Comprehensive Stray Dog Population Control and Responsible Pet Ownership

Recent signers:
Sandhiya Vignesh and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The relentless stray dog crisis disproportionately terrorizes India, more specifically Tamil Nadu's most vulnerable citizens: the working poor, children walking to school, the elderly, and anyone who must use public spaces and transportation. These ordinary citizens, who cannot afford the safety of gated communities or private cars, face daily threats of attack, while affluent activists and those with vested commercial interests in perpetuating this problem remain insulated from the consequences of their advocacy. This is not merely an animal issue; it is a stark matter of social injustice where the preferences of the privileged impose life-threatening risks on the less fortunate.

At stake is nothing less than our fundamental right to public safety and a massive, escalating health emergency. India bears the horrific burden of being the global epicenter of human rabies deaths, with thousands dying agonizingly each year from preventable dog bites. This crisis is fueled by failed policies, alleged corruption in sterilization programs, and a perverse economic incentive where soaring anti-rabies vaccine sales profit from the misery of rising bite incidents. We are sacrificing human lives on the altar of a misguided and hypocritical activism that champions street dogs' "right" to roam free while simultaneously favoring the purchase of foreign breeds over adopting these very same Indian dogs.

The time for action is now, as the situation has reached a breaking point. The Supreme Court has already paved the way for a balanced solution, directing the removal of dangerous strays from streets, and international models like Bhutan's prove that 100% sterilization is an achievable goal. We must seize this moment to reject extremist positions and implement immediate, large-scale sterilization, effective waste management, and responsible adoption programs. Every day of delay means more children mauled, more families plunged into poverty by medical costs, and more preventable deaths—a moral failure we can no longer afford.

avatar of the starter
Vignesh SPetition Starter

31

Recent signers:
Sandhiya Vignesh and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The relentless stray dog crisis disproportionately terrorizes India, more specifically Tamil Nadu's most vulnerable citizens: the working poor, children walking to school, the elderly, and anyone who must use public spaces and transportation. These ordinary citizens, who cannot afford the safety of gated communities or private cars, face daily threats of attack, while affluent activists and those with vested commercial interests in perpetuating this problem remain insulated from the consequences of their advocacy. This is not merely an animal issue; it is a stark matter of social injustice where the preferences of the privileged impose life-threatening risks on the less fortunate.

At stake is nothing less than our fundamental right to public safety and a massive, escalating health emergency. India bears the horrific burden of being the global epicenter of human rabies deaths, with thousands dying agonizingly each year from preventable dog bites. This crisis is fueled by failed policies, alleged corruption in sterilization programs, and a perverse economic incentive where soaring anti-rabies vaccine sales profit from the misery of rising bite incidents. We are sacrificing human lives on the altar of a misguided and hypocritical activism that champions street dogs' "right" to roam free while simultaneously favoring the purchase of foreign breeds over adopting these very same Indian dogs.

The time for action is now, as the situation has reached a breaking point. The Supreme Court has already paved the way for a balanced solution, directing the removal of dangerous strays from streets, and international models like Bhutan's prove that 100% sterilization is an achievable goal. We must seize this moment to reject extremist positions and implement immediate, large-scale sterilization, effective waste management, and responsible adoption programs. Every day of delay means more children mauled, more families plunged into poverty by medical costs, and more preventable deaths—a moral failure we can no longer afford.

avatar of the starter
Vignesh SPetition Starter

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