Oftentimes those in the Animal Liberation movement are berated for "caring more about animals then humans (as if humans are not animals)." Usually, Animal Liberationists just move on and don't even bother to respond. Well, maybe it is time someone did...and, guess what, someone did.
For me, carrying about non human animals is a good thing in its own right. It would be a good thing even if it was of zero benefit to the human species. Non human animals are alive, they are sentient, conscious, and thinking. They care, they love, they have emotions, they hurt, and they surely feel pain. Science has confirmed all of this. Step into a slaughter house and you will also know that animals know what is coming and they feel fear.
Now, I realize nature, being nature, there are times when animals kill other animals, often for food, or for protection...humans included. If I or someone I loved were starving to death, I won't claim that I might not have to kill a rabbit for food. I wouldn't, me being me, feel great about it, but I'd do it. It happens. It is part of nature.
However, many of us humans have the choice not to do so. We most definitely have the choice not to torture other living things for fun and profit.
Personally, I can't figure out how any feeling human can look at how we treat animals in those giant production facilities and factory farms, how we pack them together, stuff them with crap, make them live in hell, and not recoil. I can't figure that out, but that is me, I suppose.
I can't understand how people torture, maim, and murder beautiful greyhounds like my best friend Hawk, but they do.
I don't want to hear from those who can't understand that caring about animals, does not mean you don't care about people. That is nonsense. For me, the two go together. Most of my political work, mine personally, is about people, I suppose, but it is also about the rest of our environment and all the animals living in it. We are, after all, in some sense all in this together.
I have drifted astray. I didn't mean to get up on some high horse here. I am far from perfect. I am a vegetarian for example, but I am not a vegan. What can I say?
It is also true if it came down to choosing between saving a crow (and I love crows) and saving a human, I'd save the human almost every time. There are, of course, humans whom I would opt to not choose in favor of a crow. I bet the crow feels the same way...in reverse.
The reality is we almost never have to make such choices in the real world.
The reality is animal liberation does benefit humans and human liberation.
The following is from Animal Liberation Front.com
HOW ANIMAL LIBERATION WILL BENEFIT HUMAN RIGHTS
Compiled from various sources
The moral foundation of the animal liberation movement is the belief that all beings should be granted rights based on their sentience, which includes their ability to have hopes, preferences, and the capacity to be moved by love. The granting of basic rights to animals (the freedom to live a natural life; free from human exploitation, unnecessary pain and suffering, and premature death) separates them from “property”, which is essential because a number of human beings treat their property like a baby treats a diaper.
The animal liberation movement’s focus on sentience stems from the understanding that there is continuity between the human and animal condition. Human sentience has ethical significance. Humans are not granted rights because they can Cha Cha, but because they can suffer. Pain and suffering are regrettable states to endure regardless of physical form, including shape, color, ethnicity, species, or even someone who lost their job at the waffle house due to their appearance.
Animal liberation is the culmination of a vast historical learning process whereby human beings gradually realize that arguments justifying hierarchy, inequality, and discrimination of any kind are arbitrary, baseless, and fallacious. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said that the arc of history is long, but that it bends toward justice and compassion (King’s wife and son, Coretta and Dexter Scott King, are vegans).
The Animal Liberation Front grew out of the hunt saboteur movement in England in the 1970s. Today they still stand between hunters and the hunted. The photo below was taken in 2007.
Five ways animal liberation will benefit human rights:
1. Less abuse and less exploitation of vulnerable human beings. The correlation between abusing animals and abusing vulnerable humans (children, spouses, the elderly, and me after two beers) is well documented. Teaching children compassion toward any and all vulnerable beings is vital.Research provides strong evidence that many violent adults as children harmed animals, and many times they weren’t taught that it was wrong. Anthropologist Margaret Mead said, “One of the most dangerous things that can happen to a child is to kill or torture an animal and get away with it.”
The FBI has detailed common histories of animal cruelty in serial killers and more recently mass murderers, such as school shooters. The most famous case is Jeffrey Dahmer, whose neighbors remember the dog skulls the youth kept on stakes in his backyard.
Law enforcement will never be able to suitably intercede in these crimes until animals have basic rights. Recently in Lima, Ohio a woman left her abusive spouse only to return after receiving a letter threatening that every day that she was gone their dog would painfully lose a body part.
In a 1997 study of battered women’s shelters 85% of women and 63% of children in these shelters reported incidents of abuse toward family pets in their homes.
The correlation between animal rights and human rights has been known for millennia.
Pythagoras, a Greek mathematician in 569 B.C. said, “As long as man continues to be the ruthless destroyer of lower living beings he will never know health or peace. For as long as men massacre animals, they will kill each other.”
Buddha, in 500 B.C. said, “The eating of meat extinguishes the seed of great compassion.”
Leo Tolstoy, Russian author of “War and Peace”: “What I think about vivisection is that if people admit that they have the right to take or endanger the life of living beings for the benefit of many, there will be no limit to their cruelty.”
Rev. Dr. Albert Schweitzer (Nobel Peace Prize 1952) from “The Philosophy of Civilization”:
“Until we extend our circle of compassion to all living things, humanity will not find peace.”
C.S. Lewis, Irish author, novels and essays: “If we cut up beasts simply because they cannot prevent us and because we are backing our own side in the struggle for existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies, or capitalists for the same reasons.”
Animal rights advocates have long been engaged in human rights reforms. ASPCA co-founder Henry Bergh had a central role in the formation of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children in 1874. Humanitarian William Wilberforce, who co-founded the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, is best remembered for helping to abolish the slave trade throughout the British Empire.
George T. Angell, Founder of Massachusetts SPCA said in a 1884 speech: “I am sometimes asked: ‘Why do you spend so much of your time and money talking about kindness to animals when there is so much cruelty to men?’ I answer: ‘I am working at the roots.’”
2. Less world hunger and starvation. Approximately 854 million people do not have enough to eat. Thirty-three countries are facing food crises, according to the World Bank, and food riots have recently erupted in Egypt, Haiti, Yemen, Malaysia and other poor nations. That is hard for me, in England, to comprehend. The closest I’ve come to a food riot was when someone cut in line at a football stadium nacho concession stand (in my defense I swear that I thought it was the end of the line).
More than 6 million children under five die each year from malnutrition while a third of the world’s grain is fed to farmed animals. This doesn’t have to happen. A plant-based diet feeds more human beings with less money. Admittedly, just not feeding grain to farm animals doesn’t feed the hungry. It will require getting the food to those in need (hint: look for anyone who is licking discarded candy wrappers for nourishment).
Following are some supporting facts excerpted from the Pulitzer Prize nominated book “Diet for a New America” by author John Robbins. Full documentation of every fact is available fromwww.EarthSave.org .
Human beings who could be fed by the grain and soybeans eaten by U.S. livestock: 1,300,000,000
Number of people who will starve to death this year: 60,000,000
Number of people who could be adequately fed by the grain saved if Americans reduced their intake of meat by 10%: 60,000,000
Water needed to produce 1 pound of wheat: 25 gallons. 1 pound of meat: 2,500 gallons
Cost of hamburger meat if water used by meat industry was not subsidized by taxpayers: $35/pound
Current cost for pound of protein from wheat: $1.50. From beefsteak: $15.40
Cost for pound of protein from beef if taxpayers ceased subsidizing meat industry's use of water: $89
3. A healthier population. A plant based diet results in less cancer and heart strokes. (Warning: It also means that you are more likely to reach an age when that sound behind you will be your bottom hitting your heels.). More excerpts from “Diet for a New America”:
Heart attacks
How frequently heart attacks kill in U.S.: Every 45 seconds
Risk of death from heart attack by average American man: 50%. Average vegetarian man: 15%
Amount you reduce the risk of heart attack by reducing your consumption of meat, dairy products, and eggs by half: 45%. Reducing consumption entirely reduces risk 90%.
Cholesterol
Meat, dairy, and egg industries claim there is no reason to be concerned about your blood cholesterol as long as it is: “normal”
Your risk of dying of a disease caused by clogged arteries if your blood cholesterol is “normal”: over 50%. Your risk if you do not consume saturated fat and cholesterol: 5%
Cancer
World populations with high meat intakes but without corresponding high rates of colon cancer: 0
World populations with low meat intakes but without corresponding low rates of colon cancer: 0
Increased risk of breast cancer for women who eat meat daily compared to women who eat meat less than once a week: 4 times higher
Increased risk of fatal prostate cancer for men who consume meats, cheese, eggs, and milk daily compared to men who eat these foods sparingly or not at all: 3.6 times higher
Excess Protein
Diseases linked to excess protein consumption: Osteoporosis and Kidney failure
Number of cases of osteoporosis and kidney failure in the United States: Tens of millions
Bone loss
The average measurable bone loss of female meat-eaters at age 65: 35%. Vegetarians at age 65: 18%
Diseases which are commonly prevented, consistently improved, and sometimes cured by low-fat vegetarian diet include: Strokes, Heart disease, Kidney stones, Cancers (Breast, Prostate, Pancreatic, Cervical, Stomach, Colon, Ovarian, Endometrial), Diabetes, Hypoglycemia, Peptic ulcers, Constipation, Hiatal hernias, Diverticulosis, Gallstones, Hypertension, Salmonellosis, Trichinosis, Osteoporosis, Kidney disease, Hemorrhoids, Obesity, Asthma, Irritable colon syndrome.
Pesticides and male sterility
Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticide residues in U.S. diet attributable to meats and dairy products: 94%
Relative pesticide contamination in breast milk of meat-eating mothers compared to pesticide contamination in breast milk of vegetarian mothers: 35 times as high
Male college students sterile in 1950: 0.5%. In 1978: 25%
Principle reason for sterility: Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides.
The USDA tells us: Our meat is inspected. It doesn’t tell us that less than 1 out of every quarter million slaughtered animals is tested for toxic chemical residues.
Antibiotics
Total antibiotics used in U.S. fed routinely to livestock: 55%
Staphylococci infections resistant to penicillin in 1960: 13%. In 1988: 91%
Reason: Breeding of antibiotic resistant bacteria in livestock due to routine feeding of antibiotics
Effectiveness of all “wonder-drug” antibiotics: Declining rapidly
Reason: feeding of antibiotics resistant bacteria to livestock
Response by entire European Economic Community to routine feeding of antibiotics to livestock: Ban
Response by American meat and pharmaceutical industries to routine feeding of antibiotics to livestock: Full and complete support.
On average vegetarians live six to ten years longer than meat-eaters, who are nine times more likely to be obese than vegans. Studies have shown that vegetarian kids grow taller and have higher IQs than other children, and adults who switch to a plant-based diet can prevent and even reverse many chronic ailments.
Albert Einstein said, “Nothing will benefit human health and increase chances of survival for life on earth as much as the evolution to a vegetarian diet.”
Disclaimer: Skeptics argue that Einstein was overrated.
If he knew so much about gravity, why did his hair stand up like that?
John Robbins wrote, “A reduction in beef and other meat consumption is the most potent single act you can take to halt the destruction of our environment and preserve our natural resources. Our choices do matter. What's healthiest for each of us personally is also healthiest for the life support system of our precious, but wounded planet.” Excerpts from “Diet for a New America”:
Rainforest Destruction
A driving force behind the destruction of the tropical rainforests: American meat habit
Current rate of species extinction due to destruction of tropical rainforests: 1,000/year
Amount of trees spared per year by each individual who switches to pure vegetarian diet: 1 acre
Energy, True Cost
Length of time the world’s petroleum reserves would last if all human beings ate meat-centered diets: 13 years. If all human beings ate a vegetarian diet: 260 years.
Pounds of soybeans produced by the amount of energy needed to produce 1 pound of feedlot beef: 40
Raw materials consumed in U.S. for producing meat-centered diet: 33% of total. Vegetarian diet: 2%
Feedlot Sewage
Production of excrement by total U.S. human population: 12,000 pounds/second
Production by U.S. livestock: 250,000 pounds/second. Sewage systems in U.S. feedlots: Nil
Amount of waste produced annually by U.S. livestock which is not recycled: 1 billion tons
Where feedlot waste often ends up: In our water
Factory farms are a major source of water and air pollution for rural communities in their vicinity. These “farms” pack as many animals as possible into each cage, shed and pen. According the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), manure and wastewater from these facilities pollute the environment with nitrogen, ammonia, hormones and heavy metals among other pollutants. In fact, 35,000 miles of river in 22 states have been contaminated from these operations. People living in the vicinity of factory farms have reported high rates of miscarriage, respiratory problems, nausea and an inability to leave their home or open windows because of the stench.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, factory farming pollutes U.S. waterways more than all industrial sources combined.
Robert S. Lawrence, Associate Dean at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health said, “As we become increasingly aware of the finite limits to the carrying capacity of the planet, the inefficiency of converting eight or nine kilograms of grain protein into one kilogram of animal protein for human consumption would by itself be sufficient argument against continuation of our present dietary habits. When one adds in the abuse of animals inherent to factory farming methods, the depletion and contamination of aquifers, the intense use of grain crops and grazing areas, and the release of methane and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the case against our meat-eating behavior becomes overwhelming. And that is before we factor in the effects of animal fats - an inescapable component of meat and poultry - on human health.”
So eat as though the planet depended on it, since it just might.
5. Fewer dangerous drugs being tested on humans. Testing drugs on animals is primarily done because it gives corporations legal protection, not because it advances science. (Not to mention the waste of our tax dollars such as those spent on the University of Utah’s government-funded study “Are worms gay?” The conclusion, “We cannot say what this means for human sexual orientation.” After my father read the conclusions a dozen taxpayer-funded animal studies he looked a little like a steer must when it’s just been hit over the head with a sledgehammer at the slaughterhouse.
Herbert Gundersheimer, M.D. said, “Results from animal tests are not transferable between species, and therefore cannot guarantee product safety for humans...In reality these tests do not provide protection for consumers from unsafe products, but rather they are used to protect corporations from legal liability.”
Dr. Vernon Coleman, Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine, said: “Many vivisectors still claim that what they do helps save human lives. They are lying. The truth is that animal experiments kill people, and animal researchers are responsible for the deaths of thousands of men, women and children every year.”
Dr. Charles Mayo, founder of the Mayo Clinic, said: “I know of no achievement through vivisection, no scientific discovery, that could not have been obtained without such barbarism and cruelty. The whole thing is evil.”
Conclusion
Isaac Bashevis Singer, the Nobel laureate, stated that “As long as human beings go on shedding the blood of animals, there will never be any peace. There is only one little step from killing animals to creating gas chambers a la Hitler and concentration camps a la Stalin... There will be no justice as long as a man will stand with a knife or with a gun and destroy those who are weaker than he is.”
Human rights and animal rights are one struggle. Perhaps that realization prompted the 16th US president, Abraham Lincoln, to say “I am in favor of animal rights as well as human rights. That is the way of a whole human being.”
This is great.
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