RangerDave wrote:
Talya wrote:
I realize people get attached to their dogs. I realize people like to view them as part of their family. That doesn't matter. They are THINGS. Possessions. Property. They do not have any more value than the price tag attached to replacing them.
They feel pain; they feel fear; they have more complex intelligence and emotion than an infant human. There's zero argument for categorizing them as things. They may be property by law, but they are not inanimate objects and to the extent the law treats them as such, the law is not based on reason. Also, as a matter of morality, such a categorization is basically indefensible.
Yes, as a matter of fact the law IS based on reason. If you want to try to argue from a utilitarian perspective (which it appears you do), the fact is that a dog has no concept of the future, future happiness, benefit, or anytihng else, and thus depriving it of its life is not harmful in the way it is to a human, who DOES have the capacity for understanding anticipated happiness and benefit.
The only thing the dog really has an interest in is its present pain or pleasure, and its actions are dictated by such. Shooting the dog is not any more likely to result in any greater suffering in the present than TASERing or pepper spraying it, since while a death by gunshot could take time and be painful, it could also be instantaneous or near-instantaneous, and painless, or near-painless. From a utilitarian perspective, they are morally comparable.
In point of fact, even arguing the dog is more than mere "property" in the way an inanimate object is misses the point. The fact remains that it is still not a human being, does not have nor deserve the protections that a human being does, and the law recognizes that. The law is moral, defensible, and entirely based on reason - a specific type of reasoning, utilitarianism, to be exact. Clearly, the police should avoid shooting dogs to the degree that their safety in the lawful performance of their duties permits, and clearly people should generally be compensated for the loss of their pets. That's no different, however, from the fact that the police should keep property damage to the minimum necessary in all aspects of their duties, and the employing agency should always compensate for property damage (except insofar as the person whose property was damaged was themself engaging in criminal activity.)