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Source link: http://archive.mises.org/6152/bureaucrats-another-breed-of-cat/

Bureaucrats: Another Breed of Cat

January 18, 2007 by

According to the USDA, the Hemingway Home is an exhibitor of six-toed cats, and must hold a USDA animal welfare license. The USDA has repeatedly denied the Hemingway Home applications for such a license, because the cats are not cages. The USDA has also suggested the installation of an electric fence around the Hemingway Home premises. How is it that a law intended to promote animal welfare could lead to cats being caged or shocked with electricity? FULL ARTICLE

{ 14 comments }

Yancey Ward January 18, 2007 at 8:23 am

Cages, electric shocks, bureaucrats……this gives me an idea!

Brad January 18, 2007 at 8:37 am

At the risk of starting a whole animal rights thread, the notion that Animal Welfare Laws are good intentioned and we leave it at that is losing half the battle. Animals do not have rights, and any Law to preserve their life or welfare is a bad Law from the get go, regardless of the eventual abuse and distortion by the bureaucracy. We have enough good Law distorted and abused, which need to be fought against, we don’t need fundamentally bad Laws at the start.

Vic January 18, 2007 at 9:29 am

This might be mildly amusing were it not for the fact the the USDA claims not to have adequate resources to prevent the introduction of exotic agricultural pests and diseases through our porous borders. Clear misuse of public resources.

Paul Marks January 18, 2007 at 9:46 am

I wonder which dodge the supporters of the U.S.D.A. use to pretend that it is constitutional.

Perhaps it is “interstate commerce” on the grounds that not all the visitors to the house come from Florida (an absurd definition of “interstate commerce” of course, but I would not put it past “modern” “progressive” people).

Or perhaps they use the old trick of pretending that the PURPOSE of the powers granted to Congress “the common defence and general welfare” is somehow a “general welfare power” in-its-self allowing the Feds to spend taxpayers money on anything and to pass whatever regulations they feel like.

Ryan Fuller January 18, 2007 at 10:19 am

Bureaucrats are a breed of cat? Such harsh words, what did cats ever do to you?

I think Terry Pratchett once said that the bureaucrat shares some striking similarities with the octopus, such as the tendency to try to hide behind a cloud of ink when they feel threatened.

Francisco Torres January 18, 2007 at 10:21 am

Animals do not have rights, and any Law to preserve their life or welfare is a bad Law from the get go, regardless of the eventual abuse and distortion by the bureaucracy.

Well, my wife would probably want to gouge your eyes out (she is a cat lover), but I agree with you completely: The Animal Welfare Act actually violates private property rights by making the Federal (or State) government become the steward of what is in principle a person’s property – their animals or any animal within their property.

I am not in favor, of course, of mistreating furry and cute animals, but that is MY opinion – forcing people to live up to my standards or to cater to my sensibilities is a form of violence against a fellow human being, and that is infinitely worse than the mishandling of an unthinking animal.

Mark Brabson January 18, 2007 at 10:56 am

Of course, it is perfectly acceptable to the USDA for Tyson and other poultry processors to cram chickens six to a cage so tightly they can never move during their entire miserable lives, but heaven help us if a few six toed cats run loose. Oh, I forgot. Tyson has the big bucks to contribute to their government masters. Never mind.

Keith January 18, 2007 at 12:06 pm

If I was in charge of the museum, I’d either sell all the cats or have all of the cats killed, stuffed and put on display with a big sign thanking the USDA and that judge.

Bill January 18, 2007 at 12:29 pm

Paul:
Sorry, but the current Federal Government has totally abandoned any constitutional restraints. They, the President, Congress and Courts have completely ignored the wording and spirit of the constitution.

But at least we have Social Security, Medicare, Domestic Spying, the IRS, etc. Aren’t you glad?

In this particular Cat Case, I think that the Federal Government wants it hands in all museum like activities and is just causing trouble for these folks because they are a “Private” organization.

Brad January 18, 2007 at 2:35 pm

***I am not in favor, of course, of mistreating furry and cute animals***

Neither am I. I have two dogs myself. I certainly don’t have to like what people do to their animals, but I am a disinterested party. Of course our problem is precisely that third of society, the squeeky wheels, who have no concept of interest, what makes the so or not.

And I think I finally got the meaning of the headline….I’m a bit of a count…ry bumpkin I guess….

Peter January 18, 2007 at 7:10 pm

Totally off-topic, but there’s a rather interesting poll here: http://zohopolls.com/us/pres. I assume everybody here is aware by now that Ron Paul may run for President in 2008 – he’s leading (by a long way) in this poll!

(If you’re going to vote, be sure to give one star to the candidates you don’t like – not voting (zero stars) is better than a one star vote!)

Sudha Shenoy January 19, 2007 at 9:17 am

‘Bureuacrats have striking similarities with the octopus..’ (comment above.) I protest on behalf of all octopoids everywhere. They are intelligent & respect all other creatures — only killing when absolutely necessary for food. They shoot out ink to escape & _avoid_ fighting. Why demean them? Bureaucrats are the creatures of (human) _legislation_ — ‘more dangerous than gunpowder’.

banker January 20, 2007 at 10:24 am

When people stop eating cows and pigs, then maybe, for a single solitary second, I will consider animals as having rights remotely close to that of humans.

Daniel M. Ryan January 20, 2007 at 12:11 pm

Put the shoe on the other foot, banker. The gators are still smilin’…

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