She 'has stripped naked ... to publicise PETA's high-profile 'I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur'. Not a sight I want to see!
Call Your Animal a ‘Companion’ Instead of a Pet: PETA Chief Says Term Is Derogatory Because It Makes Living Things Sound Like a ‘Commodity’ or ‘Decoration’
From the Daily Mail
By Victoria Allen, Science Correspondent for the Daily Mail
- President of animal rights charity PETA calls the term 'pets' derogatory to pets
- Ingrid Newkirk, of Surrey, says that animals 'are not your cheap burglar alarm'
- She compared calling animals pets to the treatment of women before feminism
Cats and dogs seem perfectly happy to be fed, watered and cuddled by doting owners.
But whatever you do, don't call them pets, says the head of an animal rights organisation.
Ingrid Newkirk, the president of PETA, said this is derogatory and suggests they are merely a 'commodity' or 'decoration'.
The group – People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals – has long called for owners to be renamed 'human carers' or guardians.
Yesterday,
the animal rights activist, 70, from Surrey, compared calling animals
pets to the treatment of women before feminism, when they were not
allowed to own property or were patronisingly called 'sweetie' or
'honey' to make them seem 'less of a person'.
Miss
Newkirk said: 'Animals are not pets – they are not your cheap burglar
alarm, or something which allows you to go out for a walk. They are not
ours as decorations or toys, they are living beings.
'A dog is a feeling, whole individual, with emotions and interests, not something you 'have'.'
It is estimated almost 45 per cent of UK households have a pet – about 51million animals – mainly dogs.
Miss Newkirk, who once set fire to a car
at a motor show and has stripped naked numerous times to publicise
PETA's high-profile 'I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur' campaign, said
the language used around animals is important.
She
wants people to describe the animals they look after as 'companions',
adding: 'How we say things governs how we think about them, so a tweak
in our language when we talk about the animals in our homes is needed.
'A
pet is a commodity but animals should not be things on shelves or in
boxes, where people say, 'I like the look of that one, it matches my
curtains or my sense of myself.'
'Hopefully the time is passing for that kind of attitude.'
Some
ethicists have argued that people should not keep pets at all. Last
year, Dr Corey Wrenn, from the University of Kent, said: 'Through this
forced dependency and domestication, the lives of companion animals are
almost completely controlled by humans. They can be terminated at any
time for the most trivial of reasons, including behavioural 'problems'.'
Miss
Newkirk, who has written a book, called Animalkind, about animals'
abilities and the need to be compassionate towards them, also wants
phrases such as 'flog a dead horse' to stop being used because they
refer to animal cruelty.
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