Animal Rights is Wrong by Loretta Baughan
It
always amazes me to see how many people fall prey to the slick photos
of puppies and kittens national animal rights groups use to solicit
donations. Too often, people who support these organizations are misled
into thinking they are actually helping animals or their local humane
societies. Despite having a name that suggests an active role in
overseeing or operating local humane societies, in reality the Humane
Society of the United States (HSUS) is little more than a $200-million
dollar lobbying organization tirelessly working to ramrod their
anti-animal, anti-people agenda into law.
On
occasions where cases of animal abuse or neglect become the focus of
media attention, HSUS jets into town to hog the spotlight while
soliciting donations from the unsuspecting public. Like a thief in the
night, HSUS packs up and exits - along with the public's donations
- as soon as the media's attention fades, leaving struggling,
underfunded local animal shelters and rescue groups bearing the
financial burden of care for the confiscated animals.
"The
Humane Society of the United States works with local Humane Societies
across the country. We don't control every local Humane Society in this
nation. These organizations strive to the greatest degree to provide
homes for animals and to encourage adoption, to spay and neuter
animals. And if a decision is made to euthanize, it is a failure of
society, not the local organizations who are striving to do their best."
--Wayne Pacelle, President and CEO The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) testimony at the Methamphetamine
Enforcement and Treatment Act of 2007, the Animal Fighting Prohibition
Enforcement Act of 2007, and the Preventing Harassment Through Outbound
Number Enforcement (Phone) Act of 2007 hearing before the
subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security; Committee of
the Judiciary in the House of Representatives, February 6, 2007, pg 104
"Primarily
they felt that the organization took on many issues purely for their
publicity value, regardless of the facts of the case; subtly
misrepresented itself in its fund-raising efforts by leading
contributors to believe they were donating to local humane societies
for animal rescue, when in fact these groups received no money from
HSUS; and frequently sought to gain credit for the work of smaller less
funded organizations."
--Dogs Best Friend by Mark Derr (2004), pg 257
It
doesn't help when the media interviews HSUS or PETA representatives
every time a news story related to animals comes along. Those involved
in animal rights groups are largely ignorant of animal husbandry
practices. You would be hard-pressed to find anyone associated with any
animal rights group who was raised on a farm or who ever raised a
litter of puppies or kittens. Yet, these people are viewed as "experts"
in all things animal?
Hardly. Instead of rushing to mouthpieces for
animal rights organizations who exaggerate non-existent "problems" and
demonize those who have dedicated their lives to their animals, the
public would be much better served if the media would turn to the true
"experts" who actually care deeply about animal welfare: legitimate
organizations that represent farmers, hunters, fishermen, ranchers and
dog breeders, to name a few.
In
order to understand the issue, one has to first grasp the difference
between "animal welfare" and "animal rights". Some animal rights
groups, seeking to appear less radical so as to gain members and
increase donations, will claim they are "animal welfare" organizations.
But the terms are not interchangeable. In fact, they are opposites.
"While
those who adopt the animal welfare position seek merely to reduce
animal suffering, supporters of animal rights aim to abolish it,
demanding not bigger cages and "humane treatment", but rather, empty
cages and total liberation. Animal welfare philosophy accepts the
property status of animals, but animal rights philosophy insists that
animals are subjects of their own life and no one's to own."
--Terrorists or Freedom Fighters?, Reflections on the Liberation of Animals by Steven Best and Anthony J. Nocella (2004), pg 26
People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the Humane Society of
the United States (HSUS) are two high profile animal rights groups.
While PETA is best known for their outlandish publicity stunts, HSUS is
often referred to as "PETA in suits". In recent years, HSUS has
attempted to distance themselves from the "animal rights" label in an
effort to appear mainstream so as to appeal to more donors. They often
refer to themselves as "animal advocates" or "animal protectionists".
So what does that mean?
"Animal
advocacy groups are, in a sense, attempting to interfere in the
relationship between property (the animals) and the property owner."
--Animals, Property, and the Law by Gary Lawrence Francione (1995), pg 81
"I
regard myself as an advocate of animal rights - as part of the animal
rights movement. That movement, as I conceive it, is committed to a
number of goals, including: the total abolition of the use of animals
in science; the total dissolution of commercial animal agriculture; the
total elimination of commercial and sport hunting and trapping."
--Tom Regan, known as the "father of animal rights", The Struggle for Animal Rights, published in Animal Rights by Andrew Linzey and Paul A.B. Clarke, pg. 176 (2004)
"Much
of the work of animal advocates is aimed not at research but at
hunting, trapping, animal farming, and the slaughter of animals for
food... However, a great deal of the currently much-expanded activity
of animal activists seeks not the humane treatment of animals but their
total "liberation" from all uses by human beings, including the wearing
of fur and leather, eating of meat and poultry, and keeping of pets."
--Morton M. Hunt, The New Know-nothings: The Political Foes of the Scientific Study of Human Nature (1999), pg 307
"But
antivivisectionists and animal protectionists have been a significant
part of that landscape as well, lobbying for the restraint or abolition
of animal use in research. Are they friend or foe to the veterinarian?
-What Animals Want: Expertise and Advocacy in Laboratory Animal Welfare Policy by Larry Carbone (2004), pg 125
Philosophically,
there is no difference between groups or individuals who identify
themselves as "animal rights" or "animal advocates" or "animal
protectionists" since they share a common belief that animals should
not be owned or used by people.
Let's
remove the mask and identify the Humane Society of the United States by
their actions, not their lip service. HSUS has demonstrated on numerous
occasions a complete intolerance for hunting, as evidenced by their
ongoing efforts to effect bans against hunting in various areas of the
country. They also seek to abolish other animal-related activities and uses, as well.
"In
recent years, HSUS has succeeded in helping enact laws that ban certain
especially cruel hunting practices. For example, it was able to end
such practices as bear baiting and hound hunting of bears, mountain
lions, bobcats, and lynx in the state of Washington; same-day airborne
shooting of wolves and other predators in Alaska; hound hunting of
bears and bobcats in Massachusetts; hunting of bears in Colorado with
bait and dogs, as well as bear hunting there in the spring and
summer..."
--Losing Paradise by Paul G. Irwin, Hunting - Sport or Slaughter? (2000), pg 83
"The
HSUS is now anti-circus, anti-rodeo, recommends eating less meat as the
first line of attack on the cruelty of factory farming, and encourages
the use of alternatives to animal testing. Would it be such a bad thing
if violent animal rights activity made the HSUS look very mainstream..."
--Terrorists or Freedom Fighters?, Reflections on the Liberation of Animals by Steven Best and Anthony J. Nocella (2004), pg 124
"By
contrast, animal rights advocates oppose any and all human "use" of
animals. They invoke the Kantian idea that human beings should be
treated as ends, not means - but they extend the idea to animals, so as
to challenge a wide range of current practices. These include the use
of animals in rodeos, circuses, zoos, agriculture, hunting and
scientific experimentation. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
and the Humane Society of the United States are committed to this basic
approach."
--Animal Rights: Current Debates and New Directions by Cass R. Sunstein and Martha Craven Nussbaum (2005), pg 5
The
whole premise behind animal rights is a belief that animal ownership is
the same as owning slaves and that their struggle to achieve rights
for animals is the moral equivalent of the civil rights or women's
suffrage movements. These radicals view those who own animals as
committing what they call "speciesism", an offense they claim is equal
to sexism or racism.
"...a central goal of the animal rights movement - eliminating the idea that animals are property..."
--Animal Rights: Current Debates and New Directions by Cass R. Sunstein and Martha Nussbaum (2005), pg 11
"Animal
slavery has a grip on our society that is entirely like the
stranglehold that African slavery had on the antebellum South."
--Norm Phelps, The Longest Struggle (2009), pg 280
Some
fanatic animal rights believers advocate for "non-human" animals to be
granted "personhood" and legal rights enabling individuals and groups
to take owners to court on behalf of their animal. In reality, it is
human life they wish to devalue, lowering us to a status equal with - or less than - animals.
"Animal
rights promotes the idea that people should have no more rights than
animals. As PETA cofounder and national director Ingrid Newkirk puts
it, "I don't believe human beings have the 'right to life'. That's a
supremacist perversion. A rat is a pig is a dog is a boy."
--AnimalScam by Kathleen Marquardt, Herbert M. Levine and Mark LaRochelle, pg. 5 (1993)
"A
chimpanzee, dog, or pig, for instance, will have a higher degree of
self-awareness and a greater capacity for meaningful relations with
others than a severely retarded infant or someone in a state of
advanced senility. So if we base the right to life on these
characteristics we must grant these animals a right to life as good as,
or better than, such retarded or senile humans."
--quoting Peter Singer in The Animal Rights, Environmental Ethics Debate by Eugene C. Hargrove (1992), pg 20
"The
animal rights movement would allow people no more rights than rats or
cockroaches. The real agenda of this movement is not to give rights to
animals, but to take rights from people - to dictate our food,
clothing, work, recreation, and whether we will discover new medicines
or die. Animal rights pose an extraordinary threat to our health,
freedom, and even our lives."
--AnimalScam by Kathleen Marquardt, Herbert M. Levine and Mark LaRochelle (1993), pg 6
The concept and doctrine of "animal rights" is far from mainstream. It is a radical belief. It is un-American. It is dangerous.
You don't have to take my word for it because I have included a
multitude of published quotes right from the horses' mouths... the
leaders and founders of the animal rights movement, as well as a few
well-versed experts. Their words are disturbing and, at the same time,
revealing. Please read them carefully. These people are committed to
their cause, are extremely well-funded and have well-established
connections in all levels of government. Their words should be a
wake-up call for those who support any animal rights organization -
financially or otherwise.
"If
we are serious about animal rights, we have a responsibility to stop
bringing them into existence for our purposes. We would stop bringing
all domestic animals into existence for human purposes."
--Gary L. Francione, Professor of Law, Rutgers University School of
Law, when asked if he supports the use of dogs to assist the blind and
disabled in An Interview with Professor Gary L. Francione on the State of the U.S. Animal Rights Movement, Friends of Animals, published on The Animal Spirit website.
Our
"one nation, under God, with liberty and justice for all" is quickly
becoming a land of intolerance as these and other special interest
groups seek to gain the power of the law to advance their fanatic
agendas at the expense of liberty and justice. These radical animal
rights groups believe that they should dictate to the rest of us how to
live; what we can and can't do.
Their demented goal is to create an
utopian society where people cannot eat meat, eggs or dairy... cannot
wear leather, fur or wool... cannot enjoy aquariums, zoos, circuses,
rodeos, dog or horse races, field trials, hunt tests or dog shows...
cannot hunt, trap or fish... cannot own, use or breed any animals...
where advances in medicine are stiffled and a place where guide dogs
for the blind and service animals for the disabled are forbidden.
These animal rightists have no respect for other peoples' freedom to
decide these things for themselves... no respect for the US
Constitution. Just intolerance. That's not the America I believe in and that our founding fathers sacrificed so much to establish and preserve.
Tell everyone you know that animal rights is wrong.