Marian wrote:Isn't there enough money in this world for both?
Yeah, go ahead, call me a dreamer...

Wouldn't dream of it.

Yes, there
is enough money in the world for both. It's not shared fairly, but refusing to spend money on veterinary treatment for pets (or insurance for pets) is not going to help redistribute it. Let's assume that humans
are more important than other animals. Let's assume that owning a pet is a luxury. Virtually everyone in the developed world spends more money than they actually
need to. We all have our luxuries. David House talks about "travelling much further around the world". Would it be too cheeky of me to suggest that being able to do that is something of a luxury? That in general we don't
need to travel abroad at all? Many of us spend far more than we need to on holidays, cars, televisions, computers, iPods, mobile phones, clothes, shoes, haircuts, cosmetics, jewellery, meals out in restaurants, alcohol, theatre tickets, sports tickets, books, objets d'art, home furnishings and ornamental plants. Why pick on veterinary treatment for pets? Only the saintliest of people could be expected to give up all their income beyond what is needed for food and shelter and the very basic social and psychological needs. If we allow people to spend the bulk of their income on what they
want, as well as what they need, then obviously they get to choose what they spend it on, and what business is it of anyone else, unless what they are doing is harmful to others? And if people pay tax, and especially if they donate a decent chunk of their income to charities that help sick children and tackle poverty and support other causes deemed sufficiently worthy, then what more can reasonably be expected of them? Well ... actually, I think there's a strong case for redistributing wealth a fair bit more, and I would be happy to pay more tax if everyone else (who could afford it) did too. But a person's income after tax is for that person to dispose of.
I will own up to spending a few hundred pounds a year on pet insurance and vet bills for our dog, and if she needed expensive treatment that wasn't covered by insurance, it is quite probable that we would pay it (unless the treatment was risky and involved putting her through a lot of pain and we decided against it our of compassionate for her). Like Alan C. and his wife, we consider our dog to be part of our family. Oh, I might as well be honest about it: we
love her. Others may find that bizarre, but I don't care. It is less bizarre, in my view, than loving one's motorbike, or one's CD collection, or one's wardrobe. Where would be the logic in denying our dog expensive veterinary treatment out of guilt about people dying for want of medical treatment if we continued to spend money on other things that we don't actually
need and that are actually less important to us than our dog?
Is anyone here really suggesting that people should spend their income only on what they really need, and donate all of what's left to the world's poor? Is anyone really advocating sainthood?
Emma