Animal
“Rights” and the New Man Haters
By Edwin Locke, Ph.D.
Recently a sixth grade student threatened to
bomb the headquarters of a prominent corporation, the Gillette Company.
Gillette’s “crime”? The use of animals to test the safety of their
products. This student’s role models have not been so hesitant. In the
name of so-called “animal rights,” terrorists have committed
hundreds of violent crimes. They have vandalized or fire bombed meat
companies, fur stores, fast-food restaurants, leather shops and medical
research laboratories across North America. The animal “rights”
movement, however, is not about the humane treatment of animals. Its
goal is the animalistic treatment of human beings.
According to these terrorists, it is immoral
to eat meat, to wear fur coats or leather shoes, and to use animals in
research — even if it would lead to cures for deadly diseases. The
terrorists are unmoved by the indisputable fact that animal research
saves human lives. PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals)
makes this frighteningly clear: “Even if animal tests produced a cure
for AIDS, we’d be against it.”
How do the animal “rights” advocates try
to justify their position? As someone who has debated them for years on
college campuses and in the media, I know firsthand that the whole
movement is based on a single — invalid — syllogism, namely: men
feel pain and have rights; animals feel pain; therefore, animals have
rights. This argument is entirely specious, because man’s rights do
not depend on his ability to feel pain; they depend on his ability to
think.
Rights are ethical principles applicable
only to beings capable of reason and choice. There is only one
fundamental right: a man’s right to his own life. To live
successfully, man must use his rational faculty — which is exercised
by choice. The choice to think can be negated only by the use of
physical force. To survive and prosper, men must be free from the
initiation of force by other men — free to use their own minds to
guide their choices and actions. Rights protect men against the use of
force by other men.
None of this is relevant to animals. Animals
do not survive by rational thought (nor by sign languages allegedly
taught to them by psychologists). They survive through inborn reflexes
and sensory-perceptual association. They cannot reason. They cannot
learn a code of ethics. A lion is not immoral for eating a zebra (or
even for attacking a man). Predation is their natural and only means of
survival; they do not have the capacity to learn any other.
Only man has the power to deal with other
members of his own species by voluntary means: rational persuasion and a
code of morality rather than physical force. To claim that man’s use
of animals is immoral is to claim that we have no right to our own lives
and that we must sacrifice our welfare for the sake of creatures who
cannot think or grasp the concept of morality. It is to elevate amoral
animals to a moral level higher than ourselves — a flagrant
contradiction. Of course, it is proper not to cause animals gratuitous
suffering. But this is not the same as inventing a bill of rights for
them — at our expense.
The granting of fictional rights to animals
is not an innocent error. We do not have to speculate about the motive,
because the animal “rights” advocates have revealed it quite openly.
Again from PETA: “Mankind is the biggest blight on the face of the
earth”; “I do not believe that a human being has a right to life”;
“I would rather have medical experiments done on our children than on
animals.” These self-styled lovers of life do not love animals;
rather, they hate men.
The animal “rights” terrorists are like
the Unabomber and Oklahoma City bombers. They are not idealists seeking
justice, but nihilists seeking destruction for the sake of destruction.
They do not want to uplift mankind, to help him progress from the swamp
to the stars. They want mankind’s destruction; they want him not just
to stay in the swamp but to disappear into its muck.
There is only one proper answer to such
people: to declare proudly and defiantly, in the name of morality, a
man’s right to his life, his liberty, and the pursuit of his own
happiness.
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