Marc Bekoff,
Psychology today – Animal Emotions
March 2013
“"Animal torture, abuse called a 'regular practice' within federal wildlife agency" according to former employees.
Coyote in leghold trap
This morning, just like most other mornings, my email inbox was loaded
with news about nonhuman animals (animals). Sometimes I frankly hesitate to
open some of the messages because they contain gory text and offensive
pictures of animals being treated in the most egregious and inhumane ways.
When this happens at 5AM it can easily take the edge off the upcoming day.
Today was also a mixed bag but coincidentally or not, there were articles
that related to topics about which I've written in the past and they made me
revisit some of my own thoughts and feelings about the subjects at hand.
Here I consider two essays, one published by Fox News called "Animal
torture, abuse called a 'regular practice' within federal wildlife agency"
and the other published in Hinduism Today called "Animals Have Souls and
Feelings, Just Like We Do". Both will fire up your brain.
"Animal torture, abuse called a 'regular practice' within federal wildlife
agency" according to former employees.
"The brutal approach by Wildlife Services is part of a culture of animal
cruelty that has long persisted within an agency that uses taxpayer money to
wage an unnecessary war on wildlife, according to two U.S. congressmen who
have repeatedly called for a thorough investigation."
"'I had to kill hundreds of coyote pups and pregnant females,' Strader
continued. 'If you found a coyote den, you just bombed it.'"
An article published by Fox News by Cristina Corbin from which the above two
quotations are taken is called "Animal torture, abuse called a 'regular
practice' within federal wildlife agency". I've written many times about the
heinous abuse for which government workers are responsible and this Fox News
essay confirms what many people have come to see as facts: many of those who
work for Wildlife Services do indeed work for an organization that could
easily be called Murder Inc. It's not just animal rights activists who are
thoroughly offended at the deplorable way in which millions upon millions of
animals are inhumanely treated and killed, but also former employees and
those who simply feel we should treat other animals with respect and dignity
and former employees.
Consider the words of Gary Strader in the quotation below. Mr.
Strader is a former employee of Wildlife Services who claims his job was
terminated after he alerted supervisors to alleged wrongdoing within the
agency.
"It was a productive day for Gary Strader when he pulled his vehicle up to a
remote site in northeast Nevada and found nine coyotes caught in leg hold
snares set by the federal government. As was routine, Strader, a former
trapper with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, signaled his dogs to
attack.
"His supervisor, who had accompanied him that day, watched and laughed as
the dogs circled the coyotes and ripped into them, Strader recalled.
"'That was regular practice,' said Strader, who in 2009 left Wildlife
Services, a little-known program within the USDA."
Rex Shaddox, a Texas law enforcement officer who worked for Wildlife
Services when it was called Animal Damage Control, left the agency after “We
were told to watch as they held the dogs down and shot cyanide into their
mouths, one by one,' he said. 'I went home and cried that day. And then I
quit.'”
It made me ill to read this essay but I feel it is worth sharing because it
clearly shows that changes must be made in how animals are treated by
Wildlife Services and they are long overdue. For more on this reprehensible
ways of Wildlife Services please see a three-part series (see also and) by
Tom Knudson of the Sacramento Bee on the clandestine activities of this
government agency (written with the help of Brooks Fahy, Executive Director
of Predator Defense, and others) that exposes Wildlife Services using
irrefutable facts that should motivate everyone to publicly decry their
killing ways. My own essay summarizes the egregious way in which Wildlife
Services routinely treats other animals. As Camilla Fox, Executive Director
of Project Coyote notes, "If people knew how many animals are being killed
at taxpayer expense—often on public lands—they would be shocked and
horrified." Amen.
"Animals have souls and feelings, just like we do": We need a new paradigm
rooted in nonviolence and compassion.
Now for some positive news about the amazing animals with whom we share our
magnificent planet. An essay in Hinduism Today called "Animals Have Souls
and Feelings, Just Like We Do" by Matthew McDermott is a good read and
summary of what we know about animal cognition, emotions, consciousness, and
sentience. Mr. McDermott concludes, "The evidence calls for a new paradigm
in our relationships with other creatures, one that is rooted in the ancient
Hindu values of ahimsa and karunya—nonviolence and compassion." I couldn't
agree more.
Among the topics I consider is the practice of wrongly referring to "lower" and "higher" animals. I stress that hierarchical thinking in which we place ourselves above and separate from other animals is misleading and that we now know that there are "surprises" in the study of other animals concerning how smart and emotional they are and how they too deeply suffer when mistreated. Consider fish. There’s a good deal of research showing that fish are conscious beings (see also and). They feel pain, they’re very smart, they deceive other fish, they cooperate with one another, and they respond to morphine in the same ways that we do.
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