Why we should spread the word

04/26/2019

We should spread the word about animal abuse because we might know people who see it every day, know what it is, or is also fighting against it to. So that's why we should spread the word.

       Article on Animal Abuse


Research Shows the Link Between Cruelty to Animals and Toward Humans

     Ample research backs up the finding that there is a direct link between acts of cruelty to animals and violence toward humans. This includes child abuse, domestic violence, elder abuse and other violent behavior.

Here are just a handful of examples of the research supporting that conclusion:

     A landmark 1997 study by the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and Northeastern University found that animal abusers are in fact five times as likely to also harm other humans.

     Another study, published in 2013, found that 43% of those who commit school massacres also committed acts of cruelty to animals - generally against cats and dogs.

    Phil Arkow, coordinator of the National Link Coalition - a group focusing on the intersection between violence toward animals and humans - has written often about animal abuse being an indication of domestic violence, or what's called a "predictor crime."

    Indeed, a 1983 study notes that animal abuse was found in 88% of homes in which physical child abuse was being investigated.

    If a child is cruel to animals, research shows it may be a sign that serious abuse or neglect has been inflicted on the child. Children who witness animal abuse are at greater risk of becoming abusers themselves.

     A 2017 study showed that 89% of women who had companion animals during an abusive relationship reported that their animals were threatened, harmed, or killed by their abusive partner.

     This finding is in line with other research showing that domestic violence toward pets both correlates with domestic violence toward humans, and is also a tool of domestic abuse - violent members of the household will threaten to hurt or actually hurt a companion animal as a method of control and a form of emotional violence. Indeed, more than half of women in domestic violence shelters report that they delayed their escape out of fear for their animals.


    

drugged Animal
drugged Animal
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