A couple of months, a raging debate in the Supreme Court resulted in a decision about relocating street dogs, a plan of action that was supposed to be implemented within a matter of days. The debate was framed on an idea of balance, binaries of human safety and animal protection, empathy and order. A seemingly ordinary thing, legality trying to comprehend the contradictions that communities refuse to face and often shy away from. What, where, and whose life counts? Who deserves care? Who can be legitimately refused care? Who can be relocated to oblivion? The case and the debate were about dogs but let’s be honest, this is an extension of what kind of people we care for/about— migrants and migrant workers, refugees, political prisoners, marginalised identities. In precarious circumstances, some lives deserve absolution from precarity and some don’t.