The main political opposition to equal treatment and rights for all animals comes from the commercial sector of those animal industries that see any change in the status quo as an economic threat.
Dr. Fox and Friends...
America has no law prohibiting the killing of dogs for food,
probably because most Americans do not regard dogs as food. But dogs
are regularly consumed in parts of China, Korea and the Philippines.
Likewise few Americans regard horses as food. But many people in
countries like France, Belgium and Japan eat horses. Export of
American horse flesh to these foreign markets, and the killing of
some 90,000 horses in the U.S. every year, was prohibited in 2007
under the Horse Slaughter Protection Act. On the surface this meant
that the horse has won the right in America not to be treated as a
consumable commodity. But should not all animals be accorded this
right? Those who have bonded with companion pigs, sheep, goats,
calves, cows, oxen, rabbits, chickens, ducks and geese, and even pet
fish, that are slaughtered by the billion, might well call for a
similar right for their own favored species.
But in spite of the best intentions of this Act, the consequences
were horrendous for the horses, thousands being transported across
the border to be slaughtered and processed in Mexico.
Clearly the rights of animals, beyond our duty of humane care and
consideration, mandated under Federal and State animal protection
and anti-cruelty laws, are arbitrarily determined as much by human
sentimentality, custom and religious tradition (with beef for high
caste Hindus, and pork for Muslims and Jews, being taboo), as by the
profit motive. Animal rights advocates today challenge the logic and
ethics of not according animals equal rights, animals used as
companions having infinitely more rights than animals used as
commodities. This call for equal rights means that all domesticated
and captive wild animals should be kept under conditions appropriate
to their natures, conducive to their physical health and mental well
being because their basic physiological and psychological needs are
provided for. The ethics of responsible care amount to a humane
covenant between the human and the non-human that becomes the duty
of all who benefit from animals in various ways to honor at all
times.
Those who profit financially from exploiting animals as commodities
dismiss animal rights as a vegetarian conspiracy, which it is not.
Many echo the belief of veterinarian Dr. B. Taylor Bennet, associate
Vice Chancellor for Research Resources, University of Illinois,
Chicago, Ill., that “animals have neither legal nor moral rights
because they cannot make a claim or be held responsible for their
actions,” which is absurd because neither can human infants, nor
brain damaged adults, yet they have rights.
The main political opposition to equal treatment and rights for all
animals comes from the commercial sector of those animal industries
that see any change in the status quo as an economic threat.
The social, economic, and legal ramifications of a growing public
acceptance of animals having rights, puts all those with vested
interests in exploiting animals for
various purposes at odds with a rising consensus that is now
questioning the belief that non-human beings can be used as a means
to satisfy exclusively human ends, rather than being an end in
themselves with rights and entitlements.
Because more and more Americans care about the fate of all
institutionally exploited animals, those who continue to profit by
them will be under increasing scrutiny. This rising sentiment is
perceived as such a threat to the status quo that the Bush
administration has included under its National Homeland Security
Act, provision for the immediate arrest and incarceration of any
animal or environmental rights activist as a terrorist if caught
interfering with any business activity that contributes to the good
of the economy, like killing pigs and felling forests, and thus to
national security.
This kind of conflict is not new. There was a similar conflict, not
completely resolved world-wide today, over the exploitation of
humans as slaves and chattel, and as a means to satisfy the ends of
those in power. The denial of personhood, of rights, of citizenship,
goes back to the times of the Roman Empire, where wives, children
and slaves were non-persons, and had no rights. Western attitudes
toward animals are profoundly influenced by the world view of the
Roman imperialists that influenced early Greek philosophy and the
rising Catholic Christian Empire; namely animals were created for
mans’ use. But utilitarianism is a slippery slope that can lead to
the justification of animal cruelty and suffering, and similar
treatment of human beings ‘for the greater good’.
The denial of basic rights persists in the criminalization of often
innocent persons under the totalitarian utilitarianism of modern day
China, some 2,00-10,000 of whom are executed every year, and who are
now, according to BBC News (Oct 5th, 2006) the basis for a lucrative
organ donor industry. Similarly in India, the personhood of members
of the lowest caste, long regarded as sub-human, continues to be
denied. These people, the dalits or untouchables, the late Mahatma
Gandhi called the Harajans or ‘children of god’, yet opposed the
British colonial initiative to abolish the caste system that treated
the dalits as non-persons on the grounds that it would destroy
Hinduism. The greater good would therefore be sacrificed in the
abolition of the caste system.
Gandhi and his cohorts were as fearful of the economic demise of
their motherland if the caste system were to be replaced by an
egalitarian and fully functional democracy throughout India’s 60
million impoverished villages, as were the Greek, Roman, and
subsequent American, European, and other slave-owners of the past
few centuries. Yet as history informs, the abolition of slavery, and
of South
Africa’s apartheid did not result in economic ruin. On the contrary,
human progress in ethics means progress in the development of
civilization and for the founding of a just, egalitarian society. To
regard some people as non-persons, or as being sub-human, is
becoming something of the past as the sanctity and dignity of
personhood is extended to all people.
The issue of racism raises a parallel concern that has been termed
specieism, where, for reasons such as custom or sentimentality, some
animals are treated preferentially over others of the same or
different species, and yet in essence are similar in terms of their
sentience and capacity to suffer. Under the democratic spirit of a
rising civil society world wide, the divisiveness and injustices of
racism, tribalism, caste/class-ism, sexism, and other forms of
discrimination are being more effectively addressed and eradicated.
Our chauvinistic attitude toward other animals, aptly termed
speciesism, will eventually become a thing of the past as we give
equal and fair consideration to all species and individuals, human
and non-human alike. One reason to do so is actually economic,
because a healthy society depends upon a healthy animal population,
as it does upon a healthy environment.
In conclusion, animal rights is now on the social agenda of civil
society, and all who care more about the quality of life of fellow
creatures than for their value as a means to exclusively human ends
are the harbingers of what I see as a Golden Age to come, where the
Golden Rule —of treating all living beings as we would have them
treat us—usurps the rule of gold.