OMG that poor dog. A whole hour?
My dog spends all day in the house while I am at work. Food and water is available for him. Strangely he will not eat or drink until I come home. Some ten hour days, some eleven hour days and once a fifteen hour day and he didn't eat or drink anything. Eight years and he's just fine. My previous dog was just like that and she lived to be 16.
I can't imagine how that poor dog in the video didn't die from dehydration.
GTFO with that BS
Edit to add.
Both dogs stay in a crate. It doesn't have a door on it but they go in it of free will and will stay there most of the day. The previous dog would go to the crate before 8 am and stay there until either me or the woman came home.
In the house is a bit different then in the back of a truck or outside in a fenced yard. In KC they give tickets to people that have dogs outside in fenced in yards without access to water. If it is "hot" the dogs have been taken in the past.
Where I live quite a few people have "hunting dogs" and they exist in kennels. They always have water, one guy even has those "hamster type" water things where the dog can lick and get a drink. I had no idea they made them that big.
Point is they have water.
We also don't see his kennel. The ones around here are covered on the top, with holes in the side for air, and then a hole in the door. The seem to love getting to go into the kennel and go nutz when he puts the kennels in the truck, they know they are going to get to go fetch ducks or whatever. It is fantastic thing for the dog to get into the kennel in the truck.
What so many people don't know is these are not "pets" I am sure they can be, but these are more like sled dogs then pets, they are tools. The guy I am talking about, his dogs are never in his house, he does have "house dogs". These dogs live their life in a BIG fenced in run. Way back when I had one as well, mine was 100 YARDS by 50 YARDS with several dog houses inside, one made from a round bail of hay with a rebar welded structure. In the coldest of winter you could crawl into that house, and you would need to take your shirt off, it was really warm in there. Just a drape across the door. It was also cooler in the summer. They had an endless water supply, in the winter it was heated so it would not freeze. Only when it got really bad for an ice storm did they move into the garage, we lost power for 14 days and lived of a generator.
I would like to think the conditions being hot or whatever brought this all about.
I highly doubt that will change your mind, if you knew this was in Texas during the last heat wave and it is still 98F outside at that time of day, for some people it will always be the "jackbooted thugs" crushing a persons "rights".
The animal has "rights" as well, that right is to be treated humanely.