Submitted by Dino - (not verified) on Thu, 2006-03-23 12:59.
I completely agree. I was enraged at his outright dismissal of the concerns voiced by Ida and Mirha. When people are telling you that your product is repeatedly antagonising the health of companions that they care about dearly, you have the responsibility to allay their fears -- not sit there and make it seem like they're incapable of being proper stewards to the animals. Dirty litter? Multiple cats? Come ON, man. The doctor JUST SAID that those particular forms of infections have been known to be dietary, and not cleanliness issues. A UTI for a cat comes from pathogens.
The crystallising of the urine comes from diet. They're two different things. If you're going to cite credentials about your ability to diagnose and treat cats (which you're doing without animal nutrition or veterinary certifications recognised by any scientists), at least have the decency to do your homework about basic pathological information that affect animals. It took all of two seconds for the doctor on board to completely deflate your vile little snivellings about poor care from the cat parents.
Meanwhile, using a snarky and condescending tone during an interview where you've essentially been nailed to the wall with your callous disregard for the safety of pet children makes you come off as exactly what you are -- a cold, heartless corporate shill. Thanks.
I completely agree. I was enraged at his outright dismissal of the concerns voiced by Ida and Mirha. When people are telling you that your product is repeatedly antagonising the health of companions that they care about dearly, you have the responsibility to allay their fears -- not sit there and make it seem like they're incapable of being proper stewards to the animals. Dirty litter? Multiple cats? Come ON, man. The doctor JUST SAID that those particular forms of infections have been known to be dietary, and not cleanliness issues. A UTI for a cat comes from pathogens.
The crystallising of the urine comes from diet. They're two different things. If you're going to cite credentials about your ability to diagnose and treat cats (which you're doing without animal nutrition or veterinary certifications recognised by any scientists), at least have the decency to do your homework about basic pathological information that affect animals. It took all of two seconds for the doctor on board to completely deflate your vile little snivellings about poor care from the cat parents.
Meanwhile, using a snarky and condescending tone during an interview where you've essentially been nailed to the wall with your callous disregard for the safety of pet children makes you come off as exactly what you are -- a cold, heartless corporate shill. Thanks.