More Dog Park Politics

Ty, American Bulldog, and Noah, Golden Retriever, at dog park

She wears stylish, expensive glasses. Her cheekbones are admirable. She’s skinny and actually treks around in three-inch heels that would murder my feet. She has five children, a husband who is allegedly her manager, her adversary, her partner – who knows for sure? – and John McCain picked her as his running mate in 2008 and probably damns the day he did so.

Never mind that she is the half governor of Alaska who surrendered her job when she realized she could make more money doing what she does now, zipping around the country in a bus to maintain her media visibility. Never mind that she is, well, stupid, and doesn’t have a clue about foreign policy, domestic policy, the constitution, or anything else that it takes to be president. She’s cute, she winks, she grins, she’s a Barbie doll on steroids. And she has a clone named Michelle Bachman, congresswoman from Minnesota, the shame of every Democrat in the state.

For some perspective, I return to the dog park where we take our Golden Retriever most afternoons. It’s a perfect spot for political commentary. And we have our Sarah Palin, our Barack Obama, our Osama Bin Laden,  our Michelle Bachman, John McCain, our floozy like John Ensign, and that Congressman – I forget his name – who showed his abs on craig’s list. We have all those archetypes at the dog park.

It starts with Lily, a black pug, five years old or thereabouts, whose obsession is a small red ball that her human hurls across the park with a lime green ball thrower. This is Lily’s  thing, her passion, her total obsession. Every toss, every race to the ball, is Lilly’s Sarah Palin moment – or her Michelle Bachman moment –  when she reveals just how resolute and stupid she is. Don’t get me wrong. There are things I admire about Lily – her resoluteness, for instance. Once she catches that ball, she hurries back to her human – or some other human – and drops it to the ground at the human’s feet, and retains her grip on that ball. Our dog, Noah, eighty times her size, stands over her, barking –give me that stupid ball – but Lily just bites down harder on the little red ball. Like Palin, like Bachman, Lilly knows what she wants.

At some point, Lily’s human – Todd Palin, some anonymous advisor – tells Lily to release the ball and it gets thrown again by him or Rob or me or someone else who is willing. Then the race is on again and the Palin/Bachman media machine is in motion. In the dog park scheme of things, this motion comes from the human bystanders, cheering Lilly or Noah or both or simply laughing at how dogs interact.

Then there’s Lou, a Doberman, beautiful, sleek, fast  and so focused on Frisbees that she’s a Frisbee thief. I think she’s a bit like Hilary Clinton was during the 2008 presidential campaign, smart and determined and fixated on the goal. Sometimes Lou loses -Noah beats her to the Frisbee – but she’s remarkably determined. She lets Noah enjoy his triumph, tagging after him as he trots back to Rob or me, but instantly ready for the next throw.

Diesel, an American bulldog who hasn’t been fixed, is Mr. Macho Man. Most afternoons, he and Ty, another bulldog who HAS been fixed, race along opposite sides of a fence, barking fiercely at each other, but neither of them has an opportunity to act on his aggression. In fact, some days when the fences between the different sections of the dog park are opened and Diesel and Ty meet face to face, they aren’t sure how to act. It’s like, Huh? Who’re you? How am I supposed to act now?

Diesel and Ty are like any two politicians on opposite sides of the political spectrum. They recognize they’re both American bulldogs – politicians – but beyond that, they have zip in common. When the fence is no longer an impediment – like when Obama invites the Repubs to dinner or whatever at the white house – they aren’t quite sure what the protocol is.

The poop at the park is a big deal. There are poop bag dispensers at various locations in the park (four sections for various sizes of dogs) and whenever you see your dog doing the deed, you’re supposed to pick it up.  But there are people who come to the park daily, sometimes twice a day, who don’t bother.

So one day this guy from NY who owns a golden (Charlie, female, like Stephen King’s Charlie in Firestarter) sees this woman’s dog pooping and tells her about it. Minutes tick by, she doesn’t pick it up. No surprise, really, since she never scoops up her dog’s stuff. But Charlie’s human gets pissed off about it, scoops up the poop, and shouts, “Here’s your dog’s poop!” and hurls it at her.

She files assault  charges against him.

To me, this speaks of the accusations  that Repubs and Dems hurl at each other about Medicare, Social Security, the debt ceiling, you name it. Neither party has a clue what the other party is about.  Neither party has a clue what ordinary Americans are about, either. There are only talking points – the poop bag and what’s supposed to happen with it. So the rest of us – the middle class folks spread through four dog parks of different sizes – are left in a bind. What’re we doing here, anyway? Who’re we supposed to vote for? Does our vote even matter?

Some days, the quandary is resolved in unexpected ways. Today, for instance, we went to the eye doctor for our annual checkup. This is where you get those drops that cause your pupil to open so wide you feel you’ve died and been reborn.  Even wearing sunglasses, it hurt to be outside on a bright South Florida day. We were still feeling the effects when we took Noah to the park – and immediately sought shade.

Not too many dogs around, and after sniffing out the territory, Noah seemed bored. The collies arrived – three of them, lazy dogs, no fun, everyone  knows it. They’re kind of like Fox News, giving off erroneous impressions on what it means to be a dog. Human Jamie was around with mutt Sephera, who loves people but can’t abide other dogs – and Noah trotted over to Jamie, looking for the treats she usually brings into the park with her. No treats today, so he withdraws.

Noah glances around for some small dogs to chase down, but no one is up to the game. Too hot. Even the Australian guys, Frisbee freaks, are panting hard and fast. He starts digging a hole, to cool off, and refuses to chase the battered Frisbee Rob tosses. Even Lou is too hot to cross the vast expanse of two parks to catch this one.  There’s a message in all this. We just have to figure it out. Maybe the message is total silliness, that dogs care about dog stuff and humans care about human stuff and that border is never breached.

But. What I love about the dog park is the honesty I see, the sniff that says you’re cool or the obvious shunning because you’re a big, fat yawn with no chance of winning.

I think that for the 2012 election season, I’ll be looking at the dogs in the park for my insights into who will be president.Hey, it’s as good as what the bookies predict.

 

 

 

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12 Responses to More Dog Park Politics

  1. Well I’ve learnt a little about US politics via your dog park – thanks! As for Palin, I find her quite amusing – but I do have an Atlantic Ocean to distance myself from her. Just can’t believe how she got to be a prospective President’s running mate. I’m not sure she could point out where various countries are on a world map – other than America of course.

    • gypsy says:

      palin could easily mistake a monopoly board for a map, mike – i mean, she SEES russia from her back porch –

      • To be fair, Palin never said that she could see Russia from her house. It was a punchline made by Tina Fey that took on a life of its own (kind of like how Gore never said that he “invented” the Internet).

        Palin is like Bush…incurious about the outside world and when she was McCain’s running mate, she had only been to two other countries: Israel and Kuwait. McCain staffers were horrified by her ignorance (such as thinking that Africa was a country) and her inability to stick to the script. During McCain’s concession speech, she had wanted to offer a speech of her own, but McCain’s people had to keep an eye on her so she wouldn’t get near a microphone.

        I don’t think she’ll run for president, thought I hope she will just to split the primary votes with Bachmann.

  2. whoot says:

    heh Rob was scanning around and noticed how you stated the month of Hurricane Francis as havin been in June of “04”, thinking not,, only cause of coincidenes would I know for sure…..

  3. D Page says:

    You’re so right.
    It’s gone to the dawgs….

  4. At the Wednesday discussion group I attend, I asked one guy who follows politics like I do who he thinks will be the Republican nominee. All last year, he said Sarah Palin would be the next president, though I disagreed with him. Now, he seems like he’s come around to my view: that Mitt Romney will get the nomination for virtue of being the least objectionable to the wealthy backers of the GOP and the most likely to beat Obama. I predict that Romney will pick Jeb Bush as a running mate, but this other guy thinks Marco Rubio will be the VP candidate. I told him that since 1952, the Republicans have not won the presidency without a Nixon or a Bush on the ticket. Romney is a close personal friend to the Bush family and I think people in the know realize that Bush couldn’t get elected in his own right due to his brother making the family name toxic, but as a VP candidate, it would be viewed as less “threatening” and perhaps even an asset for conservative voters who are skeptical about Romney. Rubio is too new to the scene and young. His time will come in another year (I’m stunned that Rubio was born the same year as me!). Its hard to argue with history…having a Bush on the ticket means a win for the Republicans.

    Maybe I should put some money in Vegas about a Romney-Bush ticket in 2012. Not that I want them to win…but this is how I see the GOP establishment lining up next year.

  5. mathaddict3322 says:

    Geez, I have to laugh at the synchronicity this morning with the post and what happened in my living room! Our middle son now lives with us temporarily, and he brought his Great Dane, Matt. We’re accustomed to Danes; owned a small but elite AKC Dane kennel in GA. They are gentle giants, serene, friendly, non-aggressive unless they are taught to be aggressive. I have Sunshine, my service pooch, who is a Yellow-Lab/Rhodesian Ridgeback. (I mention her often on the blog because she’s my constant companion and canine soulmate.) Well, Sunshine is a large dog. Matt, however, is a GIANT dog. Huge. Enormous. But a gigantic baby who wants to be a lap puppy and tries. Sunshine has tolerated his presence in her house because she’s been highly trained to ignore other animals. She’s a snob. “OK, Big Boy, you can be here, but you better watch your step!”

    This morning, however, Matt made the error of coming into the room and nosing Sunshine’s toy nyla-bone, which she had just dropped on the floor. She snarled, showed her teeth, and grabbed his jowl and shook it. Poor Matt. He was astonished, laid that humongous body on the floor and rolled over on his back with his long legs in the air to show submission. Sunshine stood over him and stared into his eyes until he very slowly got up and more or less groveled his way out of the living room and went to hide. Sunshine is definitely the Alpha here, even though Matt is almost three times her size and weight. I was laughing like crazy but didn’t want either dog to see me laughing at them. The dynamics were so entirely human-like. Then I came and read this post and am laughing again. So, in the political scheme of things, where would we put Sunshine, and where would we put Matt? I’ll figure it out. Big female (but much smaller than the opposition) tackles enormous male and rules the roost! He treads cautiously around her, giving her the respect and space he evidently senses is hers. What can we learn from this, as humans? Gotta be a lesson here!! And unquestionably a synchronicity with today’s post! 🙂

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