689
Thank you for visiting our animal defence section. Before reading our main essay, please join us in a moment of compassion and reflection.
HELP ENLIGHTEN YOUR FELLOWS. BE SURE TO PASS THIS ON. SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON IT.
Thank you for visiting our animal defence section. Before reading our main essay, please join us in a moment of compassion and reflection.
These questions apply to any movement, for animals, for humans, or for both, dedicated to challenging entrenched power. Exploitative power never gives up without a fight. The Marquess of Queensberry rules never apply. OpEds
Is The Animal Rights Movement Really Moving?
by Marcia Mueller | Armory of the Revolution
[dropcap]I[/dropcap]n his preface to Ward Churchill’s book Pacifism as Pathology, Derrick Jensen writes the following: “Pacifists tell us ‘We must be the change we want to see.’ This ultimately meaningless statement manifests the magical thinking and narcissism we’ve come to expect from dogmatic pacifists. I can change myself all I want, and if dams still stand, salmon still die. If global warming proceeds apace, birds still starve. If factory trawlers still run, oceans still suffer. If factory farms still pollute, dead zones will grow. If vivisection labs still remain, animals are still tortured.”MOST OF US HAVE COME TO SIMILAR CONCLUSIONS:
- Big Ag and other wealthy corporate exploiters will not relinquish their power or profits.
- Most people will not make sacrifices on behalf of other species.
- Activists click, table, petition, and protest, and we get laws with loopholes and no enforcement.
- Californians recently voted for Proposition 12, which gives calves 43 square feet of space by 2020, and pigs 24 square feet by 2022. If this is a victory, it is only because it replaces something even worse.
- Transport trucks and ships depart with their doomed cows, calves, and sheep for the Middle East and Asia, while horses are flown to Japan, all for foreign slaughter. The “laws” covering animal transport are never enforced.
- The VA will go ahead with new experiments on dogs’ brains and hearts in spite of multiple protests.
- Thousands of shelters will kill the cast-off pets of irresponsible owners. Among the victims will be pit bulls who are killed simply for who they are and for what we made them.
SO PERHAPS WE SHOULD BE ASKING OURSELVES WHAT MORE WE CAN DO
- Will peaceful protests and potluck pacifism ever be enough?
- Will there come a time for more aggressive activism?
- What will we be ready to risk?
- Could the HSUS or PETA or other national groups help more with organization and mobilization of Internet activism?
Or are the animals and their advocates destined to be stalled forever by the powerful forces of corporate and individual speciesism. Will smallest mercy of a few more inches of space be all they ever receive?
Things for activists to be thinking about.
0
0
votes
Article Rating
The lives of farm animals are still overwhelmingly horrible, even with some states’ passage of humane leaning laws. There has been growing awareness and concern by the public, but progress is slow. The number of vegans continues to grow, according to a recent survey, but it’s still in the single digits. If the questions posted are asking whether people should consider violence to help animals, I’d say no. It’d be like attacking the entire government, basically fruitless. And morally bankrupt. We should be striving for humane treatment of all, humans and nonhumans. Once we can change laws to provide everyone… Read more »
We/animal advocates will never prevail to end animal suffering if we try to defeat greed and wealthy opponents who spend billions relative to our thousands. However, human emotional response is usually something that money can’t buy. Our best chance of prevailing to stop animal suffering, especially with human gluttony where plant-based foods can be both nutritious and savory, is to inform the public of the atrocities (such as the cow downed cow being drug into the truck) and education as to how it doesn’t have to be this way. For certain, the animal rights movement is growing, but folks need… Read more »