By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 4.20.06 @ 12:08AM
The public nuisances at PETA are being ordered to heel, sit, and shake hands.
WASHINGTON -- The legal concept of the Public Nuisance has for
long been recognized throughout all the civilized countries of the
world. Basically, and unadorned by the tortured language of the
legal profession, a public nuisance is one who uses property to
annoy or damage an individual or the general public. Occasionally
the annoyance or damage is sufficiently grievous for the public
nuisance to suffer some sort of penalty.
Starting at some point in the last century the public nuisance
acquired a halo by claiming that his obnoxious behavior was induced
by high purpose and noble values. In the 1930s pacifists tested the
outer limits of public nuisance law to oppose American entry into
World War II. Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini favored their
labors -- to a point. In the 1930s there were also food fanatics
and nudists numbered among the public nuisances. Through the years
Americans have become inured to these misfits and malcontents,
sympathetic as we are to the protesters' claims to higher virtue
and noble purpose.
By the later decades of the 20th century many public nuisances'
misbehavior moved from mere mischief to mayhem, but ordinary
Americans have remained good natured, generally, so long as the
nuisances are not trampling the ordinary Americans' petunias or
hauling them into court. Nudists are too polite to commit such
excesses, and even militant bicycle riders shun such tactics. Yet
there are public nuisances who frequently engage in rough stuff.
Probably the roughest of the public nuisances are the animal rights
fanatics. Some actually undertake acts of terror, blowing up
laboratories and -- for some reason -- ski resorts. Just a few
months back 11 were indicted on federal warrants for such
crimes.
Other animal rights groups aim at intimidation, through noisy
demonstrations and court action. People for the Ethical Treatment
of Animals (PETA) engage in this sort of thing. Yet they have
recently been targeting entities that enjoy the sympathy of
ordinary Americans, for instance, family entertainment groups such
as the circus and laboratories where scientists endeavor to
discover medications for greater health and less human suffering.
Demonstrating against a circus or a laboratory might sucker the
weak witted but not sensible Americans, and recently when the
animal rights nuisances have dragged their victims into court they
have lost. The burden of proof that exists in an American courtroom
is much higher than at one of the media events the animal rights
nuisances stage.
On March 15 in the Ohio Supreme Court an animal rights group's
effort to force Ohio State University to release animal testing
records failed thumpingly. A couple of weeks earlier a federal
court in New Jersey convicted animal rights thugs for inciting
violence in their effort to shut a medical research facility.
Science triumphed over these reactionaries. Also in March a
Northern Virginia jury exonerated the owner of Ringling Brothers'
Circus from charges that he and company executives wiretapped PETA
headquarters and stole PETA documents.
The Ringling Brothers case is significant because PETA has used
the courts to harass the circus for years. In this case the circus
owner, Kenneth Feld, was willing to face PETA's charges in court.
Had PETA merely complained to the press people might have believed
that Feld maintained a vast spy ring against his harassers. In
court their evidence was dismissed as nonsense.
Actually their whole case is nonsense. Circus animals are as
highly prized by animal trainers as domestic pets are by their
owners -- perhaps more so. After all, the trainers' livelihood
depends on these animals. Cruelty towards animals exists to be
sure, but it is unlikely that trainers who spend their entire lives
around animals would be cruel to them. More likely such trainers
have affection and even admiration for their animals much as a
hunter has affection and admiration for his hunting dog. Then, too,
it is unlikely a cruel trainer would be successful with his
animals, and it is even unlikelier that a cruel trainer's cruelty
would go unnoticed in such a high-profile position.
Every year for decades ordinary Americans have taken their
families to the circus. One wonders what PETA's nuisances would
suggest as a humane alternative for the children who thrill to the
mighty elephants and the gigantic cats. How about suggesting that
Ringling Brothers use artificial animals? Surely in this high-tech
world someone can come up with a robotic elephant. Or maybe just
use stuffed animals. Kids love their stuffed teddy bears. Yet I
doubt such alternatives would soothe the folks at PETA. They are
public nuisances, but the law is catching up with them.
topics:
Law, Supreme Court