Keith Frey
4.6K posts

Keith Frey retweetledi
Keith Frey retweetledi
Keith Frey retweetledi

"This soldier was saying his final goodbye to his loyal K-9 partner and best friend. The moment he fell from his chair just to hold his paw one last time absolutely shattered me. This is the unbreakable bond between a warrior and his dog. They've been through so much together. My heart completely breaks for him. A true hero's farewell."
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Keith Frey retweetledi
Keith Frey retweetledi

We cannot relent until every single dog is out of this facility and into a home
Rep. Mark Pocan@RepMarkPocan
Just got off a productive call with the USDA where I learned Ridglan Farms has been told to surrender their federal breeding license by July 1 or the USDA would take official action. They also gave us an official answer on how many dogs are left at Ridglan: 650. Even though Ridglan is losing their state (and potentially federal) licenses, it doesn't stop the on-site research they're conducting. I'll continue to work with the USDA and NIH to shut down the entire facility and find homes for the 650 remaining dogs!
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Keith Frey retweetledi

What satisfaction can you get out of shooting a stationary animal from a few metres away?!? 😡
#BanTrophyHunting NOW!
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For 7 years, he watched families walk past his kennel. For 7 years, he listened to other dogs bark with excitement as they left with their forever homes. For 7 years, he stayed. Every morning, he would sit by the front of his shelter door, tail wagging at the sound of footsteps. He never stopped hoping. Never stopped believing that one day, someone would choose him. Puppies came and went. Smaller dogs were picked first. Flashier breeds were adopted in days. But him? He waited. As the seasons changed year after year, his muzzle slowly turned gray. His energy softened. The staff saw it — the way he’d still perk up when visitors walked in, the way his eyes followed every person who passed by. He wasn’t just waiting for a home. He was waiting for his person. Seven birthdays in a kennel. Seven years of watching the door. Seven years of loving people who couldn’t take him home. And then one quiet afternoon… someone stopped. They didn’t rush. They didn’t overlook him. They saw the gentle soul behind those tired eyes. When the kennel door finally opened for him, he didn’t run. He simply leaned into them — as if to say, “I knew you’d come.” After 2,555 days in a shelter, he walked out not as the dog nobody wanted… but as someone’s best friend. Some dogs wait days. Some wait months. But the ones who wait years? They love the hardest. ❤️
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