09/08/2025
Yesterday, a little starving dog was found in Loganville. Skin and bones. Neglected. Left behind.
I cant stop thinking about her and all the others. We’ve seen this too many times—working with shelters, helping rescues scrape to save one life at a time, and standing shoulder to shoulder at the Capitol with legislators fighting for laws that can actually be enforced.
WE HAVE A CRISIS IN GEORGIA
And here’s the truth: the crisis isn’t just “too many dogs.” The crisis is PEOPLE.
• People who think it’s “cute” to let their dog have puppies.
• People who spend $1,000 on a dog but “can’t afford” to spay or neuter.
• People “shocked” when their female is pregnant—with an unaltered male in the house.
• People who walk into shelters asking for a breeder contact.
• People breeding dogs in backyards, keeping parents in cruel, soul-crushing conditions.
• People who buy from those people because the staged puppy pictures look wholesome.
This. Has. To. Stop.
Every time someone buys from a backyard breeder…
Every time someone says, “just one litter won’t hurt”…
Every time someone stays silent when they see neglect—another dog suffers.
💡 The dogs cannot fix this. But we can.
Here’s how:
✅ Spay and neuter your pets.
✅ Stop buying from backyard breeders.
✅ Adopt from shelters and rescues.
✅ Report neglect and abuse.
✅ Support laws that protect animals—and raise awareness with your lawmakers.
✅ Speak up when you see injustice.
We all have a part in this. And if we choose to look away, we’re choosing to let the suffering continue.
Let’s be the state that doesn’t just care about companion animals when it’s convenient. Let’s be the county and the state that changes the story.
📢 Read this. Share this. Be the change.