Dog Gone
It isn’t often that you see a politician destroy their career. Politicians often do stupid things and live on to fight another day, but at times, you just sense that a politician is done for. Over the weekend, we saw one of those events.
A few months ago, I wrote that Kristi Noem was one of Trump’s top picks for a running mate. The South Dakota governor was popular with the MAGA crowd and totally loyal to The Former Guy, undoubtedly his top qualification. But over the weekend, it all went wrong for Noem when The Guardian obtained an advance copy of her new book.
In the book, “No Going Back: The Truth on What’s Wrong with Politics and How We Move America Forward,” which will be published next month, Noem tells the story of “Cricket, [who] was a wirehair pointer, about 14 months old.” The Guardian picks up the story:
She includes her story about the ill-fated Cricket, she says, to illustrate her willingness, in politics as well as in South Dakota life, to do anything “difficult, messy and ugly” if it simply needs to be done.
By taking Cricket on a pheasant hunt with older dogs, Noem says, she hoped to calm the young dog down and begin to teach her how to behave. Unfortunately, Cricket ruined the hunt, going “out of her mind with excitement, chasing all those birds and having the time of her life”.
Noem describes calling Cricket, then using an electronic collar to attempt to bring her under control. Nothing worked. Then, on the way home after the hunt, as Noem stopped to talk to a local family, Cricket escaped Noem’s truck and attacked the family’s chickens, “grabb[ing] one chicken at a time, crunching it to death with one bite, then dropping it to attack another”.
Cricket the untrainable dog, Noem writes, behaved like “a trained assassin”.
When Noem finally grabbed Cricket, she says, the dog “whipped around to bite me”. Then, as the chickens’ owner wept, Noem repeatedly apologised, wrote the shocked family a check “for the price they asked, and helped them dispose of the carcasses littering the scene of the crime”.
Through it all, Noem says, Cricket was “the picture of pure joy”.
“I hated that dog,” Noem writes, adding that Cricket had proved herself “untrainable”, “dangerous to anyone she came in contact with” and “less than worthless … as a hunting dog”.
“At that moment,” Noem says, “I realised I had to put her down.”
Noem, who also represented her state in Congress for eight years, got her gun, then led Cricket to a gravel pit.
“It was not a pleasant job,” she writes, “but it had to be done. And after it was over, I realised another unpleasant job needed to be done.”
But wait, there’s more! Noem goes on to talk about the second unpleasant job. She had a goat that smelled “disgusting, musky, rancid” and “loved to chase” her children. Noem took the goat to the same gravel pit and gave him the Cricket treatment.
We have had a farm and we’ve had both chickens and goats. We have also had dogs who liked to kill chickens.
I’ll grant that breaking a dog from killing chickens is next to impossible. Dogs like to chase things and chickens make fun targets for them. The dog’s interaction may start as playful, but once they get a taste of the chicken, the dog is often hooked.
When we had our farm, we had a string of dogs that loved to chase and kill chickens. We didn’t kill these dogs, however. The dogs were just doing what dogs do. That’s especially true of hunting dogs that are bred to chase birds.
What we did with chicken killers that proved to be untrainable was to rehome them. A dog that kills chickens and won’t hunt isn’t necessarily “worthless,” they can still become cherished family pets in homes that don’t have chickens.
Shooting healthy dogs is not typical farm behavior. In fact, the only similar case that I can recall was a few years ago when the mother of one of my son’s friends killed their family dog for questionable and likely psychologically manipulative reasons. The mom in that story ended up looking like a sociopath.
We also had goats. I can agree that goats are cute and playful when they are young, but male goats can grow into jerks. There are two ways to handle this problem short of killing the goat. One is to sell it and the other is to castrate it. Noem apparently didn’t try either method.
There has been some suggestion that Noem might be prosecuted for animal cruelty. This will not happen. She mentions her daughter, Kennedy, coming home from school after the killing. Kennedy is now 26 which supports Noem’s claim that the killings occurred about two decades ago. That is beyond the statute of limitations, but I do wonder if Kennedy learned that he mom killed her dog from the weekend news coverage.
Noem claims that she didn’t break the law at all. In posts to Facebook and the platform formerly known as Twitter, the governor said, “South Dakota law states that dogs who attack and kill livestock can be put down.”
In the post, she also notes that Cricket had “shown aggressive behavior toward people by biting them,” but this is inconsistent with her account in the book, in which she only tells about Cricket killing chickens and says that the dog tried to bite her when she interrupted the attack.
Noem defends her actions, saying in social media posts, “I can understand why some people are upset about a 20-year-old story of Cricket, one of the working dogs at our ranch, in my upcoming book — No Going Back.”
In another statement, she adds, “Whether running the ranch or in politics, I have never passed on my responsibilities to anyone else to handle. Even if it’s hard and painful. I followed the law and was being a responsible parent, dog owner, and neighbor. As I explained in the book, it wasn’t easy. But often the easy way isn’t the right way.”
Neither Cricket nor the goat had to be killed. The reader is left with the impression that Noem killed the animals because she wanted to. Regardless of whether the killings were legal, shooting the animals was a choice and there were other good options that Noem apparently did not try to pursue.
An even bigger question is why Noem decided to include such a personally damaging story in her book. She obviously thought that the story made her look good and doesn’t seem to have gotten any pushback from ghostwriters, proofreaders, editors, or anyone up the chain of publishing.
One has to wonder whether the bubble of confirmation bias surrounding Noem is so impenetrable by common sense that dog-killing is considered a political strength or if she was the victim of internal sabotage. Maybe she didn’t listen to advice to remove the story, or maybe her aides were secretly trying to scuttle her career.
As one wag on Threads speculated, “Elise Stefanik on the phone to Kristi Noem: ‘No no. You HAVE to put the Cricket story in there. I love that for you.’”
Killing Cricket was a questionable moral decision. Putting the story in a book when you’re hoping to get the vice-presidential slot brings up other questions about Noem’s judgment.
People on both sides of the political spectrum point to the trivial nature of the issue. Pro-life advocates point to the massive number of unborn babies killed in America while some on the left question why a dog’s death gets more attention than the victims of gun violence. Maybe they both have a point, but it’s also true that those issues are much more divisive. No one knows exactly where life begins and there are no easy solutions to gun violence, especially considering our constitutional right to bear arms.
But both sides love dogs. And both sides abhor cruelty to animals.
I’ve been surprised at how few Republicans are rushing to defend Noem. There aren’t many don’t-clutch-your-pearls-this-is-farm-life posts or charges that not shooting dogs is a symptom of wokism. In fact, many on the right seem to be done with her. Donald Trump might be able to shoot a man on Fifth Avenue and get away with it, but Kristi Noem isn’t Donald Trump… and she didn’t shoot a man. (I have to wonder what would have happened if Noem had already been selected as Trump’s running mate when the news broke.) How many people have died because of US policy in [insert country here] without sparking bipartisan outrage?
I think a big part of the reason has to do with the human psyche. A story that is trivial but that establishes an emotional connection is more gripping than a more important story that is dry and unexciting. To put it another way, as Josef Stalin is reported to have said, “The death of one man is a tragedy, but the death of millions is a statistic.”
It can be strange how some political careers can survive big errors and scandals and then be destroyed by something small and seemingly irrelevant. Voters can ignore weighty issues and decide an election based on factors like who they’d rather have a beer with or stories about tying a dog kennel on the roof of a car.
Sometimes, it’s a little slip that betrays a politician’s true nature. A callous remark or out-of-touch comment can turn the fickle masses against them in an irreversible movement. Some errors are too big to overcome.
It might be possible for Kristi Noem to convince America that she was right to kill Cricket, but, as the governor herself might say, my gut feeling is that dog won’t hunt.
[Full disclosure: I wouldn’t say I’m a dog lover, but I am a dog tolerator. My family owns three rescued dogs (Rocky, Ginger, and Baxter) who love to take me for walks.]
I’m not sure what’s worse, that she did this or that she thinks people will like or respect her for it.Report
What’s worse is the people coming to her defense, and I say that as someone who, like the writer, tolerates dogs.Report
I wonder if those people defended Michael Vick……Report
Unfortunately a number of our more rural fellow citizens see dogs as tools for certain uses, not beloved family members or pets. Just like the see guns as tools, not “The End Of The World As We Know It.” Such folks might scoff at the decision to publish the story, but they probably share it.Report
And to think that, in some countries, these dogs are eaten.Report
I met a girl from the ethnically Korean part of China (either the Jilin or Liaoning provinces) who said she liked dog meat. When we passed by a pet store I asked her which one she thought looked the most delicious, and she, scandalized at the thought, explained to me that some dog breeds were pets, and others were meat, and she would never want to eat a pet breed.
I guess it’s not that different from the American idea that, e.g., cows are for food and horses are pets.Report
Or the difference between wild vs bred animals. E.g. the Eastern Cottontails in our woods are cute if you happen to like all bunnies, but actual pet rabbits are much cuter and fluffier.Report
I doubt it. The problem is that Cricket didn’t do anything “kill” worthy by rural standards. Killing the friends of the families chickens is a problem but unless Cricket lived on a chicken farm that wouldn’t approach shooting worthy offense. Worst case, like urban dogs, Cricket would be given to a different farm. Also, at 18 months none of her behavior was inexcusable even to a dog instrumentalist culture. She’s just a young dog.Report
My ex-wife grew up on a small farm. She’s had poultry which were pets until they weren’t. Her family has killed dogs for less reason. Her father attempted to raise animals for their fur.
Animals exist to serve a purpose. When that purpose is over it’s off to the glue factory or whatever.
This is a very normal attitude for a small farmer.Report
For some reason, the trope about the evil person doing things to be evil because evil is fun is “Kick the Dog” and the one called “Shoot the Dog” is about somebody doing something out of cruel necessity.
Old Yeller just ain’t in the rotation anymore.Report
Neither is “Where The Red Fern Grows”.Report
Gordon Korman wrote a fun little book called “No More Dead Dogs“. It contains this wonderful quotation that is the tagline of the “Death by Newbery Medal” TvTropes page: “Pick up any book with a dog and an award sticker on the cover. Trust me, that dog is going down.”
But in a world where nobody reads the books where the dog dies as the end… why do you need “No More Dead Dogs”?
Maybe Marley and Me will take off again.Report
When I was in my early single digits (before I can remember) I am told I ill advisedly tried to grab the food dish of my parents old black lab Chipper and even more ill-advisedly got my hand bit for my trouble. My Grandfather took Chipper out for a walk on the cliffs of the Island and returned alone. Dogs that bite people get killed. It is a law as old as the human-dog relationship and probably is more responsible for the nature of dogs in modern times than any other thing.
When I was in early double digits and my sister was in her mid-single digits my sister leaped up and down on the back of our saintly aging golden retriever Tyra which was undoubtably painful to my poor sweet old dog. Poor Tyra wound about and bit my sister on the face. A little higher and she’d have lost an eye, a little lower and she’d have been bit on the throat. It was a terrifying whirlwind nightmare of rushing my sister to the doctor. When we finally got home my Dad got his gun and fetched Tyra. Dogs that bite people get killed. I was beside myself because I, by then, knew how the old law goes and tried to persuade him to forbear to no avail. My sister still has dimple like scars on her cheeks from the tooth punctures. Dad came back without Tyra and I was utterly inconsolable (as, likely, was he for she truly was his dog more than any of ours).
Away from the farms and fisheries in urban and city settings, I’ve definitely seen and heard that the old laws’ teeth have been blunted and dogs that bite people can survive the experience due to extenuating circumstances and other considerations. I don’t feel comfortable saying either way if that’s a good idea or not.
Be that as it may, Cricket didn’t bite and should never have been killed. At least she got her vengeance post mortem by dragging Ms. Noems’ political career down with her. Sic semper stultus.Report
I’m not so sure her career has been drug down just yet.Report
I don’t know about her Governorship but Trump has zero loyalty and many options for a prostrate boot licking Veep candidate. I am very confident Cricket ended Noems consideration for the Veep candidacy.Report
She can certainly translate this from the governorship to a US senate seat without too much effort. Herr career may be redirected but it’s not going to end over this.Report
If she manages it I’ll admit I was wrong, but I have a suspicion that she doesn’t get the veep nod and that she ends up not becoming a Senator from Dakota either.Report
There definitely is a different from “farm country” and not farm country treatment of dogs. I spent time in both worlds, but more in the not farm country. My now ex would have raged at that type of treatment, but to her pets were family, she couldn’t see the other side, not having experienced it. I’d have some trouble with it too, but I’ll not disparage something like this because MY values don’t allow for it. I do find it odd that this was even mentioned in the book. Why the hell would you?Report
I consider the old law rather dated and harsh but readily acknowledge its consequences in the sweet loving nature of most dogs in modern times. Such is how a wolf becomes a snuggly pup.
I can only presume Noam assumed that taking a very tough “farm” stance would burnish her rural credentials and would also “trigger the libs” which would burnish her Maga credentials. This flags her both as a fake farmer- any farm person who wasn’t a dog hater would be appalled at her treatment of Cricket, and also a general tin-eared ness regarding political messaging. Also clearly the bubble around her is strong because none of her editors, ghost writers etc felt safe to intervene and say “Are you crazy? Take this out!”Report
My guess is it was included to shock those most likely to be shocked, maybe also as a cultural signal. Or she could just be kind of an idiot.Report
“Or she could just be kind of an idiot.”
I’d bet money on that explanation.Report
When I was about 11, my friend and neighbor had a family pet that was also trained as a guard dog. I forget what kind it was (I’m not a dog person) but it was big and furry… not a breed known for aggressiveness. The dog was typically in the house but was sometimes outside in a small fenced in area between the front and backyards. I went to see my friend and he told me to go around back. I mistakenly tried to do this by walking through the dog’s fenced in area — his personal space — and all he knew was a non-family member (I was familiar to him but i wasn’t FAMILY) was entering HIS space and that was enough to trigger his guard instincts. He went at me and I screamed and amidst a whirlwind of thrashing by both of us, the mom came out and pulled the dog off at me, at which point he immediately calmed down. I had a few black and blue marks where his teeth caught me on the thigh but didn’t picture. The crotch of my shorts was torn through (thank goodness for the baggy, saggy pants era!) though he never made contact with my delicates, though this was clearly from his training as a guard dog.
I guess we could debate whether he bit me or not given the specifics. But I don’t believe there was ever talk of putting him down or anything else. As it stood, I was in the wrong, entering HIS space when I ought not to have (admittedly by mistake) and he did what he was trained to do. Thank goodness for my friend’s mom’s quick action.
I’m not a dog fan and think too many people let their dogs act in socially irresponsible ways. But I’d push back on the old law since it would have caught my friend’s dog up in it and, I think, wrongly so.
Now, would I like to put down a few dogs or dog owners for their socially irresponsible behavior? That’s another story…Report
No blood, no bite is the rule as I generally understood it. So your friends dog would have skated by and probably would have been quietly approved of for such a restrained response.
And I, like you, think the old law may be outdated now for many people. But I can’t, honestly, say it was wrong back in its time. Antibiotics once weren’t a thing. You could die from a splinter if your luck was bad. A dog bite could be the end.Report
Before antibiotics we had the President of the United States’ son die of a blister on his foot.Report
Yes, it’s so easy to forget in the golden glow of modernity how deep the chasm is beneath the tightrope of civilization.Report
I got a dog bite a couple of months ago that drew blood. I kept sort of a mental list of what modernity provided. Clean water in the shower, chlorinated so it’s not got bugs of its own. Soap. Then a scrub with hydrogen peroxide. Then a scrub with 70% rubbing alcohol. OTC antibiotic cream to rub in for the next few nights. My tetanus booster up to date. The dog’s rabies vaccination up to date. Hell, record keeping!
OTOH, like most large mammals, humans are remarkably tough. I remember a couple of episodes where my skin did moderately gross things to avoid infections.Report
Assuredly. A healthy adult with a bite or skin perforation isn’t assured to keel over dead without intervention. Indeed the odds are steeply in their favor. Of course filth would hurt those odds a little. Hunger a bit more. Sickness a bit more. Cold a bit more. To say nothing of quack medicine. The further back in time we go the more of those negative factors pile up.
And, on the other hand like in your excellent example, those steep odds in ones favor can be tilted even more favorably by cleanliness, by disinfectant and they can be made absolutely overwhelming by antibiotics.Report
The big issue here of course is that very few of us live on the farm anymore. Even the most ardent MAGAt like Catturd thinks this is a bridge too far. She’s toast.Report
‘Kristi, darling, I understand completely,’ by Cruella De Vil
Kristi, darling, I understand completely. You kill a single measly ill-behaved puppy, and everyone rushes to judgment! God forbid a woman do anything!
It’s a cruel world — a cruel world, darling! Wretched! Putrid! But Cruella understands. Cruella is writing a check to Kristi Noem right now. What office are you running for? Governor? Vice president? It doesn’t matter! I have your back, a back I trust is covered in a fur as splendid as it is taboo. I am rock-solid for you. Name the figure! Any woman brave enough to fly in the face of societal convention and kill some puppies is a woman after my own heart. We are the real feminists, darling! Don’t forget it!
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/04/29/kristi-noem-shot-dog-cruella-satire/Report
I’m a dog lover. This isn’t a story. Anyone who claims to want serious politics, you can’t call this a story.Report
Mitt Romney would like a word.Report
Kristi Noem thought the story made her a tough woman of action rather than somebody who comes across like a heartless monster.Report
On the other hand, Noem’s children grew up exceptionally well-behaved.Report
That’s like this old joke: https://www.reddit.com/r/Jokes/comments/1vvev0/an_old_farmer_and_his_wife_are_riding_along/Report
She’s doing damage control, very possibly. Getting ahead of the story. Apparently, for years, there has been talk among South Dakotans that Gov. Noem had been seen shooting her pets. The “construction workers?”
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/kristi-noem-killed-dog.htmlReport
Hmm that is interesting but it’s awfully bad damage control.Report
She is apparently double downing and suggested Biden’s dog should have been killed for his behavior too.Report