Tomorrow, August 21, is the 19th annual International Homeless Animals’ Day. It’s not widely-observed enough to stop mail service, but it’s still a nice reminder that it’s not just human beings who go without homes in the country.
In many ways I feel that homeless animals, if you count strays and shelter animals and maybe even farm animals shuffled into inhumane factories, get more attention than homeless people. I hope that animal advocates who work to protect and care for animals in need will remember that homeless pets are called “pets” exactly because they’re owned by individuals who own so little else. (Prep your tear ducts before clicking on this link to see 30 photos of homeless dogs.)
Animals often provide an important lifeline for the homeless population. Bringing dogs into homeless shelters, for instance, is a proven method of therapy for both children and adults. In San Francisco earlier this year a homeless man named Daniel Harlen lost his pug-nosed Himalayan cat, Samantha. “She keeps me calm, and she helps me out,” he told the local paper while offering a reward for her safe return. He wept tears of joy when they were reunited days later.
Unfortunately, pets are often what keeps people from accepting offers of assistance. Between five and 10 percent of the homeless have pets, but just a handful of pet-friendly shelters exist in the entire country. Pets are also a barrier in the search for housing, as many landlords slap “no pets” labels on their listings.
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One hundred and thirty years ago today, Radclyffe Hall was born in Bournemouth, England. The author of eight novels and seven volumes of poetry is best known for The Well of Loneliness, her 1928 novel about a butch lesbian, Stephen Gordon. Although the book’s handling of lesbianism seems archaic at times (calling it “sexual inversion”), it was for many years one of the few books that dealt in a sympathetic way with LGBT characters. Its history indicates both how things have changed — and how they haven’t — over the last century.
Although The Well described nothing more salacious than a kiss “full on the lips,” the book faced obscenity trials in both the U.K. and the U.S. In the U.K., among those pushing for the book to be banned were Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and Chancellor Winston Churchill. They were successful, and the court ordered that all copies of the book be destroyed. In the U.S., copies were confiscated and charges brought against the publisher, but a New York court eventually allowed publication.
Although it is unlikely that a judge today would order the destruction of all copies of a book, LGBT-themed books still face challenge and censorship. Some come under fire for being sexually graphic, but others are attacked simply for including a character who has two moms, even if they play little part in the book.
The U.K. trial of The Well also shows that the search for “scientific” evidence to support anti-LGBT measures has a long history. Sir Archibald Bodkin, Director of Public Prosecutions, said to one doctor, according to the Guardian, “I want to be able to call some gentleman of undoubted knowledge, experience and position who could inform the court of the results to those unfortunate women (as I deem them) who have proclivities towards lesbianism, or those wicked women (as I deem them) who voluntarily indulge in these practices — results destructive morally, physically and even perhaps mentally.”
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A police officer in Frankfort, Kentucky, picked up a stray dog and brought her to the local humane society. The shelter employees, who presumably see dogs every day, took a look at this one and decided that she was a coyote.
As a wild animal, the “coyote” couldn’t be kept at the shelter, so they called the police department to pick her up. At least one police officer had doubts about their assessment, but not being the animal professionals in this story, the department took the humane society at their word. They called up a wildlife expert for advice and were told that coyotes should be returned to the wild or killed.
One of the officers had taken a photo of the “coyote” before setting her loose behind a home improvement store, and the picture ending up matching the Lost Dog posters for Cooper, Lori Goodlett’s 11-year-old purebred Shiba Inu, who had escaped from her yard earlier this month.
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