Kristi Noem, the South Dakota governor, wrote about shooting her dog in a gravel pit.
She wanted to look tough.
In 1982 I voted to condemn a dog to be euthanized because it chased some sheep.
I didn't feel tough. I felt bad about it.
Back in the prior century Oregon laws were written in favor of farmers and ranchers, not pet owners. If a dog chased and bit a person, there were incremental steps of fines imposed on dog owners -- not the dog. But if a dog chased livestock, the dog faced the death penalty.
That was the law when I was a county commissioner in the early 1980s, and that stayed the law through the end of the century. There was no wiggle room, no second chances.
In 1982, I was chair of the Jackson County Board of Commissioners. A county Animal Control Officer had witnessed a mixed breed dog, the pet of a young man, frightening sheep by chasing them around a pasture. No sheep were injured. The exuberant dog was having fun.The owner of the sheep had called the Animal Control Department for help capturing the dog.
Under Oregon law, county board of commissioners must hold a hearing to evaluate whether the dog in fact had chased livestock. If so, the dog must be "put down," as the Animal Control Officer put it. The county's legal counsel advised us that the county would face open-ended liability risks if we failed to carry out the sentence. If the dog subsequently chased or killed livestock, or worse, bit and injured and scarred a child, the county could be held responsible.
Kristi Noem wrote that she was angry with her dog. It had ruined a pheasant hunt by flushing birds incorrectly, and then she brought it to a place with chickens and her dog caught and killed some of them, she wrote. She shot her dog and a goat. She wrote that she hated them both.
There was no anger at that board of commissioners hearing. We were reluctant and sympathetic. The dog's owner was sobbing and pleading with us to save his dog. It was a good dog and was just having fun, he said. It was his fault, not the dog's. Spare the dog, please.
All three commissioners agreed the law struck a hard balance that reflected the needs and attitudes of an earlier era, when Jackson County had an agricultural economy and vulnerable livestock. The laws seemed antiquated to us. The laws permitted landowners to shoot a strange dog on sight if it was amid their livestock, and the law required a death sentence on a first offense for a dog that caused livestock to run. But the Oregon legislature had had multiple opportunities to change the law and it had not. We voted unanimously to do our duty.
(The dog wasn't "put down." For some reason the dog was not in custody of the Animal Control Department. It was at the young man's house. After the hearing, the dog owner drove straight home and gathered his things and moved out of state, taking his dog with him. The dog was a fugitive. We heard word from the young man's roommate that neither his roommate nor the dog could be located. They disappeared. The county lacked the resources to try to find the "lost dog," so nothing more came of it.)
I presume Kristi Noem was attempting to signal voters that she was tough-minded enough to be vice presidential material. Joni Ernst had won a senate seat in Iowa by introducing herself as someone who grew up castrating pigs. Iowa voters liked that. Noem was documenting she wasn't just pro-gun on paper. She was willing to use guns to shoot a "bad dog." She is also signaling farm sensibilities appropriate to balance Trump, a symbol of urbanity. Farmers are closer to the source of meat than are city people who think of beef, pork, and lamb as something one buys cut up and packaged in cellophane. Animal death is part of farm life.
Oregon law changed in this century, along with the economy and demographics of the state. It is still dangerous for a dog to chase livestock, but now there are a series of progressive punishments for the dog owner. A county commissioner now has options of fines for the owner and or letting a dog owner move the dog away from livestock.
Kristi Noem's story is more shocking to the sensibilities of urban voters than it would be in the farm country of South Dakota. I hear news and opinion hosts on MSNBC, amazed and mocking her. She shot a dog! Wow! That reflects the cultural divide in the country. Democrats don't "get" rural America, and that is why the precinct where my farm is located -- six miles outside Medford -- votes three to one Republican.
Yet Noem handled it poorly, even for a rural audience. Noem was posturing. Americans love their dogs. Dogs are special. If the dog is "bad" then it reflects on the owner. There are hard jobs involving the death of animals that need to be done around farms, but they are done from necessity, not hatred or anger, and not to show off one's toughness to win votes. Farmers bring animals "to market" because raising livestock is a business. Sometimes one culls animals.
But you don't present yourself as triumphant for shooting a dog you didn't train.
-- -- --
Here is an article on the former state of the law in Oregon. Here is the new law, allowing alternatives remedies if a dog chases livestock.
11 comments:
We adopted a dog from the pound that was a hunting dog that was a failure as a hunting dog due to reacting to the sound of the gun. He was our happy family pet for his 12 years of life. The same fate could have happened for her dog, but she didn’t bother. Most people love dogs and she will have a hard time living that one down.
Kristi Noem gave a detailed description of shooting her dog and goat in a memoir and then blamed the backlash she received on the media, or “fake news” as she calls it. Their offense? They quoted her. Certainly there are situations that may require killing pets, but not many people are stupid enough to boast about it.
In addition, she's lied about the 2020 election and about meeting Kim Jong Un. She'd be a perfect running mate for Trump: another clueless liar.
Axios, May 2, 2022 - Former Defense Secretary Mark Esper charges in a memoir out May 10 that former President Trump said when demonstrators were filling the streets around the White House following the death of George Floyd: "Can't you just shoot them? Just shoot them in the legs or something?"
ABC News, October 2, 2019 - Frustrated with a record number of people seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border this spring, President Donald Trump at one point asked in a private meeting with close aides whether the U.S. could shoot migrants below the waist to slow them down.
When the only tool you have is a hammer...
What’s interesting is Noemi’s state of mind and values. It’s almost like she’s the God of the Old Testament, an angry paternal tyrant who won’t hesitate to smote a “bad” individual, even for one infraction. Her tough image enhanced her political rise, like Joni castrating pigs.
One can also imagine the progressive backlash is based on values of protection and redemption. Likely it’s not the dog’s fault, it was poorly trained, maybe it suffered some trauma in puppyhood, surely it could be rehabilitated and rehomed with sufficient love and understanding.
Here, progressives are pro-life and conservatives are protecting domestic order by strict and swift punishment.
Fortunately, our moral codes do not have to be internally consistent.
She doesn't deserve to live it down.
Her guest visit to a Sunday talk show where she refused to answer yes it no to simple question about her book and the North Korean dictator she never met did little to rehabilitate her "career".
Apparently, she isn't smart enough to stop digging the hole she has created for herself.
Unfortunately, and sadly, his Cultists find this admirable.
Kristi Noemi takes tone deafness to a new level. She was completely off base to think that anyone, even a farmer or other rural dweller, would be impressed with her callous decisions to kill both her dog and her goat. I’ve seen several comments from farmers on Twitter explaining the proper way to handle a dog (like don’t give him the opportunity to get into the henhouse). The only good that will come of this is the end of her political career. She terms out in 3 years and I hope will drop out of sight forever.
I didn't realize she had 3 years left before her term ends. How sad.
This reminds me that Roy Rogers had a dog named Bullet.
Interesting that a post about the killing of a dog in another state has 10 comments while a mention of local legislative change has two (currently).
Post a Comment