I want to say that mercy, as a feeling, an attitude, and a principle is in my view indispensable to a truly ethical human life. What is worse than a merciless person, a person with no mercy? If the quality of mercy were honestly valued and practiced, then we might not need to codify our Rights.
Thoughts inspired by "Foul-Mouthed Veganism" By Roger Yates:
“All I hear now are foul-mouthed vegans using the dread c-word.
Cruelty this, cruelty that, cruelty the other. I’m heartily sick of
the damn word! This welfarist language is now largely dominant in
the vegan movement.”
– Roger Yates
Roger Yates makes good points, as when he says: “The dominant view
about eating other animals, for example, is that, while consuming
them is not a moral issue, being cruel to them is.”
This statement sums up his argument and the dire situation very
well.
I totally support the philosophy of Animal Rights, morally and
legally. To me “rights” means that others have moral claims
on us, based on their nature and evolution as sentient
beings. As Matthew Scully writes in Dominion: The Power of Man,
the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy, on p. 310,
“the moral claims of other creatures are facts about those
creatures, regardless of when or where or whether it pleases us to
recognize them.” Yet a problem with the idea of “rights,” for those
who question it, is a lack of foundation in the natural world.
Western societies since the 18th-century Enlightenment have
maintained that we as individuals have “rights,” but on what
foundation do these human “rights” stand?
Belief in human “rights” appears to rest on the bare fact that we
are human. It is not about sentience, but about the fact that we are
we, and suppose ourselves superior to all else. This is an arbitrary
conceit since Nature does not regard humans as having “rights” any
more that it regards lizards and chickens as having them. We simply
define ourselves as beings with “rights,” although not all societies
subscribe to the idea of individual “rights” for ordinary citizens.
Regarding nonhuman animals, I think it will be almost impossible to
persuade most people that other species have a “right” not to be
exploited by us. Some people point to Nature, where prey animals do
not have the “right” to be spared being hunted and eaten by
predators. I think it most likely that the only argument that could
possibly resonate with most people is that once we have inexpensive,
comparable, readily accessible substitutes for animal products and
exploitation, we no longer have an excuse to use animals.
Matthew Scully in Dominion writes that “When we call
something a ‘necessary evil,’ something requiring the suffering or
death of a fellow creature, the evil is real and it had better be
necessary” (p, 310). Once we no longer “need,” and understand that
we do not need, to use animals for our benefit, but choose to harm
them anyway, “necessary” evil becomes just Evil.
That said, I do not agree that the call for mercy and compassion and
ending cruelty are wrong, whatsoever. It is when, as Yates
indicates, “ending cruelty,” “showing mercy” and the like are
preferred as a substitute for according respect to
other animals in the form of enforceable legal rights, that the
rhetoric of “cruelty” and “mercy” can sound hollow. This rhetoric,
devoid of a commitment to animal rights, is very patronizing toward
our animal victims. At the same time, legal rights for animals that
do not include genuine empathy for them can be easily set aside.
Finally I want to say that mercy, as a feeling, an attitude, and a
principle is in my view indispensable to a truly ethical human life.
What is worse than a merciless person, a person with no mercy? If
the quality of mercy were honestly valued and practiced, then we
might not need to codify our Rights. But since this is not the case,
the argument made by some, for example, that an Ethic of Care rather
than Animal Rights should be the preferred philosophy toward
nonhuman animals, is deficient. How many of us are ready to
surrender our legal rights for reliance solely on human kindness and
care? Although our legally guaranteed rights can be violated or
turned into something destructive, we need legal rights to protect
ourselves against the whims and prejudices of those from whom “care”
cannot be depended upon.
I certainly do not want to be at the mercy of “care” without a
backup of legal rights. The evidence for the need for legal backup
is shown by how badly our species treats nonhuman animals, and how
humans with power mistreat vulnerable people when they can get away
with it. There is no reason for the issue to be Rights versus
Care/Mercy/Compassion. All are needed and are compatible, not
opposed to one another. But a legal mandate is more reliable than a
person’s fluid emotions, and a legal mandate, if it cannot prevent
prejudice (an attitude), can prevent discrimination (a behavior). In
addition, once an ethical idea is encoded into law, it can alter
both attitude and behavior.