


Questions for Rescue Posts 🐾⚖️
When you comment on rescue posts, please ask direct, clear questions with a focus on informed consent. Don’t waste time on snarky remarks or rude nicknames for breeds. This is about protecting people and animals, not participating in online drama.
Ask the important questions:
• Does this dog have a bite history? Undocumented or documented?
• Does this dog have any behavioral concerns?
• Why was this dog surrendered? Is the prior owner reachable?
• How does this dog interact with cats or other small animals?
• How does this dog act with other dogs?
• What was the early environment of this dog? Who trained or raised it?
📸 Screenshot your comments. Screenshot any replies or deleted comments to ensure you’re documenting everything responsibly.
Trolling the internet can be fun, but let’s think bigger.
The unregulated “rescue” industry has real world consequences: dogs are placed in homes without full histories, owners are misled, and communities are put at risk.
Ethical rescue work requires transparency, documentation, and accountability. It’s about informed consent, not clicks and viral sympathy posts.
Every adoption has real risks. Every bite, aggression incident, or mismatch in a home can have life altering consequences for the dog and the people involved. Don’t just scroll and “like.” Ask the questions. Demand the answers. Protect your community and the animals you care about.
🐶⚖️ #DogBiteAwareness #EthicalRescue #RescueResponsibility #DBA #AskTheRightQuestions #DogSafetyFirst #TransparencyMatters



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