We believe that our ability to make choices is our biggest asset, and should be protected above all others, when it is the biggest source of our misery. Reducing the circumstances where we have to make choices on behalf of others appeals as a damage control sort of solution. We can be kind to animals by feeding them or do our best not to cause them harm, but once we make them our "pets", we put ourselves in the awkward position of making choices on their behalf. While euthanasia is an extreme example, castration would be a more moderate one.
Where i live, there is an increasing problem of stray dogs attacking people. Public opinion is divided between killing them, or get the government to collect them and castrate them before releasing them back to nature (the streets). The proponents of killing claim the other side to be motivated by "western" funded NGOs that are implementing sinister agenda on behalf of its donors. The whole problem of stray dogs going out of control began in 2017 when the government signed a treaty protecting animal rights.
Is pet euthanasia a norm in the West?
Re: Is pet euthanasia a norm in the West?
And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: "Behold now, bhikkhus, I exhort you: All compounded things are subject to vanish. Strive with earnestness!"
This was the last word of the Tathagata.
This was the last word of the Tathagata.
Re: Is pet euthanasia a norm in the West?
Why not shelters to look after them?Bundokji wrote: ↑Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:03 pm We believe that our ability to make choices is our biggest asset, and should be protected above all others, when it is the biggest source of our misery. Reducing the circumstances where we have to make choices on behalf of others appeals as a damage control sort of solution. We can be kind to animals by feeding them or do our best not to cause them harm, but once we make them our "pets", we put ourselves in the awkward position of making choices on their behalf. While euthanasia is an extreme example, castration would be a more moderate one.
Where i live, there is an increasing problem of stray dogs attacking people. Public opinion is divided between killing them, or get the government to collect them and castrate them before releasing them back to nature (the streets). The proponents of killing claim the other side to be motivated by "western" funded NGOs that are implementing sinister agenda on behalf of its donors. The whole problem of stray dogs going out of control began in 2017 when the government signed a treaty protecting animal rights.
“The teacher willed that this world appear to me
as impermanent, unstable, insubstantial.
Mind, let me leap into the victor’s teaching,
carry me over the great flood, so hard to pass.”
- Tālapuṭattheragāthā
as impermanent, unstable, insubstantial.
Mind, let me leap into the victor’s teaching,
carry me over the great flood, so hard to pass.”
- Tālapuṭattheragāthā
Re: Is pet euthanasia a norm in the West?
Budgetary issues were raised, especially with the tightening of expenditure post COVID, but thanks Buddha, the government will allocate big chunks of land beginning in 2024 to keep stray dogs there after castrating them.
The whole issue can also be linked to economic standards, doctrine and virtue signaling. In the dominant sects of Islam these days, dogs are considered impure, unlike cats who cover up their feces after defecation. As such, the current economic hardship turned into virtue signaling by traditionalists and hardliners, linking the issue of animal rights to a wider conspiracy by the west to cause decadence in our values as the holders of the true religion, of which prioritizing animals rights over human rights through the NGOs receiving money from the west is only one aspect. Other aspects may include women rights, gay rights, peace with Israel or the spreading of any other sinister liberal/evil ideas. As such, killing dogs in this context has little to do with euthanasia, which is another heretical idea.
And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: "Behold now, bhikkhus, I exhort you: All compounded things are subject to vanish. Strive with earnestness!"
This was the last word of the Tathagata.
This was the last word of the Tathagata.