Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SUZANN
Quick Words:
commentary-dogs-rights
Full Text:
COMMENTARY: On The Rights Of Dogs
BY SUZANNA NYBERG
We all know that puppies sold in pet stores come from puppy mills, crude
breeding farms that mass-produce puppies for the marketplace. We all know that
greyhounds at the Shoreline Racetrack in Bridgeport are raced to their death
and that dogs down at US Surgical in Norwalk have staples punched into them by
traveling salesmen. Much has already been written covering the facts of these
cases.
At heart of the debate on puppy mills and dog tracks and stapling dogs is the
idea of animal rights.
That dogs and other animals do have rights can be easily justified. This issue
is one neither of emotion nor of irrational beliefs, but one of pure logic.
If one can make the case for the rights of human beings, for the rights of
women, blacks, gays, the handicapped, prisoners, one can make the case for the
rights of dogs. To insist that dogs do have rights is not to demean humans,
but it to suggest that all be given their just due.
Human beings are animals. We get hungry and want to eat; we become drowsy and
need to sleep; our heart beats, our lungs take in oxygen, our bodies grow old,
and eventually, like all other beasts, we will die. Dogs, like humans, get
thirsty, frightened, even savage when not treated well. When a dog has a
broken paw it whimpers in pain just as a child with a scraped knee cries. Dogs
prefer some things over others just as humans do. Bart, the Bee dog, eats my
carrots, but spits out the string beans.
Dogs, like humans, have a wonderful sense of play. And dogs, unfortunately,
are so physiologically close to humans that they are used for medical research
more often than primates.
Because a dog understands, accepts, and rejects, a dog thinks and reasons.
When a dog's human companion returns, the dog barks, wags his tail, gives a
kiss. A dog knows who he is greeting. Anyone who has ever looked into a dog's
eyes knows that the dog sees through the civilized facade to glean what the
human being is all about. No one can say for sure what the mental life of a
dog is like, no one knows how different or how similar it is to our own, but
that a dog has one is a given.
Nor does anyone know if a dog has an immortal soul, but then no one knows if a
human has one either. A soul, immortal or otherwise, is a matter of faith, not
knowledge and not belief. In any event, why would a living entity have to have
a soul in order to be assured of a few basic rights?
Just as few in a democratic republic would argue that the very wealthy, who
control most of the wealth of the nation, are inherently superior to those of
modest means, no one can argue that human beings, who just happen to dominate
most of the planet, are inherently better than other creatures who reside
here. Human beings are not the only species who can do many things; in fact,
there is much humans cannot do.
Human beings live in an impoverished perceptual world; dogs live in a rich
one. Dogs have a greater sense of sight and sound, smell and taste. They have
special cones in their eyes that allow them to see at twilight and at night. A
dog can hear the rustling of a mouse's stomach in the grass 30 yards away and
can recognize the age and sex of another dog from one drop of urine in a
gallon of water. A dog can use his sense of smell and high intelligence to
track a man through a bustling city. If the dog were merely following instinct
he might follow other smells more interesting to a dog.
Dogs don't need words to communicate. Their facial expressions are so subtle
and nuanced that few humans can read them. They simply have different ways of
expressing themselves. Human beings who claim that dogs don't use language
must define thoroughly what they mean by language. There are many human beings
who do not or can no longer use language to express themselves, and yet that
does not remove their humanity from them. If language -- or intelligence for
that matter -- were the litmus test for granting rights there would be a
public outcry. Just because dogs cannot defend their rights as can other
groups can does not mean that they do not have them.
Dogs feel, and it is feeling, not thinking, that determines what being alive
is all about. Given how humans continually refine themselves out of existence,
medicating themselves at the slightest twinge, it might be more appropriate to
grant dogs more rights than humans.
Dogs have value unto themselves, regardless of the needs of others. The rights
of dogs are not contingent upon the needs of humans just as the rights human
beings enjoy are not contingent upon the needs of other humans.
Because we know what dogs are like, because we have information regarding
their physiology and psychology, it is unforgivable that we sell them, race
them, and experiment on them.
No one has the right to do something just because it may be economically
beneficial or pleasurable or even useful. Puppy mills and race tracks are not
questions of economic rights versus animal rights. When it comes to economics,
the notion of a right is not involved. The problem of selling, racing, and
experimenting on dogs is a moral one, a matter of right and wrong, good and
bad. Dogs have a right to good treatment, and they have a right not to be
injured, especially for economic gain. The need to make a living does not give
human beings the right to violate the rights of others. If we are the
creatures we purport to be then we must act in the best interests over those
whom we can control.
To recognize that dogs have rights means that human beings have to change the
way they treat them. To recognize that dogs have rights has wide-ranging, but
not deleterious, ramifications for certain parts of the economy. There are
many other things pet shop owners can sell to achieve financial rewards.
Gamblers at the Shoreline racetrack can bet on baseball games. No one is
asking any human being to harm himself; one is merely suggesting that human
beings stop harming others. Even if humans were being harmed as a result of
their not being able to exploit dogs, the harm they would suffer would be as
nothing when compared to the injury they inflict on these animals.
For those looking for a particular breed of dog, there are many breed rescue
groups in the state, and for those looking for fun, surely they can find other
ways in which to amuse themselves.
