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No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights
No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights
No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights
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No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights

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The protection of animal rights is more than a modern, western phenomenon. In fact, there is a long history of concern for animals around the world, and it is this concern that underlies today’s animal rights movement.

The No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights explains the key issues, charts the growth of the movement, looks at welfare and protection laws, and makes connections between animal rights and other justice struggles. A practical day-to-day guide is included to help readers understand what they can do to minimize the exploitation of animals.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 15, 2006
ISBN9781771130455
No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights

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    Book preview

    No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights - Catharine Grant

    The

    NO-NONSENSE GUIDE

    to

    ANIMAL RIGHTS

    ‘Publishers have created lists of short books that discuss the questions that your average [electoral] candidate will only ever touch if armed with a slogan and a soundbite. Together [such books] hint at a resurgence of the grand educational tradition… Closest to the hot headline issues are The No-Nonsense Guides. These target those topics that a large army of voters care about, but that politicos evade. Arguments, figures and documents combine to prove that good journalism is far too important to be left to (most) journalists.’

    Boyd Tonkin,

    The Independent,

    London

    About the author

    Catharine Grant is a writer, historian, and activist based in Toronto, Canada. She currently is completing her doctoral dissertation, which compares Ronald Reagan’s and Margaret Thatcher’s rhetoric on religion, race, gender and sexuality. She is also involved in various campaigns for animal rights, and social and environmental justice.

    Other titles in the series

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Globalization

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Climate Change

    The No-Nonsense Guide to World History

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Science

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Conflict and Peace

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Human Rights

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Fair Trade

    The

    NO-NONSENSE GUIDE

    to

    ANIMAL RIGHTS

    Catharine Grant

    The No-Nonsense Guide to Animal Rights

    Published in Canada by

    New Internationalist™ Publications Ltd

    2446 Bank Street, Suite 653

    Ottawa, Ontario

    K1V 1A8

    www.newint.org

    and

    Between the Lines

    401 Richmond Street West, Studio 277

    Toronto, ON

    M5V 3A8

    www.btlbooks.com

    First published in the UK by

    New Internationalist™ Publications Ltd

    55 Rectory Road

    Oxford OX4 lBW

    New Internationalist is a registered trade mark.

    © Catharine Grant/New Internationalist 2006

    This edition not to be sold outside Canada.

    Cover image: Orangutan. Christer Fredriksson/Lonely Planet Images.

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be photocopied, reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of Between the Lines, or (for photocopying in Canada only) Access Copyright, 1 Yonge Street, Suite 1900, Toronto, Ontario, M5E 1E5.

    Series editor: Troth Wells

    Design by New Internationalist Publications Ltd

    Cataloguing data available from Library and Archives Canada.

    ISBN 978-1-771130-45-5 (epub)

    ISBN 978-1-771130-73-8 (PDF)

    ISBN 978-1--897071-07-6 (print)

    Between the Lines gratefully acknowledges assistance for its publishing activities from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishers Tax Credit program and through the Ontario Book Initiative, and the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund.

    Foreword

    The individual is capable of both great compassion and great indifference. Humans have it within their means to nourish the former and outgrow the latter… Nothing is more powerful than an individual acting out of conscience, thus helping to bring the collective conscience to life.

    – NORMAN COUSINS (1915-1990),

    JOURNALIST AND PEACE ACTIVIST

    I LEFT ENGLAND when I was about 8 years old and went to live in India. There I grew up in a house full of refugees, unwed mothers thrown out of their homes by conservative families, stray dogs, beggar children, ducks discarded from the fairgrounds – you name it. My mother welcomed them all, saying, ‘It doesn’t matter who is in need, it’s that they are in need.’ Much later, I came across writer, philosopher and social reformer John Galsworthy’s words: ‘We are not living in a private world of our own. Everything we say and do and think has its effect on everything around us.’

    That’s when I realized that this was the most important lesson of my youth, of my life – not my beloved geometry, not that confounding physics, or anything else that I had learned in school. I realized, as writer and naturalist Henry Beston had pointed out many years earlier (in words that I would also cherish) that all of us, no matter our gender, race, religion, nationality, or species, are fellows; whole and complete in our own way, all capable of joy, love, friendship, grief, maternal understanding; the desire to be free and free of pain and fear, and the desire to escape a painful death; and that we are all bundles of emotion.

    Animal rights is a marvelous thing, the test of whether we can examine not yesterday’s but today’s prejudices honestly and reject them as supremacist. It means embracing empathy, that invaluable ability to put oneself in another’s place by knocking down those false barriers that place our ‘own kind’ on one side and ‘others’ on the other side and replacing them with the golden rule of ‘Do unto others’ that we humans rightly hold dear in word if not in deed.

    Perhaps the hardest thing is not to turn away from the knowledge of what is done to animals in our name, but instead fearlessly to open our hearts and minds to what those ‘others’ go through, particularly when they go experience it all unwillingly and only because of our unthinking choices in life. The joy is that once we have decided to try to live without causing pain and suffering to animals, it is easy as pie to do. Do not be daunted by the enormity of their plight; rather be glad to have found out what a difference an informed and kind person can make. At PETA, we say, ‘Animal liberation is human liberation.’ Welcome to your new freedom.

    Ingrid E Newkirk

    Founder of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), and author of Making Kind Choices.

    CONTENTS

    Foreword by Ingrid E Newkirk

    Introduction

    1 Origins of the animal rights movement

    2 A Western, middle-class phenomenon?

    3 Food animals

    4 Animal entertainers

    5 Animals and ‘progress’

    6 Animals and fashion

    7 How hurting animals also hurts people

    8 Comparative treatment of animals

    9 A practical guide to reducing animal suffering

    Contacts

    Index

    Introduction

    The assumption that animals are without rights and the illusion that our treatment of them has no moral significance is a positively outrageous example of Western crudity and barbarity. Universal compassion is the only guarantee of morality.

    – ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER

    (1788-1860), PHILOSOPHER

    ANIMALS ARE THE largest group of victims on the planet: more than 50 billion are killed every year to meet human interests. Despite the scientific evidence that shows that all vertebrates are capable of feeling pain and fear, and that many are extremely intelligent, have distinct personalities and are even capable of feeling emotions, many animals are nonetheless denied even the most basic legal protection from harm. Under current laws, inanimate objects and corporations have more legal rights than most animals.¹ It is generally only when animals are considered valuable to humans that the legal system affords them protection.

    The animal rights (AR) movement has been one of the fastest growing social movements in history. About 30 years ago, a small group of academics and activists first raised the issue of widespread and systematic animal exploitation, which had largely been ignored by ethicists and animal welfarists alike. Within a decade, thousands of groups around the world, with millions of supporters, became dedicated to promoting animal rights. Today, the AR movement has reached mass dimensions and animal issues are hotly debated in many parts of the world. In 1994, Britain’s Time Out magazine described animal rights as the number one ‘hippest cause’.²

    The movement considers animals’ current status in society to be profoundly unjust. It believes that animals have certain fundamental rights that humans must respect – the right to life, liberty and freedom from unnecessary suffering. Advocates believe that the fact that some animals may be less intelligent than humans is irrelevant to their claim to rights. They argue that to deny animals’ rights based on their intellect is morally unjust, and point out that throughout history the oppression of groups often has been based on false assumptions about their intellectual inferiority.

    The movement is particularly dismayed by the large-scale abuse of animals in industrial societies. Activists have provided compelling evidence that the entertainment, farming, science and fashion industries have inflicted tremendous suffering. The fact that people are willing to subject so many creatures to pain and confinement suggests to activists that humans need to fundamentally reappraise their relationship with animals.

    Because creatures can suffer in many of the same ways that people do, AR activists believe that animals’ interests should be considered the moral equivalent of our own. Their ultimate goal is to bring about an end to all animal killing and exploitation. In practical terms, many activists reject the consumption of animal products or by-products, scientific animal testing, using them for entertainment or pleasure, or interfering with them in the wild. These may seem impossible restrictions but AR advocates insist that no matter how humane animal use might be, it is unjust because it disregards animal choice, and physical and psychological wellbeing.

    While many advocates feel an intense emotional bond with animals, they insist that this is not a prerequisite for involvement in the movement. They argue that their conviction about animals is primarily the product of a rational ethical position rather than just emotion. AR theorists point out that those who support human rights don’t necessarily love all people but instead believe that all humans have rights regardless of how much or little they contribute to society. Advocates for AR similarly believe that animals have fundamental rights regardless of how cute, loveable or useful they may or may not be to humans. They argue that killing, hurting or confining an animal for any reason violates these fundamental rights and that humans are therefore morally obliged to change the way they perceive animals.

    Catharine Grant

    Toronto, Canada

    1 Lewis Petrinovich, Darwinian Dominion (MIT Press, 1999).

    2 People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, www.peta.org

    1 Origins of the animal rights movement

    Non-violence leads to the highest ethics, which is the goal of all evolution. Until we stop harming all other living beings, we are still savages.

    – THOMAS ALVA EDISON (1847-1931), INVENTOR

    As with many other movements, animal rights activism is diverse and broad. Its modern stirrings stem from the broader humanitarian ideals from which it was conceived and it continues to draw upon and influence in equal measure today.

    THE ANIMAL RIGHTS movement identifies with other struggles for justice. Many activists, particularly those involved in the actual liberation of animals, compare themselves with early anti-slavery advocates. Many of the tactics and strategies that the movement uses have been borrowed from earlier historic struggles. Activism has also been profoundly influenced by the animal welfare and environmental movements, which also grant animals moral value.

    In a sense, animal rights (AR) evolved out of the concept of animal welfare, which is an old and respected tradition. The first Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) was established in Britain in 1824 to prevent ‘wanton’ abuse of farm and draft animals. It later campaigned against blood sports, vivisection and inhumane slaughter practices. Mostly organized by people from the upper classes, the welfare movement quickly gained popularity and spread through the Western world. By the end of the 19th century SPCAs and Humane Societies had been established in many American cities as well. Still very active today, the animal welfare movement generally seeks to improve conditions for animals. Welfarists believe that animals are capable of pain, fear and loneliness. However, they also believe that humans and animals exist in a natural hierarchy and that it is appropriate for humans to use animals in responsible ways. They accept the position of animals in society (used for food, clothes, science, companionship and so on) but argue that animals must be treated as humanely as possible. So while animal rightists and welfarists sometimes cooperate on specific issues, because the welfarists generally don’t acknowledge that animals have rights, there is tension between the two groups.

    Deep Ecology

    ‘Deep Ecology’ has also provided the AR movement with an important foundation. Deep Ecology places high priority on biodiversity, which is the preservation of each and every species on the planet. It recognizes the right of all the elements of nature to exist, regardless of their usefulness to humans. This concept is extremely important for animals because it gives them inherent value independent from human needs and desires. For ecologists, all animals have a key function and are intrinsically valuable.

    However, ecologists focus only on the big picture. They don’t study individual animals or even single species in isolation but look at broad patterns and relationships. In this sense, Deep Ecology embraces a

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