OFF THE WIRE
Kitty Block and Sara Amundson
Service dogs can alert their owners to PTSD triggers, such as crowded
areas or unanticipated risks. They can also help to reduce their
handlers’ anxiety by providing security and a calming effect.
Photo by Shutterstock
The U.S. House has just approved a bill that would expand
opportunities for veterans to get involved with training and adopting
service dogs, leading to better lives for both the animals and the
people helping them.
The PAWS for Veterans Therapy Act, H.R. 4305, will create a pilot
program at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to help
individuals with post-deployment mental health disorders by pairing them
with dogs to train as service animals. The bill directs the VA to
provide grants to nonprofit entities that teach veterans how to train
service dogs. Once the program is completed, veterans can, if they wish,
adopt their dogs for ongoing therapy.
The measure passed the House by a voice vote. The issue has such
strong bipartisan support, the bill arrived on the House floor with 324
cosponsors from both sides of the aisle.
There are few who would deny that we owe a special debt of gratitude
to those men and women who have served in our nation’s armed forces,
especially in combat. This is particularly true given our current
understanding of the significant emotional challenges associated with
conflict and its aftermath. An alarming number of veterans and current
service members face an invisible and formidable enemy in Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder and other mental health challenges.
The legislation relies upon some of the best mental health
interventions available. Working with service dogs has been shown to enhance mental health.
Among other benefits, it helps participants focus attention and energy
toward training the dog. Moreover, the positive emotions they
experience when the dogs perform their tasks well can produce
demonstrable social and psychological benefits, too.
Therapy centered on productive and satisfying employment has also
been shown to successfully lower depression, anxiety, anger, sleep
disturbances and alcohol and substance abuse, as well as enhance
interpersonal relationships.
Once the service dogs are trained, they can be invaluable companions
for veterans. They often alert their owners to PTSD triggers, such as
crowded areas or unanticipated risks. They can also help to reduce their
handlers’ anxiety by providing security and a calming effect. And any
dog breed is fit to serve, including Labradors, golden retrievers, mixed
breeds and animals rescued from shelters.
No society can afford to neglect the post-deployment well-being of
its service members. Our thanks to Reps. Steve Stivers, R-Ohio, Kathleen
Rice, D-N.Y., John Rutherford, R-Fla., Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., Michael
Walz, R-Fla., Gil Cisneros, D-Calif., Neal Dunn, R-Fla., and Elissa
Slotkin, D-Mich., for recognizing the social, psychological and medical
benefits that the human-animal bond provides to improve the health and
well-being of veterans, and for their leadership in bringing this
measure so far in such a short time. We now urge the Senate to swiftly
act upon a companion bill, the K9s for Veterans Therapy Act, S. 2948,
sponsored by Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz. This
well-crafted, urgently needed legislation is worthy of every American’s
support.
Sara Amundson is president of the Humane Society Legislative Fund.
Thursday, February 13, 2020
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
Monday, February 10, 2020
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
The civil rights leader ‘almost nobody knows about’ gets a statue in the U.S. Capitol
OFF THE WIRE
On the second day, Chief Standing Bear was called to testify, becoming the first Native American to do so. He raised his right hand and, through an interpreter, said: “My hand is not the color of yours, but if I pierce it, I shall feel pain. If you pierce your hand, you also feel pain. The blood that will flow from mine will be the same color as yours. The same god made us both. I am a man.”
On the second day, Chief Standing Bear was called to testify, becoming the first Native American to do so. He raised his right hand and, through an interpreter, said: “My hand is not the color of yours, but if I pierce it, I shall feel pain. If you pierce your hand, you also feel pain. The blood that will flow from mine will be the same color as yours. The same god made us both. I am a man.”
September 20, 2019
By 1858, the Poncas were forced to cede most of their land except for a small area by the Niobrara River, where they became farmers rather than buffalo hunters. But they did well, growing corn and trading with white settlers often.Ten years later, as described by Dee Alexander Brown in the classic “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee,” the remaining Ponca land was mistakenly included in a treaty between the United States and the Sioux tribes.
“Although the Poncas protested over and over again to Washington, officials took no action. Wild young men from the Sioux tribes came down demanding horses as tribute, threatening to drive the Poncas off the land which they now claimed as their own,” Brown wrote.
The U.S. government finally took action in 1876 but not in the way the Poncas had hoped. Congress declared that the Poncas would be moved to Indian Territory in Oklahoma in exchange for $25,000. Though the bill stated clearly this would all happen “with the consent of said band,” when the Poncas declined the inferior land they were offered in Oklahoma, they were forced to leave anyway.
By the time they arrived in Oklahoma in 1878, it was too late in the season to plant; they also didn’t get any of the farming equipment the government had promised them. More than a third of the Poncas died of starvation and disease — including Standing Bear’s sister and his beloved son.
Standing Bear and his burial party evaded capture while they traveled home but were caught and detained after visiting relatives at the Omaha reservation.The man who caught them, Brig. Gen. George Crook, had been fighting Native Americans for decades, Brown wrote, but he was moved by Standing Bear’s reasons for leaving the Indian Territory and promised to help him.Crook went to the media, which spread the story of the plight of Standing Bear and his fellow prisoners nationwide. Then two lawyers offered to take up their case pro bono, and asked a judge to free the Poncas immediately.Though Crook was sympathetic to Standing Bear, since he was the official carrying out the federal government’s orders to detain them, the civil rights case that resulted was called Standing Bear v. Crook.
The U.S. attorney argued that Standing Bear was neither a citizen nor a person, and as such did not have standing to sue the government.On the second day, Chief Standing Bear was called to testify, becoming the first Native American to do so. He raised his right hand and, through an interpreter, said: “My hand is not the color of yours, but if I pierce it, I shall feel pain. If you pierce your hand, you also feel pain. The blood that will flow from mine will be the same color as yours. The same god made us both. I am a man.”
The judge agreed, ruling for the first time in U.S. history that “the Indian is a ‘person’ ” and has all the rights and freedoms promised in the Constitution. The judge also ordered Crook to free Standing Bear and his people immediately.
Despite the landmark decision from the judge, his opinion still drips with prejudice, calling Native Americans a “weak, insignificant, unlettered, and generally despised race.”
Standing Bear returned to the land by the Niobrara River and buried his son alongside his ancestors. When he died there in 1908, he was buried alongside them, too.
A few decades later, in 1937, the state of Nebraska sent two statues to the U.S. Capitol. Each state is allowed to pick two historical figures to represent them in National Statuary Hall, and Nebraska chose politician William Jennings Bryan and Arbor Day founder Julius Sterling Morton.
(This provision is also why there are at least eight statues of Confederates in the Capitol. Neither Congress nor the Architect of the Capitol has the power to remove them; it must be done by the states that sent the statues.)
In recent years, Nebraska lawmakers voted to replace both statues. Bryan was replaced by Chief Standing Bear; soon, Morton will be replaced by a statue of author Willa Cather.
At the dedication ceremony Wednesday, which included Ponca tribal leaders and members of the House and Senate, Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts said it was an honor to recognize “one of the most important civil rights leaders in our country that almost nobody knows about.
“And we hope to be able to correct that today and tell his story,” Ricketts said.
Get Expect No Mercy
OFF THE WIRE
For those who have asked or are interested, you can order a copy of Expect No Mercy, in either the paperback or electronic editions, by clicking the image below.
I will have more to say about this book, including the people who did not want me to write it, next week.
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