This article was published by National Review online on April 21, 2026.
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Wesley Smith
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By Wesley J Smith
After a bear was euthanized in California because she paw-swiped a human
who owned a house under which the bruin and her cubs were living, there
was a popular outcry. Now, a bill has been put in the hopper in the
California State Senate promoting “coexistence” between people and wild
animals. From S.B. 1135:
It is the policy of the state that the management of
wildlife shall include an emphasis on the coexistence of humans and
wildlife through department-led efforts to reduce, minimize, and
mitigate conflicts. These efforts shall also seek to align with the
state’s conservation, public safety, environmental planning, and climate
adaptation goals and to be accomplished through coordination and
cooperation between the department and wildlife coexistence partners.
Here are the details:
Upon appropriation by the Legislature, the department
shall establish the Wildlife Coexistence Program to manage and promote
wildlife coexistence by conducting all of the following activities:
(a) Managing, tracking, and responding to wildlife conflict calls, reports, and incident responses.
(b) Avoiding, minimizing, and mitigating conflicts between humans and
wildlife by proactively and continuously implementing best practices
that emphasize effective and ecologically appropriate nonlethal conflict
resolution solutions developed using best available science and
indigenous knowledge.
(c) Investigating, documenting, and analyzing reported human-wildlife
incidents, including, but not limited to, depredation, perceived or
actual human-wildlife conflicts, and wildlife health issues.
(d) Maintaining a statewide wildlife incident reporting tool.
Okay. That’s going to take a lot of time, effort, and resources in a
state in which homelessness is rampant, children aren’t learning in
school, and the public debt is increasing. Still, my main concern is
public safety. Dangerous animals that have attacked humans should be
euthanized, it seems to me.
There is also a major push around the country for “no kill”
animal shelters. I’m fine with that, particularly for adoptable pets.
But aren’t our moral sensibilities being inverted? As we see a greater
push for fewer animal deaths by euthanasia, concomitantly, euthanasia
activists are pressuring for policies to increase the number of ill and disabled people who are killed by assisted suicide or a lethal jab.
In 2024, I wrote about a California assisted-suicide activist who, in the California Health Report,
urged the medical community to be more proactive in informing
qualifying patients of their right to be killed. (This happens all the
time in Canada.) The fellow groused that Canada had so many euthanasia deaths whereas California — with an equivalent population — had so comparatively few.
Meanwhile, Compassion and Choices (formerly and more honestly known as the Hemlock Society) sought to increase
the number of people of color who opt for assisted suicide. Similarly,
Thaddeus Mason Pope — the bioethicist leading the charge for
radicalizing access to euthanasia and assisted suicide, took to the
pages of the American Journal of Bioethics to advocate the “Top Ten Expansions” he wanted to see to increase access to euthanasia. He concluded:
The United States took an early worldwide lead with MAID
when Oregon enacted its Death with Dignity Act in 1994. But . . . the
United States has lost its lead. And it is quickly falling to the back
of the pack in terms of MAID safety and access.
I would put it differently. The U.S. isn’t falling into the moral abyss as fast as some other nations, but we are falling.
I am all for reducing the number of animals that are euthanized,
consistent with public safety, the protection of livestock, and the
ability to care for them humanely. I just wish we were equally committed
to “no kill health care” for humans.
Previous similar article:
- Animals can have no kill shelters. Why not humans? (Read).