Just as we know it’s indefensible to use and abuse animals, the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery and the near countless other Black lives taken because of violent bigotry are completely unjustifiable... Fellow animal liberators, we know the power of protesting and demonstrating. Use it now.
March, Minneapolis - Delsol Productions
Fellow animal liberators, I come to you right now—as an exhausted Black man—asking for help working against systemic racism that threatens Black lives. I know personally how motivated you all are, as I am, in pushing for real change. We need to show that energy right now.
Those of us who are active in the animal rights movement have a reason
for being powerful allies. If we truly believe in empathy and compassion for
all living beings, we can show it today.
Those involved in the animal rights movement know all too well how
frustrating it is for people to scoff at our message, even when we’re armed
with evidence of blatant injustice.
Think how infuriating it is when videos of mother cows crying out for their
stolen calves fall on deaf ears. Think of the frustration we feel when
individuals try to justify the abuse when workers punch and mutilate sheep
for wool. Or when vile commenters laugh when farmers slit the throats of
conscious animals on farms. I feel it, too.
Recognize our aggravation as Black people when the powers that be try to
avoid or twist the narrative around the killing of Black people by racists.
Just as we know it’s indefensible to use and abuse animals, the killings of
George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery and the near countless other
Black lives taken because of violent bigotry are completely unjustifiable.
Memorial for George Floyd, Minneapolis, March 4 - Delsol Productions
This is especially true when these atrocities are recorded for all the
world to see. Both the animal rights movement and the Black Lives Matter
movement include activists who know that horrible violence takes place off
camera daily. But when people view the footage for themselves, they can no
longer declare ignorance, only apathy. That’s why we must stand—and
march—together.
We know the unfair justice system well. The deck is stacked against anyone
working to end oppression.
Both movements also realize that even recorded evidence often isn’t enough
to secure a conviction in the U.S. The demonstrations taking place right now
are bigger than the four officers who murdered George Floyd on camera.
Racists, whether or not they wear a badge, often go unpunished for killing
Black Americans.
How many times have we seen obvious cruelty go unpunished in the animal
rights movement? Let’s remember that hurt—that grief over the failure of the
judicial system—and use it to relate to the events of the Black Lives Matter
movement.
There are Black police officers, and there are good police officers of all
colors. But people are now marching globally against acts of barbarism that
are systemic in many police departments.
The marchers today are demanding the same thing that animal rights activists
are demanding: accountability.
The Black Lives Matter movement calls for “an end to the systemic racism
that allows this culture of corruption to go unchecked and our lives to be
taken.”
This call for an end to unjust oppression is a message that should resonate
with every single person pushing for animal rights. Numerous folks at PETA
and other animal rights activists know what it’s like to be arrested and
detained simply for demonstrating against injustice. All the while, vile
perpetrators get off scot-free.
March, Minneapolis - Delsol Productions
Both of our movements want sweeping, reformative legislation that would
help lead to convictions. We all want more transparency in investigations.
We want prosecutors and attorney generals who will go to bat for us when we
expose cruelty.
Animal rights activists want justice always, so they can understand the
importance of defunding militarized police forces that kill Black people.
PETA is on the front lines pushing for the defunding of federal and state
institutions that funnel money into cruel experiments on animals and that
use and often kill animals for entertainment. We know these institutions
speak one language fluently, and that’s the language of money.
At the end of the day, we all want to see more funds channeled into positive
projects: hospitals, schools, and social programs that help build our
communities.
Please, resist detracting from the thrust of these demonstrations with an
“all lives matter” perspective.
The idea comes from a compassionate heart—and the idea is true—but this
phrase has been weaponized to delegitimize the Black Lives Matter movement.
As an animal rights supporter, you know how frustrating it is when someone
says, “How can you care about animals when children are going hungry?” It is
not either/or. But when you’re demonstrating against acts like scalding pigs
to death in boiling water inside slaughterhouses or running dogs to death in
the Iditarod, you’re talking about very specific lives. That focus needs to
be maintained.
March, Minneapolis - Delsol Productions
Right now, Black activists like me are asking people of all colors to
listen to our demands and our needs.
Please hear us. Just as PETA wants the world to pay attention to the plight
of animals suffering in laboratories, on farms, and in roadside zoos and to
educate themselves on the plight of animals under human supremacy, the Black
Lives Matter movement wants people to learn as much as they can about
systemic racism.
This isn’t the time for “whataboutism.” This is a time to stand with our
brothers and sisters against the same cruel system that wouldn’t think twice
about throwing you facedown in the dirt at your own protest.
Fellow animal liberators, we know the power of protesting and demonstrating.
Use it now.
As a Black vegan, I don’t tiptoe between two identities—I embrace the
solidarity of these two worlds. Many others do, too, as African Americans
are the fastest-growing population of vegans in the country. Living vegan is
as much a lifesaver for animals as it is a political statement against an
unjust status quo.
I only ask that my fellow animal rights activists make their voices heard
and show solidarity with Black people now, for this is the moment to do so.
Everyone has a moral responsibly to stand against hate and unequivocal
violence, no matter who the victims may be. Your voice could very well save
my life.
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