The New
Abolitionism: Capitalism, Slavery and Animal Liberation
Capitalism originated in, and
would have been impossible without, imperialism, colonization, the
international slave trade, genocide, and large-scale environmental
destruction. Organized around profit and power imperatives,
capitalism is a system of slavery, exploitation, class hierarchy and
inequality, violence, and forced labor. The Global Capitalist Gulag
was fuelled, first, by the labor power of millions of slaves from
Africa and other nations, and, second, by massive armies of
immigrant and domestic workers who comprised an utterly new social
class, the industrialized proletariat.
As Marx observed, the
accumulation of wealth and the production of poverty, the
aggrandizement of the ruling class and the immiseration of the
ruled, the development of the European world and the
underdevelopment of its colonies, are inseparably interrelated.
These apparent antipodes are inevitable consequences of a
grow-or-die, profit-seeking system of exploitation whose ceaseless
expansion requires a slave class and inordinate amounts of cheap
labor power.
The transatlantic slave trade
began in 1444 when Henry the Navigator began taking Africans back to
Portugal to serve as slaves. Africans already were enslaving each
other, but their labor market was more akin to indentured servitude
and nothing like the horrors they would later face in British
America. Prior to trafficking in African slaves, European nations
enjoyed positive relationships with Africa based on friendship and
trade. This ended in the mid-fifteenth century when they were
overtaken by insatiable demands for gold, profits, and slave labor.
As evident in the brutal exploits of Columbus and Spain, many
European states waged genocidal war against dark-skinned peoples in
order to appropriate their land, resources, riches, and labor power.
Over the next few centuries
European forces of “civilization,” “progress,” and Christianity
kidnapped twenty million Africans from their homes and villages.
They forced inland captives to march 500 grueling miles to the coast
while barefoot and in leg irons. Half died before they reached the
ships and more expired during the torturous six to ten week journey
across the Atlantic to North America. The slave traders confined
their human cargo to the suffocating hell beneath the deck. Blacks
were packed into tight spaces, chained together, and delirious from
heat, stench, and disease. They were beaten, force-fed, and thrown
overboard in droves.
Marx rightly saw European
colonialism as the “primitive stage of capital development” before
the emergence of industrial society. From the fifteenth to the
nineteenth century, profits from the slave trade built European
economies, bankrolled the Industrial Revolution, and powered America
before and after the Revolutionary War. The glorious cities and
refined cultures of modern Europe were erected on the backs of
millions of slaves, its “civilization” the product of barbarism. The
horrors of slavery were the burning ethical and political issues of
modern capitalism. Over a century after the liberation of blacks in
the 1880s, however, slavery has again emerged as a focal point of
debate and struggle, as society shifts from considering human to
animal slaves and a new abolitionist movement seeking animal
liberation emerges as a flashpoint for moral evolution and social
transformation
Strange Fruit of
American Democracy
Both before and after the
Revolutionary War, America was a slave-hungry system. In its
European form, the nation emerged from scratch, with no prior feudal
history or communal traditions, a product of British capital
ventures. As British colonists found no gold like the Spaniards did
in the Americas, they turned to agriculture. From the Indians they
learned to grow tobacco as a profitable crop, but planting and
harvesting required intense physical labor. For their sturdiness,
vulnerability, and cheap price, the colonists favored Africans over
Native American Indians and English laborers for the
task.
The first Africans arrived on
the North American continent in August 1619, a year before Pilgrims
landed the Mayflower on the shores of Massachusetts and decades
before the British slave trade began in New England. Exchanged for
food, twenty blacks stepped off a Dutch slavery ship to become the
first generation of African-Americans. Joining a society not yet
lacerated by slavery and racism, they worked as indentured servants
to British elites. As such, their status was equal to poor white
servants, and servants of either race could gain freedom after their
tenure. Like whites, blacks owned property, married, and voted in an
integrated society.
This benign situation changed
dramatically in the 1660s as ever-more Africans were brought to the
colonies to meet the growing need for plantation labor. As slavery
became crucial to capitalist expansion and plantation economies
organized around tobacco, sugar, and cotton, British colonists
constructed racist ideologies to legitimate the violent subjugation
of those equal to them in the eyes of God and the principles of
natural law. Having survived the shock of capture and wretchedness
of their journey, African men, women, and children were auctioned,
branded, and sold to white slave owners who grew rich from trading,
breeding, and exploiting their bodies. With no consideration of
blood ties or emotional bonds, black families were broken apart.
Stripped of rights, dignity, and human status, these African
citizens and their millions of American descendents were brutalized
in the most vicious slavery system on the planet, one whose ugly
legacy continues to dominate and poison the US.
As colonists became increasingly
autonomous from the monarchy abroad, and British military occupation
and oppression subsequently increased, the conflict between Empire
and its unruly subjects – dramatized in events such as the Boston
Tea Party in 1773 -- inexorably led to war. On July 4, 1776, the
Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence which
asserted the “self-evident” truth that “all men are created equal”
and “are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.”
Along with progressive whites such as Thomas Paine and Abigail
Adams, slaves were quick to denounce the hypocrisy whereby colonists
such as Thomas Jefferson railed against British tyranny while owning
slaves drawn from a system far more repressive than English
monarchy.
Whereas many blacks fought for
the British who promised them freedom, others fought courageously
for the patriot cause and were crucial to its victory. When the war
ended in 1783, social relations and racial views were in great flux.
Tens of thousands of slaves fled to England, Canada, Spanish
Florida, or Indian camps. Many Northern slaveholders who embraced
the nation’s egalitarian values without regard to race freed their
captives. In 1783, Massachusetts became the first state to abolish
slavery and from 1789 to 1830 all states north of Maryland gradually
followed suit. At the same time, however, slavery grew stronger
roots in Southern states that were becoming increasingly influential
economically and politically.
The new nation stood at a
crucial moral crossroads regarding the slavery question and the true
meaning of its professed democratic and Christian values. It could
end slavery and adhere to its noble ideals, or it could perpetuate a
vicious system of bondage to be an American hypocrisy not democracy.
Tragically, the profit imperative triumphed over the moral
imperative. Although the North continuously pandered to Southern
slavery interests, the two cultures drifted apart irreconcilably
like shifting tectonic plates. Rather than pulling together as one
nation honoring the progressive values that led them to war, the US
imploded through internal contradictions and in 1861 embarked on a
bloody war with itself.
The Roar of
Abolitionism
With freedom denied and justice
betrayed, both free and enslaved blacks intensified their resistance
to white oppression. Increasingly, opponents of slavery turned from
tactics of reform and moderation to demands for the total and
immediate dismantling of the slavery system, and thus, in the 1830s,
the abolitionist movement was born.
Abolitionism is rooted in a
searing critique of racism and its dehumanizing effects on black
people. In the US slavery market, a human being, on the basis of
skin color alone, was declared biologically and naturally inferior
to whites and thereby stripped of all rights. In such a system, the
slave is transmogrified from a human subject into a physical object,
from a person into a commodity, and thereby reduced to a moveable
form of property known as “chattel.” Abolitionists viewed the
institution of slavery as inherently evil, corrupt, and
dehumanizing, such that no black person in bondage – however
well-treated by their “masters” – could ever attain the full
dignity, intelligence, and creativity of their humanity.
Abolitionists renounced all reformist approaches that sought better
or more “humane treatment” of slaves, in order to insist on the
total emancipation of blacks from the chains, masters, laws, courts,
and ideologies that corrupted, stunted, and profaned their
humanity.
The most militant abolitionist
voices advocated the use of violence as a necessary or legitimate
tactic of struggle and self-defense. In 1829, David Walker published
his “Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World,” a fiery eighty
page pamphlet excoriating slavery and calling blacks to violent
rebellion. Similarly, in his 1843 keynote address to the National
Convention of Colored Citizens, Presbyterian minister Henry Highland
Garnet enjoined the nation’s three million blacks to demand freedom
and strike their oppressors down if necessary, for “there is not
much hope of redemption without the shedding of blood.”
Along with the Haitian
Revolution of August 22 1791, whereby black slaves violently
overthrew Spanish and British occupiers to establish Haiti as a free
black republic, such views panicked US slave owners over the
possibility of slave revolts and violence. Their fears were
justified, as blacks throughout the country were plotting and
carrying out rebellions, achieving with bullets, machetes, or fire
the justice denied to them in the courts. Whereas rebels such as
Gabriel Prosser and Denmark Vesey were betrayed and executed before
they could ignite large-scale insurrections, others like Nat Turner
and John Brown (a white Christian) spilled the blood of many slave
owners before being captured and executed by the state, and
resurrected as folk heroes by the enemies of slavery.
Other influential voices urged
militancy and direct action without violence. William Lloyd
Garrison, a former indentured white servant, started a prominent
abolitionist newsletter, the Liberator, on January 1, 1831, which he
published for thirty five years. Against those urging slow, gradual,
and moderate change, Garrison objected: “I do not wish to think, to
speak, or write, with moderation … Tell a man whose house is on fire
to give a moderate alarm; tell him to moderately rescue his wife
from the hands of the ravisher; tell the mother to gradually
extricate her babe from the fire into which it has fallen; but urge
me not to use moderation in a cause like the present!’’
Garrison also brought Frederick
Douglass into the abolitionist movement. Douglass was born into
slavery, became self-educated, and fled from bondage. With
Garrison’s initial assistance, he became a star on the lecture
circuit and in 1848 began publishing his own abolitionist newspaper,
the North Star. In his electrifying speeches, Douglass preached a
potent “gospel of struggle,” most eloquently expressed in an 1857
speech that exposed the Machiavellian essence of politics: “Power
concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will … The
whole history of the progress of human liberty shows that all
concessions yet made to her august claims have been born of earnest
struggle … If there is no struggle there is no progress. Those who
profess to favor freedom and yet deprecate agitation, are men who
want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without
thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of
its waters.”
A vital part of the abolitionist
movement was the Underground Railroad, a furtive, illegal network of
volunteers – white and black, male and female, free person and slave
– who violated pro-slavery laws in order to smuggle thousands of
slaves into northern Free states and Canada. Harriet Tubman not only
was a “passenger” on the railroad, using it to escape slavery in
1849 at age 25, she also became its celebrated “Conductor.” Risking
jail or death, dodging slave hunters out for the $40,000 bounty on
her head, Tubman returned to Maryland numerous times to free family
members and seventy other slaves. She epitomizes the courage,
passion for freedom, and acute sense of justice driving the
abolitionist movement.
After the Civil War ended in
1865, Congress passed the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth
Amendments, thereby banning slavery and mandating equal treatment
for blacks and whites. By the late 1880s, blacks throughout the
nation were formally “free,” but in reality they remained trapped in
racist systems of violence, exploitation, and poverty. Despite
advances during the brief Reconstruction Period, America
reconstituted racist discrimination in frightful new ways. As the US
became an apartheid system organized around Jim Crow segregation
laws, violence against blacks increased dramatically through lynch
mobs and the Ku Klux Klan. Not until the civil rights struggles of
the 1950s and 1960s and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 did brutality
diminish, the walls of apartheid come down, and significant social
progress become possible.
The New
Abolitionism
As black Americans and
anti-racists continue to struggle for justice and equality, the
moral and political spotlight is shifting to a far more ancient,
pervasive, intensive, and violent form of slavery that confines,
tortures, and kills animals by the billions in an ongoing global
holocaust.
We speak of animal liberation no
differently than human liberation. One cannot “enslave,” “dominate,”
or “exploit” physical objects, nor can they be “freed,” “liberated,”
or “emancipated.” These terms apply only to organic life forms that
are sentient – to beings who can experience pleasure and pain,
happiness or suffering. Quite apart from species differences and
arbitrary attempts to privilege human powers of reason and language
over the unique qualities of animal life, human and nonhuman animals
share the same evolutionary capacities for joy or suffering, and in
this respect they are essentially the same or equal.
Fundamentally, ethics demands
that one not cause suffering to another being or impede another’s
freedom and quality of life, unless there is some valid, compelling
reason to do so (e.g., self-defense). For all the voluminous
scientific literature on the complexity of animal emotions,
intelligence, and social life, a being’s capacity for sentience is a
necessary and sufficient condition for having basic rights.
Thus, just as animals can be
enslaved, so too can they be liberated; indeed, where animals are
enslaved, humans arguably have a duty to liberate them. Answering
this call of conscience and duty, animal liberation groups have
sprouted throughout the world with the objectives of freeing captive
animals from systems of exploitation, attacking and dismantling the
economic and material basis of oppression, and challenging the
ancient mentality that animals exist as human resources, property,
or and chattel.
Stealing blacks from their
native environment and homeland, wrapping chains around their
bodies, shipping them in cramped quarters across continents for
weeks or months with no regard for their suffering, branding their
skin with a hot iron to mark them as property, auctioning them as
servants, separating family members who scream in anguish, breeding
them for service and labor, exploiting them for profit, beating them
in rages of hatred and anger, and killing them in huge numbers – all
these horrors and countless others inflicted on black slaves began
with the exploitation of animals. Advanced by technology and
propelled by capitalist profit imperatives, the unspeakably violent
violation of animals’ emotions, minds, and bodies continues today
with the torture and killing of billions of individuals in fur
farms, factory farms, slaughterhouses, research laboratories, and
other nightmarish settings.
It is time no longer just to
question the crime of treating a black person, Jew, or any other
human victim of violence “like an animal”; rather, we must also
scrutinize the unquestioned assumption that it is acceptable to
exploit and terrorize animals.
Whereas the racist mindset
creates a hierarchy of superior/inferior on the basis of skin color,
the speciesist mindset demeans and objectifies animals by
dichotomizing the evolutionary continuum into human and nonhuman
life. As racism stems from a hateful white supremacism, so
speciesism draws from a violent human supremacism, namely, the
arrogant belief that humans have a natural or God-given right to use
animals for any purpose they devise.
Both racism and speciesism serve
as legitimating ideologies for slavery economies. After the civil
war, the Cotton Economy became the Cattle Economy as the nation
moved westward, slaughtered millions of Indians and sixty million
buffalo, and began intensive operations to raise and slaughter
cattle for food. Throughout the twentieth century, as the US shifted
from a plant-based to a meat-based diet, meat and dairy industries
became giant economic forces. In the last few decades,
pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies have become major
components of global capitalist networks, and their research and
testing operations are rooted in the breeding, exploitation, and
killing of millions of laboratory animals each year
Of course, as soon as Homo
erectus began making tools nearly three million years ago, hominids
have killed and appropriated animals for labor power, food,
clothing, and innumerable other resources, and animal exploitation
has been crucial to human economies. But whatever legitimate reasons
humans had for using animals to survive in past hunting and
gathering societies, subsistence economies, and other low-tech
cultures, these rationales are now obsolete in a modern world rife
with alternatives to using animals for food, clothing, and medical
research. Furthermore, however important the exploitation of animals
might be to modern economies, utilitarian apologies for enslaving
animals are as invalid as arguments used to justify human slavery or
experimentation on human beings at Auschwitz or Tuskegee. Rights
trump utilitarian appeals; their very function is to protect
individuals from being appropriated for someone else’s or a “greater
good.”
The Subterfuge of
Welfarism
It was not uncommon for a racist
to argue that slavery was beneficial for blacks or that they were
biologically unfit for freedom. Similarly, factory farm managers
claim that pigs, calves, and chickens are better off in conditions
of intense confinement rather than in their natural habitat as their
“needs are met” in “managed environments.” Zookeepers and circus
operators assert that their animals live better in confinement that
in the wild where they are subject to poachers and other
dangers.
Abolitionists attack welfarism
as a dangerous ruse and roadblock to moral progress, and ground
their position in the logic of rights. 19th century abolitionists
were not addressing the slave master’s “obligation” to be kind to
the slaves, to feed and clothe them well, or to work them with
adequate rest. Rather, they demanded the total and unqualified
eradication of the master-slave relation, the freeing of the slave
from all forms of bondage.
Similarly, the new abolitionists
reject reforms of the institutions and practices of animal slavery
as grossly inadequate and they pursue the complete emancipation of
animals from all forms of human exploitation, subjugation, and
domination. They seek not bigger cages, but rather empty cages.
To treat black slaves humanely
is a contradiction in terms because the institution of slavery
inherently is anti-human and dehumanizing. Similarly, one cannot
logically be “kind” to animals kept in debilitating confinement
against their will. To “act responsibly” to animals in such a
situation requires one liberate them from it. Talk of “humane
killing” of animals is especially absurd as there is no “humane” way
to steal and violate an animal’s life, and subject it to continual
pain and suffering. No accurately aimed bolt shot through the head
of an animal warrants pretense to any kind of moral dignity, however
superior the killing method is to dismemberment of an animal in a
conscious state. Killing itself – unnecessary and unjustified – is
inhumane and wrong.
While thousands of national and
grass-roots animal welfare organizations help animals in countless
ways and reduce their suffering, they cannot free them from
exploitation. Welfarists never challenge the legitimacy of
institutions of oppression and they share with animal exploiters the
speciesist belief that humans have a right to use animals as
resources as long as they act “responsibly.” Moral progress and
animal liberation is premised on making the profound shift from
human responsibility to animals to the rights of animals.
The true obstacles to moral
progress are not the sociopaths who burn cats alive, for they are an
extreme minority whose actions are almost universally condemned as
barbaric. The real barrier to animal liberation is the welfarist
orientation and its language of “humane care,” “responsible
treatment,” and “kindness and respect.” Every institution of animal
exploitation – including the fur farm and slaughterhouse industries
-- speaks this language, and animals in their “care” are routinely
tortured in horrific ways, Animal welfarism is insidious. It lulls
people into thinking that animals in captivity are healthy and
content. It promotes human supremacy and tries to dress up the
fundamental wrong of exploiting animals in the illusory language of
“kind,” “respectful,” and “humane treatment.” Attempting to mask and
sanitize the evil of oppression, animal welfarism perverts language,
corrupts meaning, and is fundamentally Orwellian and deceptive.
Furthermore, by trying to hijack
and monopolize the discourse of moral responsibility solely for its
own purposes as it feigns ethical behavior, animal welfarism
strategically positions animal rights discourse of any kind –
because of the premise that animals are not our resources to use –
as extreme. And if an animal rights advocate or organization
transgresses conservative decorum or legal boundaries in any way,
welfarists denounce the tactics as “violent” and “terrorist,” as
measures that “discredit” an otherwise respectable concern for
animal welfare.
In Defense of Direct
Action
Although abolitionism is rooted
in the logic of rights, not welfarism, there are problems with some
animal rights positions that also must be overcome. First, as
emphasized by Gary Francione, many individuals and organizations
that champion animal rights in fact are “new welfarists” who speak
in terms of rights but in practice seek welfare reforms and thereby
seek to ameliorate, not abolish, oppression. While Francione
underplays the complex relationship between welfare and rights,
reform and abolition, he illuminates the problem of obscuring
fundamental differences between welfare and rights approaches and he
correctly insists on the need for uncompromising abolitionist
campaigns.
Francione, however, is
symptomatic of a second problem with animal rights “legalists” who
buy into the status quo’s self-serving argument that the only viable
and ethically acceptable tactics for a moral or political cause are
those the state pre-approves and sanctions. In rejecting the
militant direct action tactics that played crucial roles throughout
the struggles to end both human and animal slavery, Francione and
others use the same rationale animal welfarists employ against them.
Mirroring welfare critiques of rights, and serving as a mouthpiece
for the state and animal exploitation industries, Francione
criticizes direct activists as radical, extreme, and damaging to the
moral credibility and advancement of the cause.
Like its predecessor, the new
abolitionist movement is diverse in its philosophy and tactics,
ranging from legal to illegal approaches and pacifist to violent
orientations. A paradigmatic example of the new abolitionism is the
Animal Liberation Front (ALF). ALF activists pursue two different
types of tactics against animal exploiters. First, they use sabotage
or property destruction to strike at their economic heart and make
it less profitable or impossible to use animals. The ALF insists
that its methods are non-violent because they only attack the
property of animal exploiters, and never the exploiters themselves.
They thereby eschew the violence espoused by Walker and Garnet. The
ALF argues that the real violence is what is done to animals in the
name of research or profit. Second, in direct and immediate acts of
liberation, the ALF breaks into prison compounds to release or
rescue animals from their cages. They are not “stealing” animals,
because they are not property and anyone’s to own in the first
place; rather, they are liberating them. By providing veterinary
treatment and homes for many of the animals they liberate, using an
extensive underground network of care and home providers, the ALF is
a superb contemporary example of the Underground Railroad that
funneled black slaves to freedom.
The new abolitionism also is
evident in the work of “open rescue” groups like Compassion Over
Killing who liberate animals from factory farms without causing
property destruction or hiding behind masks of anonymity. Moreover,
ethical vegans who boycott all animal products for the principle
reason that it is wrong to use or kill animals as food resources,
however “free-range” or “humanely” produced or killed, abolish
cruelty from their lives and contribute toward eliminating animal
exploitation altogether.
As of yet, there are no active
Nat Turners and John Browns in the animal liberation movement, but
they may be forthcoming and would not be without just cause for
their actions. Nor would they be without precedent. According to the
gospel of struggle: No justice, no peace.
The Meaning of Moral
Progress
Just as nineteenth century
abolitionists sought to awaken people to the greatest moral issue of
the day, so the new abolitionists of the 21st century endeavor to
enlighten people about the enormity and importance of animal
suffering and oppression. As black slavery earlier raised
fundamental questions about the meaning of American “democracy” and
modern values, so current discussion regarding animal slavery
provokes critical examination into a human psyche damaged by
violence, arrogance, and alienation, and the urgent need for a new
ethics and sensibility rooted in respect for all life.
Animal liberation is not an
alien concept to modern culture; rather it builds on the most
progressive ethical and political values Westerners have devised in
the last two hundred years --those of equality, democracy, and
rights – as it carries them to their logical conclusion. Whereas
ethicists such as Arthur Kaplan argue that rights are cheapened when
extended to animals, it is far more accurate to see this move as the
redemption of rights from an arbitrary and prejudicial limitation of
their true meaning.
The next great step in moral
evolution is to abolish the last acceptable form of slavery that
subjugates the vast majority of species on this planet to the
violent whim of one. Moral advance today involves sending human
supremacy to the same refuse bin that society earlier discarded much
male supremacy and white supremacy. Animal liberation requires that
people transcend the complacent boundaries of humanism in order to
make a qualitative leap in ethical consideration, thereby moving the
moral bar from reason and language to sentience and
subjectivity.
Animal liberation is the
culmination of a vast historical learning process whereby human
beings gradually realize that arguments justifying hierarchy,
inequality, and discrimination of any kind are arbitrary, baseless,
and fallacious. Moral progress occurs in the process of demystifying
and deconstructing all myths -- from ancient patriarchy and the
divine right of kings to Social Darwinism and speciesism -- that
attempt to legitimate the domination of one group over another.
Moral progress advances through the dynamic of replacing
hierarchical visions with egalitarian visions and developing a
broader and more inclusive ethical community. Having recognized the
illogical and unjustifiable rationales used to oppress blacks,
women, and other disadvantaged groups, society is beginning to grasp
that speciesism is another unsubstantiated form of oppression and
discrimination.
Building on the momentum,
consciousness, and achievements of past abolitionists and
suffragettes, the struggle of the new abolitionists might
conceivably culminate in a Bill of (Animal) Rights. This would
involve a constitutional amendment that bans exploitation of animals
and discrimination based on species, recognizes animals as “persons
in a substantive sense, and grants them the rights relevant and
necessary to their existence – the rights to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness. In 2002, Germany took the crucial first step
in this direction by adding the words “and animals” to a clause in
its constitution obliging the state to protect the dignity of
humans.
If capitalism is a grow-or-die
system based on slavery and exploitation – be it imperialism and
colonialism, exploitation of workers, unequal pay based on gender,
or the oppression of animals – then it is a system a movement for
radical democracy must transcend, not amend. But just as black
slaves condemned the hypocrisy of colonists decrying British
tyranny, and suffragettes exposed the contradiction of the US
fighting for democracy abroad during World War I while denying it to
half of their citizenry at home, so any future movement for peace,
justice, democracy, and rights that fails to militate for the
liberation of animals is as inconsistent as it is
incomplete.