URGENT! We need 1-2 volunteers next Friday afternoon (10/29) at CHICAGO O’HARE International Airport (ORD). Please contact me a.s.a.p. if you can help us out for a couple of hours….
As Let’s Adopt! is growing worldwide we are in need of volunteers at major US airports to assist us receiving animals from our flight volunteers, AFTER they have passed through customs.
The airport volunteer will then take the animal and check it in for its connection flight to its final destination – its new home

It’s one of the most vital part of our operations, and with that also
a lot of fun and very rewarding:

- Time commitment is only few hours.
- You’ll need a vehicle to accommodate the kennel(s) or crate(s), depending on the size and number of animals to be transported.
- Meet with the flight volunteer at Arrivals

- Receive animal(s) and all necessary paperwork.
- Give animal(s) a quick potty/water break.
- Continue to designated cargo facility nearby.
- Check in animal(s) with airline (we do all the booking)
- Send them on their way and don’t forget to take pictures and videos for our community.

- DONE!
What’s in it for you?
Be a hero to our rescues and special needs animals, by providing this essential link to the Chain of Change.
What feels better than being part of a movement, saving lives and inspiring other? There’s nothing quite like it….
“BEing in the moment – BEing part of the movement - BEing The Change“!
Will you join us?
e-mail me at misha@myletsadopt.com
URGENT:
We need 1-2 volunteers next
Friday afternoon (10/29)
at CHICAGO‘s O’HARE
International Airport (ORD).
Please contact me a.s.a.p. if you can help us out for a couple of hours. BE part of our movement!
Thank You!
Misha
BE The Change
Dear Friends,
last month I asked whether, we as a community could save 100 animals this summer.
What has happened since…
I’ve met Mary Ann, a wonderful lady from NC.She saved several cats from a property, who’s owner threatened repeatedly

Using cats for target practice for procreating? An oxymoronic situation considering who's doing the shootin'
to just use the cats for target practice.
Mary Ann and her patient husband set up traps, and over the course of a week were able to catch all of them.

trapped kitty - ready to be spayed
All have been altered, vaccinated and an older kitty is being treated for a couple of fighting wounds.
Stay tuned for Mary Ann’s story…..

a new lease on life instead of a never ending cycle of kittens
Then there is Daniela, who literally took us up on our challenge the very next day. She lives in Atlanta, went to a high kill shelter in Rome, GA and saved a beautiful English shepherd mix from death row.
Daniela named him Borgo, after a district in Rome.

Borgo on Death Row at the Rome, GA animal pound
Within days Borgo came down with the kennel cough. Daniela spent hours taking him to the vet, treating him, comforting him.
After several baths, a trip to the groomer, lots of love, vaccinations and finally getting neutered – Borgo is ready to move to his new home, which is already waiting for him in Indiana.
Unfortunately, Daniela is a poor student, with a minimum wage job on the side and has exhausted her resources.
She needs help with transport and/or shipping Borgo to Indiana. Please contact Daniela if you can help. dragomirovad@yahoo.com
What about the challenge?
We are a community of over 2000 members in the US. I think we can do better. Daniela, a student, with a minimum wage job, living in a small apartment has proven that there’s always a way to save a life.

Borgo and his personal angel, Daniela
Every life is worth saving. No matter how old or broken an animal is. We owe it to them to make things right.
If we don’t intervene, who will?
What can WE – as a community, as individuals do this coming month?
Step ONE: sign up as a volunteer with us.
if you can’t volunteer please consider supporting us via the Simba Fund.
100 cents of each dollar go to the care of our animals, and funding of special rescue operations. Let’s Adopt! does not have any overhead, because we are ALL volunteers.
This sets us apart from any other big organization.
- Send me your stories and pictures of the animals you saved.
- Sign up to volunteer for us. We are looking for volunteers in ALL 50 States and also in Canada RIGHT NOW.
Shoot me an email with your information:
- Name
- Location
- Volunteer Interest
Let’s make this summer one to remember…

Let's Adopt! Summer Of Luuuuv 2010
The summer we saved 100 animals - TOGETHER!
BE The Change
~Misha
2
Are YOU On Our Radar?
Whenever you visit our blogs, you might have noticed
the Let’s Adopt Community Map to the lower right of your screen.
What is it all about?
Very simple – The Map connects YOU to the rest of the Let’s Adopt! Network worldwide!
This is the place to put your marker on the map, tell us a little about yourself or copy the code to of your Facebook badge and let us know in what capacity you can support us.
For example: foster, transport, flight volunteer, action calls, etc).
SAVE THE MAP and you’re all done.
Need a step-by-step?
:. sign in or register with Google
.:. Go to the map at
http://bit.ly/LetsAdopt-Network-Map to add your pin to the map.
.:. zoom the map,
.:. click the blue pin and drag it to your location.
.:. add your information, and be sure to SAVE the map when you’re done.
Easy – Yet such an important step to connect with others.
Share the map and invite all your fellow animal activists, rescuers, and volunteer friends and family, so we can truly build a tight network and react fast in any sort of emergency rescue situation.

Become part of the solution. Join Let’s Adopt! USA today.
BE The Change!
Misha
Please SHARE/RT
See a bit of yourself in this video?
Welcome Home!
Join the Let’s Adopt! USA network on Facebook
add yourself to the regional volunteer/activist network
in the discussion area: http://bit.ly/LA_volunteer
Invite/Share/RT – we need to grow as an organization to be ready to cover the US.
Donate a couple of clicks to this great cause, and share this post on your FB/Twitter pages.
BE The Change
~Misha
Today’s blog is actually inspired and for the greater part written by one of my dear teachers.
Please read it with an open mind, read it again with your mind inspired, and then read it again, with your heart ready to spring into action.
Cruelty is an infectious disease and one must strictly guard oneself against it. Some students seem to have this peculiar infection and they somehow gradually dominate the others. Probably they feel it is very manly, for their elders are often cruel in their words, in their attitudes, in their gestures, in their pride. This cruelty exists in the world. The responsibility of the student and please remember with what significance we are using that word – is to avoid any form of cruelty.

- Jidduji with children
Once many years ago I was invited to talk at a school in California and as I entered the school a boy of ten or so was passing me with a large bird, caught in a trap, whose legs were broken.

I stopped and looked at the boy without saying a word. His face expressed fear and when I finished the talk and came out the boy – a stranger – came up to me with tears in his eyes and said, ”Sir, it will never happen again.” He was afraid that I would tell the headmaster and there would be a scene about it and as I didn’t say a word to either the boy or the headmaster about the cruel incident, his awareness of the terrible thing he had done made him realize the enormity of the act.
It is important to be aware of one’s own activities and if there is affection then cruelty has no place in our life at any time. In western countries you see the birds carefully nurtured and later in the season shot for sport and then eaten. The cruelty of hunting, killing small animals, has become part of our civilization, like war, like torture, and the acts of terrorists and kidnappers.
In our intimate personal relationships there is also a great deal of cruelty, anger, hurting each other. The world has become a dangerous place in which to live and in our schools any form of coercion, threat, anger must be totally and completely avoided for all these harden the heart and mind, and affection cannot co-exist with cruelty.
You understand, as a student, how important it is to realize that any form of cruelty not only hardens your heart but perverts your thinking, distorts your actions. The mind, like the heart, is a delicate instrument, sensitive and very capable, and when cruelty and oppression touch it then there is a hardening of the self. Affection, love, has no centre as the self.
Now having read this and having understood so far what is said, what will you do about it? You have studied what has been said, you are learning the content of these words; what then is your action? Your response is not merely to study and learn but also to act. Most of us know and are aware of all the implications of cruelty and of what it actually does both outwardly and inwardly, and leave it at that without doing anything about it – thinking one thing and doing just the opposite. This not only breeds a great deal of conflict but also hypocrisy.
Most students do not like to be hypocrites; they like to look at facts but they do not always act. So the responsibility of the student is to see the facts about cruelty and without any persuasion or cajoling understand what is implied and do something about it. The doing is perhaps a greater responsibility. People generally live with ideas and beliefs totally unrelated to their daily life and so this naturally becomes hypocrisy.
So don’t be a hypocrite – which doesn’t mean you must be rude, aggressive or overly critical. When there is affection there is inevitably courtesy without hypocrisy.
What is the responsibility of the teacher who has studied, learned, and acts toward the student? Cruelty has many forms. A look, a gesture, a sharp remark, and above all comparison. Our whole educational system is based on comparison. A is better than B and so B must conform to or imitate A. This in essence is cruelty, and ultimately its expression is examinations; so what is the responsibility of the educator who sees the truth of this?
How will he teach any subject without reward and punishment, knowing that there must be some kind of report indicating the capacity of the student? Can the teacher do this? Is it compatible with affection? If the central reality of affection is there, has comparison any place at all? Can the teacher eliminate in himself the pain of comparison?
Our whole civilization is based on hierarchical comparison both outwardly and inwardly which denies the sense of deep affection. Can we eliminate from our minds the better, the more, the stupid, the clever, this whole comparative thinking? If the teacher has understood the pain of comparison what is his responsibility in his teaching and in his action? A person who has really grasped the significance of the pain of comparison is acting from intelligence.
[Jiddu Krishnamurti - Letters to Schools Volume One 15th February, 1980]
Teachers & Students alike….
BE The Change

Make that one phone call to report animal cruelty, help a neighbor out, who struggles with feeding their animals in this economy, make contributions to those organizations that work so hard on bringing change. Become part of the solution by volunteering your time, knowledge and resources.
Let’s Adopt! USA needs YOU – yes YOU …help us in our quest to save animals, but also to spread the word, educate the members of your community about no-kill.
Become a leader in your own community.
Visit our Facebook Group and sign up as a volunteer in the discussion area.
Let’s make some noise for the voiceless out there.
Let’s stop the brutal killings, sanctified by your city leaders, funded by your tax dollars,
Let’s put tougher laws on animal cruelty, hoarders, breeders.
Let’s DO SOMETHING.
The apathy of many people is mind-boggling to me. We have grown numb to the pictures of death row animals, mutilated, abused, sick, dying…
here today ….gone tomorrow….. until the next load arrives.
Help Us, Help THEM!
BE The Change!
Misha
29
Dear Tribe Members
Dear Tribe Members of the Let’s Adopt!USA Family.
First of, I want to thank all of our members for your continuous support in growing our FaceBook Network, and helping us connecting more volunteers and activists in the US.
I’d also like to take the opportunity to welcome all new members who have joined us over the past couple of weeks.
We could not do our important work without you.
As we are approaching the “Thousand Member Mark”, I realized that many of you don’t know each other (yet)…other than that we obviously share a love for animals, have compassion for the voiceless and want change… Drastic change.
So, this week I want to invite you to visit our
Let’s Adopt! USA FaceBook Photo Album
and post a picture of you and your pet(s).
It’s as easy as 1 – 2 – 3:
- Add your/pet’s name AND general location (state/metro area) as captions.
- Post the image.
- In the comment section: Post a short story about how you met, and your life was changed.
DONE …
Add a quick note about what you have to offer to Let’s Adopt! USA in your capacity as a volunteer or activist, and what you would like to see changing in YOUR OWN COMMUNITY.
If you prefer you can also send me an e-mail to misha@myletsadopt.com
We can’t wait to see all your beautiful faces and read about your connections.
Finally, please take a moment to add yourself to our regional networks in the LET’S ADOPT! USA group’s discussion section.
This will help us contact volunteers quickly when we need local foster volunteers, organizing transports/rescue or for local action alerts.
This will only take a few moments of your time - imagine how many lives we can AND WILL save together.
Thank you again for standing up for what is right.
We have a lot of work to do.
BE The Change…
Misha Dee
misha@myletsadopt.com
Let’s Adopt! USA
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=205025950458
Give Our Angels Wings:
http://bethechange.chipin.com/simbas-fund
Put Yourself On The Map :
http://bit.ly/LetsAdopt-Network-Map
25
CAGE 18 — FEMALE MIX, 6 MOS.
CAGE 18 — FEMALE MIX, 6 MOS.
That’s about all she was to anyone… except someone gave her the name Petra. Her photo was taken to put on the internet with the others.
She appeared on my Facebook page last Friday evening. She and the others in the post were from a shelter in the Dallas area. Their time was nearing an end; they were the “urgents.” As are so many by the time they hit Facebook.
Always my first thought is that I want to take them all. But how would that be possible? I already have several.
So what can I do to help them?
I hit the SHARE button at the bottom of the post and add their info to my network of friends. It’s the least I can do… and maybe someone will adopt one.
Within a few minutes, someone messages me. She has seen Petra’s photo and wants to adopt her. How can she do it? Is it even possible? She lives in San Antonio — five hours from Dallas.
My first response is YES! Because I KNOW this can be done.
On her fifth try, Karrie reaches someone at the shelter who verifies that Petra is still there. She takes Karrie’s info and puts a hold on Petra. Over the next few hours, a rescue group steps up and arranges to pull the little dog on Sunday. A foster comes forward who will foster her overnight Sunday night. And at noon on Monday, transport starts for Petra’s trip from Dallas to San Antonio.
At 3 pm Monday, Petra — renamed Vimba which means “Hope” in Shona — arrives at her new home.
The power of sharing via social media saved this pup’s life… a happenstance connection on Facebook.
But there are more in need in all areas.
Do these pets a favor and share messages about animals in need. You never know when your message might save a life! And it costs you nothing… just a few minutes of your time.
Here are just a few of the faces saved in the past few weeks through sharing.
Contributed by Holly Ellis
Join us on Facebook:

Today’s blog is an important message from Viktor, the founder of Let’s Adopt!
“Let me be clear.
This is likely the most important post I have made in the last two years of running Let’s Adopt! and posting daily.
Read it please, and share it. You will be saving lives if you do.
Yesterday night we saved the life of a dog. We literally snatched him away from a family that would have either lost him or dumped him at a shelter in a matter of days.
The family called themselves animal lovers, but they were clearly incapable of taking care of that animal, they would have NEVER been able to cater to his needs, to provide him with the right veterinary care, to fulfill the basic needs of the animal.
That adoption should have NEVER taken place and the dog is lucky I intervened.
It is VERY VERY easy to find a home for a dog on the internet, but it is VERY VERY difficult to find a good home.
In the last few months we have had to intervene to rescue animals that had been given away on adoption to the very wrong people by animal lovers who didn’t follow the correct procedures. The story is always the same. Someone finds a dog, puts his picture on Facebook and asks people to apply for it. Someone applies for it, and he gets the dog, no questions asked. The nightmare starts there… Two days later the dog is again on the streets or taken to a shelter.
Rescuing and rehoming dogs is a great mission, but is also a SACRED responsibility. Let’s Adopt! is not in the business of passing dogs from one hand to the other, what we do here is to finding homes for the next 15 years of the live of that animal, and we will NEVER compromise for the sake of comfort or expediency. This also means that we cannot work under pressure, and that we will take the necessary time to find the perfect home for that animal.
I encourage all of you to rescue animals and to take action where needed, but I must also beg you to follow a system and apply strict rehoming procedures, otherwise the result could end up in death for the animal you have just rescued.
I am going to explain again what are our Adoption Rules in an attempt to make you understand why we are so strict and why we will never again make exceptions.
1. FAMILY MUST HAVE A DOG RIGHT NOW… If the dog has died recently it doesn’t count.. if they have a bird? doesn’t count, if they had a dog when they were young? No… The reason for this is simple risk management. The only way I have to be absolutely certain that you can take care of our animal is when I see you are already taking good care
of yours. There is no other way.. the alternative is for me to believe in your story and your intentions, and think about it.. why should I?
You may like dogs or cats all you want but how can I be sure you will not change your mind after a few hours. People change their minds incredibly fast after a couple of pees on their favorite carpet.
2. Dog MUST live inside the home, not in the garden. No factories, no office animals, no farms. Many reasons for this, but mainly the fact that we are looking for long term adoptions, not short term arrangements. What are the chances a dog living on a factory will receive the necessary veterinary care and attention when he is sick?
Same as a dog living on a farm…
3. Dog MUST be fed raw. This is a particularity of this group. Raw feeding is the ONLY biologically appropriate diet for a carnivore. To me, agreeing to follow this rule means that you will be putting the interest of the animal above your own, and that is precisely the kind of person I am trying to find.
These are MY rules, and after two years of rehoming on Facebook our success speaks for itself. These rules are applied in all our networks, not only in Turkey. Canada, USA and France will follow exactly the same procedures. These rules are not here to satisfy my ego as some may think. I personally don’t care what you think of me but if you are reading this message right now it means you somehow value my opinion.
Our rules are there to ensure the life of the animals and I strongly encourage you to follow them in your own particular rescues.
In Turkey, statistically only 1 out of 10 applicants is capable of taking care of an animal. 1 out of 10.“
Please share this on your profiles.
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