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[Closed] Have we done RSPCA being twunts yet?

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[#6614393]

[url= http://www.itv.com/news/2014-11-06/rspca-apologises-to-owners-after-putting-down-cat-and-bringing-charges-richard-and-samantha-byrnes-claude/ ]I'm sure there'll be plenty of cat haterz, but if they can do it to a cat, the twunts can do it to one of those dog things, too.[/url]

Bastards.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 7:29 pm
 irc
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There is no reason the RSPCA should be both a campaigning charity and a prosecutor.

http://www.countryside-alliance.org/ca/campaigns-hunting/our-submission-to-the-rspca-prosecutions-review


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 7:39 pm
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RSPCA put down suffering mangy cat?

"told the Daily Mail"

My sympathy waned.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 7:40 pm
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The RSPCA are really really bad in my opinion )on reflection I have deleted a huge chunk of my professional experience of them)
Their was also the recent concern one of their experts was seizing healthy horses and the horses were then being passed on to RSPCA donors .
Not a charity I would ever donate to.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 7:51 pm
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We were executers to a neighbours will (single old lady, no family), and the RSPCA were one of the charities she left money to. They were the rudest, least patient and most money grabbing group of people we've ever had to deal with. There was no element of sympathy in their dealings they just wanted their share fast and to the last penny.

Even the solicitor dealing with the will couldn't believe how many questions they raised to get their percentage, questioning every penny spent on funeral and clearing out costs.

I'd never give them anything ever again.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 8:04 pm
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They've been twunts for years I'm afraid. We once went to rehome a border collie to give our existing border a bit of company. They told us flat out there was no point applying as they didn't rehome pets to our area on the cheap side of town. Fortunately I persuaded them otherwise when they saw our obedience and agility prize winning dog waiting in the car to have a run together with the RSPCA dog.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 8:05 pm
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They are utter shits - as a family we have seen them fail to be interested in animal welfare and try to take someone's home from them.

I wouldn't piss in their collection tin.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:09 pm
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no love for them here. Theyve gone from a much needed welfare organisation many years ago to a politically screwball "animal rights" organisation and really lost the plot.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:17 pm
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I am immensely glad to see that others are coming round to this way of thinking. Bunch of Grade A shits.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:19 pm
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Plus one for stoner and flashheart and I'm also glad people are beginning to wake up to this

Unfortunately it seems the RSPB and even amazingly (and I can't believe I'm typing this) the RNLI are going the same way too


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:25 pm
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money and power gone to their heads by the sound of it.

they do sound like a huge bunch of arses tbh.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:25 pm
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I agree with Cranberry, reported cruelty to dog - never heard a thing from them


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:27 pm
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I honestly thought that they were a respectable charity. I have never had to deal with them, and given the comments above I'd think twice. Why the polarised views?


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:28 pm
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Hmmmmm!! The RSPCA performed very badly here. I have no experience of them in action so I can't comment from personal experience. However, this does raise the ethical question of keeping pets alive beyond what is good for the pet.

When it gets to the point where an unhealthy pet is suffering unnecessarily, it should be let go, regardless of how important it is to the owners. Now that I am speaking from experience.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:34 pm
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Used to donate to them believing that they were interested in animal welfare.

Soon became apparent that they are a financially motivated, politically minded, urban focused animal rights organisation.

The phone call when I cancelled their direct debit was a hoot!

Agree that the RSPB are on the edge of the same slippery slope. Happy to support the RNLI still, criminal that their work is not government funded.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:35 pm
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I have to listen to my partners weekly horror stories regarding these useless responsibility shirkers.

The things they turn a blind eye to makes me think they are purely a money making machine with the odd bit of compulsory animal care thinly veiled as their main concern.

Its a shame really as there is undoubtedly a requirement for genuinely effective policing of animal related ****tery in this country.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:36 pm
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I wouldnt go near them. Pdsa yes but the rspca seem to be revenue/exposure angled.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:38 pm
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MCTD - I think you would be surprised where the RNLI are focusing their efforts these days - and how much clout they have in certain areas. I say this as an avid sea sailor and kayaker who has supported the institution for decades and has family members as volunteer lifeboat crew


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:41 pm
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perhaps its indicative of the charity commission not standing up to their role to policy the third sector effectively.

The politicisation of charities is the quickest route to their irrelevance


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:45 pm
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the RNLI are going the same way too

The RNLI are a funny one.

I have been told first hand by fishermen, who used to be the vast majority of the crews, that they left as the RNLI preferred to use "ordinary" people as crew, as the publicity of a school teacher/hairdresser/barmen rescuing someone gave much better publicity than some hardened "old sea dog" doing it.

They also have massive revenue and seem to have money to burn.

I still give money and they also build some fantastic boats.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:47 pm
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Mind you, everyone I know working in child protection hates the NSPCC with a passion, seems to be a theme emerging....


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 9:49 pm
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For balance,

I can't comment on them as an organisation, at an enterprise level they may be a shower, but if there are problems at the top then it doesn't reflect at the bottom IME. I've worked in a few branches (they're one of our customers at work) and without exception every single person I've met has been professional, lovely, and utterly dedicated to animal welfare above and beyond the call of duty.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:04 pm
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Why the polarised views?

Twice my father had reason to report animal cruelty to the RSPCA, in both incidents it was people staying in a travellers camp near their office. In the first incident a horse was being punched and kicked. My dad was informed over the phone that "gypsies do not abuse their animals" and that the RSPCA would not investigate, no matter what. In the second incident a horse was on a tether next to a dual carriageway - the tether was long enough to allow the horse to walk over to the central reservation. My dad reported this as if a car/truck had hit the tether the horse would have lost its head. The RSPCA told the horse's owner who had reported the matter and my dad was threatened with having his business firebombed.

Furthermore, [url= http://www.ourdogs.co.uk/News/2010/Feb2010/News120210/rspca.htm ]this [/url]was pretty local to me.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:05 pm
 hora
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I found a large African Parrott in a area full of cats. Rang them- call the RSPB' why? Cos its nowt to do with us.

****s. RSPB dont offer the same service- they do conservation.

Same again - Swans nest on Manchester canal path. Right in the middle of it. Nope/sorry two days later it was in the manchester evening news- Staff killed nesting swan.

Ditto a Westie wandering. I rang em- not us/call the stray dogs.

Fine. I can see all they do is rspca vet centres and cherry pick prosecutions.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:18 pm
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I once drove over the Dartford crossing behind an RSPCA van watching the driver throw kittens out the window.

This may not have really happened.


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:21 pm
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I once drove over the Dartford crossing behind an RSPCA van watching the driver throw kittens out the window.

How did you think we managed to have so many wheel size threads?


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:36 pm
 hora
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****in kitten-sized holes in my windscreen


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:53 pm
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Dartford

sure it wasnt Catford?


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:54 pm
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You were throwing cats in a ford? You animal, I've a good mind to call the RSPCNLI


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 10:58 pm
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You were throwing cats in a ford?

No, it was [i][b]from[/b][/i] a [i][b]Ford[/b][/i].


 
Posted : 06/11/2014 11:09 pm
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The RSPCA is an English and Welsh only charity, wish more people in Scotland knew that as they advertise and receive donations from here much to the annoyance of the SSPCA.

I once read that the RNLI was the most effective fundraiser of all charities, and were so efficient at collections they had enough in reserve to survive for over a decade.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 12:33 am
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Family and friends have worked (and all been screwed over) by the RSPCA, head office not far from hometown.

The change seemed to happen when a reorganisation brought in directors/senior managers with more 'commercial' sensibilities than charitable, if you know what I mean.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 1:05 am
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Had a girlfriend once who worked for them, i was quite concerned as the relationship progressed when i realised that instead of any sort of animal protection or preservation, she used to needle everything.
The back of her van almost always had some sort of poor dead creature in there that had been unfortunate enough to cross her path..

I was under the impression that as a charity they're only allowed to retain a couple of years running costs in the bank, so they spend what they can otherwise they lose it??

Her training sounded amazing, fire arms, high speed boats, no expence spared..


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 1:36 am
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PDSA good. Dogs Trust good. Stopped donating to RNLI. All our giving goes to Surfers Against Sewage, Catharine House who provide end of life care at home and
...wait for it, keyboards ready...Oxfam.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 1:41 am
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Her training sounded amazing, fire arms, high speed boats, no expence spared

RSPCA or Miami Vice?


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 1:57 am
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RSPCA or Miami Vice?

Meowaii Five-0.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 7:01 am
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I found a large African Parrott in a area full of cats. Rang them- call the [b]RSPB[/b]' why? Cos its nowt to do with us.

****. [b]RSPB[/b] dont offer the same service- they do conservation.

Same again - Swans nest on Manchester canal path. Right in the middle of it. Nope/sorry two days later it was in the manchester evening news- Staff killed nesting swan.

Ditto a [b]Westie[/b] wandering. I rang em- not us/call the stray dogs.

To be fair to the RSPB, dogs aren't birds.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 7:46 am
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Winston, could you elaborate on your RNLI experiences?
Thanks
Alan.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 9:45 am
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I was under the impression that as a charity they're only allowed to retain a couple of years running costs in the bank, so they spend what they can otherwise they lose it??

How would that work?


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 9:50 am
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I don't know (i'm not an accountant) it was something she said, hence the ? at the end of my sentence..

Could be something to do with this though-
https://www.gov.uk/charity-financial-reserves


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 10:32 am
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http://www.countryside-alliance.org/ca/campaigns-hunting/our-submission-to-the-rspca-prosecutions-review

I knew there was a reason why I liked the RSPCA.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 10:38 am
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The RSPCA do birds too badly they in one case could not correctly identify how a healthy fledgeling would look so prosecuted for neglect for its perfectly normal appearance , did not know that the chicks did not urinate so again neglect for being stood over a tray full of clean water that they said was its own urine and allowed what had been a perfectly healthy and very expensive bird to die in their care through neglect by them ( they did not prosecute themselves for that though)


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 10:40 am
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Twunts of the highest order, spending hundred of thousands of pounds of donations pursuing purely political agendas.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 10:42 am
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I've donated to dogs trust in preference to RSPCA every time. They seem more focussed on actually helping animals that need it and less on political ends.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 11:47 am
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Twunts of the highest order, spending hundred of thousands of pounds [b]donated by well meaning people who think that their money will be going on genuine animal welfare causes[/b] [s]of donations[/s] pursuing purely political agendas.


 
Posted : 07/11/2014 11:49 am
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