Tag: Animal Rights

Boycott Namibia over seal culling, South Africa?

As is usually the case with single-species animal campaigns, this profoundly misses the point. While most South Africans are eating animal flesh from animals that have been treated no better, animal advocates in South Africa are calling for a tourism boycott against Namibia over seal culling. When, oh when, will we make the connection, and expand our moral concern to all animals, including so-called “food” animals.

Johannesburg – South Africans should boycott Namibian tourism and products because of the country’s seal culling practices, three animal rights groups said on Wednesday.
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Animal-rights-groups-Boycott-Namibia-20110615 

Dharma, nonviolence and vegansim

In a not-unexpected turn of events, I ended up in a back-and-forth with one of the many Gary Francione citing vegan advocates on twitter who seem hell bent on misappropriating every eastern religion they can find in order to claim that faith traditions thousands of years older than the modern animal rights movement inherently require veganism. I’d love it if it were true, but, of course, it isn’t, and all of the cherry-picking of the dharma in the world to try and make this claim won’t make it true. Things started here:

@wchanley There’s no moral justification for anyone, particularly Buddhists, to continue the violence of animal use. Veganism is the answer
http://twitter.com/#!/LiveVegan/status/82433912810385408

While I obviously have no issue with vegan advocacy, as an animal rights, social justice issue, I did take exception to LiveVegan’s characterization that there was some special vegan onus on Buddhists. I tried explaining that the monastic rules required that animals not be killed specifically for the consumption of monks and nuns, and that working as a butcher would be wrong livelihood, and that taken to its conclusion, dharma tradition could create a vegan future, as a result.

This seemed to fall on predictably deaf ears, as LiveVegan apparently googled for a few passages from some cherry-picked sutras that suited his/her taste and decided I was unaware that the Lankatavara Sutra among some other mahayana sutras criticize meat eating. But that’s the very point he/she was missing. Some mahayana sutras criticize meat eating; they do not imply or require veganism, and these sutras have not traditionally been used as a foundation for ethical veganism within Buddhist communities.

The problem, here, and it’s especially galling among GLF followers, is that folks don’t ever seem to know enough about the faith traditions they’re citing; some mahayana traditions encourage vegetarianism on some canon grounds, but they do not – as of yet – require veganism, no matter how much I’d like it if more people went vegan.

LiveVegan then decided to chuck his/her religious justification altogether, claiming that it was irrelevant what any religion had to say on the matter (which rather begs the question why single Buddhism out for special criticism in the first place). Trying to have it both ways instead of admitting you don’t actually know what you’re talking about is annoying, to be sure, but alas, unsurprising.

The whole exchange is on my Twitter feed if you’re interested, but the basic point is this: vegan advocates, do you really need to misappropriate Buddhism, Jainism or some other faith tradition in order to advocate veganism and animal rights? Are your arguments for animal rights not strong enough to stand on their own, without trying to claim that some religion you (very likely) don’t actually practice says things you want it to say (regardless of the facts) about veganism? Why eastern traditions in particular? Because Western religious chauvinism paints them as incense-waving, “exotic” pacifists?

Veganism as a moral position, and animal rights, as a social justice issue, are worthy enough to stand on their own merits. They don’t need your flawed claims about the dharma in order to be valid on their own.

Talk about a pointless “scientific” exercise…

In what is likely the very essence of needless duplication of effort, Iran’s fledgling space program plans to send primates into space to…what? Utterly duplicate the efforts of the US and Soviet space program more than a generation ago?

DUBAI: The reports that Iran is planning to send a monkey into space have left animal rights groups frustrated and angry. According to state television, the country’s top space official said after the launch of the Rassad-1 satellite that it would send the monkey in the near future.
http://bikyamasr.com/wordpress/?p=34961

Am I seriously missing something? “Activists march against overseas abattoir cruelty”

What am I missing? Why are animal activists in Sydney protesting abattoir practices overseas, while most folks in Australia eat flesh? Killing any animal for “food” is inherently a cruel act.

Up to 1000 animal rights activists have marched from Sydney’s Hyde Park to Parliament House, to protest against cruel slaughter practices at overseas abattoirs.

http://www.smh.com.au/environment/animals/activists-march-against-overseas-abattoir-cruelty-20110618-1g8q1.html#ixzz1Pj39sMla

University of Utah agrees to stop using shelter animals for experimentation.

Good job PETA! I’m often critical of PETA’s “stupid human tricks” that trivialize animal rights using nearly naked women or celebrities in many of their campaigns. It’s good to give them some credit where it’s due – and it’s good that the University of Utah is at least modifying some of its animal experimentation procedures (via The Peta Files):

“According to The Salt Lake Tribune, some U experiments have “completely halted” now that faculty members can no longer exploit animal shelters as a cheap and easy source of test subjects. The inability to obtain animals from shelters may have also helped prompt the U and the Primary Children’s Medical Center to end the use of cats for intubation training (which PETA had also vigorously protested) and to switch to infant-patient simulators.” 

http://www.peta.org/b/thepetafiles/archive/2011/03/09/victory-at-the-u-reaps-bigger-gains.aspx?c=pfs#comments 

Um. Utah? Why? UT HB210 Back before the Utah Senate

So, Utah’s back with their “humane” feral cat bill, now headed to the Utah Senate. Really? The Utah legislature hasn’t ever considered funding actually humane trap-neuter-release programs instead (via Friends of Animals)?

“Utah HB210, allowing the shooting of suspected feral animals with legal impunity, has been restored in full, and it has made it past the House and into the Senate. If it isn’t stopped, this odious piece of legislation will allow cat, dog, and pigeon shooting in any area of Utah where firearms can be discharged.” 

http://www.friendsofanimals.org/news/2011/march/return-of-the-feral-.html

Friends of Animals | Urgent Alert: Help the Bison Get Home

Please take action on this:
Friends of Animals | Urgent Alert: Help the Bison Get Home: “As you read this, a group of formerly free-living bison are trapped and await their fate at the hands of ranchers’ protectors in the U.S. government. Al Nash, spokesperson for Yellowstone National Park, has just told the Bozeman Daily Chronicle that the park will announce what will be done with some of these bison by the end of this week. [ See article. ]”

“Weekday Vegan” as a commitment to animal rights?

Over on www.thisdishisvegetarian.com I ran across a new-ish pseudo-vegan rationalization in this (I’m sure) well-intentioned piece by Elizah Leigh, in which she purports to show all she’s learned being a “weekday vegan.” This makes about as much sense as Mark Bittman’s “vegan before six” construct, which is to say none at all, but the thing that jumped out at me were Leigh’s stated reasons for her “vegan” transition: 

My motivation for test driving weekday veganism involves so much more than a concern for my own personal health and well-being. The first issue that weighs heavily on my mind is the factory farming industry’s utter lack of regard for the countless living creatures that are perceived as ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ commodities.

http://www.thisdishisvegetarian.com/2011/01/10-things-ive-learned-about-being.html

How this squares with being non-vegan on the weekends is anyone’s guess, but it still makes no sense at all. As Leigh herself allows, she’s only “test-driving” her own version of semi-veganism. This totally ignores the ethical position that underlies veganism itself. We have to oppose this if we’re ever to have any chance of communicating that ethical position itself. If veganism can be “test driven” (and part-time, at that) then it’s just another diet. The ethics don’t much matter, here. 
Think it through: would we applaud this construction on any other sort of social justice claim? Can one claim to be opposed to racism or sexism “part-time?” Can one claim that the treatment of animals weighs heavily on one’s conscience and then that moral concern can be discarded on a whim, when the almighty tastebuds win out, but hey, we’re limiting it to the weekends, so let’s all join hands and call this progress for animal rights…and make no mistake, Leigh would like folks to think at least part of her concern is, indeed, animal rights. 

I know that I am not presenting a model view of veganism, but as someone who is incredibly moved by health, environmental and animal rights issues, I want to make a sincere effort to change my lifestyle habits.

Then why not make a sincere effort? Does your need for milk chocolate or whatever your trigger food really is justify animal consumption so long as you tell yourself you’re making “progress” by limiting your consumption to Saturdays and Sundays? Are you really committed to the RIGHTS of nonhumans you exploit for your trivial tastes? Can you really rationally make this claim? 
Of course not.
Now then: if the folks at This Dish had called the piece “Weekend Vegetarianism” or something similar, there wouldn’t be much point in objecting. Given that “vegetarian” has become so diluted as to be meaningless, I’d have (regretfully, perhaps) left it be. But words matter. Meaning matters. An ethical consideration that animals are not ours to eat or wear was why Donald Watson coined the term vegan in the first place. Veganism is not a diet. It’s not about eating healthier, or living in a smaller ecological footprint or even reducing factory farming. It may incidentally include those things, but ultimately, veganism is a moral commitment that animals do not exist for us to exploit for food, clothing and trivial, easily avoidable human conveniences. Any claim to “part time” veganism removes this ethical consideration and makes veganism just another fad diet that one can try on for size when one wishes to lose some weight or “get healthy” or “live green” or other such ego-fulfilling cliches…but ultimately it simply means that the folks promoting this notion haven’t fully considered animal rights ethics, no matter how much they may claim to support those ethics. 

Ex-SeaWorld Trainers Expose Orca Abuse | PETA.org

Isn’t it about time we stopped pretending that Sea World and similar animal entertainment ventures were doing something good for “conservation” or “education?”

Ex-SeaWorld Trainers Expose Orca Abuse | PETA.org: Two former trainers at SeaWorld have released a report that includes firsthand information about the stress that killer whales endure in captivity—stress that the ex-trainers feel led to the deaths of at least two SeaWorld employees.

We see this time and time again. Animals in circuses turn and attack their “trainers.” Animals in marine “parks” like Sea World attack theirs. We are torturing these animals and depriving them of their natural lives for our entertainment – nothing more.