"The question is not, can they reason? nor,
can they talk? but, can
they suffer?"
Jeremy Bentham
Over the last few years, the public has gradually become
aware of the existence of a new cause: animal liberation. Most people first
heard of the movement through newspaper articles, often of the "what on earth
will they come up with next?" variety. Then there were marches and
demonstrations against factory farming, animal experimentation or the Canadian
seal slaughter; all brought to an audience of millions by the TV cameras.
Finally there have been the illegal acts: slogans daubed on fur shops,
laboratories broken into and animals rescued. What are the ideas behind the
animal liberation movement, and where is it heading? In this essay I shall try
to answer these questions.
Let us start with some history, so that we can get some
perspective on the animal liberation movement. Concern for animal suffering
can be found in Hindu thought, and the Buddhist idea of compassion is a
universal one, extending to animals as well as humans; but nothing similar is
to be found in our Western traditions. There are a few laws indicating some
awareness of animal welfare in the Old Testament, but nothing at all in the
New, nor in mainstream Christianity for its first eighteen hundred years.
Paul scornfully rejected the thought that God might care
about the welfare of oxen, and the incident of the Gadarene swine, in which
Jesus is described as sending devils into a herd of pigs and making them drown
themselves in the sea, is explained by Augustine as intended to teach us that
we have no duties toward animals. This interpretation was accepted by Thomas
Aquinas, who stated that the only possible objection to cruelty to animals was
that it might lead to cruelty to humans - according to Aquinas there was
nothing wrong in itself with making animals suffer. This became the
official view of the Roman Catholic Church to such good - or bad - effect that
as late as the middle of the nineteenth century, Pope Pius IX refused
permission for the founding of a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals in Rome, on the ground that to grant permission would imply that human
beings have duties to the lower creatures.
Even in England, which has a reputation for being dotty about
animals, the first efforts to obtain legal protection for members of other
species were made only 180 years ago. They were greeted with derision. The
Times was so lacking in appreciation of the idea that the suffering of
animals ought to he prevented, that it attacked proposed legislation that
would stop the "sport" of bull-baiting. Said that august newspaper: "Whatever
meddles with the private personal disposition of man's time or property is
tyranny." Animals, clearly, were just property.
That was in 1800, and that bill was defeated. It took another
twenty years to get the first anti-cruelty law onto the British statute-books.
To give any consideration at all to the interest of animals was a significant
step beyond the idea that the boundary of our species is also the boundary of
morality. Yet the step was a restricted one, because it did not challenge our
right to make whatever use we choose of other species. Only cruelty -
causing pain when there was no reason for doing so, merely sheer sadism or
callous indifference - was prohibited. The farmers who deprive their pigs of
room to move does not offend against this concept of cruelty, for they are
only doing what they think necessary to producing bacon. Similarly the
scientists who poison a hundred rats in order to find the lethal dose of some
new flavouring agent for toothpaste are not cruel - only concerned to follow
the accepted procedures for testing for the safety of new products.
The nineteenth century anti-cruelty movement was built on the
assumption that the interests of nonhuman animals deserve protection only when
serious human interests are not at stake. Animals remained very clearly "lower
creatures"; human beings were quite distinct from, and infinitely far above,
all forms of animal life. Should our interests conflict with theirs, there
could be no doubt about whose interests must be sacrificed: in all cases, it
would be the interests of the animals that had to yield.
The significance of the new animal liberation movement is its
challenge to this assumption. Animal liberationists have dared to question the
right of our species to assume that human interests must always prevail. They
have sought - absurd as it must sound as first - to extend such notions as
equality and rights to nonhuman animals.
The case for animal equality
How plausible is this extension? Is it really possible to
take seriously the slogan of Orwell's Animal Farm: "All Animals are
Equal"? The animal liberationists contend that it is; but in order to avoid
hopelessly misunderstanding what they mean by this, we need to digress for a
moment, to discuss the general ideal of equality.
It will be helpful to begin with the more familiar claim that
all human beings are equal. When we say that all human beings, whatever their
race, creed or sex are equal, what is it that we are asserting? Those who wish
to defend a hierarchical, inegalitarian society have often pointed out that by
whatever test we choose, it simply is not true that all humans are equal. Like
it or not, we must face the fact that humans come in different shapes and
sizes; they come with differing moral capacities, differing intellectual
abilities, differing amounts of benevolent feeling and sensitivity to the
needs of others, differing abilities to communicate effectively, and different
capacities to experience pleasure and pain. In short, if the demand for
equality were based on the actual equality of all human beings, we would have
to stop demanding equality. It would be an unjustifiable demand.
Fortunately the case for upholding the equality of human
beings does not depend on equality of intelligence, moral capacity, physical
strength, or any other matters of fact of this kind. Equality is a moral
ideal, not a simple assertion of fact. There is no logically compelling reason
for assuming that a factual difference in ability between two people justifies
any difference in the amount of consideration we give to satisfying their
needs and interests. The principle of equality of human beings is not a
description of an alleged actual equality: it is a prescription of how we
should treat human beings.
Jeremy Bentham incorporated the essential basis or moral
equality into his utilitarian system of ethics in the formula: "Each to count
for one and none for more than one". In other words, the interests of every
being affected by an action are to be taken into account and given the same
weight as the like interests of any other being.
It is an implication of this principle of equality that our
concern for others ought not to depend on what they are like, or what
abilities they possess - although precisely what this concern requires us to
do may vary according to the characteristics of those affected by what we do.
It is on this basis that the case against racism and the case against sexism
must both ultimately rest; and it is in accordance with this principle that
speciesism is also to be condemned. If possessing a higher degree of
intelligence does not entitle one human being to use another for its own ends,
how can it entitle human beings to exploit nonhuman beings?
Many philosophers have proposed the
principle of equal consideration of interests in some form or other, as a
basic moral principle; but not many of them have recognised that this
principle applies to members of other species as well as to our own. Bentham
was one of the few who did realise this. In a forward-looking passage, written
at a time when black slaves in the British dominions were still being treated
much as we now treat nonhuman animals, Bentham wrote:
"the day may come when the rest of the animal creation may
acquire those rights which never could have been withholden from them but by
the hand of tyranny. The French have already discovered that the blackness
of the skin is no reason why a human being should be abandoned without
redress to the caprice of a tormentor. It may one day come to be recognised
that the number of the legs, the villosity of the skin, or the termination
of the os sacrum, are reasons equally insufficient for abandoning a
sensitive being to the same fate. What else is it that should trace the
insuperable line? It is the faculty of reason, or perhaps the faculty of
discourse? But a full-grown horse or dog is beyond comparison a more
rational, as well as a more conversable animal, than an infant of a day, or
a week, or even a month, old. But suppose they were otherwise, what would it
avail? the question is not, Can they reason? nor Can they talk but, Can they
suffer?"
In this passage Bentham points to the capacity for suffering
as the vital characteristic that gives a being the right to equal
consideration. The capacity for suffering - or more strictly, for suffering
and/or enjoyment of happiness - is not just another characteristic like the
capacity for language, or for higher mathematics. Bentham is not saying that
those who try to mark "the insuperable line" that determines whether the
interests of a being should be considered happen to have selected the wrong
characteristic. The capacity for suffering and enjoying things is a
pre-requisite for having interests at all, a condition that must be satisfied
before we can speak of interests in any meaningful way. It would he nonsense
to say that it was not in the interests of a stone to be kicked along the road
by a child. A stone does not have interests because it cannot suffer. Nothing
that we can do to it could possibly make any difference to its welfare. A
mouse, on the other hand, does have an interest in not being tormented,
because it will suffer if it is.
If a being suffers, there can be no moral justification for
refusing to take that suffering into consideration. No matter what the nature
of the being, the principle of equality requires that its suffering be counted
equally with the like suffering - in so far as rough comparisons can be made -
of any other being. If a being is not capable of suffering, or of experiencing
enjoyment or happiness, there is nothing to be taken into account. This is why
the limit of sentience (using the term as a convenient, if not strictly
accurate, shorthand for the capacity to suffer or experience enjoyment or
happiness) is the only defensible boundary of concern for the interests of
others. To mark this boundary by some characteristic like intelligence or
rationality would be to mark it in an arbitrary way. Why not choose some other
characteristic, like skin colour?
Racists violate the principle of equality by giving greater
weight to the interests of members of their own race, when there is a clash
between their interests and the interests of those of another race. Similarly
speciesists allow the interests of their own species to override the greater
interests of members of other species.
Equal consideration of interests
If the case for animal equality is sound, what follows from
it? It does not follow, of course, that animals ought to have all of the
rights that we think humans ought to have - including, for instance, the right
to vote. It is equality of consideration of interests, not equality of rights,
that the case for animal equality seeks to establish. But what exactly does
this mean, in practical terms? It needs to be spelled out a little.
If I give a horse a hard slap across its rump with my open
hand, the horse may start, but presumably feels little pain. Its skin is thick
enough to protect it against a mere slap. If I slap a baby in the same way,
however, the baby will cry and presumably does feel pain, for its skin is more
sensitive. So it is worse to slap a baby than a horse, if both slaps are
administered with equal force. But there must be some kind of blow - I don't
know exactly what it would be, but perhaps a blow with a heavy stick - that
would cause the horse as much pain as we cause a baby by slapping it with our
hand. That is what I mean by the same amount of pain; and if we consider it
wrong to inflict that much pain on a baby for no good reason then we must,
unless we are speciesists, consider it equally wrong to inflict the same
amount of pain on a horse for no good reason.
There are other differences between humans and animals that
cause other complications. Normal adult human beings have mental capacities
which will, in certain circumstances, lead them to suffer more than animals
would in the same circumstances. If, for instance, we decided to perform
extremely painful or lethal scientific experiments on normal adult humans,
kidnapped at random from public parks for this purpose, every adult who
entered a park would become fearful that he or she would be kidnapped. The
resultant terror would be a form of suffering additional to the pain of the
experiment.
The same experiments performed on nonhuman animals would
cause less suffering since the animals would not have the anticipatory dread
of being kidnapped and experimented upon. This does not mean, of course, that
it would be right to perform the experiment on animals, but only that
there is a reason, which is not speciesist, for preferring to use
animals rather than normal adult humans, if the experiment is to be done at
all. It should be noted, however that this same argument gives us a reason for
preferring to use human infants - orphans perhaps - or retarded human beings
for experiments, rather than adults, since infants and retarded human beings
would also have no idea of what was going to happen to them.
So far as this argument is concerned nonhuman animals and
infants and retarded human beings are in the same category; and if we use this
argument to justify experiments on non human animals we have to ask ourselves
whether we are also prepared to allow experiments on human infants and
retarded adults; and if we make a distinction between animals and these
humans, on what basis can we do it, other than a bare-faced - and morally
indefensible - preference for members of our own species?
There are many areas in which the superior mental powers of
normal adult human beings make a difference: anticipation, more detailed
memory, greater knowledge of what is happening, and so on. Yet these
differences do not all point to greater suffering on the part of the normal
human being. Sometimes animals may suffer more because of their more limited
understanding. If, for instance, we are taking prisoners in wartime we can
explain to them that while they must submit to capture, search and confinement
they will not otherwise be harmed and will be set free at the conclusion of
hostilities. If we capture a wild animal, however, we cannot explain that we
are not threatening its life. A wild animal cannot distinguish an attempt to
overpower and confine from an attempt to kill; the one causes as much terror
as the other.
It may be objected that comparisons of sufferings of
different species are impossible to make, and that for this reason when the
interests of animals and human beings clash the principle of equality gives no
guidance. It is probably true that comparisons of suffering between members of
different species cannot be made precisely, but precision is not essential.
Even if we were to prevent the infliction of suffering on animals only when it
is quite certain that the interests of human beings will not be affected, we
would be forced to make radical changes in our treatment of animals that would
involve our diet, the farming methods we use, experimental procedures in many
fields of science, our approach to wildlife and to hunting, trapping and the
wearing of furs, and areas of entertainment like circuses, rodeos, and zoos.
As a result a vast amount of suffering would be avoided.
Killing
So far I have said a lot about the infliction of suffering on
animals, but nothing about killing them. This omission has been deliberate.
The application of the principle of equality to the infliction of suffering
is, in theory at least, fairly straightforward. Pain and suffering are bad and
should he prevented or minimised, irrespective of the race, sex, or species of
the being that suffers. How bad a pain is depends on how intense it is and how
long it lasts, but pains of the same magnitude are equally bad regardless of
species.
While self-awareness, intelligence, the capacity for
meaningful relations with others, and so on are not relevant to the question
of inflicting pain - since pain is pain, whatever other capacities, beyond the
capacity to feel pain, the being may have - these capacities may be relevant
to the question of taking life. It is not arbitrary to hold that the life of a
self-aware being, capable of abstract thought, of planning for the future, of
complex acts of communication, and so on, is more valuable than the life of a
being without these capacities.
To see the difference between the issues of inflicting pain
and taking life, consider how we would choose within our own species. If we
had to choose to save the life of the normal human being or a mentally
defective human being, we would probably choose to save the life of the normal
one; but if we had to choose between preventing pain in the normal human being
or in the mentally defective - imagine that both have received painful but
superficial injuries, and we only have enough painkiller for one of them - it
is not nearly so clear how we ought to choose. The same is true when we
consider other species. The evil of pain is, in itself, unaffected by the
other characteristics of the being that feels the pain; the value of life is
affected by these other characteristics.
Normally this will mean that if we have to choose between the
life of a human being and the life of another animal we should choose to save
the life of the human being; but there may be special cases in which the
reverse holds true, because the human being in question does not have the
capacities of a normal human being. So this view is not speciesist, although
it may appear to be at first glance.
The preference, in normal cases, for saving a human life over
the life of an animal when a choice has to be made is a preference
based on the characteristics that normal humans being have and not on the mere
fact that they are members of our own species. This is why when we consider
members of our own species who lack the characteristics of normal human beings
we can no longer say that their lives are always to be preferred to those of
other animals. In general, though, the question of when it is wrong to kill
(painlessly) an animal is one to which we need give no precise answer. As long
as we remember that we should give the same respect to the lives of animals as
we give to the lives of those human beings at a similar mental level we shall
not go far wrong.
Goals of the movement
Now that we have looked at the philosophy behind the animal
liberation movement, we can turn to the movement's aims. What is animal
liberation trying to achieve?
The aims of the movement can be summed up in one sentence: to
end the present speciesist bias against taking seriously the interests of
nonhuman animals. But where do we begin? This is so broad a goal that it is
necessary to have more specific aims.
The traditional animal welfare organisations concentrate on
trying to stop cruelty to animals of those species to which we most easily
relate. Dogs, cats and horses are high on their lists, because we keep these
animals as pets or companions. Next come those wild animals that we find
attractive especially baby seals, with their big brown eyes and soft white
coats, the mysterious whales and the playful dolphins. Animal Liberationists
are also, of course, opposed to the suffering and killing that is needlessly
inflicted on dogs, cats, horses, seals, whales, dolphins and all other
animals. They do not, however, think that how appealing an animal is to us has
anything to do with the wrongness of making it suffer. Instead they look to
the severity of the suffering, and the numbers of animals involved.
This means that the animal liberation movement is more likely
to demonstrate on behalf of laboratory rats, or factory-farmed hens, than for
dogs or cats that are being mistreated by their owners. After all, there are
some 45 million rats and mice used in laboratories each year in the
United States alone; and in the same country, every year, over 3
billion chickens get raised in factory farms, stuffed into crates on
the backs of trucks, and then hung upside-down on the conveyor belt that takes
them to slaughter. The amount of suffering involved in such institutionalised
speciesism dwarfs the harm done to dogs and cats by thoughtless or even cruel
pet owners.
So while animal liberation groups oppose all exploitation of
animals, they have concentrated on animal experimentation and the use of
animals for food. Let us look at these two areas a little more closely.
Experimental animals - tools for research
Speciesism can be seen in the widespread practice of
experimenting on other species in order to see if certain substances are safe
for human beings, or to test some psychological theory about the effects of
severe punishment on learning, or to try out various new compounds just in
case something turns up. People sometimes think that all this experimentation
is for vital medical purposes, and so will reduce suffering overall. This
comfortable belief is very wide of the mark.
Here is one common test carried out by cosmetic companies
like Revlon, Avon and Bristol-Myers on many substances they plan to put into
their products. It is called the Draize Test, after the man who developed it.
You start with six albino rabbits. Holding each animal firmly, you pull the
lower lid away from one eyeball so that it forms a small cup. Into this cup
you drip 100 millilitres of whatever it is you want to test. You hold the
rabbit's eyelids closed for one second and then let it go. A day later you
come back and see if the lids are swollen, the iris inflamed, the cornea
ulcerated, the rabbit blinded in that eye.
This is a standard test, performed without anaesthetic on
virtually every substance sold that might get into someone's eye. Other
commercial tests include the LD 50 - the "LD" stands for "Lethal Dose" and the
"50" refers to the percentage of animals for which the dose is to be made
lethal. In other words in an LD 50 test, you take a sample of animals - rats,
mice, dogs or whatever - and feed them concentrated amounts of the substance
you are testing, until you have managed to poison half of them to death. Then
you have found out the dose that is lethal for 50 per cent of your sample.
This is known as the "LD50 value" and is supposed to give some indication of
how dangerous the substance is for humans. Apart from the misery it causes for
the animals, all of which usually get very ill, and half of which of course
get so ill that they die, the test is not at all reliable as a guide to human
safety. There are too many variations between the species. Thalidomide, to
take one notorious example, does not produce deformities in many animal
species.
These are standard tests in commercial laboratories. In the
universities there are also many experiments which could not be considered
justified by anyone who takes seriously the interests of nonhuman animals. In
psychology departments experimenters devise endless variations and repetitions
of experiments that were of little value in the first place. Animals will be
punished with electric shock, or reared in isolation to see how neurotic this
makes them.
Animals as food
For the great majority of human beings, especially in urban,
industrialised societies, the most direct form of contact with members of
other species is at meal-times; we eat them. In doing so we treat them purely
as means to our ends. We regard their life and well-being as subordinate to
our taste for a particular kind of dish. I say "taste" deliberately - this is
purely a matter of pleasing our palate. There can be no defence of eating
flesh in terms of satisfying nutritional needs, since it has been established
beyond doubt that we could satisfy our need for protein and other essential
nutrients far more efficiently with a diet that replaced animal flesh by
high-protein vegetable products.
It is not merely the act of killing that indicates what we
are ready to do to other species in order to gratify our tastes. The suffering
we inflict on the animals while they are alive is perhaps an even clearer
indication of our speciesism than the fact that we are prepared to kill them.
In order to have meat on the table at a price that people can afford, our
society tolerates methods of meat production that confine sentient animals in
cramped, unsuitable conditions for the entire durations of their lives.
Animals are treated like machines that convert fodder into flesh, and any
innovation that results in a higher "conversion ratio" is liable to be
adopted.
As one authority on the subject has said, "cruelty is
acknowledged only when profitability ceases". So hens are crowded three of
four to a cage with a floor area of sixteen inches by eighteen inches, or less
than the size of a single page of a daily newspaper. The cages have wire
floors, since this reduces cleaning costs; though wire is unsuitable for the
hens' feet; the floors slope, since this makes the eggs roll down for easy
collection, although this makes it difficult for the hens to rest comfortably.
In these conditions all the birds' natural instincts are thwarted: they cannot
stretch their wings fully, walk freely, dust-bathe, scratch the ground or
build a nest. Although they have never known other conditions, observers have
noticed that the birds vainly try to perform these actions. Frustrated at
their inability to do so, they often develop what farmers call "vices" and
peck each other to death. To prevent this, the beaks of young birds are cut
off.
This kind of treatment is not limited to poultry. Pigs are
now also being reared in stalls inside sheds. These animals are comparable to
dogs in intelligence, and need a varied, stimulating environment if they are
not to suffer from stress and boredom. Anyone who kept a dog in the way in
which pigs are frequently kept would be liable to prosecution, but because our
interest in exploiting pigs is greater than our interest in exploiting dogs,
we object to cruelty to dogs while consuming the produce of cruelty to pigs.
Animal liberation today
In the past few years the animal liberation movement has made
unprecedented gains. Whereas a few years ago the public in most developed
countries are largely unaware of the nature of modern intensive animal
rearing, now in Britain, in West Germany, in Scandanavia, in the Netherlands
and in Australia, a large body of informed opinion is opposed to the
confinement of laying hens in small wire cages, and of pigs and veal calves in
stalls so small they cannot walk a single step or even turn around. In Britain
a House of Commons Agriculture Committee has recommended that cages for laying
hens be phased out. Switzerland has gone one better, actually passing
legislation which will get rid of the cages by 1992. A West German court
pronounced the cage system contrary to the country's anti-cruelty legislation
- and although the government found a way of rendering the court's verdict
ineffective, the West German state of Hesse announced that it would follow
Switzerland's example and begin to phase the cages out.
Perhaps the most positive step forward for British farm
animals has been in the worst of all forms of factory farming, the so called
"white veal trade". Veal calves were standardly kept in darkness for 22 hours
a day, in individual stalls too small for them to turn around. They had no
straw to lie on - for fear that by chewing it they would cause their flesh to
lose its pale softness - and were fed on a diet deliberately made deficient in
iron, so that the flesh would remain pale and fetch the highest possible price
in the gourmet restaurant trade. A campaign against the trade led to a
widespread consumer boycott; as a result, Britain's largest veal producer
conceded the need for change, and moved its calves out of their bare, wooded,
five feet by two feet, stalls into group pens with room to move and straw for
bedding.
The other major area of concern to the animal liberation
movement, because of the numbers of animals and the amount of suffering
involved, is animal experimentation. Here too there have been important gains,
although in contrast to the situation with factory farming, these have
occurred mostly in the United States. The first success came in 1976, in a
campaign against the American Museum of Natural History. The museum was
selected as a target because it was conducting a particularly pointless series
of experiments which involved mutilating cats to investigate the effect this
had on their sex lives. In June 1976 animal liberation activists began
picketing the museum, writing letters, advertising and gathering support. They
kept it up until, in December 1977, it was announced that the experiments
would no longer be funded.
This victory may have saved no more than sixty cats from
painful experimentation, but it had shown that a well-planned, well-run
campaign can prevent scientists doing as they please with laboratory animals.
Henry Spira, the New York ex-merchant seaman, ex-civil rights activist who had
led the campaign against the museum, used the victory as a stepping stone to
bigger campaigns. He now runs two coalitions of animal groups, focusing on the
rabbit-blinding Draize eye test and on the LD50, a crude, fifty-year old
toxicity test designed to find the Lethal Dose for 50% of a sample of animals.
Together these tests inflict suffering and distress on more than five million
animals yearly in the United States alone.
Already the coalitions have begun to reduce both the number
of animals used, and the severity of their suffering. US government agencies
have responded to the campaign against the Draize test by moving to curb some
of the most blatant cruelties. They declared that substances known to be
caustic irritants, such as lye, ammonia and oven cleaners, need not be
re-tested on the eyes of conscious rabbits. If this seems too obvious to need
saying by a government agency, that merely indicates how bad things were until
the campaign began. The agencies have also reduced by one-half to one-third
the suggested number of rabbits needed per test for other products. Two major
companies, Procter and Gamble and Smith, Kline and French have released
programs for improving their toxicology tests which should involve
substantially less suffering for animals. Another company, Avon, reported a
decline of 33% in the number of animals it uses.
In another recent step forward, the United States Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) has announced that it does not require the LD 50. At
a stroke, corporations developing new products have been deprived of their
standard excuse for using the LD50 - the claim that the FDA forces them to do
the test if the products are to he released onto the American market.
Other dramatic successes came about through the patient work
of individual activists. In one celebrated case Alex Pacheco volunteered for
work in the laboratory of a Dr. Edward Taub. Pacheco found that Taub's work
involved severing the nerve connections in the arms of monkeys, and then
seeing to what extent they could recover the use of their limbs. Moreover the
conditions in the laboratory were filthy, and when the monkeys inflicted
wounds on themselves, they were not given veterinary attention. Patiently
Pacheco gathered his evidence, and then he went to the police. Taub was
convicted of cruelty, the first American experimenter ever to be found guilty
of this offence. The conviction was later reversed on a technicality relating
to the jurisdiction of state law when federal government grants were involved;
but Taub lost a sizable government grant, and the public image of animal
experimentation was badly dented.
That public image was to suffer even worse damage in 1984-5
when members of the Animal Liberation Front broke into a head injury research
laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia. At the
laboratory, Dr. Thomas Gennarelli specialised in inflicting head injuries on
baboons. The animal liberationists did not release any of the baboons, but
they took several hours of videotapes, made by the experimenters themselves.
When segments of these tapes were shown on national television they caused a
horrified reaction. They showed the experimenters joking as they handled the
baboons roughly, calling them "sucker" and using other mocking language. The
tapes also made it plain that, contrary to Gennarelli's claims, the baboons
were not properly anaesthetised when the head injuries were inflicted. After
much protest, a sit-in at the offices of the National Institutes of Health,
the government body which had funded the experiments, led to a dramatic
victory: the United States Secretary for Health and Human Services announced
that there was evidence of "material failure" to comply with guidelines for
the use of animals, and funding to the laboratory was suspended.
The Future of Animal Liberation
Those who live from exploiting animals are now on the
defensive. The research community is especially alarmed. Many laboratories
have increased their security arrangements, but this is a costly business, and
money spent on fences and guards is presumably not then available for research
- which is just what the animal liberation activists want. To guard every
factory farm would be even more expensive. No wonder that some of those who
experiment on animals, or raise them for food, hope that animal liberation
will just prove to be a passing fad.
That hope is bound to be disappointed. The animal liberation
movement is here to stay. It has been building steadily now for more than a
decade. There is wide public support for the view that we are not justified in
treating animals as mere things to be used for whatever purposes we find
convenient, whether it be the entertainment of the hunt, or as a laboratory
tool for the testing of some new food colouring.
But there is still the question of the course the movement
will take. Within the animal liberation movement, some forms of direct action
have widespread support. Provided there is no violence against any animal,
human or nonhuman, many activists believe that releasing animals from
situations in which they are wrongly made to suffer, and finding good homes
for them, is justified. They liken it to the illegal underground railroad
which assisted black slaves to make their way to freedom; it is, they say, the
only possible means of helping the victims of oppression.
In the worst cases of indefensible experiments, this argument
is surely correct; but there is another question that should be asked by
everyone interested not only in the immediate release of ten, or fifty, or a
hundred animals, but in the prospects of a change that affects millions of
animals. Is direct action effective as a tactic? Does it simply polarize the
debate and harden the opposition to reform? So far, one would have to say, the
publicity gained - and the evident public sympathy with the animals released -
has done the movement more good than harm. This is, in large part, because the
targets of these operations have been so well selected that the
experimentation revealed is particularly difficult to defend.
Now there are signs that this crucial matter of selecting
only the most blatantly indefensible targets is being neglected as the
groundswell of militant activity increases. Some activists are even going
beyond actions directed at releasing animals or documenting cruelty. In 1982 a
group calling itself the "Animal Rights Militia" sent letter-bombs to Margaret
Thatcher. The group had never been heard of before, has never been heard of
since, and may not have been a genuine animal rights organization at all. But
the "Hunt Retribution Squad", an offshoot of the highly successful Hunt
Saboteurs Association, is undoubtedly real. To disrupt a hunt so as to make it
possible for the intended victim to escape is one thing; to seek "retribution"
on the benighted hunters is another thing altogether, and morally far more
dubious. (If we consider the unfortunate social background and childhood
experiences of most hunters, their atrocious behaviour becomes readily
explicable, and more a matter for pity than retribution.)
I do not believe that illegal actions are always morally
wrong. There are circumstances in which, even in a democracy, it is morally
right to disobey the law; and the issue of animal liberation provides good
examples of such circumstances. If the democratic process is not functioning
properly; if repeated opinion polls confirm that an overwhelming majority
opposes many types of experimentation, and yet the Government takes no
effective action to stop them; if the public is kept largely unaware of what
is happening in factory farms and laboratories - then illegal actions may be
the only available avenue for assisting animals and obtaining evidence about
what is happening.
My concern is not with breaking the law, as such. It is with
the prospect of the confrontation becoming violent, and leading to a climate
of polarization in which reasoning becomes impossible and the animals
themselves end up being the victims. Polarization between animal liberation
activists, on the one hand, and the factory farmers and at least some of the
animal experimenters, on the other hand, may be unavoidable. But actions which
involve the general public, or violent actions which lead to people getting
hurt, would polarize the community as a whole.
The animal liberation movement must do its part to avoid the
vicious spiral of violence. Animal Liberation activists must set themselves
irrevocably against the use of violence, even when their opponents use
violence against them. By violence I mean any action which causes direct
physical harm to any human or animal; and I would go beyond physical harm to
acts which cause psychological harm like fear or terror. It is easy to believe
that because some experimenters make animals suffer, it is all right to make
the experimenters suffer. This attitude is mistaken. We may be convinced that
a person who is abusing animals is totally callous and insensitive; but we
lower ourselves to their level and put ourselves in the wrong if we harm or
threaten to harm that person. The entire animal liberation movement is based
on the strength of its ethical concern. It must not abandon the high moral
ground.
Instead of going down the path of increasing violence, the
animal liberation movement will do far better to follow the examples of the
two greatest - and, not co-incidentally, most successful - leaders of
liberation movements in modern times: Gandhi and Martin Luther King. With
immense courage and resolution, they stuck to the principle of non-violence
despite the provocations, and often violent attacks, of their opponents. In
the end they succeeded because the justice of their cause could not be denied,
and their behaviour touched the consciences even of those who had opposed
them. The struggle to extend the sphere of moral concern to non-human animals
may be even harder and longer, but if it is pursued with the same
determination and moral resolve, it will surely also succeed.
FURTHER READING
ANIMAL RIGHTS
Animal Rights Peter Singer (Thorsons)
In
Defence of Animals ed. Peter Singer (Blackwell)
Animal Rights and
Human Obligations ed. Torn Regan & Peter Singer
(Prentice-Hall).
Men and Beasts: an Animal Rights Handbook Maureen
Duffy (Paladin)
The Animals Report Richard North
(Penguin)
Animals and Why They Matter Mary Midgley
(Pelican)
The Moral Status of Animals Stephen Clark (Oxford
University Press)
Voiceless Victims Rebecca Hall
(Wildwood)
The Case for Animal Rights Tom Regan (Routledge and Kegan
Paul)
The Extended Circle: a Dictionary of Humane Thought Jon
Wynne-Tyson (Centaur)
FOOD
Compassion the Ultimate Ethic: an exploration of veganism
Victoria Moran (Thorsons)
Food for a Future Jon Wynne-Tyson
(Abacus)
Assault and Battery Mark Gold (Pluto)
International
Vegetarian Handbook (Thorsons)
Why Veganism Kath Clements
(Heretic)
Easy Vegan Cooking Sandra Williams & Joy Scott (Old
Hammond Press)
Eva Batt's Vegan Cookery (Thorsons)
VIVISECTION
Victims of Science: the use of animals in research
Richard Ryder (N.A.V.S.)
Slaughter of the Innocent Hans Reusch
(Civitas)
HUNTING
Outfoxed Mike Huskisson (Michael Huskisson
Associates)
The Hunt and the Anti-Hunt Philip Windeatt (Pluto)
NONVIOLENCE
Preparing for Nonviolent Direct Action Howard
Clark/Sheryl Crown/Angela McKee/Hugh MacPherson (Peace News)
Manual for
Action Martin Jelfs & Sandy Merrit (Action Resources Group)
The
Politics of Nonviolent Action Gene Sharp (Porter Sargent)
Direct
Action April Carter (Peace News/Housmans)
CONTACTS
ANIMAL RIGHTS (General)
ANIMAL AID SOCIETY, 7 Castle Street,
Tonbridge. Kent. Publishes Outrage.
ANIMUS, 34 Marshall Street.
London W1V ILL Produces badges, records, The Animal Diary etc.
FOOD
THE VEGAN SOCIETY, 33-35 George Street Oxford OX1
2AY.
Publishes The Vegan.
THE VEGETARIAN SOCIETY. 53 Marloes
Road, London W8 6LA.
Publishes The Vegetarian.
COMPASSION IN
WORLD FARMING, 20 Levant Street, Petersfield, Hants GU32 3EW.
Publishes
Agscene.
VEGFAM, The Sanctuary, Nr Lydford, Devon.
Feeds the
hungry, without exploiting animals.
ANIMAL WELFARE/RESCUE
R.S.P.C.A., The Causeway, Horsham, Sussex.
Publishes RSPCA Today.
VIVISECTION
NATIONAL ANTI-VIVISECTION SOCIETY, 51 Harley Street,
London W1N 1DD.
Publishes Animals' Defender and The
Campaigner.
BRITISH UNION FOR THE ABOLITION OF VIVISECTION, 16a Crane
Grove, Islington. London N7 8LB. Publishes Liberator.
HUNTING
HUNT SABOTEURS ASSOCIATION. PO Box 19, London SE22
9LR.
Publishes Howl.
LEAGUE AGAINST CRUEL SPORTS, 83-87 Union
Street, London SE1 1SG.
Publishes Cruel
Sports