United States | Animal rights
Pablo Escobar’s hippos lead a charge for animal rights
They can wallow on a while longer
|New York
CORPORATIONS HAVE enjoyed legal personhood since the 19th century. Now, it seems, they have company. A dispute over the fate of hippos in Colombia has given rise to a federal court ruling in Ohio that, for the first time in American law, recognises animals as people.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Wallow on”
United States October 30th 2021
- The Democrats’ disadvantage
- The message from our model for Virginia’s gubernatorial race
- George Floyd’s city votes on the future of its police department
- Cops hate vaccine mandates, and the city leaders imposing them
- Pablo Escobar’s hippos lead a charge for animal rights
- How to bring sex work out of the shadows
- No one loves Joe Biden
Discover more
An FBI sting operation catches Jackson’s mayor taking big bribes
What the sensational undoing of the black leader means for Mississippi’s failing capital
America’s rural-urban divide nurtures wannabe state-splitters
What’s behind a new wave of secessionism
Does Donald Trump have unlimited authority to impose tariffs?
Yes, but other factors could hold him back
As Jack Smith exits, Donald Trump’s allies hint at retribution
The president-elect hopes to hand the Justice Department to loyalists
Democratic states are preparing for Donald Trump’s return
But Mr Trump will be more prepared, too
Donald Trump and Tulsi Gabbard are coming for the spooks
The president-elect’s intelligence picks suggest a radical agenda