Originally posted by: Amused
Torpid, this is very simple.
Come up with a valid link showing a consensus among vets. Not single issue activist sites, not holistic hippie sites, and not single articles written to the AVMA by the former.
My vet's advice has kept 5 cats over 40 years perfectly healthy. That's quite a track record. It's not one cat, but 5 over 40 years. ALL have been perfectly healthy on dry food and ALL have lived very long lives... longer than the average.
As for your fourth point, it's kinda silly, isn't it? We brush and floss daily. Cats do not.
Meanwhile this article blows away your catnutrition.org activist article:
http://www.avma.org/onlnews/javma/jan05/050115ww.asp
Funny how it was the only relevant article I could find when I searched for "canned food" on the AVMA website.
Yes, it is simple. Your arguments for dry food are bunk and you can't back them up with any logical statement or ANY site at all.
We brush daily, so should yout cats. Congratulations, you have finally started to get it. Apparently some new ideas can make it into your brain, albeit extremely slowly.
You are calling that PDF article written by an activist site? You're joking, right?
Can you provide me a single link anywhere on the internet which demonstrates that there is a health benefit to cats who eat dry food other than dental benefit? I find it unlikely. You can find thousands that list benefits of wet food. Whether or not you agree with them, at least admit that the ONLY benefit to dry food is some potential dental improvements, and even then, by your own article posted above, only when feeding hill's DENTAL diet and not any other diet (such as the ones recommended here like hairball control).
So, to summarize:
1. There is some benefit to feeding hill's dental diet to cats to their teeth, but none proven to feeding non dental diet (see your own link above)
2. Brushing your cat's teeth will offer significantly more benefit than any form of food
3. There may be some benefit to feeding wet food as it relates to bladder, kidney, and bowel disorders.
4. Your sample of 5 cats is scientifically inconclusive, just as my sample of 6 cats owned by various members of my family is.
Do you disagree with any of these 4 points? I assume not, unless you have some serious problems with rational arguments.
Regardless, it's preposterous to say what you wrote on this issue initially, that canned food stinks and makes a mess of teeth. Assuming you were referring to that being a RULE and not a generality, it is demonstrably false. My cats' teeth are fine, and they do not stink. At best, you can say it makes a mess of SOME cats' teeth and causes SOME Cats to stink.