Daily Camera (Boulder)

Dogs are the true heroes of the pandemic

- By Kathleen Parker

During a recent visit to base camp — i.e., The Washington Post, Capitol Hill and points thereabout in D.C. — I was struck that my day revolved almost entirely around dogs.

Not that every moment here should be filled with politics and punditry. But a full day of dog talk is rare, even for a columnist who writes often of animal rights and who once negotiated a TV contract to include her blind toy poodle.

For the record, I wasn’t angling to have Ollie on CNN, as some believed, but in the building. I had just adopted the poor fellow from a kill shelter and felt I couldn’t then abandon him for 12hour workdays. Thus, when I swung by The Post’s K Street offices Wednesday, I wasn’t disappoint­ed to land in a canine-centered conversati­on. One of the participan­ts was Ruth Marcus — the Harvard-educated lawyer, columnist and deputy editorial page editor. She and I may disagree on one or two issues, but we’re sisters in solidarity when it comes to our dogs. You gotta start somewhere. I made a mental note that sharing dog stories not only breaks the ice but also opens our hearts, a ritual that might be helpful to our bipartisan negotiatio­ns. Couldn’t hurt.

Later that evening, dog talk came naturally at a dinner hosted by the Best Friends Animal Society, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to helping homeless dogs and cats through adoption and to making America a no-kill country by 2025. It runs the country’s largest no-kill shelter in southern Utah, where, on average, about 1,600 dogs, cats and other animals live at a time until they’re adopted. Since 2016, the Best Friends Animal Society and its partners have managed to help reduce the number of dogs and cats killed in U.S. shelters from roughly 1.5 million a year to about 347,000 in 2020, the organizati­on announced this year.

Rarely have I heard so much laughter at a D.C. dinner, especially among other writers and editors. We tend to be an overcautio­us and, therefore, dull group in such settings. As is customary, we began by introducin­g ourselves to one another, but this time we also introduced our dogs, telling stories and producing photos. By the time the last person spoke, we were no longer strangers but, well, Best Friends bonded by our love of dogs. (One person confessed to not currently having a dog, but Jim Acosta’s secret is safe with me for now.)

My dogs have been much more than pets, which implies a master-servant relationsh­ip and ownership. Spooky, Shasta, Moses, OD, Max, Malcolm, Asheville, Brevard, Winston, Akela, Harley, Mister, Ollie and Honey are characters in the chapters of my life. They’ve punctuated milestones, shared victories and losses, licked my tears, healed my wounds and broken my heart as no human could.

When Asheville, a mixed breed, died several years ago, a friend said, “I know you must miss her so much because you loved her so much.” And I said,

“No, I miss her because she loved me so much.” Ollie, who died on Christmas Eve 2019, was 100 percent dependent on me. I was his service animal, his seeing-eye human. He had spent so much of his life confidentl­y perched on my right forearm that when he died at 18, I felt his absence like a missing limb. I once ran looking for him while he was on my arm. My devotion to Ollie doubtless filled an empty space in my heart, possibly the need to nurture after my son was grown.

There’s not much mystery there, but a goldfish would have been a lot easier. It seems, therefore, that we humans reap benefits from tending to others, especially the weak and defenseles­s. Dogs have served human beings in various capacities for millennia, but they’ve also trained us to serve them. In this way, they’ve deepened our humanity by expanding our capacity for empathy.

And for that, we owe them their lives.

Bedrooms

The moral of GossGrove’s story

This is a true story. Actual names were left out to protect the guilty. Not long ago GossGrove was a neighborho­od of Latine, white and a few Black families; working class. The unrelated singles who lived in small groups worked in town or at the university and could AFFORD to live and stay here. It was a community; people felt a sense of belonging. People stuck around because it felt great to live in Goss-grove. Then one day big developers got a whiff of these small homes near campus and came in and bought it all up. Of course folks took the money. Developers then set out to pack any big yard that was once a garden and groves of fruit that fed folks

Bedrooms

Collective wisdom

Iam a ballot sponsor for Ballot Measure 300, Bedrooms Are For People. I am also a 20-year Boulder renter and here is what I know:

Seven years ago I started working on the co-operative housing ordinance. It took four years to get an ordinance (interestin­gly, we hear the same unreasonab­le and hyperbolic attacks on

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