The Animal Advocate

Are Humans Inherently Superior to Other Animals? The Question at the Root of Animal Advocacy

14 min · 26. mar. 2026
episode Are Humans Inherently Superior to Other Animals? The Question at the Root of Animal Advocacy cover

Beskrivelse

What really separates humans from other animals? It's one of the oldest questions we've asked — and the answer keeps changing. Tool use was supposed to be uniquely human. Then we watched crows bend wire into hooks and octopuses carry coconut shells as portable shelter. Language was supposed to be uniquely human. Then bonobos, whales and other animals taught us differently. The list keeps getting shorter. In this episode, you'll learn: * Why the framework we use to define human uniqueness is built on a standard we designed ourselves * Which items on the current "uniquely human" list are likely to hold — and which are already being challenged by research * What elephant grief, crow behavior, and rat empathy tell us about animal cognition and emotion * How our laws and ethics need to evolve as our understanding of animals deepens Key Takeaway: Different doesn't mean superior. And the list of what makes humans unique keeps shrinking. It's time our actions and our laws caught up with what the evidence actually shows. Want to build your skills as an animal advocate? Access the free private audio series on the Four Cs of Legislative Advocacy for Animals at AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs [https://animaladvocacyacademy.com/fourcs/]

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Alle episoder

49 episoder

episode Philadelphia Bans Carriage Horses. Will New York? cover

Philadelphia Bans Carriage Horses. Will New York?

Philadelphia just did something New York still won't: it banned horse-drawn carriages. Earlier this month, Philadelphia banned horse-drawn carriages for good. Penny helped get that bill passed, and in this episode she tells the inside story of how it got done, then turns to the harder question: why New York, where a young man just died, still hasn't acted, and what advocates there have to do before this moment slips away. In this episode, you'll learn: * Why the Philadelphia companies closing was in part luck, not strategy, and what the real strategy was * How to foresee loopholes while there is still time to close them * Why banning an entire use of animals is hard but CAN get done if public opinion supports it * How to spot the substitute "reform" bill that gets passed instead of a ban, and quietly kills it Key Takeaway: Law doesn't create public opinion, it follows it, so the advocate's job is to build the record, watch for the opening, and when the moment comes, ask for the law that prevents the harm instead of the smallest fix you think you can get. If you want to move policy in your own community, or build the skills to do it well, you can access the free private audio series on the Four C's of Legislative Advocacy for Animals here: AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs

I går26 min
episode The Win Column: 7 Recent Legislative Wins for Animals cover

The Win Column: 7 Recent Legislative Wins for Animals

We spend a lot of time on this show talking about problems that need to be fixed. This episode does the opposite. It's a roundup of recent wins for animals, most of them from this year, on the issues we come back to again and again, and most of them happening at the city and county level where your voice carries the most weight. From a statewide pet store ban in Colorado to a spay and neuter program brought back from the dead by the residents of Fort Smith, Arkansas, to the first time New York City ever put animal welfare in its budget, these are the victories that don't always make the news but should. Every one of them started with advocates who looked at a problem everyone treated as permanent and decided it wasn't. The point isn't just to celebrate. It's to hand you an idea you could bring home to your town. We talk about: * Why local ordinances are often an effective path to a statewide law, using Colorado's pet store ban as the model * How the people of one Arkansas city reversed a budget cut to their spay and neuter program, and what that says about the need to defend the wins you already have * How Texas made its first major investment in spay and neuter by framing it as public health and taxpayer savings, and why the application window closed early when demand far exceeded the funding * Why New York City putting animal welfare in its budget for the first time is an example other cities will notice * What persistence looks like in practice, from a pet store ban that took years and mutiple tries to get across the line Key Takeaway: Almost none of these wins happened because a lawmaker woke up with the idea. They happened because constituents kept showing up, sometimes for years, and that means the next one could start with you. If this episode left you thinking about a change you'd like to see where you live, I created a short private audio series called The Four C's of Legislative Advocacy for Animals. It lays out a practical framework for advocates who want laws that work in the real world. You can access it free at AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs [https://animaladvocacyacademy.com/fourcs].

10. juni 202614 min
episode Outside Dogs and the Law: How Support Keeps Dogs Out of Shelters cover

Outside Dogs and the Law: How Support Keeps Dogs Out of Shelters

When a dog lives outside 24/7, the first instinct for a lot of animal lovers is to report it as animal cruelty. But what happens when humane law enforcement shows up, finds food, water, and shelter, and determines there's no violation to act on? The dog is still outside. They need more to be comfortable and healthy, mentally and physically. But the law doesn't demand it. That gap, between what the law requires and what a dog needs to live a good life, is where Underdogs of Philly does their work. In this episode, I talk with Cara Brand and Caroline Lipinski of Underdogs of Philly about a model that most animal advocates have never considered: partnering with owners who keep their dogs outside, meeting them with resources instead of judgment, and improving conditions for dogs the law can't help and the shelter has no room to take in. We get into why removal isn't the answer most people assume it is, how trust gets built one knock at a time, and how this kind of community support directly prevents surrenders to an already overcrowded city shelter. In this episode, you'll learn: * Why a dog kept outside with adequate food, water, and shelter is often within the law, even if the living situation is far from ideal * How meeting owners with support rather than judgment changes outcomes for dogs the shelter system can't serve * The connection between human poverty and animal welfare, and why helping the person helps the animal * How spay/neuter incentives work when cost and transportation barriers are removed * Why preventing a surrender before an owner reaches the shelter lobby matters so much * How to start this kind of work in your own community, even without a formal organization Key Takeaway: When the law is satisfied but a dog still needs more, supporting owners where they are keeps dogs out of shelters and helps the animals and people the system leaves out. Want to move policy in your community, or build the skills to do it well? You can access the free private audio series, The Four C's of Legislative Advocacy for Animals, at AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs. [https://animaladvocacyacademy.com/fourcs]

28. maj 202634 min
episode Why Animal Advocates Need a 501(c)(4): Allie Taylor of Voters for Animal Rights cover

Why Animal Advocates Need a 501(c)(4): Allie Taylor of Voters for Animal Rights

Most animal welfare organizations are 501(c)(3) nonprofits. But in this episode, we talk about why advocates focused on law and policy should think about starting a 501(c)(4) instead. If you find all those IRS code section references confusing (or boring), this episode will clarify the difference and show you what a 501(c)(4) can accomplish politically that a 501(c)(3) can't. Allie Taylor is the founder and president of Voters for Animal Rights and, under her leadership VFAR has racked up nearly a dozen legislative wins for animals in New York over the past 10 years. In this conversation, we go through what made those wins possible and what those wins have changed for animals in New York. In this episode, you'll learn: * The legal and practical difference between a 501(c)(3) and a 501(c)(4) * How VFAR uses candidate endorsements to build relationships with elected officials * The story behind New York City's foie gras ban and the litigation keeping it from being enforced * How a law banning the sale of guinea pigs in pet stores drove a 70% drop in shelter surrenders * How VFAR holds elected officials accountable for the commitments they make on the campaign trail * Why Allie thinks animal advocates spend too much time protesting and not enough time phone banking Key Takeaway: If you want to change the law for animals, you need an organization that can endorse and oppose candidates, and that means a 501(c)(4). If you want to move policy in your community, or build the skills to do it well, you can access the free private audio series on the Four Cs at AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs.

20. maj 202623 min
episode Should Rescues Import Dogs When Local Shelters Are Full? cover

Should Rescues Import Dogs When Local Shelters Are Full?

Should rescues and shelters be importing dogs from other states when local shelters are full and dogs here are being euthanized for space? It feels like there should be an obvious answer. Help the dogs already here first. But the obvious answer misses something important. And the dogs caught in the middle of this debate, including the long-stay pit mixes and the easier-to-place dogs being euthanized in southern shelters, are paying for the fact that nobody is asking the right question. In this episode, Penny takes a mediator's view of one of the most contentious debates in animal welfare. She walks through what each side gets right, what each side misses, and where responsible importing organizations have to draw the line. In this episode, you'll learn: * Why the "no imports" argument is consistent with advocating for the dogs who need help, and where it falls short * The economic argument that explains why rescues import easier-to-place dogs from out of state * What "benefactor dogs" are and why some rescues fail without them * The 2 minimum standards every responsible importing rescue should meet * What the Association for Animal Welfare Advancement says about transport in its own guidelines * The 2 questions to ask any rescue before you adopt or donate Key Takeaway: The way out of the binary import-or-don't-import debate is not to pick a side. It's to set baseline standards every responsible importing organization should be meeting, and to give every adopter and donor the questions that make those standards stick. Want to learn how to turn your compassion for animals into effective legislative advocacy? Get free access to The 4 C's of Legislative Advocacy for Animals at AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs [https://animaladvocacyacademy.com/fourcs/]

7. maj 202618 min