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Working dog diets
Thanks for posting background on this person. Helps if you know what you are really dealing with. Delusional_Dimensions_Recovery_DDR wrote: HOWEDY sharon aka sharon too veterinary malpractice office manager, mrs. veterinary malpracticioner, liar, dog abusing punk thug coward and active acute chronic long term incurable mental case and professional veterinary client obsfucationist, "Sharon Too" wrote in message . .. "chardonnay9" wrote: And why would I trust a post from an animal abuser? People like you are dangerous as you spout your version as God's divine truth because you say so and anybody who disagrees is an 'animal abuser'. Oh, you mean, LIKE THIS?: "Sharon Too" wrote in message ... Several years ago my now 9 year old cocker spaniel was prescribed Metacam for minor arthritis . Metacam is apparently the drug of choice by vets for this condition. Be careful about speaking for the whole profession. INDEEDY. NOT ALL veterinarians are lyin animal murderin frauds an scumbags like yourself, sharon. It's kindly of you to defend them~! Metacam is NOT the drug of choice for all vets. RIGHT. Of curse not. You make more money and other perks off of Rimadyl: From: Pluffmud97 - Date: Sat, Apr 4 1998 12:00 am Email: (Pluffmud97) I sincerely hope your dog will survive. This drug has been on the market for over a year now - the Pfizer Co. that makes this drug has been allowing the deaths of hundreds of dogs to occur because they will not make public the many serious and deadly side effects. The drug was never tested properly - it was not tested long enough - the dosage prescribed in the U.S. is higher than that prescribed in England where Rimadyl has been used for a much longer time. There are many people who have owned older dogs and put them on Rimadyl as a last resort to help ease the pain of arthritis. When the poor dog dies, does the owner question the use of Rimadyl? Probably not. They just think their dog died of old age. Pfizer does not care - they care about the money they make from the drug! Vets don't care - they care about keeping the drug manufacturers happy and looking out for each other. The drug reps don't care - they tell the vets what the vets want to hear so the vets will buy the drugs that they sell at an incredible markup Only the dogs suffer - if your dog is on Rimadyl you had better make your vet do blood workups, etc. - or your dog may join the other poor animals who have suffered liver problems, severe hemorrhaging, perforate ulcers and god knows what other effects from this drug. ======== Bigger profit margin than on aspirin!!!. I'm sorry about your situation, but please don't jump into the "vets-are-in-it-for-the-money" bandwagon. RIGHT~! Subject: torn ACL HOWEDY sharon aka sharon too veterinary malpractice office manager, mrs. veterinary malpracticioner, liar, dog abusing punk thug coward and active acute chronic long term incurable mental case and professional veterinary client obsfucationist, Sharon wrote: AH! My 2 year old pit tore his ACL yesterday. my vet said i should visit an orthopedic specialist for surgery, Yeah. They're as thick as thieves, eh sharon aka sharon too, veterinary malpractice office manager and mrs. veterinary malpracticioner and veterinary malpractice apologist / obsfucationist {) ; ~ ) and i have been researching, and there are some other options. the vet also gave me Rimadyl for anitinflamatory and pain.. but have been reading about the bad side effects of this drug and am considering taking him off of it. any help or advice?? BWEEEAHAHAHAHHAHHAAAA!!! has anyone else experienced a dog with a torn ACL before? Yeah. Many of the dog lovers here abHOWETS got the same problem. please let me know, thank you, Kelly.. and Jake. Torn ACLs are CAUSED BY STRESS from MISHANDLING and GARBAGE commercial dog food {}: ~ ( Torn ACLs don't heal on their own Sez YOU. Below you'll find FIVE CASE HISTORIES stating EXXXACTLY PRECISELY OPPOSITE of what you sez. You're in the BUSINESS of misleadin veterinary clients to increase profits through unnecessary inapupriate dangerHOWES surgical mutilations and pharmacutical company scam drugs which comprise 50% of your unethickal profits. You sound sincere and caring but you AIN'T NUTHIN but a goddamened liar, fraud, thief, animal abuser and murderer and professional apologist. THAT'S HOWE COME you manage your veterinry malpracticioner husband's veterinary malpractice. and the longer you wait, the more the dog will start over relying on the other leg and put it at risk for joint disease That's sheer idiocy. HOWE COME we don't see the same "phenomenon" in three legged dogs, sharon aka sharon too, veterinary malpractice apologist / obsfucationinst? YOU'RE A LIAR. ACL DIS-EASE is the #1 surgical mutilation in the USA after unnecessary inapupriate surgical sexual mutilations. The ACL tear / rupture is an EMOTIONAL STRESS INDUCED AUTO- IMMUNE DIS-EASE CAUSED BY your veterinary malpractice and "traditional" training and handling as recommended by your veterinary malpractice. and possibly another torn ACL. IN MOST CASES the other leg FAILS for the SAME REASON the first leg failed. Dogs are NATURAL ATHLETES sharon too, veterinary malpractice office manager and veterinary malpractice apologist and mrs. veterinary malpracticioner. THERE AIN'T NO REASON HOWE COME a dog engaging in normal activities should become CRIPPLED OTHER THAN IATROGENIC ASSAULT including garbage commercial diets recommended by the client's veterinary malpracticioner. As for the Rimadyl, "Also, these Vets receive perks from the drug manufacturer Pfizer when they buy Rimadyl to sell to animal owners. Vets could get points from Pfizer for each Rimadyl purchase they made; points were redeemable for PalmPilots, Zip Drives, and other equiptment!" Date: Mar 14 2000 Since Rimadyl's 1997 launch, the FDA has received reports of about 1,000 dogs that died or were put to sleep and 7,000 more that had bad reactions after taking the drug, records and official estimates indicate. The FDA says such events are significantly underreported. ----------- From: The Annals Of Animal Behavior Forensic Sciences Research Subject: Rimadyl poisoning--again From: Jaimie Date: Wed, Apr 1 1998 12:00 am Email: (Jaimie) My 9 year old female Samoyed was put on the poison Rimadyl for about 2 weeks for arthritic knee. I read posts to this group discussing the horrors of the drug. She was in such pain, I decided to give her a few more dosages. I should have listened to you wise posters. For three days my dog had weird yellow urine and yesterday and today wouldn't eat. I took her to the vet and found out she now has liver damage and will be in the hospital for as long as it takes to reverse the damage--IF they are able to. Cady, our Sammy, was a pretty healthy dog until the Rimadyl. Now she's on the critical list. The makers of Rimadyl should be put out of business. They are marketing poison and should be forced to take it themselves. Jaimie -------------- From: LuSwinton Date: Wed, Apr 1 1998 12:00 am Email: (LuSwinton) Jamie: I know what you are going through - I have been there! His name was George - he was on Rimadyl less than 30 days before his collapse and subsequent death. Make up your own minds about this drug. I would never use it for any of my animals again, ever! Please let me know how you dog is doing ! I pray he does not die like my dog (a chocolate lab, named George) did. I am praying for the safe recovery of your dog. Most Sincerely, Jean Townsend Johns Island, SC ------------ From: coloredhead Date: Sun, Apr 5 1998 There are too many people who have lost pets to Rimadyl, myself included, for you to defend in ANY way the drug company who produces it! I challenge you to have the same feelings about Rimadyl once you have suffered a loss because of it. Our dog died an agonizing death, and I wouldn't wish it on _any_ other dog. One more condescending reply to this newsgroup from you and I will puke all over my keyboard!!!!! ---------- From: Bados Date: Wed, Apr 8 1998 I wasn't able to save my labrador, Bados, who died BEFORE Pfizer publicly acknowledged the serious side effects. Perhaps I can save someone elses. Nancy Carr New Jersey ------------- From: Mishelle Fresener Date: Tues, Apr 7 1998 12:00 am Email: Mishelle Fresener My dog died due to Rimadyl (at least I believe she did) ----------- As Buglady said, BugF'nNUTS is a lyin animal murderin coward like yourself who works for a veterinary malpracticioner like your husband who's office you run. baseline chem panels are standard protocol with NSAIDs as well as follow-ups. Are those given complimentary, courteHOWESY of the veterinary malpracticioner PROFITTING from the drugs they sell? That's what people whould be warned about. INDEED? Hey sharon? Don't you think that by the time the tests reveal the dog is goin into kidney / liver failure, that the DAMAGE is already DONE, kinda like HOWE it might happen if WON was to accidentally take a baby critter HOWETA their kitty kat's MHOWETH an find that it's a orphaned opossum? LIKE THIS: Hey sharon? You remember Fred writin in askin for ADVICE for that possum baby his kitty kat brang in? You told him to put it HOWET in the woods where his mommy could find IT. LikeWIZE you told his his mommy might not accept IT back on accOHOWENTof he got human scent on IT. Then you told him to 'F-OFF' when he told you your ADVICE was a DEADLY MYTH and DEAD WRONG. LIKE THIS: From: Jack Crenshaw Date: Thurs, Jun 1 2006 Jack Crenshaw Groups: alt.med.veterinary, rec.animals.wildlife, rec.pets Sharon wrote: What you just said is such a fountain of misinformation I hardly know where to begin. First, the scent thing: It's an old wives' tale, and totally false. Second, releasing a juvenile back to the wild is as good as a death sentence. The animal will not, repeat _WILL_ _NOT_ survive. If you just want to kill the juvie, it would be more humane to flush it down the toilet. We'll have to disagree on most levels. As for surviving alone in the wild, it's no more likely to sirvive *in most cases* domestically. Most people don't know the first thing about raising wildlife, thus my recommendation to contact a wildlife rehabilitator. Your advice to contact a wildlife rehabber was a good one. Your advice to release a juvenile back to the wild sucked rocks. Your assertion that the mother would smell the human scent on the baby and reject it was ridiculously wrong. Finally, the bit about parasites and organisms. While it's true that wild animals carry both, so do you. Unless one plans to eat the dropping or some such, it is not an issue. Most likely, the worst parasite problem you're likely to get is a flea bite. There are plenty of parasites that are zoonotic diseases that cross species into humans. Hookworms and whipworms which are hard to get rid of to name two. Leptospirosis is on the rise and since it is contracted through contact with urine, more and more cases are seen in facilities that care for stray animals. Not at any time did I demean the OP by assuming that they would be eating feces. But we have to remember that some homes have children and toddlers in them. There was a case of a child dying from parasites licked from firewood brought in by the parents. And one does not have to ingest all parasites to be affected. How do we know that the OP's home does not have an ill person in it - one whose immune system is not compromised thus being more prone to some parasites? Advising someone who is NOT trained in wildlife rehabilitation to take a wild creature into their homes (taking care of them might as well be permission to take them into the home - because it is inevitable that they will) could be detrimental. Oh, please. How far do you intend to reach to make a case for catching hookworms from an opossum? It's true, it _COULD_ happen, esp. if there's a child in the home who likes to lick things, and whose immune system is compromised by radiation therapy. There's also a finite probability that there's an inbound asteroid that has the opossum's name on it. Or a Bigfoot who got bitten by the opossum's mom, and is out to get even. Stick with the higher probabilities. It does no good to give advice based on 1000-year possibilities. Even the National Spossum Society recommends leacing the critters alone: "What to do if you encounter an opossum.... NOTHING. http://www.opossum.org/#Membership Let's be clear: In my post, you will not find _ANY_ suggestion that the OP take the opossum into his home and keep it as a pet. And, indeed, the best thing one can do for an opossum is to leave it alone, just as the NOS says. _HOWEVER_ -- you seem to have missed the part where something has already been done. The baby is _ALREADY_ in his house. His cat brought it there. The issue, now, is how to keep it alive until help arrives. Seems to me the OP only has two choices: Either keep it warm and feed it decent food, until he can get it to a rehabber, or take your advice and relegate it to certain death. Jack From: Sharon Date: Thurs, Jun 1 2006 10:36 am Email: "Sharon" Groups: alt.med.veterinary, rec.animals.wildlife, rec.pets Your reading comprehension was compromised somewhere along the way. I'm not pulling this info out of my butt. FYI - a child's immune system doesn't have to be suppressed by radiation to act as a host for a parasite. It is immature and developing. Continue giving dangerous advice. I prefer to dump your a**. -- *There are no accidents in life* ------------- BWEEEAAAHAAAHAAA~!~!~! HOWEDY sharon aka sharon too, veterinary malpractice office manager, mrs. veterinary malpracticioner, liar, animal muderin FRAUD, COWARD and ACTIVE ACUTE CHRONIC LIFE LONG INCURABLE MENTAL CASE, "Sharon Too" wrote in message ... I have heard that giving garlic to dogs can help with flea control Old wives tale. Yeah? Like the WON abHOWET wild mamma critters abandoning their babies if they should get a human scent on them? Hey sharon? You remember Fred writin in askin for ADVICE for that possum baby his kitty kat brang in? You told him to put it HOWET in the woods where his mommy could find IT. LikeWIZE you told his his mommy might not accept IT back on accOHOWENTof he got human scent on IT. Then you told him to 'F-OFF' when he told you your ADVICE was a DEADLY MYTH and DEAD WRONG. LIKE THIS: From: Jack Crenshaw Date: Thurs, Jun 1 2006 Jack Crenshaw Groups: alt.med.veterinary, rec.animals.wildlife, rec.pets Sharon wrote: What you just said is such a fountain of misinformation I hardly know where to begin. First, the scent thing: It's an old wives' tale, and totally false. Second, releasing a juvenile back to the wild is as good as a death sentence. The animal will not, repeat _WILL_ _NOT_ survive. If you just want to kill the juvie, it would be more humane to flush it down the toilet. We'll have to disagree on most levels. As for surviving alone in the wild, it's no more likely to sirvive *in most cases* domestically. Most people don't know the first thing about raising wildlife, thus my recommendation to contact a wildlife rehabilitator. Your advice to contact a wildlife rehabber was a good one. Your advice to release a juvenile back to the wild sucked rocks. Your assertion that the mother would smell the human scent on the baby and reject it was ridiculously wrong. Finally, the bit about parasites and organisms. While it's true that wild animals carry both, so do you. Unless one plans to eat the dropping or some such, it is not an issue. Most likely, the worst parasite problem you're likely to get is a flea bite. There are plenty of parasites that are zoonotic diseases that cross species into humans. Hookworms and whipworms which are hard to get rid of to name two. Leptospirosis is on the rise and since it is contracted through contact with urine, more and more cases are seen in facilities that care for stray animals. Not at any time did I demean the OP by assuming that they would be eating feces. But we have to remember that some homes have children and toddlers in them. There was a case of a child dying from parasites licked from firewood brought in by the parents. And one does not have to ingest all parasites to be affected. How do we know that the OP's home does not have an ill person in it - one whose immune system is not compromised thus being more prone to some parasites? Advising someone who is NOT trained in wildlife rehabilitation to take a wild creature into their homes (taking care of them might as well be permission to take them into the home - because it is inevitable that they will) could be detrimental. Oh, please. How far do you intend to reach to make a case for catching hookworms from an opossum? It's true, it _COULD_ happen, esp. if there's a child in the home who likes to lick things, and whose immune system is compromised by radiation therapy. There's also a finite probability that there's an inbound asteroid that has the opossum's name on it. Or a Bigfoot who got bitten by the opossum's mom, and is out to get even. Stick with the higher probabilities. It does no good to give advice based on 1000-year possibilities. Even the National Spossum Society recommends leacing the critters alone: "What to do if you encounter an opossum.... NOTHING. http://www.opossum.org/#Membership Let's be clear: In my post, you will not find _ANY_ suggestion that the OP take the opossum into his home and keep it as a pet. And, indeed, the best thing one can do for an opossum is to leave it alone, just as the NOS says. _HOWEVER_ -- you seem to have missed the part where something has already been done. The baby is _ALREADY_ in his house. His cat brought it there. The issue, now, is how to keep it alive until help arrives. Seems to me the OP only has two choices: Either keep it warm and feed it decent food, until he can get it to a rehabber, or take your advice and relegate it to certain death. Jack From: Sharon Date: Thurs, Jun 1 2006 10:36 am Email: "Sharon" Groups: alt.med.veterinary, rec.animals.wildlife, rec.pets Your reading comprehension was compromised somewhere along the way. I'm not pulling this info out of my butt. FYI - a child's immune system doesn't have to be suppressed by radiation to act as a host for a parasite. It is immature and developing. Continue giving dangerous advice. I prefer to dump your a**. -- *There are no accidents in life* ------------- BWEEEAAAHAAAHAAA~!~!~! It certainly doesn't kill all of the life cycle of the flea. That's curiHOWES. It AIN'T suppHOWESED to KILL them, sharon. It's a REPELLENT. You put it ON the dog's FUR. Of curse, there IS a strong probability that occasionally giving garlic internally MAY kill a variety of parasites, includin and PARTICULARLY, HW. HOWEver, the veterinary malpractice and pharmacutical industries DON'T WANT to test the efficacy of NATURAL CURES for DIS- EASES as it would PUT YOU HOWETA BUSINESS. IN FACT, 90% of your practice goes RIGHT DHOWEN the crapper as soon as folks wize up and follow the MONEY trail to your practice and see the EFFECTIVE CURES you and your industry repress in favor of SELLIN TOXIC treatments which CAUSE DIS-EASE, just like your surgical sexual mutilations. From: showdogbark Date: Sun, Apr 30 2006 6:09 pm Email: "showdogbark" I have used half Engevita Yeast and half Flake yeast with Garlic Powder, not tablets along with Dulce or Kelp powder for fleas for years on my dogs and cats in their diet daily, and along with absolutelty no fleas, they love the taste. Often if a dog comes to visit and they are not hungry due to being left without their owner and are avoiding their food, just putting the mix on their food makes them very interested in eating. My friends have used this mixture for years and also no fleas. I certainly agree with Jerry that chemical so called solutions to fleas are only of help to the chemical companies and the pockets of vets to be fattened. Also Dr. Pitcairn is a fabulous source of info. But when it comes to fleas it is the above mixture I mentioned that for 20 years has been my solution and my friends solutions also. Remember it must be powder and organic garlic not just any powder on a shelf with additives. Stay away from drugs for yourselves and for dogs and cats. Be Well, and love your animals by being nonviolent with them and that means using methods of training like Jerry's and the First Nations along with no chemical garbage as so called nutrition or help with medical problems like fleas. Do Good, Be Good, Be One. --------------------- And it can also be toxic. That so? Oh, you mean like your PROFESSIONAL advice, sharon?: From: Sharon Date: Sun, Apr 30 2006 11:03 pm Email: "Sharon" I think it's best to think of garlic as it relates to fleas like sprinkling sage around the edges of a kitchen to keep ants out. The ants are still there - alive - procreating, just like the fleas will be. Further, fleas can cause issues with the humans in the house. It's better to ask your vet about a product that will kill all stages of the fleas' life cycle. -Sharon ---------------------- INDEED? THAT'S WHAT KILLED Sage... LIKE THIS: Subject: Warning Revolution Heartworm Med From: LUVAPOOCH Date: Sat, Apr 8 2000 3:00 am Email: (LUVAPOOCH) Kelly Cruzan On 3/15/00 wrote: I asked my Vet for a Heartworm preventive for my 2 year old Australian Shepherd, Sage. They recommended Revolution. It was applied on 3/15/00. On 3/20/00 Sage developed a cough, but she was otherwise fine. She had had a bath at the Vet on 3/15/00 also, so I decided to watch her for further symptoms. On 3/23/00 she was fine until late afternoon when she became quiet and didn't want to play. By 7pm that night, she had trouble opening her left eye and whimpered when she jumped down from the couch or bed. In the past, Sage always had a tendency to bruise easily. She had sensitive skin and worry an area until it bruised. She had no trouble with her blood clotting and had been previously spayed. She now had bruising on her body. When I took her to the Vet, he asked if she had been in rat poison. I informed him that she was an inside dog and only went out to play with the kids and to use the bathroom. My neighbors have pets and do not put out poisons. They also asked if she had had a blow to the head because there was blood in the whites of her eyes that was not there yesterday. I stated that she was not hit in the head. I asked if it could be the Revolution and was informed that it could not be. I told my vet that was the only thing that Sage had been exposed to. He did a CBC and her platelets were 87 and WBC count was 27,000. her Hct was 37. He treated her for infection and rat poisoning and sent us home. Within 3 hours she was falling over. I rushed her back to the Vet and he kept her until 5pm that afternoon. I brought her home after they said she was doing better. At 6pm she was again falling over and I called my Vet back and was informed to bring her back the next day. By 11pm, she was bleeding from her nose and had vomited with streaks of bright red blood. My husband and I drove her to an ER clinic in Savannah, GA and was told that it was either a tick born disease or rat poisoning or a blow to the head. I again asked if could be the Revolution and was informed no. They kept her and treated her as my vet. When I called at 6am, I was informed that she was having seizures but she was otherwise stable. I was worried about a subdural hematoma and talked with my Vet. He suggested I take Sage to Charleston, SC to see a Specialist. She arrived there at 4:30pm. When I gave her history, I again asked if it could be the Revolution and was informed no. Later that night Sage continued to have seizures and she bled into the orbits of her eyes, but they said their was still hope. At 6:45am they called and said Sage had arrested and was on a ventilator. We asked that they let her go. This has been devastating to my family. We loved that dog. She was a family member. At 10am, the clinic called and asked for an autopsy. They informed me that another dog had died last month there, with symptoms the same as Sage. The dog was an inside dog and the only thing different was that the owner had started Revolution. The dog died of low platelets and intracrannial hemorrhage just like Sage. The vet in Charleston called the Revolution people and they are paying for Sages autopsy. They also paid for the other dogs autopsy. That autopsy showed low platelets and intracrannial hemorrhage from a toxin. (? Revolution was the only toxin the owners had given). I will not know the results of the autopsy for a month, but I believe it was the Revolution. If 2 dogs have died in the Savannah-Charleston area in the last month, how many nation wide. Please spread the word for owners to be careful about using this drug on their dogs. No dog should suffer like my Sage suffered. Thanks for Listening, Terri Eddy Rincon, GA HOWEDY jst, jst wrote: Sharon wrote: What are you doing for flea prevention? Allergies are a result of compromised auto-immune system. Auto-immune systems are COMPROMISED by STRESS, insufficient diet, and TOXINS. ALL commercial dog food is GARBAGE. sharon is a veterinary malpractice office manager and mrs. veterinary malpracticioner and proven lyin dog abusing punk thug coward active acute chronic long term incurable mental case. She SELLS toxins and prescription garbage diets for her livin when she ain't SELLIN MUTILATIONS and MURDERIN dogs and comfortin their owners while acceptin their payments. Shell fleece you as fast as her own veterinary malpractice customers.. Frontline, HOWEDY Nell71, Nell71 wrote: Subject: Broken Heart Needs Answers/Help My dog has died From: Nell71 Date: Sat, Mar 4 2006 10:03 pm Email: Nell71 My dog has died and I was hoping if I give you the details that you could shed some light on what could have happened to her. The vet didn't know and we couldn't face an autopsy. We have talk to a few professionals who deny Frontline could have been the prbolem. At 5pm on Monday night, Frontline Plus was applied as per instructions. By about 6.30-7pm she was showing signs of disorientation, looking vague (I would call her and she stared blankly at me), fatigue, panting heavily, a little drool, excessive thirst. No vomiting but a 'hack' a couple of times. No diarrheoa. No bleeding that we could see. We phoned 24 hour local vet who said it couldn't be the Frontline so she would be ok. We watched her over night, but by morning still very thirsty, fatigued, vague. Called our vet who said if she was still the same later that day to bring her in. My partner was finally able to get off work to check on her at 4pm that day on the Tuesday. Temperatures outside were 38c and he found her sitting by the pool gate (we always left the doors open so she could have stayed inside in the cool), panting heavily, glassy eyed, drooling, a little foamy in corners of mouth, tongue blueish under and white on top, gums whiteish. He got her into the car, by the time he reached the vet 5 minutes away she was limp. The vet gave her 2 adrenalin shots and got her heart going again but she died. If it is any help with diagnosing, she has always been a little 'simple'. We lovingly said she was our down syndrome dog as she hung her head to the left from birth with her tongue hanging out the left side of her mouth. She was always a little left sided when walking etc. She would run and get the ball and drop it straight away then run to you with nothing. She would growl when you hugged her and we have never hurt her for her to be aggressive. We have been told maybe she had a neurological disorder, does it sound like it to you? We have Rhubarb in our pool area but don't think she ate any although this is toxic. We get poisoned dead rats in the pool area (from other people, we don't use snail pellets or rat poison ourselves) and found one there the day after but it wasn't undisturbed, could a 'lick' have killed her?) Frankly we blame ourselves as it seems too coincidental for it to be anything but the Frontline Plus. What do you think the symptoms show? Any past experiences, thoughts are appreciated, Thanks in advance |
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Working dog diets
On Nov 30, 10:07*pm, chardonnay9 wrote:
Thanks for posting background on this person. Helps if you know what you are really dealing with. I think you've had enough Chardonnay for the day. |
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Working dog diets [JH] [ninnyboy] [eggplant]
Snip AssHowe's stupid crosspostings again, because I'm "embarrassed"
On Dec 1, 10:48*am, "Human_And_Animal_Behaviour_Forensic_Sciences_Rese arch_Laboratory" Human_And_Animal_Behaviour_Forensic_Sciences_Rese wrote: HOWEDY Chardonna9, "chardonnay9" wrote in message m... Thanks for posting background on this person. Oh, you ain't seen the half of it yet, Chardonnay9 {}: ~ ( Helps if you know what you are really dealing with. What we're dealin with are MENTAL CASES who'll DO an SAY ANY THING to defend their alleged RIGHT to jerk choke shock bribe crate surgically sexually and digitally mutilate and EXXXCESSIVELY vaccinate innocent defenseless dumb critters for PROFIT {}: ~ ( Oh come on. The only mental case is you. You ALWAYS DO an SAY anything to support your mental illness...besides, of course, meeting me. You won't do that. And then we come to PROFIT. How about selling a useless device called a DDR? For some odd reason it didn't take the world by storm and got horrible reviews. Why is that? Shouldn't it be world famous for curing all behavior problems? Either it didn't work or you suck at marketing and are basically equal on intelligence as a ringworm. Which is it? |
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