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Cuz Animals Are People Too, Ya Know?
Written By : Warner Todd Huston

I’ve always been amazed at liberals when it comes to their absurd penchant for acting as if animals are somehow just like people. This anthropomorphizing of the animal kingdom is fine if you are talking with kids, reading fairy tales, or creating entertainment, but when you are talking like adults about science or generally about animals there is no place for it. Animals are not people. It’s just that simple.

But apparently we can’t tell that to the left-wingers at NPR because on Dec. 22 on the Morning Edition program we got a pretty silly story about baboons and their “mystical moment” that beggers description.

The story is about a troop of 30 baboons in Kenya that was being observed by professor Barbara Smuts who was studying them for several months. As it happened, one day as Smuts was following the troop back to its sleeping area, the whole troops stopped dead in its tracks.

Here is how NPR described the incident:

All of a sudden, Smuts says, “without any signal perceptible to me,” every one of the baboons, the adults, the little ones, all of them, stopped walking and sat down on the edge of a pool of water. They not only stopped walking; they stopped talking. “Even the little kids, and you know kids are always making noises, but even they got quiet.”

The quiet was total. “I really wondered what was going on,” says Smuts. The baboons didn’t focus on any one thing. They all, or most of them, gazed down into the little pool right below them and hardly moved. There was no fidgeting, no touching or grooming, no discernible activity, just a communal “almost sacramental” contemplation. Smuts calls it a “sacred” quiet.

And here is the absurd way NPR wrapped up the tale:

The big dangling question here is the oddball possibility that a troop of monkeys (baboons are not apes, they are more distant from us) might have the capacity for a kind of group expression of wonder or rapture or thanks. Only baboons know what they were doing during those moments Barbara Smuts saw, and though my broadcast partner Jad is right to be skeptical, I can’t give up the idea that maybe groups of highly social, communicative animals might, on occasion, address the mysteries of their (and our) world.

Of course we don’t know why the animals stopped and remained so quiet like that. But to ascribe a human-like sense of wonder, or “thanks” to them is simply ridiculous. This reading of what these monkeys were doing says more about the wistful, unscientific expression of the humans reporting the story than it does about animals’ behavior.

But it is of a piece with the assumption that many of these people have of the “nobility” of animals and it reflects their sense that animals are equal to — and some even think better than — humanity. They are neither, however, equal to, nor better than, people.

But ascribing human-like sensibilities and worth to animals makes it easier to break down the proper relationship between us and animals and sets the stage for lowering humans to the point where animals get “rights” in our courts of law.

The truth is that monkeys and apes are not just like people. Ask Charla Nash about that one.

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  • http://conservativebootcamp.com martinhale

    I read that account of the baboons somewhere else today and after I got done, my overwhelming reaction was “what a bunch of unscientific hogslop.” For a lifelong scientist, Ms. Smuts was anything but scientific in her assessment of the moment as a “sacred quiet”.

    Judging by all the dogs, cats, and other animals which I’ve known, I don’t doubt that animals have thoughts about the world around them, in their own ways. My current pet, Jimmy the cat, will sit on his window ledge seat that I made for him on a fine spring or summer day with a grin from ear to ear. It’s obvious that he’s enjoying the beauty of a warm sunny day. Likewise, I’m sure that baboons find some elements of their world pretty, fascinating and wondrous. But please, Ms. Smuts, rise above your own human blinders and give us some damn science. For all you know, that troop of baboons might have smelled the scent of a big cat in the near distance, and their “spiritual” pause was just a security measure inbuilt upon countless generations of species experience. Just because you didn’t sense it, doesn’t mean it’s not there, after all.

    Sheesh.

  • Pingback: Cuz Animals Are People Too, Ya Know? | Right Wing News N Zoo

  • Toastrider

    Spiritual, huh? From the description, it almost sounds like the baboons picked up one (or more) possible signs that a predator was nearby. Moving to the water’s edge might’ve been a defensive tactic.

  • Pingback: Cuz Animals Are People Too, Ya Know? | Right Wing News OQ China

  • rmiller

    They are neither, however, equal to, nor better than, people.
    Warner Todd Huston | 2:03 pm | Permalink Comments (4) Trackbacks Email this!

    exactly.

    If we can eat apes, we can eat humans.

    “But it is of a piece with the assumption that many of these people have of the “nobility” of animals and it reflects their sense that animals are equal to — and some even think better than — humanity. They are neither, however, equal to, nor better than, people.”

    They don’t have the ‘nobility’ of animals….but humans are animals.
    You have no proof that humans are anything other than evolved animals.

  • DrEvil

    The debate is over, the science is settled. Baboons are spiritual beings akin to Angels. Baboon deniers are narrow minded unscientifical haters.

    Have an Evil day

    PS

    rmiller, eat me.

  • http://conservativebootcamp.com martinhale

    What’s the point that you’re trying to spit out miller? Or do you have a point to make other than opposing it if comes from a conservative?

    Go back to your bottle/bong, rummie.

  • Realpolitik

    No no no – you have it backassward (you get more and more irrelevent like van hell-sing every day). People are animals, too. Always have been – always will be.

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