“Don’t be fooled — Steph Curry is saving real pets, not feeding them to wildcats” While a Danish zoo sparked global outrage by asking the public to donate unwanted pets as food for lynxes, Curry quietly launched the opposite campaign — one rooted in compassion, not cruelty. Holding a rescue kitten in his son Riley’s arms, Curry posted: “They’re not leftovers. They’re family.” In a world growing numb to brutality disguised as policy, Curry is reminding us: mercy is never out of style.
“Make no mistake — Steph Curry is saving real pets”
As outrage erupts over a zoo feeding donated pets to wild cats, Curry quietly rewrites the story of compassion.

While social media explodes in fury over Denmark’s Aalborg Zoo — where people are being asked to donate unwanted pets as food for predators — on the other side of the world, a basketball legend is writing a completely different ending.
Steph Curry, the Golden State Warriors icon, has quietly stepped in to back a rescue fund for abandoned animals — urging the NBA community and fans alike to “choose compassion over so-called natural selection.”
As public backlash intensifies against the zoo’s controversial “pet donation for prey” policy, Curry posted a symbolic photo to his Instagram: a small kitten curled in the arms of his son Riley, with a single powerful caption —
“They’re not leftovers. They’re family.”

Sources close to Curry confirm he’s working with PetRescue to open a sanctuary for abandoned animals in the Bay Area — a place where no creature will be “humanely euthanized” behind cold steel doors.
In an age when “professional decisions” often mask cruelty, Curry’s quiet stance reminds us that kindness is never outdated.
There’s a difference between survival instinct and calculated indifference — and Steph knows it.

So maybe it’s time we stop handing pets to places promising a “second chance” when all they deliver is a silent execution.
Maybe we follow Steph instead — and give these animals a real shot at life.