Quote Originally Posted by Karen View Post
There are too many people who are NOT responsible owners of these animals, especially big cats, and the sanctuaries are largely full, because people get an adorable baby and fail to realize it will grow up to be a huge predator that will require a large commitment of both time and money to care for it properly. Even monkeys, for example, have a hard time finding a new home, and zoos and sanctuaries can only do so much. Many primates are difficult to care for as they mature, and should only be in the care of someone with the right knowledge and financial resources to give them a good home for their whole lifetime. In most states here, you have to have a license or a permit to own a monkey, and often have to pass a written exam to get that permit.

I'm not talking 'exotics" like hedgehogs, or certain snakes, or guinea pigs, but animals like bears, lions, tigers, chimpanzees, and animals like that. In Florida, for example, there is a huge problem with people who have decided their Burmese Python is just too big or too expensive to care for, and set them loose. They are causing huge ecological problems - they have no natural predators in Florida, and are prolific breeders as well as big eaters of anything they run across, whether it be a rare species of native waterfowl, or your neighbor's cat or dog.
It's not going to make any difference to the perpetrators, they will simply go underground and not bother with permits or anything else.
The people who end up paying and wearing all of the burden will be those who are serious about keeping exotic pets. It's always the same, it's the responsible who pick up the tab.