesting point.
That guy Havens makes my blood run cold, not that he's mixing different breeds but just the mass scale of his operation and all that this implies, the commodification and resulting prioritization of business efficiency over humaneness--and the way in which this mirrors the society at large which does not frown on this, and which supports such enterprises through strong market demand.
I don't think of designer dogs as mutts or mongrels. I think of a mutt as a heinz 57 where you can't say for sure what breeds are involved--sort of like a human being. To me, designer dogs are on the same end of the continuum as purebred dogs--they are carefully *designed* for certain purposes, the human tries to control the outcome. The article suggests that today's pure breeds were once created out of different kinds of dogs, just as designer dogs are being created today.
Not to say that trying to achieve certain results from breeding is in itself good or bad. What i consider bad, of course, is when breeding is controlled without regard for resulting health problems such as trying to create an animal who's nose is deformed to a point where they can't breathe adequately or where they tend to injure their eyes (and to find this amusing and endearing), or without appropriate concern for the risks of genetic diseases.
I really have never known anything about purebred dogs because my parents got my first dog at the pound when i was 9, she was a wonderful dog, i was an only child and she was my close companion--so getting a mutt at the pound seemed successful to me and i didn't know why everyone wouldn't do that. I thought the whole point of getting a dog was to get a friend, a companion. My second companion dog was also a mutt, i don't really know what breeds were in her, but there could not be a better sweeter, smarter, more loving, affectionate, happy healthy amazing awesome dog. So i never even considered getting a purebred dog until my daughter got a cavalier.
Having experienced two cavaliers at close range, and knowing so many people on this forum, and through them, getting a sense of their dogs, it makes me think that maybe it would not be such a bad idea to breed humans for temperment. If people could be bred to have the temperment of cavaliers, just think of how much better the world could be.
thanks for posting that article. It represented two extreme cases of inhumanity that are not really seen or treated as such in our society, people who blend into the social landscape as part of the acceptable spectrum--you have Havens who is a crass puppy miller, striving to meet and to create market demand to make himself rich, and you have Beard, a ghoulish caricature of a person who has no grasp of true humaneness but is self righteous about her bizarre values...
anyway, that's my reaction.