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    1. India is also the rabies capital of the earth….

      There are so many dog bites happening and even kids are mauled but the moment someone tries to do aything, these so called „animal welfare“ groups with deep lobbying would immediately move court and since our judges are completely above even our legislature oversight, they give favorable judgements

      I used to be a dog lover and adopted two indies when i was a kid. Now i just try my best to stay away from dogs because of rabies scare…

    2. Own_Alternative_5000 on

      The stray dog population here in India has seriously exploded over the last few years or so, for me it feels like it sharply rose after Covid, basically in cities every street corner has like 4-5 dogs nowadays and thousands die every year from Rabies

    3. TenPointsforListenin on

      Taiwan does have a lot of stray dogs. I was wondering why.

      I think even without euthanasia though, if they’re constantly bringing in stray dogs to be fixed, the problem won’t ever get too severe

    4. _poptart_wizard_ on

      Why tho? At first I thought it was because of the high number of vegetarians in India but also Bangladesh doesn’t allow it?

      I love dogs but feral dog colonies are obviously a safety and public health hazard.

    5. Inevitable_Motor_685 on

      India doesnt allow it, when it should be like the first country to allow it in Asia

    6. On the bright side, stray dogs have become the main diet of some of India’s preserved wildlife like leopards!

    7. xXLucifer-KingXx on

      TNR is the best long-term solution if implemented properly. The issue is most places half-implement it no coverage, no follow-up, no tracking so it doesn’t reduce populations fast enough. Meanwhile, rabies doesn’t wait.

    8. Comfortable_End2921 on

      if you look at stray dogs per population from states in india manipur has 0 it is just that we dont have stray dog culture people even steal small dogs so that they can have them but alas for the mainland indians we are the dog eaters the chinese of indians

    9. West-Main-4163 on

      The damn animal lovers always oppose any moves to bring this back. Most of them are privileged ass holes who travel in cars and never have to walk a mile. They don’t know how it is to live in an area with a stray dog problem.

      If anyone says they have been living here for x years without any dog issues, the whole country isn’t like that. My college hostel was in an area where dogs bit random people and no one could travel to eat without a bike at night. Walking was out of the question.

    10. Hot_Tap6805 on

      If we started culling or so do any other activity the animal activists will come and yap a 1000 pages.

      If India’s vulture population increases, the stray (or feral) dog population would likely decrease over time. Vultures and stray dogs compete for the same food source: animal carcasses.

      Vulture Conservation Foundation:
      Why Vultures and Dogs are Connected
      Direct Competition: Vultures are hyper-efficient, obligate scavengers that can consume a carcass in a matter of minutes. When vultures were abundant, they would strip carrion completely, leaving very little food for stray dogs.
      The Population Boom: When vulture numbers plummeted by over 95% in the early 2000s due to the veterinary drug diclofenac, massive amounts of abandoned carrion were left to rot. This steady, abundant food supply allowed the stray dog population in India to surge significantly, increasing by at least 5 million.

      The Public Health Impact:
      Rabies Risk: With the explosion in stray dog numbers, the transmission of rabies and other diseases to humans spiked dramatically. Economic and ecological studies indicate that the loss of vultures led to tens of thousands of additional rabies-related deaths in India.

      The Path Forward
      To help reduce the stray dog population, conservationists and ecologists emphasize the importance of recovering India’s critically endangered vulture populations. By restoring these apex scavengers to their natural ecological roles, the unlimited food supply supporting massive, aggressive stray dog packs can be naturally limited.

    11. Subject_Offer_9621 on

      It’s sad but stray dogs are dangerous, unlike stray cats they’re more unstable in so many ways in the wild

      I’m kinda glad I don’t see stray dogs in my neighborhood often, kids play outside a lot here

    12. Evening_Ether2470 on

      Why people happy with slaughtering animals? I am sure these people would soon vouch for slaughtering poor people one day too

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