1/17/09
As previously reported, small dogs in Orange County, California,
are dying of weird cancers at an unusually accelerated rate and at
fractions of their expected life span. Orange County
veterinarians
have taken advantage of the epidemic by charging large fees for
treatments they don't expect to work. After these vets fail to
heal the dogs with their non-working treatments, they try to convince
pet owners to finish off the dogs early, for additional exorbitant
fees. Orange County oncologists will admit that fatal diseases, like
cancer, are at epidemic levels among dogs in Orange County. Those
contacted say they do not know why. Often these Orange County dog
diseases have a "weird" component. The CYNT has observed that
these mysterious ailments are making OC veterinarians rich.
If the dead or dying dogs started out in Orange County, one might think
it was bad inbreeding. However, in California, most purebred dogs
are purchased from out of state and from long-living stock. This
is because of a lock California breeders have on the market, often
charging six to ten times the national rate for dogs purchased in
California. Because rich people are willing to pay these
rates and agree to any terms from the small number of California
breeders with puppies to sell, it is difficult even to find a puppy
from a desired breed in California. California breeders get away
with this by using spay/neuter contracts for most show quality dogs
they sell, thereby eliminating potential competition. Spayed and
neutered dogs are never allowed to even compete in the show
ring - even if they are champion quality. Anyone buying a puppy
in
California has to pay an even higher show price of thousands to avoid
receiving a limited contract that prevents the the buyer from selling
any puppies as AKC or from competing. That way, there is no
competition, ready to undersell the small number of breeders in
California. For this reason, most purebred dogs in Orange County
come from outside California. Though some puppies are obtained at
pet stores, the most common method for obtaining puppies is via
the Internet. Pet stores have a negative reputation, often as the
result of
an anti-pet-store campaign pushed by California breeders and by a
concern that their store-bought dogs may be unsocialized, low quality
left-overs. As a result of the negative reputation of pet stores
and the high costs of working with California breeders, most Orange
County puppy buyers surf the Net for their dream puppy and meet that
puppy for the first time at LAX or or the San Diego International
Airports.
Could the flights contribute to the deaths of Orange County dogs?
Though the flights may expose dogs to different temperatures and
atmospheric conditions than non-flying dogs would receive, these
flights take
place when the dogs are puppies, and it is very rare for puppies to
become sick after flying. Also, why are puppies that fly to other
states more likely to live a larger chunk of their lifespan?
Recently, pet owners have been watching out for money-seeking vets who
want to plant carcinogenic tracking chips in the dogs, spay or neuter
competitive dogs as a payoff to certain special interests, or subject
puppies to over-vaccination and poisons, such as Frontline.
Watchful pet owners have switched to organic dog food with no animal
by-products, non-plastic dog toys and organic or natural insect
repellents. At same time, Science Diet, a dog food associated by
some pet owners with serious medical canine conditions, is available at
most Veterinary offices for unsuspecting pet owners. With more
and more pet owners watching out for carcinogenic products, you
would expect cancer rates to go down. Instead the epidemic has
skyrocketed among dogs, and so has the childhood leukemia rate in
Orange
County.
Smaller dogs tend to be more susceptible to the killer force than large
dogs. Usually smaller dogs have longer life spans and fewer
killer
ailments. However, smaller dogs are more susceptible to the
environment. The mysterious deaths of small dogs at a young age
is
much more indicative of environmental factors than the deaths of larger
dogs. These forces may take longer to kill larger dogs and
humans. The
childhood leukemia rates in Orange County are consistent with some
dangerous environmental factor attacking the smaller beings who are
more unacceptable to the environment.
In interviewing high school students around the county, it has been
learned that San Clemente is especially high in terms of the number of
mysterious pet deaths. Interestingly, San Clemente is the home of
the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. In California,
leukemia is also significantly higher in proportion to the proximity to
San Onofre. Though San Clemente is highly dangerous for keeping
pets alive, other cities in Orange County are high risk for pets
as well. On the San Diego side, Camp Pendleton separates most of
the population from the power plant. The majority of San Diegans
live more than 60 miles from the reactor. The reactor is set very close
to Orange County's populations. The elevated temperature of the
ocean around San Onofre indicates that toxins may be carried to other
parts of Orange County by more than soil and air. Most of
the child victims of Chernobyl lived in Kiev, more than 60 miles
away. All of Orange County is closer to San Onofre than Kiev was
from Chernobyl. Any incidents at San Onofre, whether disclosed or
not, could seriously affect the health of all small Orange County
residents. In terms of numbers, there have been thousands of
incidents at San Onofre, generally called minor. What if Orange
County residents haven't learned the whole truth?
Should children and small animals be evacuated from Orange
County? The question is becoming a more important one as San
Onofre continues to operate. See earlier articles for more
information on statistical links between cancer and nuclear power
plants in general.
A previously mentioned example is Obi-wan Kenobi, a six year old, seven
pound Eskie, who was obtained from Canada as a puppy. No dogs in
Obi-wan's line or associated lines have ever had cancer or died before
18 years of age. One advantage with an AKC or CKC dog is that
the history of the dog and the family are available. Obi-Wan
passed away yesterday morning, in her clean, warm bed, with her human
family and dog friends close by. Alex said that they had been
hoping for a miracle. Obi-wan seemed happy and full of love up
until the end. She had a very peaceful expression on her face and
this gave the family comfort.
The Orange County vets (most of whom were specialists), who had worked
on Obi-wan's case, charged the dog's human family thousands of dollars
for treatments that the doctors later admitted had no life-saving
value. The worst part was that, though the dog was always warm and
loving and though she was possibly the most beautiful representation
ever of the American Eskimo breed, the veterinarians didn't really seem
to care about saving her life. They just wanted to put her
through archaic high priced procedures while not doing anything that
actually slowed the mystery cancer or saved her life. The CYNT
has confirmed previous information that, in Canada, canine cancers are
treated and cured with a sense of optimism that seems to escape Orange
County oncologists.
Alex, the owner of the dog, and Alex's mother kept explaining that
they wanted the dog to live. The vets seemed to have
difficulty understanding that pet owners prefer live pets to dead
pets. After the family had paid thousands for recommended
procedures, the canine oncologist suggested killing the dog.
Adding
insanity to injury, the vet would have charged to kill the dog the
family wanted kept alive. Alex's mom reacted to the suggestion
with the words, 'We don't kill dogs in our
family." The vet seemed shocked that someone would
say NO to killing a beloved pet. The mom asked if the vet
would kill her daughter or sister if the daughter or sister had an
unspecified cancer and the vet said she would. Alex
later asked, "What part of 'save the dog' didn't the vet
understand?" Though the vet claimed the dog was in pain, Alex and
his mom noted that Obi-wan would wag her tail and appear to be happy at
all times. Alex's mom pointed out that, though they were unable
to
save the dog's life, every day the dog lived was a blessing to the
family. Alex has commented that the modern approach to Orange
County veterinary medicine is to charge lots of money for procedures
that make the dogs worse and then to try to convince families to pay
extra so the vets can kill dogs, who would be better off if they had
never seen a vet. Alex has suggested flying dogs to Canada for
serious problems. The CYNT believes that licenses should be
pulled from Orange County vets until they prove their ability to meet
Canadian standards of veterinarian medicine. The CYNT also
recommends that any OC vets who engage in dog-killing be prosecuted.
On Obi-wan's street, several human neighbors have cancer and one
neighbor recently died of lupus. Unusual diseases are rampant
there. Though it is not in San Clemente, it is in Orange County
and much closer to San Onofre than Kiev is to Chernobyl. Are
Orange County residents being poisoned with something that affects the
smallest animals first? Alex knew of another Orange County dog
that developed a first-ever kind of cancer for a Sheltie. That Sheltie
was cured, but then that Sheltie's vet retired. Alex wonders
if that vet was the last caring vet in Orange County.
Today, San Onofre is churning out more power than previously and
the epidemic rates of unspecified cancers in Orange County are
increasing among dogs. Orange County is even setting records in
human cancers. There have been thousands of "incidents," all
supposedly minor, at San Onofre. Would the government be telling
Orange County residents if any of these incidents were
major? The nuclear power companies do not believe they have to do
so. Look at Obama's Illinois legislation that would have allowed
nuclear companies to hide Chernobyls from the residents of
Illinois. The nuclear power corporation Excelon has been a major
contributor to Obama's various campaigns. Not surprisingly, his
environmal team is from the nuclear industry.
Why are childhood leukemia, breast cancer and dog cancers so prominent
in Orange County? Is there a cover-up? Should
children and dogs run for their lives?
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©2009 by the Creative Youth News Team. All rights reserved.
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