"If you have no desire to go about the work of collective liberation, that’s fine. But please get out of the way for those of us who are doing it."
Like many people I woke up to the news on Monday that Joaquin Phoenix had made a sweeping speech when he accepted his award for best actor at the 2020 Academy Awards ceremony, and like many people I was moved that he spoke so eloquently about injustice for all marginalized persons including animals.
I was, however, disappointed to read Harriet Hall’s hot take the next day in the Independent. Disappointed, but not surprised.
When you have been standing at the crossroad of black liberation, queer
liberation, and animal liberation for any amount of time, you know all about
the difficult task of convincing allies of social justice that institutional
violence against animals and humans does not occur in a vacuum.
The fact that Hall characterized Phoenix’s speech as a “galling
juxtaposition” reveals her bigotry toward the other persons with whom we
share this planet. The perceived exceptionalism of humans in relation to
other animals should be the thing that galls her, not Phoenix’s recognition
of it. But the myth of our supreme right to dominate everyone else is
persistent, and it replicates the very hierarchy I presume Hall wants to
dismantle.
In response to online attempts to educate her, Hall very condescendingly
stated, “I’ve been a vegetarian for 15 years and take animal welfare
extremely seriously - but comparisons like these do no one any favours and
only undermine all points being made. By all means he could have made them
separately, but lumping them together was my problem.”
Her problem was lumping them together? I hate to break this to her, but in
the words of Yolo Akili, author of Dear Universe: Letters of Affirmation and
Empowerment, “Oppression thrives off isolation. Connection is the only thing
that can save us.”
Furthermore, Hall presents her vegetarianism as some sort of misguided
allyship. But that allyship earns Hall no cookies. Vegetarianism still robs
chicken and cows of their reproductive autonomy. Vegetarianism offers no
prohibition against violent exploitation of animals for entertainment or
fashion. Hall would be well served to read the tireless work of Carol Adams
who penned The Sexual Politics of Meat some 30 odd years ago to learn what
ecofeminism can teach us about that.
And by shifting the focus to animal welfare, Hall conceals the necessity for
animal liberation because welfare relies on the notion that we are entitled
to others’ bodies as long as we treat them nicely. Such badge allyship is as
fraudulent and toxic as that which white women have been serving up to black
people since the dawn of western civilization.
Badge allyship allows co-conspirators to appear sympathetic while holding
the perpetrators’ boot in place. It is the illusion of solidarity by
altering the material conditions of our marginalization instead of removing
them altogether. Animals care about as much for her token concerns toward
their “welfare” as I do about her performative outrage on my queer and black
behalf.
Hall also inaccurately states that Phoenix compared marginalized groups to
bovine animals. That’s not what happened. It is perhaps Hall’s own bigotry
that triggered such a kneejerk response. Phoenix merely recognized bovine
animals as marginalized persons themselves. It is only insulting to the
bigoted imagination that someone should even consider bovine animals to be
marginalized persons at all.
But here lies the biggest plot twist. Even if Phoenix did make such a
comparison, he wouldn’t be the first. Just two days ago, Chuck Sims Africa
was released from prison after an unconscionable 40+ years of incarceration.
He was the final member of the radical Philadelphia-based MOVE organization
to be paroled. MOVE was a revolutionary black liberation group that
advocated for total liberation for all persons, including animals.
Ed Pilkington wrote for the Guardian in 2018, “Black liberation, animal
liberation – the two are as one with Move.”
In the same piece, Pilkington shared the words of MOVE’s own Janine Africa,
“We demonstrated against puppy mills, zoos, circuses, any form of
enslavement of animals. We demonstrated against Three Mile Island [nuclear
power plant] and industrial pollution. We demonstrated against police
brutality. And we did so uncompromisingly. Slavery never ended, it was just
disguised.”
Is Hall equally offended? Is she still galled?
Hall invokes “the injustices of racism, of the experiences of people of
colour whose history is steeped in slavery” to express how it trivializes
our experiences to recognize that they are shared. But it is dishonest
virtue signaling at best, and willful weaponizing of oppression at worst.
Hall condemns Phoenix for mentioning “queer rights, when members of the gay
community have been beaten, criminalised and banned from marrying their
partners.” Yet it seems that Hall is completely ignorant of the tireless
work of authors like pattrice jones, who has written and spoken quite
extensively about queering animal liberation.
Could Phoenix be criticized for not elevating the voices of marginalized
people who have been saying the same thing for years? Maybe. But we also
have criticized straight white men for not doing the work of educating other
privileged people like themselves instead of locating that burden on us. In
the moment of his speech, Phoenix did exactly that.
It is a great irony that Hall considers Phoenix to embody white savior
complex. While there is no shortage of it in the movement for animal
liberation, today the only white savior in the room is Hall. So since Hall
is so quick to offer pro tips, here’s one for her: Ms. Hall please do the
homework assignment before coming to class. The body of literature to
educate so-called allies on the commonality of oppression is vast. You may
speak for other oppressed people who share your contempt for other animals,
and that is indeed your privilege. But you do not speak on behalf of all
marginalized people. If you have no desire to go about the work of
collective liberation, that’s fine. But please get out of the way for those
of us who are doing it.
I lose nothing by expanding the scope of my justice to include other
animals. Unfortunately, doing so may cause Hall to lose a glass of milk. I
hope that doesn’t distress her too much. After all, several scholars have
observed the link between milk and white supremacy, a point that might be
lost on Harriet Hall, although such shared oppression was very literally the
point made by Joaquin Phoenix.