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Other Places I Blog

  • Pet Connection
    I'm a contributing editor for Universal Press Syndicate's Pet Connection, and I blog there, too, along with New York Times bestelling author Gina Spadafori, Good Morning America vet Dr. Marty Becker, and MSNBC.com's Kim Campbell Thornton.
  • Club Kingsnake
    I'm an editor and one of several bloggers who write about music at this Austin-based site.
  • AfterElton.com
    I'm just a femme dyke with a thing for shoes blogging on a gay boy's media blog. It all makes perfect sense if you think about it. I blog there mostly about movies, actors, and TV shows, but sometimes I sneak in some politics.
  • Vet Techs
    Nancy Campbell, RVT's blog on veterinary medicine. I write here mostly about veterinary drugs and procedures. Named one of the top ten pet health blogs by Fox News!
  • AfterEllen.com
    I don't blog here as frequently as at their brother site, AfterElton.com, but they let my inner Warrior Princess run free now and then when I have news to report about Lucy Lawless, Renee O'Connor, or Xena: Warrior Princess.

Links

  • Pet Connection
    The home of Gina's Spadafori's Pet Connection column, for which I'm a contributing editor.
  • RescueNetwork.org
    This is a searchable directory of animal rescue groups and shelters, and offers a number of free and useful services to those organizations, as well as to individuals looking for homes for pets, and to post lost/found/missing notices. Staffed by very dedicated volunteers!
  • PetPress.net - The Pet News Engine
    Another website where I work. And you can add your citizen journalist two bits to the mix, too - as long as it's about animals.
  • PetHobbyist.com
    I'm the Editor and Director of Community Service for this group of websites. In other words, this is what pays for grass-fed organic beef for my dogs.
  • Blogs By Women
    A directory of weblogs written by women.
  • Mark Morford
    Every time I read something by this guy, I suffer a bitter and poisonous envy at not having written it. Damn you, Mark Morford!
  • Columbia Journalism Review Daily
    Real-time media analysis from people who are actually journalists practicing journalism. It's a dying art. Cherish it while you can.

« April 2006 | Main | June 2006 »

31 May 2006

Film Festival

So, in the midst of selling my house, buying a new house in San Francisco, all my regular jobs, and, you know, trying to LIVE, in mid-June I'm also going to be covering the San Francisco Lesbian and Gay Film Festival (that's not the official name, I'm just too tired to go look it up right now) for AfterElton.com/AfterEllen.com.

There's a great lineup of films, which you'll be able to read me snark about review thoughtfully. If you're going to be there, say hi ... I only bite when specifically requested. Those who know different, shut up now. I'm serious.

Lineup is here.

This is, btw, the THIRTIETH annual festival, which fills me with horror and trepidation because I remember, well, never mind, who cares how long it's been and we aren't even going to mention how old I am.

29 May 2006

It's Kind of Like Sex

So, I'm reading the comments section to my post on the lies we're told in the pet media about the health effects of spay/neuter. And I'm thinking, if so many people I like and respect really don't agree with me or even address my point, does that mean I'm wrong? Incoherent? Not thinking this through?

But that's just crazy talk.

No, what this really reminds me of is the Christian right's crusade to deny the existence or efficacy of ANY method of preventing teen pregnancy, HIV, and other sexually transmitted diseases, other than the infamous abstinence method.

On the surface, they talk a good talk, don't they? Who can deny that not fucking will indeed prevent pregnancy and STDs?

The problem is, not fucking is great in theory, but real life? Not so much. Most teens who pledge not to fuck before marriage are, you know, lying. Or at least, they change their minds the first time their hormones get all frothed up. OK, not necessarily the first time. But you know, soon.

And that's how I feel about those of you who waxed passionate about spay/neuter and pet overpopulation and dogs and cats dying in shelters and all the sad and tragic and yes, true stories about unwanted pets. Pretty much everything you say is true. (And for the record, I've volunteered in shelters and for rescues. Which I guess means, I get to voice my opinion on this.)

And all that stuff about there being factors to consider other than health? That's true too, which I actually do point out in the original post.

But it's like admitting that not fucking prevents pregnancy and STDs is true. Yes, it's true, but it's not the point. The point is not that fucking causes pregnancy and STDs, the point is that fucking is fun and normal and kids are gonna want to do it. I did.

And the point about spay/neuter is not that my keeping my dogs' balls on has any effect on the numbers of dogs in rescue or shelters (although it doesn't), or causes them to have behavior problems (although they don't), or that an intact dog won't get cancer (because he might). The point is, stop lying.

The other point is, accept that just about everything on earth has at least two sides, usually a lot more, and pretending it doesn't makes just as much sense and works out just as well as pretending kids won't fuck.

I'm just saying.

26 May 2006

Friday iPod Challenge, Yet Again Actually on Friday

The Friday iPod challenge on Friday, two weeks in a row. I may become incredibly boring and predictable one day soon.

Stolen from Roxanne at Rox Populi, the Friday iPod challenge really doesn't require an iPod to play. All you have to do is set your MP3 player or a program on your computer like iTunes (which is free) to randomly shuffle your music and generate a list of ten songs. Absolutely no cheating is allowed, even if you have like, I don't know, the theme song from Gilligan's Island on there. Here's mine:

  1. Viva Columbia (Cha Cha) NamZip Club Mix    - Namtrak vs. Chris Zippel
  2. Anything - Jason Walker
  3. Big Shot - The English Beat
  4. When He Comes Home - Pansy Division
  5. Flower - Moby
  6. Evolution Revolution Love - Tricky (Feat Ed Kowalczyk)
  7. At The End (Saeed and Palash Remix) - Iio
  8. This Town - Go-Go's
  9. Panic In Detroit - David Bowie
  10. Ask the Angels - Patti Smith

Hey, ooogy, three songs from QAF! The universe of random iPodness was smiling at you today.

25 May 2006

Canada So Rocks

Mouties

It might really be worth learning to stick the letter "u" randomly into words and celebrating Thanksgiving on the wrong day to live in a country where the Mounties ALWAYS get their man. From the Nova Scotia Chronicle Herald, via ooogyfan2, the gayest straight person I know:

On a Friday night in Yarmouth this June, Const. Jason Tree and Const. David Connors will don their scarlet dress uniforms, stand before family, friends and co-workers and wed in the first same-sex marriage in the RCMP’s storied history.

Of course, now that gay marriage has been legal in Canada for almost a year, it's clear that god is showing his displeasure by smiting them with two major hurricanes that took hundreds of lives and caused billions of dollars worth of destruction of property, scattering the survivors all over the country, while embroiling them in a war in the Middle East that sucks the money out of the national coffers and takes the lives of young men and women while the national leadership is wracked with scandals ...

Oh wait.

Girls Sing

DixiechickscdAmazon.com loves me and sends me presents.

Yesterday they sent me the new Dixie Chicks CD Taking the Long Way. It's too soon to review it and sheesh, who the hell am I to review a country album anyway? Nobody, that's who. I only started listening to the Dixie Chicks because they trashed Bush and caught shit for it.

For what it's worth, while the album is probably a bit more mainstream and "produced" than I'm entirely comfortable with, I'm liking it. Highlights are the two singles, the first being "I Hope," which they did brilliantly as a Hurricane Katrina benefit piece, and which contains some truly glorious lyrics:

Sunday morning
heard the preacher say
Thou shall not kill
I don't wanna hear nothin' else, about killin'
And that it's God's will
Cuz our children are watching us
They put their trust in us
They're gonna be like us
So let's learn from our history
And do it differently

Amen, chicks.

The other single is the anthem-y smackdown "Not Ready to Make Nice," which I rhapsodized about before. It's still just as good as it ever was, and the chicks are still sleeping like babies. The rest of the album is sounding good to my un-countryfied ear, but I'll shut up now because I know nothing about country music, I only know what I like, and what I like is country singers saying Bush sucks.

I also discovered two old songs by other artists that are burning a hole in my iPod this week. One is the Free Man in Paris remix of Amanda Ghost's "Glory Girl." She's normally a bit too smooth for me too, although lyrically very dark, but this mix, done by Boy George and Kinky Roland, roughs and thumpa-thumpas things up so that I can love the beauty of her voice and the melody without feeling like I'm lost in AOR land.

The other one, I have no excuse for liking - none none none. I've had the dance remix of Sarah McLachlan's "I Love You" for ages, and while I liked it fine, it was no big deal. So today I listened to the original version of the song. I normally don't like Sarah McLachlan's un-remixed originals, because I find them too pretty and almost cloying. Yes, her voice is stunning, her songs are amazing, it's just the production doesn't work for me. That's why I mostly get her remixes instead, and her guest appearances with other artists (check out her duet of "Time After Time" with Cyndi Lauper sometime, talk about beautiful). But the original of "I Love You" showed me why people love her, because it's just so sad and beautiful and agonizing. It really hurts. (Shut up KT, we've acknowledged I'm a closet romantic, don't rub it in.)

Now, let's go back to talking about dogs.

24 May 2006

It's Just That They LIE ABOUT IT

I have this deep-seated aversion to being lied to and manipulated for my own or the common good. I also am allergic to lying to and manipulating other people unless they buy a puppy from me in which case I do whatever it takes to get them to do what I want.

So let me be crystal clear. Like everything else, be it diet or vaccinations or drugs or herbs, there are risks and benefits to altering dogs and cats. I think we need to make informed decisions on all aspects of how to care for our animals, and you can't make an informed decision when you're being lied to. Lied to over and over and over, explicitly. Not metaphorically, not by omission, but actually told big fat lies.

Pick up any number of dog, cat, or general consumer magazines, and you'll be assured that not only are there no adverse effects of spaying and neutering, but altering will make your pets healthier and better behaved. They'll be less likely to soil in the house, to roam, to fight, and they won't get testicular, uterine, or ovarian cancer or infections (well duh), and will greatly reduce their chances of getting mammary cancer. You'll be spared messy heats and the risk of unwanted puppies or kittens. It's enough to make you rush right out and get spayed or neutered yourself.

But is it true?

Sure, some of those things are true. You can't get cancer or an infection in an organ that you no longer possess, so yeah, your dog or cat won't get ovarian, uterine, or testicular cancer or infections. And in females, there is an increased incidence of mammary cancer in intact animals, and a pretty high rate of uterine infection as well.

But is there a downside?

Are you listening? Good. Because I'm about to tell you the truth. You may have never heard it before. There are risks to altering your cat or dog.

Neutered and spayed dogs appear to have a greater .... not lower, GREATER ... risk of some cancers, including osteosarcoma, a painful and basically fatal cancer to which I lost my spayed deerhound Raven last September, than intact animals. (1, 1b) Neutered males have a greater chance of getting prostate cancer than intact males (although the incidence of prostate cancer in dogs is very low). (2) Neutered dogs have a four times greater chance of getting transitional cell carcinoma in their bladder than intact dogs. (3)

Spayed females have a greater incidence of urinary incontinence (actually called "spay incontinence," often by the same vets who assure you there are no adverse effects to spaying and neutering) than intact females. (4) They may also have a higher risk of bladder infections. (4b)

Spayed female and neutered male dogs have a significantly greater incidence of anterior cruciate ligament injuries than intact dogs. (5)

And yes, no matter what you've been told, study after study has shown that spayed and neutered dogs and cats weigh more when fed the same amount of calories as intact animals. Altering won't "make" them fat, but it reduces the amount of food they can eat. For most dogs and cats that's actually no big deal - just feed them a little less, exercise them a little more, and they'll be fine. But how do you do that when you're having it beaten into your brain every time you turn around that spaying and neutering does not, cannot, make your dog or cat fat, or have any adverse effects on your animals at all? (6, 7, 8, 9, 10)

So what's the justification for this massive campaign of bullshit? That people are idiots, basically, and can't be trusted to prevent unwanted pregnancies or keep proper control of their intact animals. And this is the problem. Because one thing that working for more than fifteen years in online pet communities has taught me is that a scary number of people are, in fact, idiots. (I don't mean you.) Most people, frankly, don't appear to know enough to come in out of the rain let alone manage a house full of sexually intact dogs and/or cats. Do I have an answer for this problem? If only. I just know lying is not the answer.

So, are there health benefits to altering dogs and cats? I think that will vary from animal to animal. If you want my "big picture" opinion, I'd say that for most females the benefits of spaying outweigh the risks, as long as the owner pays attention to any signs of weight gain, but for males, the risks probably outweigh the benefits. Breed, lifestyle, and other considerations will affect this analysis, but the bottom line is, to make the analysis in the first place, you have to have some facts, and not just propaganda. Are my footnotes, below, enough "facts" for that analysis? Absolutely not. They're meant only to suggest that this issue, like most issues, really does have two sides, and that a statement that there are no risks, only benefits, to altering dogs and cats can't be supported with the evidence. But that's probably more than you had before.

Footnotes, you want footnotes? After the jump.

Continue reading "It's Just That They LIE ABOUT IT" »

23 May 2006

Does It Always Have to Be Important?

I suppose asking if it's always got to be important would be more effective if I didn't blog so much about music and TV these days.

Will you all faint in shock and awe if I post something about dogs? Because I have something almost ready. But before I do that, I have to ask a question.

How the heck do you get iTunes to repeat a playlist? My iPod repeats it, but iTunes plays it once and then stops. And then I have to sit there going, huh... why has my computer stopped singing to me like, an hour ago and I didn't notice it?

[UPDATE:] Travis told me how to fix it. Thanks honey!

22 May 2006

Meanwhile at Big Gay Picture...

I've made some posts over on Big Gay Picture I might normally have made here, so for the sake of getting the "Weekend" post off the top of the page:

It's My Party
Some thoughts about the Democrats and some love for Russ Feingold

Scientifically Speaking
Why it's astonishing to me Bill Frist went to medical school, and why I love ScienceBlogs

Good News, Bad News for Gay Groups at the UN
Just some news, but it doesn't totally suck so go read it

Elmhurst, IL Loves Gay Porn
It's more love for Mark Morford, can you stand it?

21 May 2006

Dance Dance Dance, it's the Weekend

Beatport sucks the money out of my wallet.

Today on Christie's iPod, two new dance songs. Don't like dance music? Don't listen to these:

Tracking Treasure Down (Francis Preve Mix) by Gabriel & Dresden & Molly
Runaway (Evolved Mix) by Iio

Go download them and go to the gym. I'm telling you for your own good.

Scientifically Speaking

Archived post from Big Gay Picture

I hang out on a lot of science blogs because I used to write about science and medicine a lot. (Did you really think all I do is buy shoes and watch TV?) And while I don't think it's a good idea to let scientists run the world, we could do a whole lot worse and actually, we are doing a whole lot worse.

From Dispatches from the Culture Wars at ScienceBlogs:

Bill Frist has announced that he plans to bring up the Federal Marriage Amendment for another vote in the Senate in early June, so expect the next few weeks to be filled with all sorts of nonsense about how gay marriage will make the baby Jesus cry and let the terrorists win. The amendment has less of a chance of passing than it had two years ago, when it failed to get the 2/3 required to pass it. So why bring it up again? Political posturing, of course. The mid-term elections are in November and it's vitally important to say that one's opponent voted against it 4 times rather than only 3.
Doesn't that make you wish you'd majored in biology or something?

Doggedly Good Books/DVDs

  • Kate Jackson: Mean and Lowly Things: Snakes, Science, and Survival in the Congo

    Kate Jackson: Mean and Lowly Things: Snakes, Science, and Survival in the Congo
    Biologist Kate Jackson spent much of 2005 in the flooded forests of the northern Republic of Congo, searching for new species of reptiles and amphibians. While there she faced government hassles, bad weather, disgusting food, and seemingly insurmountable cultural barriers -- and she can't wait to go back. "Mean and Lowly Things: Snakes, science, and survival in the Congo" is a fascinating glimpse into the world of a field biologist in one of the least-known ecosystems in the world. Read this book before you tell your little snake-crazy daughter that reptiles are "icky."

  • The Nightwatchman (Tom Morello): One Man Revolution

    The Nightwatchman (Tom Morello): One Man Revolution
    My friend Clint from Club Kingsnake turned me onto this CD, and it's dominated my iPod ever since. We saw him, twice, in Austin. This intensely political album brings its rough-edged folk sound to bear on issues of war, racism, poverty, job loss... you know, all the fluffy shit we care about less than whether Obama wears a flag pin. (*****)

  • DVD: My So-Called Life - The Complete Series (w/ Book)

    DVD: My So-Called Life - The Complete Series (w/ Book)
    Best. Television. Show. Ever. It only ran one season, but massively influenced everyone who saw it. Genius. And fun, too.

  • Nathan J. Winograd: Redemption: The Myth of Pet Overpopulation and the No Kill Revolution in America

    Nathan J. Winograd: Redemption: The Myth of Pet Overpopulation and the No Kill Revolution in America
    Nathan Winograd goes back to a place and time I know well, the days when the San Francisco SPCA decided to stop killing animals in the name of saving them, and made San Francisco a place with one of the highest rates of pets who make it out of the shelter system alive today. There are those who might not agree with Winograd's every prescription, but one thing we should (but don't) all agree on: When something's broken, you fix it, not institutionalize it. (*****)

  • DVD: The Princess Bride

    DVD: The Princess Bride
    Possibly the best movie of all time, ever. "This is true love, Highness. Do you think this happens every day?" You must watch it immediately. (*****)

  • DVD: The Laramie Project

    DVD: The Laramie Project
    This isn't a book, but a DVD, of the HBO film version of Moises Kaufman's play about the town of Laramie, Wyoming in the aftermath of the murder of Matthew Shepard. It took me about ten minutes to get over the "play-iness" of the film (although it's filmed on location and not on a set), and get drawn into the heart of the story. Highly recommended. (*****)

  • Robert M. Sapolsky: Monkeyluv: And Other Essays on Our Lives as Animals

    Robert M. Sapolsky: Monkeyluv: And Other Essays on Our Lives as Animals
    You know, I could hate this guy much the way I hate Mark Morford.... for being a better writer than I am, for being so much smarter than I am, for saying things I would like to say better than I can and with greater credibility. And, also like Morford, for being so fricking FUNNY while doing it. Get this book ... the essay on People Magazine's "50 Most Beautiful People" is worth the price alone. Then go buy all his other books. This guy's a scream. (*****)

  • Charles Darwin: From So Simple a Beginning: Darwin's Four Great Books (Voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle, The Origin of Species, The Descent of Man, The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals)

    Charles Darwin: From So Simple a Beginning: Darwin's Four Great Books (Voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle, The Origin of Species, The Descent of Man, The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals)
    I saw the editor of this book on Charlie Rose and knew I had to get it. Darwin's classic books in a beautifully bound set with excellent introductory essays by editor E. O. Wilson. (*****)

  • Stephen J. O'Brien: Tears of the Cheetah : The Genetic Secrets of Our Animal Ancestors

    Stephen J. O'Brien: Tears of the Cheetah : The Genetic Secrets of Our Animal Ancestors
    I previously dubbed Robert Sapolsky's Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers as the best recent popular science book, and it is, but this one is a close second. It's not as funny as Sapolsky's book, but it's more broad-ranging, covering the genetic heritage of the human race and all its cousins and ancestors in the animal kingdom. Profound, whistful, clever, and sometimes maybe a bit too technical for a popular audience, this is a remarkable and fascinating book about genetics. Topics include HIV, dog and cat diseases, conservation, cloning, evolution, and of course, cheetahs. (*****)

  • Robert M. Sapolsky: Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers

    Robert M. Sapolsky: Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers
    A really funny guy writing about science in a way that makes you want to go be a stress researcher in the wilderness. Reading this book is better, though, because you can do it sitting on the deck in the shade with a nice glass of iced tea in your hand. Did I mention this book is REALLY funny? But it's science, too. A great combination. (*****)

  • Vicki Hearne: Bandit: Dossier of a Dangerous Dog

    Vicki Hearne: Bandit: Dossier of a Dangerous Dog
    Some people object to Vicki Hearne's writing style (smart girls can be annoying). Others feel her training methods were too harsh. But Vicki Hearne knew a great dog, and how to write about one. Be warned: This book is politically incorrect and may make you do something really stupid, like adopt a pit bull. Vicki Hearne is, after all, the one who said, "It is true that Pit Bulls grab and hold on. But what they most often grab and refuse to let go of is your heart, not your arm." (*****)

  • Ronald D. Schultz: Veterinary Vaccines and Diagnostics

    Ronald D. Schultz: Veterinary Vaccines and Diagnostics
    This gets clicked on a lot from my website, but no one's ever bought it, probably because it's quite expensive. But if you want to know all that there is to know about veterinary vaccines, this is the place to find it. And you might be very surprised at what's between this book's covers! Your local library might be able to order a copy for you. (*****)

  • M. H. Dutch Salmon: Gazehounds & Coursing - The History, Art and Sport of Hunting With Sighthounds

    M. H. Dutch Salmon: Gazehounds & Coursing - The History, Art and Sport of Hunting With Sighthounds
    Sighthounds, you say? What are they? Read this terrific dog book and find out! Better yet, read it and Constance O. Miller's "Gazehounds: The Search for Truth" too. It's not available on Amazon so I didn't include it here, but it's well worth seeking out. (*****)

  • Robert C. Atkins: Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution, New and Revised Edition

    Robert C. Atkins: Dr. Atkins' New Diet Revolution, New and Revised Edition
    There is so much absolute crap about Atkins out there, I ask only one thing: Before you form (or express) an opinion about Atkins, please find out what Dr. Atkins actually said. I got my health back after reading this book - and painlessly lost 115 pounds in 19 months. So you might understand I'm a bit protective of it. (*****)

  • Sally Fallon: Nourishing Traditions:  The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats

    Sally Fallon: Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats
    The "Natural Diet" for humans - or at least, our traditional diets. This cookbook-cum-manifesto would make Julia Child smile, and it just doesn't get much better than that. (*****)

  • Marcia Angell MD: The Truth About the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It

    Marcia Angell MD: The Truth About the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It
    Written by a physician who also is the past editor of the New England Journal of Medicine. It simply re-enforces my concerns about how little most practicing physicians know about the drugs they prescribe, and the body systems they are attempting to regulate with those drugs. (****)

  • L. David Mech: The Wolf: The Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered Species

    L. David Mech: The Wolf: The Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered Species
    I'm not into gurus who tell you what to feed your dog. (In fact, I'm not much of a fan of being told what to do about anything.) If you're looking for facts and information to help you build a nutritional and lifestyle plan for that domesticated wolf we call "the dog," this book is where you should start. (*****)