Blog description.

Accentuating the Liberal in Classical Liberal: Advocating Ascendency of the Individual & a Politick & Literature to Fight the Rise & Rise of the Tax Surveillance State. 'Illigitum non carborundum'.

Liberty and freedom are two proud words that have been executed from the political lexicon: they were frog marched and stood before a wall of blank minds, then forcibly blindfolded, and shot, with the whimpering staccato of ‘equality’ and ‘fairness’ resounding over and over. And not only did this atrocity go unreported by journalists in the mainstream media, they were in the firing squad.

The premise of this blog is simple: the Soviets thought they had equality, and welfare from cradle to grave, until the illusory free lunch of redistribution took its inevitable course, and cost them everything they had. First to go was their privacy, after that their freedom, then on being ground down to an equality of poverty only, for many of them their lives as they tried to escape a life behind the Iron Curtain. In the state-enforced common good, was found only slavery to the prison of each other's mind; instead of the caring state, they had imposed the surveillance state to keep them in line. So why are we accumulating a national debt to build the slave state again in the West? Where is the contrarian, uncomfortable literature to put the state experiment finally to rest?

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Showing posts with label Dog Ownership Rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dog Ownership Rules. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Campbell Live, Christchurch Rentals, Children, Dogs, Tattoos and Cannabis.



A theme of this blog is that we’re living in a semi-police-surveillance state (ie, welfare state), because people are emoting, not thinking about life, and Campbell Live’s piece on Christchurch last night was proof of this as well as the MSM emoting on issues again.

I would normally let The Cactus get the hate mail from the obligatory post below, but she must have missed the program.  Last night's show was centred on how a family would soon be out of their rental home, and couldn’t afford to find further accommodation in Christchurch, ostensibly due to the earthquakes. Let’s look at the family, objectively, with the reasoned eye of a landlord:

Dad had a low paying job  - security guard. (But, yes, at least had one).
Dad was covered in tattoos.
Mum and Dad had four, yes, four kids all under six, in my estimate.
Mum , Dad, and four kids own an Alsatian dog.

Mum and Dad haven’t been thinking.

Before the first child, get your career, or at least your own freehold home sorted so you control your destiny.  That’s the responsible thing. Four kids are hard on any property. And property ownership aside; why not just have the one child, and have the resources to give that child his or her best shot in life? Possibly two children still has a modicum of prudence, but four, in your circumstances: that was mental.

Dad, tattoos all over you like that, pretty much has destined you to low paying jobs, sorry. (See following).

And I love dogs, so let’s add to my dog ownership rules for the clueless: ‘you own a dog when you own a property’, end of; because if you own an Alsatian when you’re renting, you’ve just denied yourself ninety nine rental propositions out of every one hundred. Perhaps just buy guinea pigs, or rabbits until you own your own home.

Then the street group-shot in the piece of those complaining about Christchurch’s high rentals. I'm assuming the two women spoken to were solo mums - because it's impossible circa 2012 not to draw that conclusion anymore - with inestimable numbers of children, and yes, tattoos, everywhere, on those two women and pretty much the whole group. Good lord. Tattoos on fatty flesh overflowing pants, tattoos on hips, tattoos on tits, probably tattoos on kids, that whole fad has become so ridiculous.  When I see someone with tattoos visible all over them it tells me something:  this person’s not been thinking much, therefore, are they going to look after a landlord's property? And off topic now, plus call me reactionary, but I find tattoos aesthetically ugly: moreover, if tattoos and body piercings made people more interesting, then people with tattoos and body piercings would be more interesting. Though getting back to the Campbell Live piece, the opportunity costs of those tattoos, is how many weeks rental? And, of course, for the stereotype you’ve just bought into, vis a vis employment and rental opportunities - or rather, lack of: priceless, you'll probably never be able to afford to move beyond it.

Sorry, empathy for your children, not a lot of sympathy for the adults.


Footpiece: Re Campbell Live’s final piece on the crowd behaviour at the Sevens. Appalling, you won’t find me there. Here’s a thought, replace the vomit inducing booze culture with a cannabis culture, and the vibe at the Sevens would be great, no vomit, or angry young men and women widdling all over the carpark who can’t even stand straight. But no, Nanny State has arbitrarily - conspiracy theories about crony links to an alcohol lobby aside - decreed cannabis be illegal, even a humane medicinal use of it in hospices: it's a binge drinking, Neanderthal projectile vomiting, violent, alcohol culture we're to have. Crazy, but that's life in the Big State where you don't own your life no more, no more.

… Work time for me …

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Dog Rescue: Penultimate Post – Not Great News.



An update on what can happen when hard arsed hunting folk meet the brick wall of a libertarian nut-job: appallingly, a Labrador dog may next week be shot, though I hope not.

Importantly, a note about privacy and the people involved in this first, because I have been personally struggling with some aspects of it: I don’t particularly like looking over my neighbour’s fence. I am one of the most private of people, and I would be mortified, then furious, if someone were spying over my fence, and privacy forms a pervasive theme in this blog, given the police state is the absence of same. So this is how I rationalise it: the privacy concerns in this blog chiefly concern privacy from the intrusive state, as the state is the only power that can breach privacy with impunity, indeed, specifically legislates itself the right. To take my property and my freedoms from me, the state first had to do away with my privacy, or more precisely, my right to be left alone, hence, the new surveillance states we live in. Whoops politicking … I believe that if you initiate force that is not self-defence, then you lose your right to be left alone, obviously: that’s why we have the law. I would differ from Objectivists, proper, by then carrying the non-initiation of force (or cruelty) principle over to protecting an animal, and I have no compunction about that at all: I explained why in this earlier post. That said, I have never on this blog named the people involved in this rotten affair regarding the dog, nor, at this stage, do I intend to ‘name and shame’. There’s a great image Kundera evokes in his novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being:


When she told her French friends about it, they were amazed. "You mean you don't want to fight the occupation of your country?" She would have liked to tell them that behind Communism, Fascism, behind all occupations and invasions lurks a more basic, pervasive evil and that the image of that evil was a parade of people marching by with raised fists and shouting identical syllables in unison. But she knew she would never be able to make them understand.


The quotation doesn’t relate to privacy, not directly at least, but there’s an undertone in that paragraph about ‘being careful’ not to be subsumed unthinkingly in affairs that are emotionally charged – thinking over feeling,again  – and moreover, there’s a bullying menace to indiscriminate naming and shaming: as Kundera says, a ‘more basic, pervasive evil’ that I am wholly uncomfortable with, even here, though I’m not counting it out.

This is complicated. No, no, sorry those who would advocate the instant outing, this IS complicated. I hate the way it’s going, but my hotheadedness probably hasn’t helped: I’ve pushed the dog owners’ concerned into a corner by being so much on their case. Regardless, the final result is now going to be known Friday (read following), and naming and shaming would a) just make things worse at the moment, and b) is not warranted yet.

The origins of my recent dog rescue posts can be read at the bottom of this post: a voluntary dog ownership guide for the clueless

From that, and after hoping the issues regarding the dog involved were resolved in earlier remonstrations with the dog’s owners, they quickly slipped back into their old ways, leading to the issue coming to a head again this Sunday, when, with no one at the their house, I had to go over and feed their dog, and put this note on their door.

The below email sent to two interested blog readers, sums up the aftermath, vis a vis yesterday’s ‘negotiations’ – I’ve extended it where necessary: 


Cheers xxxx

I'm not too sure what to do at the moment. This is ornery folk with a dreadful view of animals, but on own terms, human to human, can be fine. Up until we fell out over the welfare of their dog, they've been good neighbours. I'm just done talking to her now, and her/their position is they're going to try and find dog another home this week, (despite our offer to take her) otherwise, quote: 'they'll have it shot. That's the thing about animals, we can shoot them, problem gone'.

The dog is currently not on their premises; it hasn't been since last night. I said to ‘the mother’, do not have the dog shot, we will take it on. But she is adamant, 'it's her problem'. Sadly, I suspect that's my fault, because the message I left them on Sunday said 'the last thing we need is another big dog, but we'll take your dog on' ... that was stupid. She may be 'proudly not giving me a problem'.

It’s not against the law to shoot your dog, so long as done 'humanely', whatever that means. She might just be bluffing to get at me, I've no idea. Part of the problem is she works long shifts, and she's tired, and the dog is just another problem she doesn't need: but still, because we have offered to take the dog on, that's not good enough. She does have an option, but either does seriously see it as 'her problem, she'll fix it', or is so angry with me she thinks she's 'getting at me', because I have been a pain for a while now, given I 'see red' over animal welfare issues. Pauline is making phone calls to various authorities this afternoon and tomorrow morning, including the local SPCA.

Regards Mark

 Will keep you up to date … I'll ring them again within the week, hoping it is partly hot air, currently, and they'll climb down. And in the meantime, I've actually got to get some work done.

Oh, one thing, and it sounds awful, but the dog has had no emotional input: it's never had company of other dogs, or a kind word spoken to it from a human, yet its kept in conditions that would be hard for SPCA to prove outright abuse (it's a high threshold). For example: after I went over on Sunday and gave her some biscuits and a pat, she never barked again, so she obviously was hungry, and I'm wondering if she had anything to eat Friday, which she spent wholly in her kennel, after I went over and put her in her kennel Thursday night when it was raining, and took some biscuits with me – when she’s not in the kennel she’s tied to a tree on a two metre chain, and can’t get out of rain and weather, though there is some shade -  but I can only surmise that, I can't prove anything. And she doesn't appear to be emaciated. So given the no-mans land she appears to be stuck in, and heaven only knows what sort of other home they would find her, in that sense she would be better off dead, frankly, rather than carrying on as the living dead (and they certainly won't be getting another dog while we're here). It’s just that in every contact I've had with her (the dog) recently, she appears to have a lovely nature, against all the odds, so we want a go to see if she can be retrained as an inside, family dog. I'll let matters cool down a day or two and see where we are then.

Humans. They're over-rated.


I doubt if the dog’s owners are reading this blog, I’m sure they would have told me yesterday if that were the case, and I’m not too concerned if they do anymore given for now I’m keeping all names out. Hence this update.

My wife has since talked to SPCA, and I’m afraid, as wiser heads had warned me, they’re not much use. Dog owner’s not liking dogs, is not abuse. And yes, I think the care of this dog is atrocious, and it is, but proving actual abuse is another matter altogether; the owners for the most part have, eventually, given her enough dirty water, and enough of the cheapest form of dry biscuit to keep her alive. Plus it’s not against the law to shoot your dog, so long as you do so humanely – proving you can have all the laws, regulation and state bullying for people to do the right thing you like, that doesn’t make the people who need to be, civilised: that can only be had by changing people’s minds. Worse, the dog, a Labrador, is six coming on seven year old, a bit older than we thought, and re-housing that age dog that has lived as spartan as this one, is probably impossible outside ourselves.

Anyway, back on track, in yesterday’s discussion, I typically thought of what I should have said only afterward, so luckily I’ve still got one chance left. ‘The Mum’ is not threatening to have dog shot until next week – and yeah, oh course they wouldn’t think of a peaceful euthanasia. So I’m ringing a last time on Friday, with my final argument being along the lines of it is now not just the owner’s problem anymore, as she says it is, for by saying as the result of my pestering she plans to shoot the dog, she has made it my problem.  More pertinently, if she has the dog shot when I have said I'll take the dog into our care, then she is shooting a dog only to get at me, and couldn’t care less about its welfare, despite her verbal protestations regarding ‘working long hours’ (which is a copout anyway, but I let that slide while talking). Obviously that would put her on the highest order of evil, but then, as she says, ‘it’s just an animal, we can shoot them, problem solved’. Something still makes me think she’s just bluffing and venting, albeit, if it does come to that, then I guess one hard arsed libertarian nut-job will lose it in a (hopefully) controlled explosion.

I don’t know if I’ll get a chance to update this blog on the result, sorry, until between Christmas and New Year. I need to be doing many more hours working than I am, and we have a house in the Mahau Sound we’re trying to get to Boxing Day for a break. Although, should we manage to get the dog, that in itself will be a huge bunch of problems; not the least of which is the Hubbards’ are a three member family now, two adults and one small Daisy Dog, and we have packing and traveling between Geraldine  and the Sounds , an eight hour day, in our zippy little Ford Focus down to an art form. A Labrador dog will disrupt all that, and I guess I would be in the market for a station wagon next week, pending Friday’s discussions, when we thought our big dog station wagon days were well over. Mind you, a couple of weeks in the Sounds would be a perfect place to start house-training a dog that has never seen the inside of a house before.

Jesus.

Four things only can result from here:

(1) The dog’s owners find another home for her where the people are able to care for her properly – and hopefully they actually like dogs. Personally, reservations about this as I’ll have no way of knowing what the future welfare of the dog will be (especially if another bloody hunter – sorry for the ‘decent’ hunters who read this blog, but I’ve stated my views on hunting, at the beginning of this, and those views are only hardening).

Or (2), we’ll take over care of the pooch. Huge curve from there, re-training, syncing in with Daisy which is a big concern as Daisy is used to 100% of our attention, us, etc. Pauline and I are reticent about the notion of taking her on, this is largely forced on us, and it’s a hell of an upheaval, given after three Great Danes across our marriage, our responsibilities now all cared for, we had deliberately planned for the mobile family we’ve become; however, when dealing with this dog, she’s had a shit life to date, and we’d love to have a go at giving her a doggy heaven for the last part of it, given the chance. (Or at the very least getting her house trained, see what sort of a dog she can be - we have no idea what behavioural issues she now has - in view of finding a good home).

Or (3), the pooch will be shot, at which stage this issue will unfortunately go nuclear.

Though fourthly, the only certainty: Boxing Night, I will be sitting on my balcony, in the Mahau, looking at this:


 … with a bottle of wine, and pleasantly tiddly. 2012 has been a rotten year in many ways, not just this dog; I’m over it.

There may be one more tax post next week, but now I’ve got to work …

Finally, remember my dog guide to the clueless (scroll down for rules): apart from what I will call hunters’ heartlessness, in this case, some type of basic empathy missing in this family’s make-up, remembering this dog is the son’s who has now left home, this family initially broke the following rule:


If you are buying a dog as an accessory for your five year old child, stop, read William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, and bugger off. The dog doesn’t need you.


This dog very definitely did not need these people.

Dog ownership is no different to thinking about family size: you’ve got to think about it, from conception and then over the entire life of the sprog or dog. It requires time. It requires financial resources. It requires, believe it or not, intellectual wherewithal. And only after that, it most importantly requires you to want a dog or sprog in your family because it betters your life, and you love having them. Having sprogs or dogs is not mandatory, and if you’re not equipped, then don’t do either. Those in society who do not think about these issues just cause chaos for the rest of us who have to clean up after them. Through a coercive tax system, and then nonsense like this, I’m ‘over’ the stupid, slave society voted in by our social(alist) democracy: generation text would say it’s a bit shit, I would say it’s damned evil, and growing worse, daily

Now I’ve mentioned children and family size, if you still have a spare minute, spend it reading Liberty Scott’s succinct philosophic demolition of Office of the Children's Commissioner Report on Child Poverty in New Zealand. Hell, meet the hand-cart …

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

A Voluntary Guide to Dog Ownership for the Clueless: Animal Welfare and the Libertarian State.



… and in which I attack New Zealand’s hunting culture, and remarkably, this once, thank the Exclusive Brethren.

The subject of animal rights and classical liberalism, for me, has always been an interesting one, given, if I could ever be radicalised in favour of a group of complete misfits, it would be those anti-classical liberal nutters from PETA. It's the chink in my rationalist armour.

The Libertarian politick is such a wide school, the below post would go down uncontroversially with most Libertarians, however, I do fall foul of Objectivism for the views I’m about to express. The latter is primarily because despite my admissions on this blog that man must live by his mind, (and he must), and the welfare state is currently feeling its way toward the police state, (which it is), in a case of animal cruelty, I’m prepared to chuck out every shred of philosophy and politick, save the animal, then think about the philosophical issues later. But having said that, I don’t see any contradiction here.

There will be no classical liberal (free) society, until such time as individuals understand the need to lead reasoned, responsible lives. I’ll call it a reasoned, civilising humanity, which includes thinking and caring about the welfare ­- used in its innocent, correct sense, as in ‘humane’ - of all sentient beings, animals included. There lies in this the further notion of how someone treats an animal, may well indicate how they treat their fellow humans. And thus if they do not behave responsibly in the humane treatment of animals in their care, then there will be a high likelihood of irresponsibility in other spheres. I’m thinking further of the studied cases of those that have gone on to commit heinous crimes against humans, who started out doing acts of animal cruelty when young. Though I am quick to point out there is another school of people who are not knowingly abusive, though that is the result: they are simply ignorant: people – let’s call them stupid - who somehow have an inability to rationalise the world they live in, to the extent of compartmentalising empathy in a manner that’s almost schizophrenic, and cruel. Via that I could turn this whole post into railing against the insidious manner a welfare state works on the psychology of the participants, but I won’t; there’s something more important I’m trying to figure out in this.

Libertarians are not the ‘rugged (read uncaring) individualists’ that the Left try to simplistically paint them. Indeed, if there is one thing the new classical liberal party that hopefully arises from the Libertarianz conference this weekend, must try to broach, finally, is that it is the classical liberal society that makes possible the ‘decent’ society, not the welfare state which has so cruelly turned ‘nurture’ on end, taking away self-reliance and the clear heads needed to make responsible decisions, financial and otherwise, about the care of children and pets. A libertarian society would not see people ‘dying in the streets’, as detractors inanely proclaim, quite apart from anything else, you’d have to be some sort of monster to leave someone dying in a street, (or an animal in circumstances of neglect), and the only uncharitable societies I can think of where that happened, to humans, are communist and totalitarian ones. Libertarians realise as much as anyone we ‘live in the village’: we just don’t think the village owns us. We want communities based on voluntarism, rather than state coercion from above; the twentieth century showed how cruel that was. One of the favourite quotations I have come across this year - ­ hat-tip to Café Hayek - is the following from pages 77 and 94-95 of David Schmidtz’s contribution to David Schmidtz’s and Robert E. Goodin’s important 1998 book, Social Welfare and Individual Responsibility: For and Against:


If communitarians are right to say Western society has been atomized, then surely one of the causes has been the state’s penchant for making itself (rather than the community) the primary focus of public life….

What explains market society’s unparalleled success in helping people to prosper? The key, I have argued, lies in background institutions, especially property institutions, that lead people to take responsibility for their own welfare….

The welfare state would have made people better off if it had led neighbors to rely on each other and on themselves, but it seems to have done the opposite.


It’s from ourselves, and then the community that a free society will have to arise: by definition it can never arise from the powers wherein statism resides, because it involves the state, itself, falling on its pen (name one instance from history that has happened voluntarily?) To bring this down to micro-level, and the issue of this post, regarding an individual act of animal cruelty, or neglect, the starting point to fix this thus has to be within the community of individuals dealing with one another – in the first instance remonstrating directly with the people concerned. If that does not work, then, it's unlikely the state would provide a remedy, without making things worse, and by this I mean the state in the form of the local council: indeed, looking at the increasing council restrictions from public walkways I am allowed to walk my dog anymore, including for large parts of the year not being allowed to take a dog along almost always deserted Caroline Bay, I have formed the opinion the Timaru Council hates dogs - and I guarantee my wee dog would get more enjoyment from that beach, than most of the adults there. No, even if first attempts break down, then solutions will nearly always remain most effective in the voluntary community; namely, those charitable groups such as we support each year financially, RSPCA and a Canterbury Dog rescue group, because such voluntary charities are where compassion for animals is to be found in the people involved, and success or failure is always about the people involved: in this case, volunteers with a passion to ensure no cruelty is transacted on an animal by the mindless, (see, this is about mind over emoting, after all).

Although something else, also, when considering issues of animal cruelty: New Zealand’s hunting culture. I grew up on a farm, albeit one where my father wouldn’t allow guns - though I suspect that was to do with my family, then, being Exclusive Brethren (and regards that I was sickly fortunate to have an intellectually handicapped sister who the whiskey alcoholics running the Brethren took to be ‘evil’, and thus my direct family were thrown out - mindlessness again, but yay) - plus a father whose most hated farm job, and one which he never stopped hating, was killing sheep for our own table. It was good he never stopped hating that: it defined him as a thinking, compassionate, empathetic human. But this meant I’ve always been around the hunting culture of our rural communities, and though it was never something I thought about overly when growing up, for whatever reason, now, perhaps because I’m spending more and more time living in the Marlborough Sounds, it’s something I seem to be pondering. 

I have to say I’m ‘over’ hunting culture. Completely.

Yes, I know we have to control pests, such as possum, I’m grown up and understand that, but that’s not what hunting culture is about. Nor is it about feeding ourselves anymore: in the twenty first century we farm our meat humanely, and have you ever tried eating wild meat? Wild boar is so tough, it’s hard to get off the bone, and hare is as tough as old rope: farmed meat is much more palatable. But that’s by the by. As far as I can tell, hunting culture is supposedly about, at best, testing oneself against nature, and also, I’ve had the odd hunter ­- and these were odd hunters -­ who have tried to inform me there’s some sort of mystical communing with nature involved (that woo woo Robin Hood set to Enya nonsense; stag heads rising out of the mist, druids, and all that …). I say a pox on both counts.

Here’s what hunting is: hunting is sitting on one hillside with a bazooka and telescopic sight while you bravely try and destroy every completely defenceless, living thing on the hillside across the valley, your only risk the rifle of the mate you’ve taken with you (mindlessness again rears its head). I just don’t buy into the bullshit anymore. If you want what you profess, hunters, take up tramping, or vege gardening, otherwise, arm the wildlife, or go into the bush only armed with a spear, killing at arm’s length: that would be a test, just like in the days hunting was an essential for living; the days of cave men, that civilised men have responsibly walked away from. And I’ve not seen a single pig dog ­- and I’ve seen a lot - whose life wouldn’t be improved by being euthanized.

Considering all of the above, indeed, I reckon I’m only a $7,000 BBQ and my stomach away from an ethical vegetarianism.

Anyway, my public service for this week, and for the mindless who are incapable of thinking these issues through, let me give a guide to dog ownership. Note this is an ‘and’ test, not ‘or’, that is, you must pass every limb, failure on any one counts you out, you should voluntarily choose to never have a dog – it is only via such informed, voluntary decisions that animal cruelty will ultimately be stopped.

The test is simple - (and for this single post I’m breaking my blog’s self-imposed no swearing policy):

The Rules:

If you are currently sitting at home and your dog is by itself outside in a kennel: you are a shit, you shouldn’t own a dog.

If your dog is sitting in its own shit in its kennel: you’re an even bigger shit, in fact, you should be prosecuted or re-educated if that ignorant, with your kids taken off you in the meantime. Go live in your own toilet for a week, make sure it’s a small one like your dog’s kennel, and don’t pull the chain. When you come out green, wonder why your dog, with a sense of smell one hundred times better than your’s, would want to live that way. Plus a dog won't sit in its shit, so you've just halved the size of an already paltry sized kennel. Indubitably you also are struck out on the first criteria above, so well done, you've turned a kennel into a concentration camp for your poor dog.

If your dog has to live outside all its life, never allowed inside as one of your family, you don’t really like dogs, so don’t own one. A dog is a sociable animal.

If when deciding to get a dog, the first breed your mind lands on is buying a fighting, aggressive breed of dog, then you don’t like dogs, so don’t own one.

If you are buying a dog as an accessory for your five year old child, stop, read William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, and bugger off. The dog doesn’t need you.

If you’re planning on feeding your dog the exact same diet of dry biscuits every day: you can’t really be bothered with a dog; don’t own one.

If you don’t kiss your dog on top of its head, once a day, and give it a stroke whenever passing, or whenever it wants one, you don’t really like dogs, so don’t own one.

… See. Easy, when you just think about things for a little bit.

Finally, in an actual case of harm, which my wife and I are now tackling the owner’s over - this is, finally, one very uncomfortable D-Day - the family is mum and a grown up son and daughter. The Labrador concerned belongs to the son, a hunter: his attitude toward the poor dog is succinctly summed up in his phrase, quote: ‘its just a hunting dog’. Although there’s the problem, for the dog is not that; it lives in a suburban kennel/dog concentration camp, and gets taken hunting, if its lucky, five or six times a year, I imagine, I can’t remember last seeing it go: it has no other dogs for company, and gets no stimulation or affection from any human, at least not that we can see. They don’t appear to have an understanding a dog is a pack/social animal, and to deprive it of all companionship is in itself a real form of cruelty, despite no law saying so, quite apart from everything else they’re doing wrong – the dog sitting in its own faeces rule above comes from this case. Indeed, both the children treat the dog as offhandedly bad, if not worse, than the mother, so it would seem to be learned ignorance. When those children have children, guess what’s going to happen if something doesn’t break the vicious cycle of ignorance here of how animals should be treated … starting to sound like the argument against the welfare state, isn’t it – note these are all hard workers. I would say a welfare state and Antonio Gramsci in our schools, over time, by stopping people thinking (self-reliance), leads to this. The Left who take a cynical view of man would say we need the welfare state precisely because of this, man’s fallen nature; people must be coerced to do the right thing.

Who is right?

Me. Of course. Only voluntarily made decisions and actions stick for the long term.

(Did I say I was thinking about ethical vegetarianism? Jeez, I’m feeling a bit faint. Better go throw a farmed steak on the BBQ).


Dog 'Rescue' - Final Update:

On so many levels I don't understand this, but am very glad about the nature of this update, and it's vindication, at least anecdotally - at D-Day plus two and a half weeks - the above community based, leave the authorities out of it, approach, has merit.

The little dog concerned now spends its night in a clean kennel, all faeces have been removed and the kennel is kept clean with fresh water. It also has bedding, now, in the hutch for comfort. Better, it only spends its nights in the kennel anymore (it used to sometimes spend three days in there), its out all day, and thus far is walked once a day. The family is even mowing my front verge! While I'm glad we tackled it - though there was no choice, a dog must not be left like that - I'm even feeling 'slightly' guilty because I 'pulled no punches' telling them what I thought, and what dog welfare was. So, while I don't believe in miracles, and it will never be what I think as adequate dog care - read my rules above, all dogs should be inside and part of the family - it's been two and a half weeks, the family have been 'big' about it, because they had the choice to really go dog, so I'll take over a peace offering in the form of a couple of nice bottles of wine soon. If I can get things back on track, I can offer to walk the pooch with our own Daisy dog when we're in Geraldine, on the days they can't.

Anyway, would seem to be a good result.