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Should dogs be citizens? It’s not as crazy as you think. (Huh?)
VOX ^ | December 16, 2014 | Zack Beauchamp

Posted on 12/16/2014 11:01:01 AM PST by Kaslin

What if domestic animals — pets such as dogs and cats as well livestock like cows and chickens — were granted citizenship rights? That may sound like a crazy question, but Canadian philosopher Will Kymlicka thinks it's a critically important one.

Kymlicka, a professor at Queen's University, is a well-regarded figure in modern political philosophy. He's also the author, along with writer Sue Donaldson, of Zoopolis, a book making the case for animal citizenship. Their basic premise is simple: animals are already part of our society, as pets and work animals, therefore we should formally recognize them as such.

That's not just a head-in-the-clouds thought experiment. We already have basic laws forbidding animal abuse and regulating industrial slaughterhouses. But, as anyone who has visited an animal shelter or thought about the ethics of what they eat can attest, we as a society have not come anywhere close to solving the problem of animal mistreatment. If we really want to improve animals' lives, Kymlicka and Donaldson argue, we need to stop thinking in terms of merely treating animals better. Rather, we need to acknowledge on a fundamental level that animals are a part of society and deserve to be treated as such. That leads you, however improbable it might sound, to citizenship.

Kymlicka and I chatted over the phone about why he believes we ought to make animals citizens, how that would work in practice, and what a world in which animals have equal rights would look like. What follows is a transcript of our conversation, edited for length and clarity.

Zack Beauchamp: The idea of animal citizenship sounds a bit strange. What does it mean for a dog to be a citizen? What rights do they get?

Will Kymlicka: The first idea is that we've brought dogs and other domesticated animals into our society. That's a decision we have made — to domesticate animals — and the very term domestication indicates that's process of incorporating them into our world. So we need to ask: what do we owe them in virtue of the fact that we've brought them into our world?

We owe them membership. We need to recognize domesticated animals as members of our society. And citizenship is the legal and political term that we have historically used to recognize membership. The ways in which humans stake claims to membership is by staking claims to citizenship. It's our legal and political tool for recognizing it.


TOPICS: Canada; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: canaduh; kittyping; stupididea
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To: Kaslin

So, then, I guess we MUST allow all children to vote. Babies, everyone of them.

(BTW, notice how NO ONE ever brings up that children should get a vote, even while they insist foreigners get a vote here.)


61 posted on 12/16/2014 8:14:17 PM PST by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue./Federal-run medical care is as good as state-run DMVs.)
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To: jazusamo

Don’t forget the perverts who want to marry them.


62 posted on 12/17/2014 1:59:58 AM PST by tuffydoodle (Shut up voices, or I'll poke you with a Q-Tip again.)
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To: Kaslin

“Two legs bad, four legs good!”


63 posted on 12/17/2014 5:03:14 AM PST by CSM
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To: bgill

“Mine will vote conservative or they’ll loose their spot on the couch.”

_______________________________________

LOL!


64 posted on 12/17/2014 5:55:00 AM PST by proud American in Canada
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