Evidence:
Some of you may be asking is this really real? Yes it is. I've supplied evidence below and you will soon see that the horrors of pet food are real:
Some of you may be asking is this really real? Yes it is. I've supplied evidence below and you will soon see that the horrors of pet food are real:
- If the pet food industry is so well regulated, why are there so many recalls, major recalls, class actions, linked pet deaths, and conveniently placed loop holes?
- If the pet food industry is so great then why don't we let an independent group who would not profit anything from it regulate the pet food companies, instead of letting them self regulate and using AAFCO and FDA who members often own companies or have some relation with the companies? (CVM benefits, dog food companies often support vet clinics, colleges and etc.)
- (for something as simple as dog food)Why does a company need insurance in case they get sued? And why should they be at risk of getting sued of they're supposed so good?
- Why did the FDA/CVM release a report saying pets are not in pet food and then later report they didn't really know but not make it easy for the public to see?
- Why was the sodium pentobarbital test only eight weeks long when over eight years it will accumulate and probably cause problems like BHA and BHT does? (Something so controversial doesn't belong in pet food!)
- The companies that claim nothing is wrong and the pet food industry is well regulated tend to have many recalls, many class actions and are linked to pet deaths, vs. the companies who use safer ingredients, reliable meat sources and non harmful animal testing as well as no class actions, no or low recall histories and aren't linked to pet deaths,tend to say there is something wrong and the pet food industry needs improvement.
- There have been many large recalls, not just the recent one, that involved companies who use artificial, questionable meat sources and poor animal testing ethics. While Pet food companies who don't use questionable ingredients, meat sources and have non harmful animal testing, were often not involved with these recalls (In fact most of them never had recalls.)
- Also there is an increase of cancer in pets and about 20 years ago dogs and cats rarely suffered from arthritis or allergies.
- Companies that truly care about your pet would use high quality ingredients not just the cheapest ones available, so why do some companies use the cheapest ingredients, such as glutens and other cheap ingredients?
- Why should you trust a industry monopolized by Del Monte, Master Foods, Nestle, Proctor and Gamble, and others?
- Who would you trust companies whose CEOs tend to keep all the money or companies like Paul Newman's who donates to charities? (Which happen to mostly be the ones without harmful animal testing and safe, ingredients with reliable suppliers) (Some of the not so great companies do it for looks. Usually these ones require the receiver of the donation to buy their product.)