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Cohn also said researchers continue to uncover fascinating insights into the animal kingdom, including communication among elephants and the social structure of wolves, which "are not the blood-thirsty wild beasts that many people imagine." "In other words, there has been an explosion of knowledge about animals that should make us consider them in a new light and perhaps change the manner in which we treat them," wrote Cohn, who has six cats and a dog. In California, The Humane Society of the United States is backing legislation to update language in old state animal-control laws. The bill would replace "pound" with "shelter" and "destroy" with "euthanize," changes that better reflect current views on animal welfare. "Those words matter," said Jennifer Fearing, the society's senior state director. The linguistic debate, which Serpell said has been covered previously in various academic journals, stems from animals being in a gray area: they are sentient creatures
-- more than objects or property -- but less than fully human. Yet he acknowledged that inherently derogatory or disparaging language "perhaps makes it easier for us to justify exploiting them." Still, Serpell sees nothing wrong with the word "pet," which the fourth edition of Webster's New World College Dictionary defines as "an animal that is tamed or domesticated and kept as a companion or treated with fondness." Serpell's family has a veritable menagerie at home: a dog, a cat, three aquaria of fish, a pair of degus
-- like small chinchillas -- and a bearded dragon. "We call them all 'pets' and don't consider the term denigrating," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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