Peter Tatchell,
AlterNet.org
October 2017
Surely, in the twenty-first century, the time has come to emancipate non-human animals, just like we previously emancipated humans through abolishing slavery, male-only suffrage and anti-LGBT laws?
"Sow" confined in gestation crate...
Since we humans are an animal species, it is obvious that human rights
are a form of animal rights; and that animal rights include—or should
include—the human species.
Sadly, not everyone sees it this way. Many view humans and other animals as
totally distinct: drawing a clear, sharp line between animal rights and
human rights.
That's not my view. Sentience is the bond that unites all animal species,
human and non-human. I accept our shared animalism and advocate our shared
claim to be spared suffering and accorded inalienable rights.
It is true that other animals are less intelligent than humans and lack our
mental-physical skills and our capacity for culture and conscience. But this
is no justification for abusing them. Just as we do not sanction the abuse
of humans—such as babies and disabled people—who lack these highly developed
capacities.
We accept that we have a special responsibility to protect weaker, more
vulnerable humans. Surely the same reasoning applies to other weaker, more
vulnerable thinking, feeling creatures?
There is, in my moral universe, no great ethical gulf between the abuse of
human and non-human animals or between our duty of compassion towards other
humans and other species.
Indeed, I see a link between the oppression of non-human animals and the
oppression of human beings because of their nationality, race, gender, faith
or non-faith, political beliefs, disability, sexual orientation and gender
identity.
Speciesism is analogous to homophobia, racism and misogyny
The different forms of human and other animal oppression are interconnected,
based on the similar abuse of power and the infliction of harm and
suffering. They cannot be fully understood separately from one another.
How we mistreat animals parallels how we mistreat people. Cruelty is
barbarism, whether it is inflicted on humans or on other species. The
campaigns for animal rights and human rights share the same fundamental aim:
a world without oppression and suffering, based on love, kindness and
compassion.
Speciesism is the belief and practice of human supremacism over other animal
species. It is prejudice, discrimination or violence in favor of human
beings; variously involving the exploitation, incarceration, mistreatment or
killing of other animals by humans.
This humans-first ideology of speciesism is analogous to homophobia, racism
and misogyny. A form of prejudice, domination and oppression, it is
incompatible with a humane, civilized society.
We humans are an animal species. We know about pain and suffering. So why do
most of us hold high-handed attitudes towards other animals and accept their
abuse in medical laboratories, farms, zoos, circuses and sports events?
It does not follow that our highly sophisticated intelligence and
material development gives us the right to lord it over other species. Just
because we have the capacity to do so, does not mean that we should. On the
contrary: our brain power and conscience give us a special responsibility of
stewardship over the Earth and all its beings.
We must start thinking in a new way...
My thinking has been influenced by the Australian philosopher, Peter Singer,
and his ground-breaking book, Animal Liberation. In my mind, it is one the
most important books of the last 100 years. It expands our moral horizons
beyond our own species and is thereby a major evolution in ethics.
Singer challenges human chauvinism. By viewing non-human sentient beings as
‘other', we allow ourselves the ‘excuse' to look down on and mistreat them;
including to insult, exploit, abuse, dominate or even kill those ‘other'
beings. We stop seeing them as living, thinking, feeling creatures.
Anti-animal prejudice runs deep. Bigots often disparage other people with
speciesist epithets. They accuse them of acting 'just like a beast' or
'worse than an animal.' This bigotry echoes the vile insults that black
people are 'savages', women are 'bitches' and that LGBT people are
'perverts.'
Before we can liberate the millions of oppressed humans and billions of
exploited animals we need to free our minds and start thinking in a new way:
to consciously eliminate the mentality of subjugation and entitlement that
allows us to passively acquiesce or, even worse, actively participate in the
cycle of abuse against other sentient beings - human and non-human.
Animal liberation is in the same ethical tradition as women's, black and
LGBT liberation. It is about ending the suffering that flows from a
supremacist mindset and power relations of domination.
Surely, in the twenty-first century, the time has come to emancipate
non-human animals, just like we previously emancipated humans through
abolishing slavery, male-only suffrage and anti-LGBT laws?
We have a moral duty to stop abusing other animal species. They aren't
really that different from us humans. Vertebrates share much of our DNA and
our capacity for thought, feelings, emotions, sociability, language,
altruism and empathy.
We need to recognize and accept our common animal nature. If we did that,
the excuses and rationalizations for treating other species badly would fall
away.
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