|
Editor's
note: Reprinted with permission of the author

Guarding
the Guard Dogs?
Are you a dog "owner"—or a dog
"guardian"?
By Jon Katz
Last month, In Defense of Animals, a California-based animal rights
organization, sent me some materials about its "Guardian
Campaign." A polite letter complimented me on my most recent
book, then requested that I use the term "guardian" rather
than "owner" in future writings about dogs.
The benefits of relating to animals as guardians rather than as
owners would be "far reaching," wrote IDA president Dr. Elliot
Katz (who's no relation). Changing how we speak would help change how we
act. In a world where dogs are protected rather than owned,
Katz argued, it would be easier to crack down on animal abuse, end the
puppy-mill trade, and stop the killing of animals at shelters.
As a dog lover, owner of a rescue dog, and member of two rescue
groups, I'm not convinced there will be concrete benefits from this
metaphoric, even Orwellian revolution. How exactly will these semantic
changes improve the lot of animals? Why can't we shut down puppy mills,
end some cruel animal research, save the lives of dogs and cats in
shelters, prosecute animal abuse, and still
call ourselves "owners"?
IDA's letter proudly pointed out that
San Francisco
;
West Hollywood
;
Berkeley
,
Calif.
;
Boulder
,
Colo.
;
Amherst
,
Mass.
, and the state of
Rhode Island
have already enacted ordinances changing owners into guardians. (Some of
those jurisdictions have also embraced the animal-rights movement's
other language crusade, changing "pets" into "companion
animals.")
Although IDA cited these cities and state as evidence that the notion
of "guardian" is spreading, to me it suggests the opposite:
Its successes are confined to left-wing pockets. I'll be impressed when
Kansas City
takes up the idea.
Social movements are only as effective as their ability to win
popular support. I'm currently living in rural upstate
New York
, and I showed the IDA packet to Sandra, a sheep farmer who lives down
the road with her female partner. She was shocked. "I love my
Rottweiler," Sandra told me. "But I'd love to marry my partner
and I can't. I have to say I'm a bit uncomfortable with dogs having more
rights than I do. Me first." Sandra had just filed legal papers to
have her partner declared her legal guardian in the event of serious
illness. She said she was not about to do the same for her dog.
I reminded Sandra that animal rights don't really come at the expense
of human rights—there's no reason both species can't have some
protection. But her reservations are important. Easing animal suffering
is inarguably worthwhile; turning animals into a kind of human is
another matter.
And such a transformation seems the goal of some animal activists. My
IDA packet contained a testimonial from a
Michael
Mountain
of the Best Friends Animal Sanctuary. "People of other genders,
races and even age groups were once treated as property in this
country," Mountain wrote. "Now, it is time for 'people' of
other species to be accorded the same simple dignity of being
recognized, not as someone else's property but as beings in their own
right."
Mountain couldn't have made the point more dramatically—or
offensively. I don't care to jump in with a moral value system that
equates my beloved border collies with human slaves. Nothing about this
comparison helps animals. It distorts their true natures and diminishes
ours.
The guardian campaign is a vivid example of the growing tendency to
blur the boundaries between us and our pets. Many Americans have already
stopped seeing their dogs and cats as animals. They're family members,
emotional support systems, metaphors for issues from our own pasts, aids
for healing and growth, children with fur.
Seeing them the way we see ourselves—as having human thoughts and
needs, human rights—is another kind of abuse and exploitation. It is
cruel to crate a child, but it's often helpful and soothing to crate a
dog. No human would want to spend five minutes in a kennel, yet good
kennels, much maligned by deeply attached pet owners, are often the
safest and best places to leave dogs when we leave home.
Seeing dogs as piteous, deprived, abused, and needy can lead us to
treat them unwisely. Vets cite overfeeding and the resultant epidemic
obesity as a major killer of dogs and cats in
America
. Yet I can't count how many times I've heard somebody say, "I feed
him because I just can't bear to starve him." Or "I just can't
resist when he begs for food. He's so cute." Any vet or animal
nutritionist would tell these people that they're doing as much harm to
their cute little beggars by overfeeding them as they would by kicking
them.
People who see their dogs as humanlike often struggle to train them
properly, especially if they believe they were abused or mistreated.
Owners sometimes think their dogs have already suffered so much that
they couldn't possibly inflict any more criticism. Yet it's that very
firm, effective training that would make those dogs happier and more
secure. And what about the growing number of owners who find neutering
cruel or unbearable, because they would find it so? Refusing to neuter
may put their own pet or someone else's in danger—causing aggression,
running away, and unwanted litters. Or the pet owners who make
their dogs hyper by believing they need to "play"
continuously, like over programmed boomer children? They drag them to
unruly play groups, toss Frisbees and balls night and day, haul them to
an endless round of organized activities—but fail to teach them how to
be calm.
The humanlike view of dogs affects the decision about when to euthanize
a sick or elderly pet. I recently attended two veterinary conventions
where scores of vets told me their biggest recent problem is people who
see their pets as so human that they simply cannot end their lives or
suffering, no matter the cost or the pain.
There is no evidence that dogs have the kind of complex emotional
lives and value systems that we do. It's one reason why we love them so
much, in fact. They are neither "good" nor "bad."
They don't hold grudges, act in petty ways, or seek revenge. They read
our moods, but not our minds. If they did, we'd start loving them as we
love other humans—which could mean a lot less than we love them now.
Dogs are not "people" of another species. They are
another species. To train and care for them properly, to show them how
to live in our complex world, requires first and foremost that we
understand that. I owe my dogs much—more than I can say—but they are
not my "companions"—as if we voluntarily chose to hang out
together but none of us has authority over the others. I bought and/or
acquired them. I own them. I am profoundly responsible for their care
and well being.
Guardianship, a word always applied to human beings, implies equality—the
highest and perhaps most noble of all goals in this democratic nation.
Ownership implies responsibility.
Americans who own dogs need to be more responsible for them, literally
and emotionally—not more equal to them.
The drama of the modern dog is that he is segregated from
society—from work, children, public places—and then blamed for not
knowing how to live in our world. The things he wants to do—have sex,
roll in gross stuff, roam freely, squabble with other dogs, chew shoes,
pee on every other tree—are either illegal or frowned upon. His
challenge isn't to become a free and equal person in the best traditions
of our society but to learn how to live in the alien world of people.
Guardianship suggests dogs have a right to live their own lives as
they wish. This is impossible in our dog-unfriendly world. Ownership
implies a human duty to help the dog adjust to this difficult,
inhospitable place.
"Dog owner" is a proud title. It suits me fine.
Jon
Katz is the author of The New Work of Dogs: Tending to Love, Life and
Family. You can reach him at jdkat3@aol.com
|