David Cantor, RPA
Responsible Policies for Animals
November 2017
Originally published November 2, 2017 on Chestnut Hill Local, Philadelphia
As detailed in The Comparative Anatomy of Eating by Milton R. Mills, M.D., human beings have none of the anatomical or physiological traits that define animals who evolved in nature to kill other animals – the above plus an omnivore’s or carnivore’s dentition, saliva, and digestive tract. In nature, killing is mostly for eating. No naturally occurring human “equipment” correlates with that function.
In the aftermath of mass murders as in Las Vegas, we constantly hear that
killing others arises from human nature. Filmmaker Ken Burns stated in
his Fresh Air interview about his recent release on the Vietnam War, “War is
human nature on steroids.”
Yet during my 28 years studying human beings’ killing of others, I
discovered this from the leading expert on training human beings to kill in
war, psychologist Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, in On Killing: The
Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society: “[D]espite
an unbroken tradition of violence and war, man is not by nature a killer.
Grossman invokes findings that even with military training and
indoctrination, many soldiers deliberately fire over the enemy’s head.
As consistently indicated in a great many sources on morality in human
beings and other animals, we see human nature in the altruistic, protective,
compassionate, and cooperative behavior that takes hold in the aftermath of
mass murder, in mass resistance to war, and in spontaneous celebration of
war’s end.
This distinction is crucial for understanding and preventing violence and
murder and for responding to perpetrators. If killing were natural, we
would not collectively be so horrified by it. Maybe it would be okay
for authorities to “lie us into war” if “we” could benefit at the expense of
“them.” Instead, we experience moral injury from our representative
government’s promoting official violence while demonizing killers acting on
their own. We reward and celebrate peacemakers and officers who make
arrests without killing or injuring the accused. We teach children how
to get along with other human beings, not how to kill them because it is
“natural” to do so.
For killing to manifest an animal’s biological nature, the animal must have
body parts adapted to killing other animals and to protecting against
prospective victims’ defenses. It helps to have thick, tough skin;
long, hard claws and powerful muscles for wielding them; long fangs and
strong jaw and head muscles to sink them between a victim’s vertebrae; back
and limbs especially suited to pouncing and chasing.
Obviously, human beings do not possess such physical traits. As
detailed in The Comparative Anatomy of Eating by Milton R. Mills, M.D.,
human beings have none of the anatomical or physiological traits that define
animals who evolved in nature to kill other animals – the above plus an
omnivore’s or carnivore’s dentition, saliva, and digestive tract. In
nature, killing is mostly for eating. No naturally occurring human
“equipment” correlates with that function.
Humans evolved as plant-foraging apes on the African savanna, with color
vision good for distinguishing a great variety of edible leaves, fruits,
berries, flowers, and other plants that eventually led to what we call
“produce” when our species began living unnaturally through agriculture;
versatile digits and nails adapted to picking, plucking, peeling; teeth good
for tearing and grinding plants, not for ripping and scarfing flesh.
Human beings’ organized killing relies on innovation, not nature – on
manufactured weapons, traps, rope; more recently, poison, electrical
current, toxic fumes. For killing, our elaborate imaginative and
cooperative capabilities, adapted to avoiding predation and raising families
while moving about the landscape foraging for plants to eat, are distorted
to plan and coordinate assaults, attacks, murders, wars, eliminationist
campaigns, and executions.
Our bodies alone – our original, natural condition – aid us in spotting our
natural predators, grabbing children and fleeing, defending with rocks and
tree branches, not in actively planning, organizing, and setting out to
kill.
In making policies and establishing practices with regard to nonhuman
animals, human beings and governments typically analyze the kind of animal
involved. Except that other animals’ sentience, emotions, and
intelligence are denied because our innate humaneness rebels against
injuring and killing.
It is peculiar indeed that we craft policies and perpetuate practices for
our own species based on ignorance of such a basic fact of our animality as
whether or not it is natural for us to kill.
David Cantor, a full-time animal advocate since 1989,founded Responsible Policies for Animals, promoting total liberation and equal rights of all animals, in 2002.
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