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WHO ARE YOU ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS ANYWAY?
Do
animals have rights? Different people give different answers. Sometimes
people give different answers because of a disagreement about the
facts. For example, some people believe cats and dogs, chickens
and hogs do not feel anything; others believe they do.
Sometimes
different answers are given because of a disagreement over values.
For example, some people believe animals have no value apart from
human interests; others believe the opposite. Disagreements of both
kinds are important certainly, and both will need to be explored
along the way. As important as these kinds of disagreements are,
neither touches a third, more basic source of division, this one
concerning the idea of animal rights itself.
Some
people think this idea is synonymous with being kind to animals.
Since we should be kind to animals, the inference is obvious: animals
have rights. Or they think animal rights means avoiding cruelty.
Since we should not be cruel to animals, the same conclusion follows:
animals have rights. Given either of these two ways of understanding
animal rights, it is hard to explain why the idea is so controversial,
with animal rights advocates on one side, and animal rights opponents
on the other.
The
heated, often acrimonious controversy that pits advocates against
opponents tells us that these familiar ways of thinking (we should
be kind to animals; we should not be cruel to them) fail to capture
the real meaning of animal rights. Its real meaning, as it turns
out, is both simple and profound.
Animal
rights is a simple idea because, at the most basic level, it means
only that animals have a right to be treated with respect. It is
a profound idea because its implications are far reaching. How far
reaching? Here are a few examples of how the world will have to
change once we learn to treat animals with respect.
1.
We will have to stop raising them for their flesh.
2. We will have to stop trapping them for their fur.
3. We will have to stop training them to entertain us.
4. We will have to stop using them in scientific research.
Each
example illustrates the same moral logic. When it comes to how humans
exploit animals, recognition of their rights requires abolition,
not reform. Being kind to animals is not enough. Avoiding cruelty
is not enough. Whether we exploit animals to eat, to wear, to entertain
us, or to learn, the truth of animal rights requires empty cages,
not larger cages.
UNTRUTH
IN LABELING
Opponents think animal rights is an extreme idea, and it is not
unusual for them to pin the label “extremists” on animal
rights advocates. It is important to understand how this label is
used as a rhetorical tool to prevent informed, fair discussion;
otherwise, chances are we won’t have an informed, fair discussion.
“Extremists” and “extremism” are ambiguous
words. In one sense, extremists are people who will do anything
to further their objectives. The terrorists who destroyed the twin
towers of the World Trade Center were extremists in this sense;
they were willing to go to any lengths, even if it meant killing
thousands of innocent human beings, to further their ends.
Animal
rights advocates (ARAs) are not extremists in this sense. Let me
repeat this: ARAs are not extremists in this sense. Even the most
militant advocates of animal rights (the members of the Animal Liberation
Front, say) believe there are absolute moral limits to what can
be done in the name of animal liberation, acts that should never
be performed, they are so bad. For example, the ALF opposes hurting
let along killing human beings.
In
another sense, the word “extremist” refers to the unqualified
nature of what people believe. In this sense, ARAs are extremists.
Again, let me repeat this: ARAs really are extremists, in this sense.
ARAs really do believe that it is always wrong to train wild animals
to perform tricks for human amusement, for example. But in this
sense, everyone is an extremist. Why? Because there are some things
all of us (one hopes) oppose unqualifiedly.
For
example, everyone reading these words is an extremist when it comes
to rape; we are against rape all the time. Each of us is an extremist
when it comes to child abuse; we are against child abuse all the
time. Indeed, all of us are extremists when it comes to cruelty
to animals; we never favor that.
The
plain fact is, extreme views sometimes are correct views. That being
so, the fact that ARAs are extremists, in the sense that we have
unqualified beliefs about right and wrong, by itself provides no
reason for thinking that we must be mistaken. So the question to
be examined is not, “Are ARAs extremists?” It is, “Are
we right?” As we shall see, this question is hardly ever fairly
asked let alone fairly answered. Collusion between the media and
powerful special interests sees to that.
THE
MEDIA
One barrier to fair discussion of animal right is the media. As
so often happens today, our perception of the “real world”
is based on what we see on television or read in the newspaper.
This should raise a red flag immediately. Think about it. The media
loves a plane crash. Safe landings? Not newsworthy. As the first
axiom of news reporting states: ”If it bleeds, it leads.”
The second? “Good news is no news.” So if something
happens and it doesn’t bleed or isn’t bad? Well, it’s
probably not worth reporting, at least not in depth. Any doubts
about this, just watch the news tonight or read the paper tomorrow.
Because
the media looks for what is sensational, there is a strong tendency
for them to cover animal rights only when something unlawful or
outlandish occurs. Members of the Animal Liberation Front firebomb
a lab. An anti-fur activist throws a pie in Calvin Klein’s
face. These are the sorts of stories judged to be newsworthy. As
for the peaceful protest that took place outside a fur store yesterday,
or the lecture on animal rights given at the law school last night?
Forget about it. Non-sensational news is not news; it doesn’t
“bleed” enough for the media’s tastes. No wonder
the general public views ARAs as a band of merry pranksters and
social misfits. With rare exceptions, this is the only message that
works its way through the media’s filters.
SPECIAL
INTEREST POLITICS
That the general public tends to have a negative picture of ARAs
is not the result only of the media’s appetite for the sensational;
it is also due to what the media is fed by the public relations
arms of major animal user industries. By “major animal user
industries” I mean the meat industry, the fur industry, the
animal entertainment industry, and the biomedical research industry,
for example. The people who work in these industries speak with
one voice, tell the same story, even use the same words to denigrate
their common enemy: animal rights extremists.
The
origin of the most recent chapter in this story is not hard to find.
It begins in 1989, with the publication of the American Medical
Association’s white paper, “Use of Animals in Biomedical
Research: The Challenge and the Response.”(1) Among the AMA’s
recommendations: People who believe in animal rights “must
be shown to be not only anti-science but also (a) responsible for
violent and illegal acts that endanger life and property, and (b)
a threat to the public’s freedom of choice.” ARAs must
be seen as people who are “radicals,” “militants,”
and “terrorists,” who are “opposed to human well
being.” By contrast, sane, sensible, decent people must be
shown to favor animal welfare, understood as humane, responsible
use of animals by humans, for humans.
The
AMA’s strategy was both simple and inspired. If the public’s
perception of using animals in research could be structured as a
contest between no nothing animal rights extremists who hate humans
and have an insatiable appetite for terrorism, on the one hand,
and wise scientific animal welfare moderates, true friends of humanity,
on the other, ARAs would be repudiated and the ideology of humane,
responsible use would prevail.
Since
1989, a steady stream of press releases, memos, email messages,
press conferences, and web site miscellany, denouncing ARA extremists
and lauding reasonable animal welfarists, has flowed from the AMA’s
and other biomedical research industry’s public relations
offices straight into the hands of reporters, news directors, and
editors. How does this work? Here is one example.
The
Foundation for Biomedical Research describes itself
as “the nation’s oldest and largest organization dedicated
to improving human and animal health by promoting public understanding
and support for the humane and responsible use of animals in medical
and scientific research.” FBR’s web site includes a
page entitled “Journalist Resources,” featuring three
links. One is “Expert Opinion,” which is described in
this way. “FBR works to bring scientists and journalists together
to inspire exceptional, outstanding and ongoing news coverage that
contributes to public understanding and appreciation for the humane
and responsible use of animals in medical and scientific research.
When you need to quote an expert from the American research community,
contact us first.”
“To
inspire exceptional, outstanding . . . coverage.” That’s
positive and appealing. Who could be against that?
A
second link is “FBR News Tips,” described as “a
monthly tip sheet for journalists that promotes story ideas that
will strengthen public understanding and respect for the humane
and responsible use of animals in medical research. It provides
a summary of the latest medical discoveries, as well as reliable
contact information. In every case, the research described demonstrates
the essential need for lab animals in medical research.”
“Humane
and responsible use of animals in medical research,” which
is “essential.” Hard to be against that, either.
And
the third link? This one is “Animal activism,” where
FBR presents (quoting) “a record of all known criminal activities
committed in the name of ‘animal rights’ since 1981.”
Let’s
see, now. “Animal activism” equals “criminal activities
committed in the name of ‘animal rights’,” which
equals “illegal and violent acts.” If that’s what
‘animal rights’ involves, who (except those who support
criminal, illegal and violent acts) could possibly be for it?
There
we have the basic story: Animal welfare moderates versus animal
rights extremists. Wise scientists who treat animals humanely versus
no nothing, emotionally overloaded ARAs bent on destruction. This
is the message special interest groups like FBR spoon-feed the media.
Does it work? Does the media slant its coverage because of efforts
like FBR’s? Before we answer, let’s do some imagining.
Here we have Clark Kent, reporter for the Daily Planet.
His beat includes biomedical research. On a monthly basis, he receives
FBR’s tip sheets. On a daily basis, he receives the latest
installment of authoritative quotes from “experts” who
support research using animals. And on a timely basis, he receives
an up-to-date inventory of “criminal activities committed
in the name of ‘animal rights’.”
So
let us ask ourselves: what are the odds of Clark’s giving
an impartial, fair story about the “latest medical break-through
using animals”? Might the odds be just a tiny bit skewed in
one direction rather than another? Should we mention that among
the Daily Planet’s biggest advertisers are major animal user
industries, including economically powerful interests (major pharmaceutical
companies, for example) represented by FBR? Or that Clark’s
401(K) is heavily invested in these same industries, as are those
of the Daily Planet’s publisher and editorial staff? Can we
really think, when we think about it objectively, that the odds
of an impartial, fair story about the “latest medical breakthrough
using animals” are even-steven?
There
may be some people who will answer yes, but my experience tells
me they would be in the minority. Most people, once they understand
how the cards are stacked, understand why the news is dealt the
way it is. Remember the old adage: “Those who pay the piper
call the tune?” Its truth did not pass away when paid pipers
became an extinct species. The plain fact is, many people have a
negative image of animal rights because the media relentlessly presents
ARAs in a negative light.
And
the media relentlessly presents ARAs in a negative light because
the media is relentlessly fed a negative image by the financially
powerful and influential spokespersons for the major animal user
industries. It’s not all that surprising, once we stop to
think about it.
ALL
ABOARD!
With so prestigious a group as the AMA having raised the sails,
it did not take long for other major animal user industries to come
on board. The meat industry. The animal entertainment industry.
Sport hunters and rodeo enthusiasts. The story is everywhere the
same. Animal welfare moderates versus animal rights extremists.
Law-abiding citizens versus law-breaking terrorists. By way of example,
consider the following discussion of animal welfare and animal rights
from the Fur
Information Council of America. First, we have a description
of the sane, sensible position of those who favor animal welfare.
Animals
enrich our lives in many ways. They provide food, clothing and companionship.
Animals used for medical research have given us important advances
in medicine that have saved millions of lives. Most people today
recognize that the use of animals under humane circumstances is
important.
Animal
welfare organizations also support the wise use of animals under
humane conditions. The animal welfare ethic has been promoted over
the past century by many groups, including the fur industry. Working
with the government and the veterinary community, industries that
involve animal use have adopted high standards for the treatment
of animals. For instance, today there are strict regulations governing
livestock; guidelines have been implemented for the care of animals
used in medical research; and humane care standards have been implemented
by the fur industry.
Next,
we have a description of the “out-of-touch-with-reality”
extremists who favor animal rights.
In
the past few years, however, an extreme movement called "animal
rights" has emerged. The basic philosophy of these groups dictates
that humans have no right to use animals for any purpose whatsoever.
These groups oppose the use of animals for food, clothing, medical
research, and in zoos and circuses . . .
The
majority of Americans support animal welfare groups, but do NOT
support [any] out-of-touch-with-reality, publicity-hungry animal
rights groups . . . Animal welfare groups support humane treatment
and responsible care of animals while the animal rights philosophy
not only condemns the use of all animals for any purpose but it
also is known for its increasingly terroristic tactics. The current
mindset of the animal rights movement is, "Believe what I believe
. . . or else."
True
to the spirit of the AMA’s white paper, the debate over fur
is here framed as a contest between animal welfare moderates, who
favor “humane treatment and responsible care of animals,”
and animal rights extremists who, like the criminals who blew-up
the twin towers of the World Trade Center, resort to “terroristic
tactics.”
But
(you might well ask) is this true of all ARAs? Do we all favor terrorism
and intimidation? This is what the Fur Information Council is saying.
They presume to tell us what “[t]he current mindset of the
animal rights movement” is, not what a small handful of ARAs
think. The mindset of the movement is, “Believe what I believe
. . . or else,” where the “or else” carries with
it the threat of one “terroristic tactic” or another.
ARAs must really be terrible people.
“THEY
WOULD NEVER DO THAT, WOULD THEY?”
Having adopted a pro-active strategy, one pillar of which is the
depiction of ARAs as lawless terrorists, the major animal user industries
face a daunting challenge. For their strategy to work, there has
to be illegal, terroristic activity attributed to ARAs. And not
just a little. What is needed is a lot. It did not take long before
anti-ARA forces decided that they would need to do a little free
lance terrorist work of their own.
Consider
this possible scenario.(2) Why not hire someone to infiltrate the
animal rights movement, as an agent provocateur, with one main purpose:
to find a malleable person in the movement who could be “encouraged”
(shall we say) to try to do something that would really discredit
ARAs. Like, maybe this person could be “encouraged”
to try to murder someone. And not just anyone. No, the “someone”
should be a pillar of the community, someone who (what an odd coincidence)
just happened to be a leader in a major animal user industry, someone
who just happened to have been famously outspoken in his criticisms
of ARAs. An attempt on his life would be perfect. It would show
the public that ARAs really are extremists who will stop at nothing
to further their ends. It is not hard to visualize the headline:
“Animal Rights Terrorist Attempts to Murder Pillar of Community.”
A
few problems would have to be solved. It takes time to find the
right person for the job. It takes money to pay all the players.
Who is going to come up with the necessary cash? Well, suppose the
pillar himself could pay for the attempt on his life. Suppose the
pillar himself (such is his influence) could arrange to have the
local police on hand to arrest the would-be murderer. “Nah,”
you might say, “This is too fanciful, too conspiratorial.
I don’t think anyone in a major animal user industry would
ever do anything like this.” Think again.
Leon
Hirsch, president of the Norwalk, Connecticut-based U. S. Surgical
company, played the role of the pillar of the community. Hirsch’s
company manufactures staples used in place of ordinary sutures in
many operations. Physicians receive training by practicing on live
dogs, who are vivisected, then killed. ARAs (led by Friends of Animals,
also located in Norwalk) mounted an in-your-face campaign against
Hirsch and his company back in the late 1980s. His ingenious way
of getting even was to put-up the necessary money to arrange for
an ARA to try to murder him.
On
November 11, 1989, a man on the payroll of a firm Hirsh had hired
drove a young woman named Fran Trutt, a self-professed ARA, along
with her two recently purchased pipe bombs, from New York City to
Norwalk. When she placed the bombs adjacent to Hirsh’s parking
space, Hirsh’s friends in the Norwalk police department just
happened to be on hand to arrest her.
The
resulting story (not the bombs, which never exploded) was the real
bombshell. There it was: “Animal Rights Terrorist Attempts
to Murder Pillar of Community.” As John C. Stauber and Sheldon
Rampton observe, “Normally, of course, company presidents
do not arrange their own murder, but Hirsch was neither crazy nor
suicidal. He was trying to engineer an embarrassing scandal that
would discredit the animal rights movement.”(3)
Hirsch
would have succeeded, too, except for one thing: the ensuing trial
brought to light extensive tape transcripts that implicated everyone,
from Hirsh on down, who had hatched the plot to discredit ARAs.
Friends of Animals sued Hirsh, but their suit was unsuccessful,
and he never faced any criminal charges. Perhaps not surprisingly,
Fran Trutt was the only person to serve time (a year in prison,
followed by a year on probation). She seems to have left the movement.
IT
ONLY GETS WORSE
This is not the only case where people in major animal user industries
have taken on the job of trying to make sure there is enough “ARA
terrorism” to go around. Books, not just people, can be deceiving.
The infamous Ku Klux Klan leader, David Duke, knows this. One of
his books, African Atto, is a manual written for violent
black street gangs, supposedly authored by an “insider”
(that is, a gang member). Another of his books (like the first,
this one was not published under Duke’s name, for obvious
reasons), is a sex manual written by and for the “liberated”
woman. You know the type: mindless of “family values,”
lusting after sexual adventures with the next guy to turn the corner.
In
both cases, Duke’s books were written to reinforce prejudicial
stereotypes of the sort Duke wants his constituency to fear: the
predatory black male, in the one case, the “liberated”
woman (whatever her race), in the other. Given the familiar stereotype
of ARAs as misanthropic violent law-breakers who are anti-science,
anti-reason, anti-American, anti-everything any decent human being
values, one might expect to find a fraudulent animal rights expose
written by someone posing as an ARA insider.
This
expectation was fulfilled with the publication of A Declaration
of War: Killing People to Save Animals and the Environment,
written anonymously by an author identified only as “Screaming
Wolf.”(4) A real charmer, Screaming Wolf makes it clear that
there is no limit to the violence real ARAs (“liberators”)
are prepared to carry-out. It is not just the university researcher
who uses animals in harmful studies, not just the furrier, not just
the hunter, whose lives are at risk; it is the researcher’s
children, the furrier’s rabbi or minister, the hunter’s
friends or business associates. In short, anyone can be chosen as
a legitimate, justifiable victim by the army of “liberators”
who have decided the time has come to kill people in order to save
animals and the environment.
Haven’t
the major animal user industries been saying as much? Screaming
Wolf (a liberator “insider”) is only confirming what
these industries have been saying about ARAs all along. The industries
could not have done a better job of discrediting ARAs if they had
hired some fictitious “Screaming Wolf” to write this
book for them. (5)
Which
is precisely what happened. At least this is the finding I believe
the available evidence supports. In my judgment, A Declaration
of War is nothing more than a work of fraudulent provocation,
a work of fiction disguised as fact. And a clever work of fiction
it is. For liberators, you see, will rarely take credit for their
actions. In general, they prefer to remain anonymous.
Consider
the illogic of this logic. Suppose a researcher’s car is blown
up. Or she dies or disappears mysteriously. Or strangers rape her
daughter. Then either liberators will take credit for this or they
will not. If they do, then they did it. If they don’t, then
they probably did it anyhow. Here, most assuredly, is a strategy
that cannot fail to create the appearance that animal rights terrorism
is on the rise.
And
the moral of the story is? The moral of the story is simple. The
next time the media shows or tells a story about “animal rights
terrorism,” we should all think twice before buying into its
veracity. We do not know how often violent, unlawful acts that the
media attributes to ARAs actually were paid for by someone trying
to do what Leon Hirsch tried to do: discredit the animal rights
movement by encouraging an impressionable ARA to break the law.
And we do not know how often violent acts that the media attributes
to ARAs actually are carried out by people who, paid or unpaid,
have nothing to do with the movement. What we do know is, all this
happens some of the time, which should be reason enough to make
us raise a skeptical eyebrow when we open tomorrow morning’s
paper and read “Animal Rights Terrorists“ do one bad
thing or another.
NORMAN
ROCKWELL AMERICANS
Let me be perfectly honest. My wife Nancy and I have been involved
in animal advocacy for more than thirty years. During this time,
we have met some people we would not want to watch our children.
Misanthropic people, mean-spirited to the core. People who hate
hunters, hate trappers, hate butchers, hate every living, breathing
human being, even themselves. We have also met ARAs who could be
described (to speak charitably) as weird, kooky, or strange, and
others who have had no respect for reason or science. More, we have
known ARAs who believe violent, criminal acts, as well as personal
threats made against animal users or their family members, when
done in the name of animal liberation, are morally justified. Yes,
some ARAs are prepared to go this far.
For
a variety of reasons, the attitudes and values of the ARAs I have
just described are regrettable. One reason concerns the public’s
perception of animal rights. The violent, lawless behavior of a
few, the hateful attitudes of a handful, is grist for the opponents
of animal rights’ mill. Representatives of the meat and fur
industry, for example, want nothing more than to have the general
public accept the accuracy of the stereotype of ARAs as misanthropic
violent law-breakers. Fortunately for industry spokespersons, some
ARAs cooperate by actually being this way. They don’t have
to be invented.
If
I have learned anything from my years of involvement in animal rights,
it is that the ARAs who fit the stereotype are the rare exception,
not the rule. The great majority of ARAs are just ordinary folks:
neighbors and business associates; the family that runs the print
shop or cleaners down the street; the guy next to you on the exercise
bike at the gym; students and teachers in the local schools; the
woman who sings solos in the church choir; teenagers who belong
to Luther League or Wesley Fellowship; the couple that volunteers
for Meals on Wheels; homemakers, nurses and physicians; counselors
and social workers; whites, blacks, browns, reds, yellows, of every
shade and hue; rich, poor, middle class; the old and the young;
Protestants, Catholics, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and every other faith,
including those with no faith; political liberals and conservatives;
people who love family and country, who work hard, mow their lawn,
and pay their taxes.
Moreover,
while the ARA message the public receives is one of negativity (ARAs
are against greyhound racing, against sport hunting, against rodeo,
for example), the other, positive side of the story never gets told.
With rare exceptions, ARAs are for love of family and country, for
human rights and justice, for human freedom and equality, for compassion
and mercy, for peace and tolerance, for special concern for those
with special needs (children, the enfeebled, the elderly, among
others), for a clean, sustainable environment, for the rights of
our children’s children’s children--our future generations.
In
a word, the vast majority of ARAs are Norman Rockwell Americans,
straight off his famous Thanksgiving cover for the old Saturday
Evening Post, only with this noteworthy difference. We’ll
pass on the turkey, thank you. We don’t eat our friends.
So
let us put an end to the untruths that the major animal user industries
spread about “animal rights extremists.” Not all ARAs
are violent law breakers, and “[t]he current mindset of the
animal rights movement” is not “‘Believe what
I believe . . . or else.’" This is just special interest
propaganda meant to forestall fair, informed discussion. That said,
it has to be acknowledged that ARAs are, well . . . we are . . .
different than most people. Especially if you’re a Muddler,
you have to wonder how we got that way. Answering this question
is a good place to begin the discussion.
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