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The Rights Of Animals

California voters have put the animal-rights movement squarely in the mainstream. Will we all soon be vegans?

 
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The notion that animals should have rights was widely ridiculed when it was first advocated in the 1970s. Now it is getting more respect. The movement has gained tens of millions of adherents and has already persuaded the European Union to require that all hens have room to stretch their wings, perch and lay their eggs in a nest box, and to phase out keeping pigs and veal calves in individual crates too narrow for them to walk or turn around. And earlier this month Californians voted 63 percent to 37 percent for a measure that, beginning in 2015, gives all farm animals the right to stand up, lie down, turn around and fully extend their limbs. The state's 45 major egg producers will have to rip out the cages that now hold 19 million hens, and either put in new and larger cages with fewer birds or, more likely, keep the birds on the floor in large sheds. California's sole large-scale pig-factory farm will also have to give all its pigs room to turn around.

Pressure on other states to grant the same basic freedoms may prove irresistible. Many people see this movement as a logical continuation of the fight against racism and sexism, and believe that the concept of animal rights will soon be as commonplace as equal pay and opportunities for women and minorities. If that happens—and I believe it will—the effects on the food we eat, how we produce it and the place of animals in our society will be profound.

If this sounds radical, so did suffrage and civil rights a few decades ago. The notion that we should recognize the rights of animals living among us rests on a firm ethical foundation. A sentient being is sentient regardless of which species it happens to belong to. Pain is pain, whether it is the pain of a cat, a dog, a pig or a child.

Consider how widely humans differ in their mental abilities. A typical adult can reason, make moral choices and do many things (like voting) that animals obviously cannot do. But not all human beings are capable of reason, not all are morally responsible and not all are capable of voting. And yet we go out of our way to claim that all humans have rights. What, then, justifies our withholding at least some rights from nonhuman animals? Defenders of the status quo have found that a difficult question to answer.

If animals do have rights, what rights would those be? The most basic right any sentient being can have is for his or her interests to be given equal consideration. After that, things get more complicated. Some advocates think that all animals have a right to life. Others give more weight to the lives of beings such as chimpanzees, which are capable of understanding that they have a life, and of having hopes and desires directed toward the future. The movement's supporters agree that the way we treat animals now, as test subjects and factory-farm products, is flagrantly wrong.

If society were gradually to accept animal rights, it would spell dramatic changes. Some people might accept humanely raised meat, eggs and dairy products, if the animals had good lives, living outdoors in social groups of a size natural to the particular species. But this would most likely prove to be an interim stage. As the demand for animal products dwindles, the meat industry would breed fewer chickens, turkeys, pigs and cattle. Eventually the only remaining beef cattle, sheep and pigs would be small herds preserved so that we can take the grandchildren to see what these once abundant animals look like. Factory farming—for meat, eggs or milk—would disappear. If we are to continue to eat meat, we'll have to rely on scientists who are now trying to grow meat in vats. When they succeed, it will be the real thing, grown from animal cells, not a soy-based substitute, and it might even be indistinguishable from the meat we eat now. But since it would involve no animals, and hence no suffering or killing, there will be no ethical objections.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: jafrank @ 04/09/2009 10:24:01 AM

    Even if you don't believe that animals should have basic rights in living, consider this: The more that the animals we eat are allowed room to be comfortable and do what they normally do (chickens perching, pigs nosing the ground for insects and plant matter) as well as given the food they are naturally supposed to eat, the healthier they will be. The healther they are, the healthier we will be afer we eat them. Birds, for example, become stressed quickly. If we stress them out by stuffing them together in cages so they can't move, they get stressed out, thier immune systems weaken, we then pump antibiotics in them (or they die), and all of that "sick" meat is then passed on to us.

  • Posted By: jafrank @ 04/09/2009 10:23:41 AM

    Even if you don't believe that animals should have basic rights in living, consider this: The more that the animals we eat are allowed room to be comfortable and do what they normally do (chickens perching, pigs nosing the ground for insects and plant matter) as well as given the food they are naturally supposed to eat, the healthier they will be. The healther they are, the healthier we will be afer we eat them. Birds, for example, become stressed quickly. If we stress them out by stuffing them together in cages so they can't move, they get stressed out, thier immune systems weaken, we then pump antibiotics in them (or they die), and all of that "sick" meat is then passed on to us.

  • Posted By: fred123 @ 01/21/2009 12:47:58 AM

    It would seem to be pertinent to point out the obvious- while Mr. Singer may know a great deal about Bio-Ethics, he knows absolutely nothing about animals, whether they are farm animals or companion animals. Cows, like every other mammal on this planet, only ever have to become pregnant one time, and as long as there is a regular stimulation of the milk-glands (ie, "milking", or in humans we call it "pumping"), all female mammals will continue to produce milk until menopause. Birds, such as chickens, will happily live in flocks numbering in the thousands, so I hardly think that limiting the number of chickens one is allowed to keep will benefit their emotional state, but might actually be detrimental to it. "Factory Farming" is an emotional term created by the Animal Rights groups, and is designed to elicit a negative response. It has nothing to do with anything that is actually going on. Perhaps Mr. Singer should go and learn something hands on, like animal husbandry, before he is referred to as any kind of expert in any field having to do with animals. Any reputable scholar knows that one cannot fake credentials for long, because at some point, they wil be discredited by a genuine expert. Mr. Singer claims no experience in animal husbandry, references no credentials in this field of any kind, yet he is considered by academia and the intelligencia to be an expert. Very interesting. In short, because the majority of people who live in urbanized areas have absolutely no knowledge of animal husbandry, they beilieve someone like Mr. Singer when he claims that cows must become pregnant every year in order to produce milk, because those people have no frame of reference in order to NOT believe such nonsense. His scholastic credentials seem to be enough for them to believe his false claims. Hey-I'm an Award-Winning Real Estate Agent, and I've got some ocean front property for sale in Missouri- how many of you are willing to buy it?

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