Planet Debate 2011 September/October l-d release Animal Rights


Speciesism Immoral – Akin to Racism and Sexism



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Speciesism Immoral – Akin to Racism and Sexism



THE ELIMINATION OF SPECIESISM LIKE RACISM AND SEXISM IS ESSENTIAL IN THE MORAL PROGRESS OF HUMANITY AND ASSURES THE PROTECTIONS OF ANIMAL RIGHTS

Bernard Chevassus-au-Louis, geneticist, PhD, is currently president of the National Natural History Museum in Paris, Robert Barbault, director of the French Institute of Basic and Applied Ecology, and Patrick Blandin, President of the IUCN French National Committee,Towards a national biodiversity research strategy for sustainable development” Biodiversity and Global Change, 17 january 2005, VIII



http://www.adpf.asso.fr/adpf-publi/ folio/biodiversite/pdf/en/chap8.pdf

There is also the thesis of the intrinsic value of all living creatures and their right to live, which forms the basis of the “biocentric” point of view. This vision attempts to position our species as one among many, and to relativise – even radically call into question human beings’ right to impede the future of other species. In a more limited fashion, the existence of rights for certain species, domestic animals in particular,



is defended by such philosophers as Élisabeth de Fontenay (1998). Domestication, by modifying animals for the needs of humans, creates a common destiny and also a chap. viii 201

responsibility towards these species in the future. The concept of “animal rights” vis-à- vis human rights is implicitly present in certain legal texts (Hermitte, 1993). This point of view has been adopted by those who see the progressive elimination of forms of discrimination –racism, sexism, and now “speciism” (negative discrimination against other species) – as a form of moral progress for humanity. More generally, the idea that all of nature has rights that humans must respect – even at the expense of their proper future – forms the basis of the “ecocentric” vision, which asserts that human beings must take their place without damaging the functioning of planet Earth. In this vision, the earth itself is compared to a living “super organism”. This is the “Gaia hypothesis” (the Earth mother in Greek mythology), which was developed some twenty years ago by British thinker James Lovelock (Barbault, 1994, Stengers, 2003).
SPECIESISM IS RACIST

Roger Fouts, President of non-profit organization, Friends of Washoe; Co-Director of Chimpanzee and Human Communication Institute; Professor of Psychology; and Distinguished Professor of Research at Central Washington University. “APES, DARWINIAN CONTINUITY, AND THE LAW”. Animal Law. 10 Animal L. 99 2004



Our conception of nonhuman animals derives from our assumptions about humans and then presumes that these unique abilities are [*105] absent in our fellow animals, without finding out. Under this system, nonhuman animals are conceptualized as either defective humans or worse, mere unthinking, unfeeling objects to be exploited. It also deems defective any humans who are not ideal in the Platonic sense.n40 This approach is "implicitly, and perhaps necessarily, racist." n41 It forces us "to convince ourselves how a few of the have-nots could have come upon what we consider to be language." n42 Of course, many academics have used the absence of evidence or studied intentional ignorance to come up with explanations to do just that. Two such academics, Steven Pinker and Konrad Lorenz, are discussed in the section that follows. n43


Confinement of Animals in Zoos/Circuses Immoral


CONFINING ANIMALS FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES IMMORAL

Robert Garner, Professor of Politics, University of Leicester, 2004, Animals, politics and morality, p. 92

In terms of captive wild animals, we can make a distinction between zoos on the one handwhich usually claim to fulfill functions other than merely entertaining the public with displays of wild animals – and circuses and dolphinaria on the other which, although they have increasingly sought to justify their use of animals in other ways, remain primarily concerned with entertainment. Given that the moral orthodoxy demands that we balance the suffering of animals with the benefits that accrue to humans as a result, the predominance of the trivial benefit in the latter category would make the infliction of suffering morally illegitimate. The case of zoos, where it is claimed in particular that captive wild animals provide important conservation functions which will benefit wild animals in general, is more complex.
CIRCUSES IMPOSE REAL SUFFERING ON ANIMALS

Robert Garner, Professor of Politics, University of Leicester, 2004, Animals, politics and morality, p. 92

There is little doubt that many circus animals do suffer as a result of their captivity. There is evidence of deliberately inflicted cruelty particularly as a result of the training methods which often depend upon engendering fear in animals to make them perform. More important, though, is that even if circus employees did not inflict pain on their animals (and many no doubt do not) it is doubtful if circuses could ever provide a reasonable environment to prevent suffering. For obvious reasons, animals have to remain shackled or caged for most of the time between performances and are transported between venues in so-called “beast wagons” which, by definition, have to be small and often basic. So even, without considering the morally dubious nature of the “tricks” that circus animals are expected to perform (the roller-skating elephant, for instance, or the ice-skating polar bear) the level of suffering inflicted on circus animal is high.
NO MORAL JUSTIFICATION FOR ANIMALS IN CIRCUSES—CAN HAVE CIRCUSES WITHOUT ANIMALS

Robert Garner, Professor of Politics, University of Leicester, 2004, Animals, politics and morality, p. 93

Since circuses have no significant human purpose, the moral orthodoxy demands that these strict regulations be enforced elsewhere. The moral orthodoxy does compel us to consider the livelihoods of circus employees, but it should be remembered that circuses can and do exist without using wild animals as part of the performance. In addition, as William Johnson (1990:318) has suggested, it is possible for governments to provide tax concessions and grants to enable circuses to develop non-animal shows and to retrain the animal handlers.



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