Letter to the editor of The Salt Lake Tribune by John K. Dallimore of Cottonwood Heights.
Ms. Meyer = Daybreak Elementary School teacher Alli Meyer, who led her 4th grade class in " just really a fun project to partner with these kids to teach them about the legislative process." Her class got the idea to influence a state senator to propose a state domestic animal after seeing that some other Utah students had successfully influenced the legislature to change the state tree from Colorado blue spruce to quaking aspen. Those students had made the persuasive political argument that a tree with "Colorado" in its name should not be the state tree of Utah. I don't know the extent to which they considered fact that "Aspen" is a city in Colorado.
"We wondered if we could do something similar. We thought of replacing the California seagull as the state bird, but didn’t think that would happen since the seagulls helped save the pioneers from crickets," Meyer said. "We noticed we didn’t have a state domestic animal," as Wisconsin does (the dairy cow). She said the students decided to pursue that. (Utah already has an official "state animal," the Rocky Mountain elk.)10 thoughts:
1. Thanks for emulating Wisconsin, but the significance of golden retrievers to Utah scarecely parallels the significance of cows to America's dairyland.
2. It's hard to oppose dog lovers... dog lovers and 4th graders... but that's how politics works, right? What a lesson! Patch together bits of sentiment and make it harder to say no than yes.
3. What's up with picking a particular breed? It's not like Wisconsin picked the Holstein as its state domestic animal, and we have the experience of seeing those iconic black-and-white cows dotted all over the rolling green farmland. If I had photoshop skills, I'd produce an image of golden retrievers in a comparable pattern on a stark desert landscape.
4. Okay, what's the story of the crickets and the seagulls? Here's the Wikipedia entry for "Miracle of the gulls":
Although late frosts in April and May destroyed some of the crops, the pioneers seemed to be well on their way to self-sufficiency. Unfortunately, swarms of insects appeared in late May.... According to traditional accounts, legions of gulls appeared by June 9, 1848. It is said that these birds, native to the Great Salt Lake, ate mass quantities of crickets, drank some water, regurgitated, and continued eating more crickets over a two-week period. The pioneers saw the gulls' arrival as a miracle, and the story was recounted from the pulpit by church leaders such as Orson Pratt and George A. Smith (Pratt 1880, p. 275; Smith 1869, p. 83). The traditional story is that the seagulls annihilated the insects, ensuring the survival of some 4,000 Mormon pioneers who had traveled to Utah. For this reason, Seagull Monument was erected and the California gull is the state bird of Utah.5. So "California" was in the name of the state bird, which made it look like a sitting duck of a Colorado blue spruce variety. But the children learned that the seagull had a monumental role in the history of Utah.
Credit: Intothewoods29
6. Of course, the cricket — not that they were crickets (they were some kind of katydid) — can't be the state insect of Utah. The state insect had to be the bee... as a 5th-grade class back lobbied the legislature to acknowledge: "The honey bee is significant in Utah history, as Utah was first called by its Mormon settlers, 'The Provisional State of Deseret,' a Book of Mormon word meaning honey bee."
7. Can we get an Establishment Clause lawsuit over the honey bee's status as state insect?
8. Would that there were somewhere a Provisional State of Golden Retriever!
9. Have you heard of golden retriever politics? Neither have I. Golden retriever don't have politics.... they're very gentle... all compassion.... all compromise. We can trust the golden retriever. I'd like to become the first golden retriever politician. I'd like to, but.... I'm a golden retriever... who dreamed she was a woman, and loved it. But now the dream is over, and the golden retriever is taking another nap.
10. What happens when a golden retriever goes on "Meet the Press"?
What if I forget my talking points? These journalists can be ruthless... hard-hitting... always looking for sound-bites, gaffes, gotcha moments.... What? My position? (Uh oh, here it comes) On what? — my position on CATS ??? Uh... well, cats are... uh, cats are...
23 comments:
“If I had photoshop skills, I'd produce an image of golden retrievers in a comparable pattern on a stark desert landscape.”
Here is a photo of a pack of wild Utah golden retrievers in Bryce Canyon, where their natural coloration helps them blend with the orange cliffs.
https://plus.google.com/+SeanGleeson/posts/Kf5TNVWpTUw
Key Word: vomit
vomit as keyword vs. regurgitation as keyword
"Vomit" is a longstanding tag on this blog. Click on it! I don't vomit-blog lightly. Except that one time... when I intentionally vomit-blogged — making a 10-point list (even as the post above is a 10-point list).
Among the vomit-tagged posts is one about another miracle: "Amsterdam had the most famous vomit in history."
As for choosing "vomit" rather than "regurgitation" as the tag:
1. I try to use existing tags when I can, which is why I used "fashion" and "pornography" on the posts about the rocket scientist's shirt. I don't want tag proliferation and I like tags that form a sizable collect of posts. Vomit now has 53 posts. And I haven't been going out of my way looking for vomit. (Except that one time.)
2. I like the most direct, pithy word for something. Anglo-Saxon over Latin and so forth. Some people have rankled at my use of the tag "fat," but I like plain speech like that. Call things what they are. Though, I must admit that I have tags for "excrement" and "urine" and not "shit" and "piss."
My Golden Retriever flickr tags, spanning 3 Dobermans and 3 Golden retrievers.
LOL Sean. I made it a new post.
“Anglo-Saxon over Latin and so forth.”
But of course ‘vomit’ is Latin (vomitare). And so is ‘piss’ (pisiere).
I don't think I will ever get a better Insect Politics tag to post my Grasshoppers at war link.
So there it is.
@rh: I enjoyed those v much.
Uh....several look to be yellow labs.....
Shouldn't the Utah state dog be a Irish Setter, like Seamus?
As poodle owners, we would not kibble with the decision to make goldens the state domestic. We instead welcome our new canine overlords.
Hey, isn't Golden a town in Colorado?
Utah, the Beehive State.
Very curious. Why a beehive? The Scholastics considered the beehive a model of the ideal society -- orderly, productive, perpetual -- kind of shy on that individual destiny thing, but after Caesar it took the better part of two millennia for democracy to become something more than a Greek drollery. Could a human hive have been what Brigham Young had mind for his Mormon republic?
Golden Retrievers just want love. They are the Wm. Penn of dogs.
Could a human hive have been what Brigham Young had mind for his Mormon republic?
Short answer: Yes.
There's a beehive on the State flag with the words "Industry." Busy as a bee and all that jazz...Early Mormon history is a lot more collective than most modern Mormon politicians would lead you to believe.
And Mr. Dallimore sounds like he needs to get out of Utah. I think he'll be disappointed though. Inane news items making headlines is not limited to the SLC Tribune.
Previous post deleted for typos and superfluous link.
The blue lacy is the State Dog of Texas.
http://www.statesymbolsusa.org/Texas/Dog-blue-lacy.html
A year old bitch followed a scent onto our property one evening and spent the night before we could locate the owner, who burned rubber down to retrieve her. Appaarently she was a registered line and he was looking to breed her.
I know, a Texan AND a breeder, two strikes against her in the better circles, but she was a ridiculously affectionate animal and saw no reason we shouldn't attend to her.
Golden retrievers are wonderful dogs. My favorite, prior to my present basset hound who has issues, was my golden who died about 5 years ago. However, gold retrievers are also (I have read) the most common dog breed involved in bites, especially of children. No doubt it is a consequence of thinking of them as cuddly toys rather than animals that will bite if provoked enough.
traditionalguy said...
Golden Retrievers just want love. They are the Wm. Penn of dogs.
Due to their good nature, I've heard Golden Retrievers called Stepford Dogs.
This is the kind of pointless time-wasting that goes on in America's baby-sitting academies. I suppose it keeps the teachers and legislators from causing trouble, but why do the poor kids have to get dragged into this nonsense?
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