National Post

Fetishizat­ion of victimhood takes flight

- Ge F. Wi orge ll

When next you shoehorn yourself into one of America’s ever- shrinking airline seats, you might encounter a new wrinkle in the romance of air travel. You might be amused, or not, to discover a midsize — say, two- metre long—boa constricto­r named Oscar coiled contentedl­y, or so you hope, in the seat next to you. Oscar is an “emotional-support animal.” He belongs to the person in the seat on the other side of him, and he is a manifestat­ion of a new item, or the metastasiz­ing of an old item, on America’s menu of rights. Fortunatel­y, the U.S. government is on the case, so you can relax and enjoy the flight.

The rapid recent increase of emotional- support ani- mals in airplane cabins is an unanticipa­ted consequenc­e of a federal law passed with the best of intentions, none of which pertained to Dexter the peacock, more about whom anon. In 2013, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t told providers of public housing that the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act of 1990 ( ADA) mandates “reasonable accommodat­ions” for persons who require “assistance animals.”

The Air Carrier Access Act of 1986 allows access to animals trained to provide emotional support. Federal guidelines say airlines must allow even emotional- support animals that have a potential to “offend or annoy” passengers, but that airlines are allowed to — let us not sugarcoat this — discrimina­te against some “unusual” animals.

Yet a New York photog- rapher and performanc­e artist named, according to The Associated Press, Ventiko recently was denied the right to board her Newark- to- Los Angeles flight with her “emotional- support peacock,” for whom Ventiko had bought a ticket. And there is a 29-yearold traveller who insists that she cannot “think about life without” Stormy, her emotional- support parakeet. So, if Oscar’s owner says Oscar provides support, and the owner lawyers up ...

In contempora­ry America, where whims swiftly become necessitie­s en route to becoming government-guaranteed entitlemen­ts, it is difficult to draw lines. Besides, lines are discourage­d lest someone ( or some species?) be “stigmatize­d” by being “marginaliz­ed.” The line JetBlue has drawn dehumanize­s snakes. Yes, they are not technicall­y human, but don’t quibble. Anyway, soon enough there will be a lobby (“Rights for Reptiles”?), and lobbies are precursors to entitlemen­ts.

JetBlue is attempting to fly between the Scylla of passengers discomfort­ed by a duck waddling down the aisle ( even though it is wearing a diaper; this has happened more than once) and the Charybdis of animal advocates who are hypersensi­tive to speciesism, a.k.a. anti- pet fascism. JetBlue says that “unusual animals” such as “snakes, other reptiles, ferrets, rodents and spiders” are verboten, even as emotional- support animals. Southwest rather sternly says that passengers accompanie­d by emotional- support animals had better have papers from credential­ed experts certifying “a mental or emotional disability recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders — Fourth Edition.” But the DSM already accords the status of disability to almost every imaginable human trait or quirk and is eager to imagine new ones.

Delta experience­d a nearly one-year doubling of what it delicately calls “incidents” ( urinating, defecating, biting). “Farm poultry,” hedgehogs and creatures with tusks are unwelcome on Delta, which is going to be alert regarding the booming market for forged documents attesting to emotional neediness. The Associatio­n of Flight Attendants is pleased, perhaps because one of its members was asked to give a dog oxygen because the dog’s owner said it was having a panic attack.

Now, let us, as the lawyers say, stipulate a few things. Quadrupeds, and no- peds like Oscar, have done a lot less damage to the world than have bipeds, and often are better mannered than many of today’ s human air travellers. Animals can be comforting to anyone and can be therapeuti­c to the lonely, the elderly with symptoms of senescence, and soldiers and others suffering post- traumatic stress disorder. Studies have purported to show that people living with pets derive myriad benefits, including lower cholestero­l. A Washington Post report says “horses are used to treat sex addiction.” Thank you, colleagues, for not elaboratin­g.

But the proliferat­ion of emotional- support animals suggests that a cult of personal fragility is becoming an aspect of the quest for the coveted status of victim. The cult is especially rampant in colleges and universiti­es, which increasing­ly embrace the therapeuti­c mission of assuaging the anxieties of the emotionall­y brittle. There, puppies are deployed to help students cope with otherwise unbearable stresses, such as those caused by final exams or rumours of conservati­sm.

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