10 Things You Must Know About Animal Rights
An online dairy
newsletter (Dairy Management) posted a March 15, 2010 column which is
rapidly being cross-posted to numerous pro-dairy sites.

The column as
it appears reveals what dairy farmers perceive as truth:
"10 things you must know about animal rights
By Megan Pierce
The dairy industry is getting attacked left and right by animal-rightists.
David Martosko, director of research for the Center for Consumer Freedom,
refers to these types as "humaniacs."
And, he says, when it comes to
dealing with them, there are 10 lessons you need to learn. Martosko shared
these lessons last week at the Western United Dairymen Convention in
Modesto, Calif.
Lesson 1:
Animal welfare is not the same as
animal rights.
Believers in animal welfare say we have a right to
make proper and humane use of animals, and that we have a duty to treat
animals properly, says Martosko. There is a moral distinction between
animals and human beings.
But animal rights is a dogma, almost a
religious belief, he explains. In this view, what gives moral value to life
is the ability to suffer. And since a cow can feel pain and a human can feel
pain, they are equal. The ultimate goal of the animal-rights movement is the
complete elimination of the domestication of all animals.
Lesson 2:
PETA and HSUS are both animal-rights groups.
Both the People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the Humane Society of the United
States (HSUS) are animal-rights groups. They will manipulate you into
producing and selling less and less milk until eventually
there is none,
says Martosko.
These groups are not promoting the kinder treatment of
farm animals; they are promoting the abolition of farm animals. They want to
make it prohibitively expensive to raise animals for protein.
Lesson
3:
HSUS is a business.
For the 2008 fiscal year, HSUS had an
income of $85.8 million, a budget of $99.7 million and net assets of $162.2
million. More than $24 million was spent on fundraising in 2008.
"This is not a group of little old ladies, this is a business," explains
Martosko.
Lesson 4:
PETA is a side-show distraction.
The
goal of PETA is to make HSUS look moderate by comparison.
Martosko
compares PETA to a pick-pocket; they are all about the flair, while HSUS is
like a con-man who makes you like him and draws you in slowly before he
picks you clean.
Lesson 5:
HSUS is not a real humane society.
HSUS is not affiliated with any pet shelters, and they hardly give any
money to pet shelters.
Martosko notes that 0.45 percent of their
money was actually shared with real (local) humane societies in 2008.
Lesson 6:
HSUS director Wayne Pacelle is a politician, not a
stakeholder.
Pacelle does not believe there is a single piece of
humanely raised meat on the planet, explains Martosko. That makes him an
outsider as far as meat, eggs, and dairy production go.
Lesson 7:
You are in an endless war with HSUS (whether or not you want to be).
This is not a short-term deal, says Martosko. It is impossible to fully
pacify an animal-rights group.
To HSUS, cage-free is not humane.
Cruelty-free means you don't eat the egg, he explains.
Lesson 8:
Public opinion is everything.
Eighty-three percent have a favorable
view of HSUS. Seventy-one percent of Americans believe HSUS is an umbrella
group for local pet shelters. Sixty-three percent believe their own local
animal shelter is affiliated with HSUS. And 59 percent believe HSUS shares
most of its money with local pet shelters.
They are all wrong, notes
Martosko. But 25 percent of Americans still believe animals deserve the same
rights as people.
Lesson 9:
You can't win a football game without
a defense and an offense.
"You are in a war and you can't win the
game with only defense," Martosko says. "You need both offense and defense.
You have to tell the truth about who they are."
It's not just enough
to tell your story; you have to start telling the truth about them, too.
Lesson 10:
All convention wisdom is flexible, but there is no public
opinion tooth fairy.
In 2003, PETA had a public approval rating of 73
percent. Today, their public approval rating has dropped to 49 percent.
But if you are not driving the message of who HSUS is, they will drive
their own message, says Martosko.
"You can choose – are you in the
war or not?" asks Martosko. And, he says it's as simple as that
because you either believe in your profession or you don't – there is no
middle ground.
In the art of warfare, the most successful warriors invest enormous
resources in determining what their enemy is thinking. It is helpful to be
in possession of your enemy's manifesto.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk. com