Declawing your cat is far worse than giving it a manicure. Experts say people often mistakenly believe that it is a harmless “quick fix” for unwanted scratching. However, they don’t realize that removing the bones at the tip of their cat’s toes can make it less likely to use the litter box or more likely to bite. It also can cause lasting physical problems for the cat. In fact, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and many European countries have laws and policies that significantly restrict or prohibit onychectomy.
Sick and tired of hearing about the practice, artist and cat lover Kikidoodle posted a Twitter thread on why declawing is a bad idea and how to approach cat scratching in general. The informative and comprehensive read quickly went viral, so at least we know that people understand just how important this topic really is. Let’s hope it makes cat owners renounce the procedure too!
More info: Kikidoodle.com | Instagram | Twitter
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Kikidoodle has 4 cats: Gandalf the Pink, Piggy (Pythagoras), Pandora, and Jiji. “Gandalf and Piggy are both sphynx cats, Jiji is a cornish rex, and Pandora is a feral rescue tortie,” the artist introduced her pets to Bored Panda. “Pandora is 11 and I found it half starved in a planter, trying to catch birds many years ago. I admired her moxy. Gandalf is 8 and was my first ‘pure bred’ cat and has a myriad of health issues due to poor breeding. Her, plus my second sphynx (Archimedes, who died of HCM last April) got me obsessed with the health and wellness of cats. Jiji is 3 and an extremely hyper black cornish rex who gets into trouble non-stop. I am Kiki so he is my Jiji! He’s my first well-bred pedigreed cat and very healthy. He loves to meet strangers. Piggy at 2 is our newest kitty and a very healthy and hearty sphynx with an amazing temperament. He loves when you yell his name.”
Kikidoodle practices what she posts and has trained all of her cats; they know where the scratching posts are and, most importantly, know the house rules. “All 4 of them have realized that they get praise and pets when they use their posts, so besides being a normal cat behavior thing, they use the posts when they want attention from me. Win-win!”
The same applies not just for the scratching posts. The cats and their owner do a bunch of training to keep things as happy and harmonious as possible. Kikidoodle said sphynx and cornish rex are known for being “absolute gremlins” about getting into trouble, so house rules are important.
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Cats and animals in general is something she has always been obsessed with. “My mom was a high school biology teacher and growing up, we were encouraged to ask questions at zoos and museums and nature parks and to learn, and question what you already know,” she explained. “I’ve had cats forever, but I also engage with others. [One time], I wound up doing a coloring book for The International Cat Association (TICA) and was invited to do signings of it at a local cat show. There, I was introduced to the world of cat fanciers and connected with a large number of cat people who view breeding not as a pursuit of a beautiful but unhealthy animal, but as making the most well-rounded, healthiest, happiest, sturdiest cat and educating others on health and behavioral issues, and all kinds of [positive] things.” The invaluable well of resources and networking that happened has strengthened Kikidoodle’s desire to learn and to help others too.
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
According to the author of the thread, people’s reaction to it has been wonderful. “I have always complained that there is nothing that can go viral without being toxic, and have had viral threads in the past that were less enjoyable. The cat scratching post, however, has broken this ‘rule’ and I have seen nothing but positivity!”
Her absolute favorite thing that has come from all of this has been people sending her private messages about how the thread gave them the confidence to try out nail trimming or engagement with their needier or more difficult cats—and how they were able to find success. “I absolutely cried a few times reading some of the messages to me. I think cats are often misunderstood because of how different they are from dogs. They’re treated as mean or aloof, disliked, killed, and even people who like them often treat them as decorative objects or non-trainable and impenetrable walls,” Kikidoodle said. “Cats just think differently than humans and dogs do, but are still amazing social animals who just want to be in a harmonious colony with us. Even the most feral, scaredy-cat can give unconditional love and deserve it in return.”
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Image credits: KikiDoodleTweet
Kikidoodle frequently talks about other cat-related topics on her social media as well, such as diets, training, health, and all kinds of other things, sometimes including other animals too. But that’s not all. “I’m a full-time artist! I used to work in the games industry with Disney, have illustrated children’s books and comic covers, and even briefly was a professor of digital arts, and now I make my living creating art and products at home! I do a ton of cat and wildlife things, including mermaid-cat plush toys (Purrmaids). If you want to check it out, here’s my website.”
Here’s what some people said after reading the thread
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Image credits: Storm_Engineer
Declawing is cruel and should be banned. If one cannot handle a cat or is not willing to learn how to, why take it at all?
Many places have banned it and many vets won’t do it anymore.
Load More Replies...Any piece of s**t insensitive enough to remove the claws of a cat should have their fingernails cut out with a dull knife.
Considering where human nails grow from, I recommend starting at the first knuckle of the finger and go from there..see how they like it
Load More Replies...My cat doesn't like having her nail trimmed. She puts on a full puma mode and howls as if I'm trying to take her eyes out. So I give up and let her be. She also has an affinity to my couch. I have tried so many different scratching posts, but my couch wins every time. Have I ever thought of declawing her? Hell no! Have I ever thought of throwing her out? Of course not, would I throw a child out for being a child? If people think they can't handle this then they shouldn't get a cat. They don't deserve them anyway.
Some people put aluminum foil on the couch, cats hate it. Eventually she might break the habit and you can take the aluminum foil down
Load More Replies...My parents declawed out cats when we were young - and now they are horrified that they ever did that. They had no idea what it really meant and the vet told them it was just taking the nails off so they don't grow back. Now that they know, they would never do something so cruel again.
Remember that declawing your cat is not removing claws only. It's actually removing a part of their little fingers!!! Imagine having one segment of your finger cut because somebody doesn't like your nails.
So glad that declawing cats is illegal in Australia. Should be illegal worldwide.
One thing worth adding is that punishing your cat for bad behaviour doesn't help at all. In fact, it may make matters worse. The cats do not understand the concept of punishment. If you punish them, they don't understand. Instead, they will feel stressed out and think you treat them badly. And may have other problems like doing their business outside of the litter box. You should reward them for good behaviour, that's what works for cats.
My friend is a cat lover but has scleroderma & can't trim her cats' claws, so she got them declawed. Personally I don't think she's a real cat lover by putting her pets through an abusive procedure for her own convenience when she could take them to a groomer or just not get cats if she can't take care of them properly.
Declawing is as cruel as cutting the tail/ears of some dogs just because "it´s the way the breed is supossed to look like". WTF they were born with those large ears and tail and cats with their claws!
It's the sort of human garbage you'd like to store your knives in. (Animal cruelty turns me violent.)
Load More Replies...Adopted a rescue kitten and noticed that it had been left out in the cold to die by a poultry farmer. Kitty had only one bad habit: picking up anything that remotely resembled an egg and dropping it to see if it cracked. He went through all my teacups, small vases, etc.etc., outgrew his habit, turned into a lovely adult and....got run over by a car. My last memory of him was looking at the snowflakes in his eye lashes. Broke my f***ing heart.
I am so happy that declawing is legally forbidden in civilized countries. Well. Most...
There are also glue-on nail caps, I had good luck with these on my rabbit. It was the only way to save the carpet in the rented apartment.
I agree with these but you still have to watch them once you get them on. We tried these on our cats & one was so agitated by them he was literally ripping his own claws off. We started finding them around the house with way more nail, still glued into it, then there ought to be. When we talked to our vet about it, she told us to not use them anymore. They said it could be him not getting used to it or it could be a reaction to the glue but either way we stopped using them. Totally still recommend them....just not for my monster boy! Lol! Still not declawed though!
Load More Replies...If you can't take the complete animal, don't take part of it. Simple as that. Declawing is cutting off finger tips. Wonder how they'd like theirs cut off...
When my declawing-the-cat in-laws cut their kids' nails, b/c they got scratched, I asked why they didn't just cut off the fingertips from the last joint like they did to their cats. They honestly didn't realize it was actually amputating toes!
Load More Replies...I've yet to find an apartment that will actually enforce the declawing clauses in their lease. Most just take your word for it, and the one time an apartment tried to force the issue by having me bring a vet note stating they were declawed, I instead brought a vet note explaining why the vet refused to declaw and why they would report the apartment for animal cruelty if they continued to require it. Never heard another word of complaint from the apartment :)
Never declawed an animal in life. Ir escue the ones that were mutilated. Also, I have five scratching "areas" ---- cardboard, sisal rope posts, and also an actual chunk of tree trunk. Nary a claw used elsewhere. !!!:-)
I refused to declaw my 2 cats. My biggest reasoning (besides disagreeing with it to begin with) was that, as indoor cats, if they ever got outside their claws are their only defense whether it be clawing or climbing. We have issues with them clawing some furniture but luckily for us, its old hand me down furniture that we'll eventually replace. They can destroy the couch if they want. Its literally the same couch we've been destroying for YEARS when it was my grandparent's couch. And it was their "crappy couch" from the basement living room where we were allowed to play & rough house. We have posts & they love cardboard scratchers. Their also not huge players anymore (they're about 5 & 6) so 10min of lasers & feathers & they're usually done & ready to nap.
I should get better with trimming though. They've never liked it or gotten used to it, even after all these years, so i've gotten a bit lazy about it in their older years. They do get spoiled rotten with treats when its over though
Load More Replies...My cats are have plenty of scratching posts but occasionally likes to take a whack at the furniture. It took a bit but now they know if they get caught they get a manicure which they hate. So now they leave the furniture alone.
I used to be a vet tech and this practice is beyond barbaric and cruel.Many cats who are declawed develop behavioral issues because of the constant pain and are then dumped. It's a disgusting procedure that shouldn't be allowed. Don't have a cat if you don't want to deal with claws.
Oh your child picks his nose? We can solve that problem by cutting their fingers off at the first knuckle. That will stop them. Basically the same thing and also just as ridiculously cruel.
Don't declaw cats. You're taking away their best defence which can make them aggressive and scared all the time. In my country it is abuse and illegal no mater what the reason
Thank you, Panda Community, for this great post! Even though I am a lifelong, very experienced cat person, I got some new tips here for keeping my sweeties from clawing furniture. And I see that there are some nice types of nail-clippers available that I wasn't aware of. Declawing really is awful, and it has been banned in many places. A dear friend of mine adopted an already-declawed kitty, and although he is now well-loved, healthy and spoiled, it is heartbreaking to watch him try to jump up on the back of a chair or sofa and fall down to the floor because he can't get any purchase where he's trying to jump.
So many people do this so the cat can't scratch but that just leads to cats that bite! Well that and there is a big chance the poor cat eventually ends up crippled either by arthritis or because the claws or chipped bone regrow inside their poor paws!!! I will never take a cat to a vet that does this.
OMG! I've been a cat owner for meerly 1 year, but honestly never heard of such thing, I am MORTYFIED! :O I do manicure my cat, but just a tips, but never in my mind I would have thought a DOCTOR, who wowed to help the animals, would ever do such a thing!! I would "declaw" the people who do this, just so there wouldn't be any need for them either to do manicure!
No civilised country allows declawing. In fact, no civilised country allows animals to be multilated.
Hans, please read littlesaresare's comment in full. It also addresses halal killing. We are constantly mutilating animals all over the 'civilised' world.
Load More Replies...Around maybe 5 years ago, we took our cat to the vet, the vet got our cat and some ones else's cat mixed up and ours got de clawed and the other one got fixed. ( we wanted to get our cat fixed because alot of neighborhood cats were males and not fixed) and so we got her fixed but we felt so bad that she could climb around trees and hop on stuff without slipping off (she was an outdoor/indoor cat). Rest in peace Bella 🙏
I wish that more people actually understood that it is not just the nail that is removed. I think many people would think about other things if they realized the vet is going to cut off the whole end of your cats fingers if you have them declawed. I worked with a lady that would chew her own nails all the time and she was trying to decide whether to get her cat declawed and we went to break and she started chewing her nails. I told her I knew exactly how to help her stop that habit. I knew she had been trying to stop for a long time. She excited asked how and said she would try anything. I told her all she had to do was get her fingers cut off at the first knuckle. Of course she thought I was insane till I explained that was exactly what she was about to let her vet do to her cat. At first she thought I was exaggerating but several others chimed in and I told her when you get home call your vet and ask them. She not only didn't go through with it but changed vets once she realized were
My parents spent £400 (I think) on a couch that was covered in a fabric that was supposed to deter cats from scratching the furniture. It didn't work, so now the cat lives with me.
It's an easy problem to solve. 1. Have a cat tree and other scratching posts/products. Different cats prefer different types. All of the cats I've had over the years like sisal a lot. 2. Trim their nails every 2 -3 weeks. I find small cat claw scissors easiest to use. 3. Have styptic powder on hand if any of your cats squirm during nail trimming. 4. If you got your cats as kittens, start trimming their nails right away - they adapt best if you start early. 5. Have scratching posts before or when you get the cat so it won't start scratching furniture, carpets or other items.
I know a family who declawed their cat because they had young children. She is now more prone to biting and swatting. I hope they had looked into the cons of declawing their cat before they did.
The only part of the article that I disagree with is that any cat can be trained to tolerate having their nails trimmed. That is not realistic for many people and their cats. In that case the owner needs to either take the cat to the vet for nail trims or deal with scratched up furniture. Surgically mutilating the cat shouldn’t even be an option and it’s insane how many people are defending it.
Scratching is what comes naturally to cats. De-clawing them is not natural. It's just cruel. If you can't trim the cat's nails yourself, bring it to the vet or pet groomer, and have the professionals do it. It does not cost that much.
Load More Replies...You can say it, but you’re still wrong, and sound like a trashy Karen who thinks she’s the exception to the rule when you’re literally just the entire problem. Most declawed cats seem “fine” but that’s missing the entire point just so you can feel better.
Load More Replies...You’re exactly the kind of person the article is talking about. You blamed your cat for your lame-asś family. You punished your cat because your shïtty kid was “scared” of it. This is literally the exact situation where you are a fûcking horrible, selfish, gross “pet owner,” making up excuses for why torture of an animal is okay because your dorky lifestyle got in the way of the well being of a living creature. You should be ashamed, but you’ll never see. You’ll always excuse yourself and act like I’m wrong for calling you out. Piece of shít. PS - “No kill” literally means not killing. You’re an idiot.
Load More Replies...During the history of mankind many, many very stupid and cruel things were "recommended".
Load More Replies...You are one disgusting idiot harming your cat like that. And NO, cats are sensitive and know not to use their claws on the human face, if they were not raised by an absolute f***ing sadist, that is.
Load More Replies...Declawing is cruel and should be banned. If one cannot handle a cat or is not willing to learn how to, why take it at all?
Many places have banned it and many vets won’t do it anymore.
Load More Replies...Any piece of s**t insensitive enough to remove the claws of a cat should have their fingernails cut out with a dull knife.
Considering where human nails grow from, I recommend starting at the first knuckle of the finger and go from there..see how they like it
Load More Replies...My cat doesn't like having her nail trimmed. She puts on a full puma mode and howls as if I'm trying to take her eyes out. So I give up and let her be. She also has an affinity to my couch. I have tried so many different scratching posts, but my couch wins every time. Have I ever thought of declawing her? Hell no! Have I ever thought of throwing her out? Of course not, would I throw a child out for being a child? If people think they can't handle this then they shouldn't get a cat. They don't deserve them anyway.
Some people put aluminum foil on the couch, cats hate it. Eventually she might break the habit and you can take the aluminum foil down
Load More Replies...My parents declawed out cats when we were young - and now they are horrified that they ever did that. They had no idea what it really meant and the vet told them it was just taking the nails off so they don't grow back. Now that they know, they would never do something so cruel again.
Remember that declawing your cat is not removing claws only. It's actually removing a part of their little fingers!!! Imagine having one segment of your finger cut because somebody doesn't like your nails.
So glad that declawing cats is illegal in Australia. Should be illegal worldwide.
One thing worth adding is that punishing your cat for bad behaviour doesn't help at all. In fact, it may make matters worse. The cats do not understand the concept of punishment. If you punish them, they don't understand. Instead, they will feel stressed out and think you treat them badly. And may have other problems like doing their business outside of the litter box. You should reward them for good behaviour, that's what works for cats.
My friend is a cat lover but has scleroderma & can't trim her cats' claws, so she got them declawed. Personally I don't think she's a real cat lover by putting her pets through an abusive procedure for her own convenience when she could take them to a groomer or just not get cats if she can't take care of them properly.
Declawing is as cruel as cutting the tail/ears of some dogs just because "it´s the way the breed is supossed to look like". WTF they were born with those large ears and tail and cats with their claws!
It's the sort of human garbage you'd like to store your knives in. (Animal cruelty turns me violent.)
Load More Replies...Adopted a rescue kitten and noticed that it had been left out in the cold to die by a poultry farmer. Kitty had only one bad habit: picking up anything that remotely resembled an egg and dropping it to see if it cracked. He went through all my teacups, small vases, etc.etc., outgrew his habit, turned into a lovely adult and....got run over by a car. My last memory of him was looking at the snowflakes in his eye lashes. Broke my f***ing heart.
I am so happy that declawing is legally forbidden in civilized countries. Well. Most...
There are also glue-on nail caps, I had good luck with these on my rabbit. It was the only way to save the carpet in the rented apartment.
I agree with these but you still have to watch them once you get them on. We tried these on our cats & one was so agitated by them he was literally ripping his own claws off. We started finding them around the house with way more nail, still glued into it, then there ought to be. When we talked to our vet about it, she told us to not use them anymore. They said it could be him not getting used to it or it could be a reaction to the glue but either way we stopped using them. Totally still recommend them....just not for my monster boy! Lol! Still not declawed though!
Load More Replies...If you can't take the complete animal, don't take part of it. Simple as that. Declawing is cutting off finger tips. Wonder how they'd like theirs cut off...
When my declawing-the-cat in-laws cut their kids' nails, b/c they got scratched, I asked why they didn't just cut off the fingertips from the last joint like they did to their cats. They honestly didn't realize it was actually amputating toes!
Load More Replies...I've yet to find an apartment that will actually enforce the declawing clauses in their lease. Most just take your word for it, and the one time an apartment tried to force the issue by having me bring a vet note stating they were declawed, I instead brought a vet note explaining why the vet refused to declaw and why they would report the apartment for animal cruelty if they continued to require it. Never heard another word of complaint from the apartment :)
Never declawed an animal in life. Ir escue the ones that were mutilated. Also, I have five scratching "areas" ---- cardboard, sisal rope posts, and also an actual chunk of tree trunk. Nary a claw used elsewhere. !!!:-)
I refused to declaw my 2 cats. My biggest reasoning (besides disagreeing with it to begin with) was that, as indoor cats, if they ever got outside their claws are their only defense whether it be clawing or climbing. We have issues with them clawing some furniture but luckily for us, its old hand me down furniture that we'll eventually replace. They can destroy the couch if they want. Its literally the same couch we've been destroying for YEARS when it was my grandparent's couch. And it was their "crappy couch" from the basement living room where we were allowed to play & rough house. We have posts & they love cardboard scratchers. Their also not huge players anymore (they're about 5 & 6) so 10min of lasers & feathers & they're usually done & ready to nap.
I should get better with trimming though. They've never liked it or gotten used to it, even after all these years, so i've gotten a bit lazy about it in their older years. They do get spoiled rotten with treats when its over though
Load More Replies...My cats are have plenty of scratching posts but occasionally likes to take a whack at the furniture. It took a bit but now they know if they get caught they get a manicure which they hate. So now they leave the furniture alone.
I used to be a vet tech and this practice is beyond barbaric and cruel.Many cats who are declawed develop behavioral issues because of the constant pain and are then dumped. It's a disgusting procedure that shouldn't be allowed. Don't have a cat if you don't want to deal with claws.
Oh your child picks his nose? We can solve that problem by cutting their fingers off at the first knuckle. That will stop them. Basically the same thing and also just as ridiculously cruel.
Don't declaw cats. You're taking away their best defence which can make them aggressive and scared all the time. In my country it is abuse and illegal no mater what the reason
Thank you, Panda Community, for this great post! Even though I am a lifelong, very experienced cat person, I got some new tips here for keeping my sweeties from clawing furniture. And I see that there are some nice types of nail-clippers available that I wasn't aware of. Declawing really is awful, and it has been banned in many places. A dear friend of mine adopted an already-declawed kitty, and although he is now well-loved, healthy and spoiled, it is heartbreaking to watch him try to jump up on the back of a chair or sofa and fall down to the floor because he can't get any purchase where he's trying to jump.
So many people do this so the cat can't scratch but that just leads to cats that bite! Well that and there is a big chance the poor cat eventually ends up crippled either by arthritis or because the claws or chipped bone regrow inside their poor paws!!! I will never take a cat to a vet that does this.
OMG! I've been a cat owner for meerly 1 year, but honestly never heard of such thing, I am MORTYFIED! :O I do manicure my cat, but just a tips, but never in my mind I would have thought a DOCTOR, who wowed to help the animals, would ever do such a thing!! I would "declaw" the people who do this, just so there wouldn't be any need for them either to do manicure!
No civilised country allows declawing. In fact, no civilised country allows animals to be multilated.
Hans, please read littlesaresare's comment in full. It also addresses halal killing. We are constantly mutilating animals all over the 'civilised' world.
Load More Replies...Around maybe 5 years ago, we took our cat to the vet, the vet got our cat and some ones else's cat mixed up and ours got de clawed and the other one got fixed. ( we wanted to get our cat fixed because alot of neighborhood cats were males and not fixed) and so we got her fixed but we felt so bad that she could climb around trees and hop on stuff without slipping off (she was an outdoor/indoor cat). Rest in peace Bella 🙏
I wish that more people actually understood that it is not just the nail that is removed. I think many people would think about other things if they realized the vet is going to cut off the whole end of your cats fingers if you have them declawed. I worked with a lady that would chew her own nails all the time and she was trying to decide whether to get her cat declawed and we went to break and she started chewing her nails. I told her I knew exactly how to help her stop that habit. I knew she had been trying to stop for a long time. She excited asked how and said she would try anything. I told her all she had to do was get her fingers cut off at the first knuckle. Of course she thought I was insane till I explained that was exactly what she was about to let her vet do to her cat. At first she thought I was exaggerating but several others chimed in and I told her when you get home call your vet and ask them. She not only didn't go through with it but changed vets once she realized were
My parents spent £400 (I think) on a couch that was covered in a fabric that was supposed to deter cats from scratching the furniture. It didn't work, so now the cat lives with me.
It's an easy problem to solve. 1. Have a cat tree and other scratching posts/products. Different cats prefer different types. All of the cats I've had over the years like sisal a lot. 2. Trim their nails every 2 -3 weeks. I find small cat claw scissors easiest to use. 3. Have styptic powder on hand if any of your cats squirm during nail trimming. 4. If you got your cats as kittens, start trimming their nails right away - they adapt best if you start early. 5. Have scratching posts before or when you get the cat so it won't start scratching furniture, carpets or other items.
I know a family who declawed their cat because they had young children. She is now more prone to biting and swatting. I hope they had looked into the cons of declawing their cat before they did.
The only part of the article that I disagree with is that any cat can be trained to tolerate having their nails trimmed. That is not realistic for many people and their cats. In that case the owner needs to either take the cat to the vet for nail trims or deal with scratched up furniture. Surgically mutilating the cat shouldn’t even be an option and it’s insane how many people are defending it.
Scratching is what comes naturally to cats. De-clawing them is not natural. It's just cruel. If you can't trim the cat's nails yourself, bring it to the vet or pet groomer, and have the professionals do it. It does not cost that much.
Load More Replies...You can say it, but you’re still wrong, and sound like a trashy Karen who thinks she’s the exception to the rule when you’re literally just the entire problem. Most declawed cats seem “fine” but that’s missing the entire point just so you can feel better.
Load More Replies...You’re exactly the kind of person the article is talking about. You blamed your cat for your lame-asś family. You punished your cat because your shïtty kid was “scared” of it. This is literally the exact situation where you are a fûcking horrible, selfish, gross “pet owner,” making up excuses for why torture of an animal is okay because your dorky lifestyle got in the way of the well being of a living creature. You should be ashamed, but you’ll never see. You’ll always excuse yourself and act like I’m wrong for calling you out. Piece of shít. PS - “No kill” literally means not killing. You’re an idiot.
Load More Replies...During the history of mankind many, many very stupid and cruel things were "recommended".
Load More Replies...You are one disgusting idiot harming your cat like that. And NO, cats are sensitive and know not to use their claws on the human face, if they were not raised by an absolute f***ing sadist, that is.
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