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Jaaakkkeee

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Are breeders a problem, like? Is it frowned upon to get your cat pregnant (by another cat, not DIY) and sell off the kittens? Why?

It is mainly because there are so many animals needing homes even kittens, one of the good things about getting them from a shelter is you are helping out and they will also be neutered. There are a few campaigns going about to stop people selling animals on gumtree as well as there has been a lot of bad press about people buying the animals for fighting and explicitly for breeding, not sure how that is different from going to a pet shop but in my opinion why buy one when you can rescue one? The main reason I had a go at Jake was that he couldn't see the difference in buying a jumper from a charity shop and adopting a kitten and also because he seemed to think of adopting a cat but never actually followed it up "I heard Mrs. Murrays charge £50"

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Are breeders a problem, like? Is it frowned upon to get your cat pregnant (by another cat, not DIY) and sell off the kittens? Why?

If your cat gets knocked up and you are forced to rehome the kittens, there's no real moral issue per se. However, the fact that people will pay anything from £30 to ~£50 for a mongrel kitten encourages arseholes to deliberately get their cat(s) pregnant as often as possible to make a quick buck at the expense of the health of the cat. If any kittens from the litter aren't bought, they'll usually be "discarded" or sent to cat's protection or similar.

I don't have a problem with buying a cat privately, but as (I think) Chris pointed out, it's a false economy if you do it for purely financial reasons, plus there's a really wide selection of kittens currently living in the garages of CPL volunteers because they've been finding many stray cats who have recently had litters.

xx

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The problem is not sensible breeders, its the idiots who have no clue about cats, dont get them dressed and then struggle to look after the kittens when they are born, they then sell them to irresposible people and its goes round and round like that. Hence why we have the need for shelters in the first place.I have already decided i wont be getting my next cat dressed as i quite fancy the idea of breeding cats when im older, its not going to turn me into the next Adolf Hitler or anything.

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My pregnant wife read that, and is getting our two checked out. As it can be passed to little foetus, and make it blind.

As she can't do their poop, I was the lucky one having to take samples from the litter tray.

Despite the scare stories of the last few days the biggest risk of being infected by Toxoplasmosis isn't owning a cat, it's eating unwashed vegetables and undercooked meat.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/22/toxoplasmosis-brain-cancer-cat-owner_n_1822231.html

Also if you wear gloves while cleaning the litter tray or, you know, wash your hands afterwards you massively minimise the risk

http://www.catchannel.com/news/2012/07/03/cats-and-toxo-facts-myths.aspx

In fact reading the FSA website about the report that the news stories this week have been based on, they don't even mention cats! Unsurprisingly for a report by the Food Standards Agency what they're saying is that more research is needed and the main risk is through the food chain.

http://www.food.gov.uk/news-updates/news/2012/sep/toxoplasma

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Despite the scare stories of the last few days the biggest risk of being infected by Toxoplasmosis isn't owning a cat, it's eating unwashed vegetables and undercooked meat.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/22/toxoplasmosis-brain-cancer-cat-owner_n_1822231.html

Also if you wear gloves while cleaning the litter tray or, you know, wash your hands afterwards you massively minimise the risk

http://www.catchannel.com/news/2012/07/03/cats-and-toxo-facts-myths.aspx

In fact reading the FSA website about the report that the news stories this week have been based on, they don't even mention cats! Unsurprisingly for a report by the Food Standards Agency what they're saying is that more research is needed and the main risk is through the food chain.

http://www.food.gov.uk/news-updates/news/2012/sep/toxoplasma

Thanks for the links.

I know there was no risk to our cats, as they aren't outside cats - so the chance of them getting toxoplasmosis is pretty slim. But I just think its a crafty ruse to get me to change the litter.

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