Home for the Free: Cultivating Animal Rights


Lee Hall / January 12, 2011 / 33 Comments


animal rights cruelty free vegan

The public, the activist community, and the animals for whom we strive to advocate could all do with a positive vision of animal rights. ~ On Their Own Terms: Bringing Animal-Rights Philosophy Down to Earth
Animal rights means seeing ourselves as part of, and not in charge of, life on this planet. Just as much as animal-rights advocacy aims to stop exploitation, it also strives to preserve the freedom of those animals who live on their terms. In other words, habitat matters. It’s time we bring environmental concerns and animal rights together, and this is why I wrote On Their Own Terms.

We are all responsible for protecting our planet’s ecology — the animals’ only home. Will we have to give up anything? Yes: a destructive fantasy. We’ve made mistakes. We have appointed ourselves the master, the top of the food chain, the grand consumer, the super-predator. We have associated well-being with material affluence, control over nature, and conveniently accessible animal products. We have systematically turned the bio-community into billions of creatures who exist for no other purpose than to be exploited for our own pleasure, and then killed when they no longer suit our whims and conveniences.

In animal-advocacy circles, abolitionists talk of completely removing non-human animals from the category of human-owned property. Today, animals are selectively bred to be the choices on menus and the objects of racing and betting, showing and petting; abolishing these customs would mean ending our systems of breeding animals to be humanity’s playthings or stock shares. But as for those animals living free in their habitat? Are we paying attention to our effects on them? It’s vital that we do so.

It’s in their habitats and social networks — in their oceans, air, and meadows — that the respect taught by animal-rights theory will apply. It’s in their world that animal rights will have meaning. It’s essential that animals keep their habitats, and the freedom to pursue the interactions and experiences that comprise their free lives.

Beyond compromise

Tom Regan, who, in 1983, published The Case for Animal Rights, insists: “You don’t change unjust institutions by tidying them up.”

It’s hard to argue with that. And tidying the system doesn’t mean the animals really are treated any better, although groups who win compromises might call these victories. What happens behind the curtains? Negotiating with a dairy producer over the standards of confinement might well result in the company cutting corners in, say, the transportation contract in order to make up any financial losses from the change. Or the company might vaunt the new, improved confinement standard in its promotional material and succeed in selling more animal products, or in selling them at a higher price.

As long as there is slaughter — as long as human warring on other animals is considered acceptable and normal — there will also be untidy situations, to say the least. Humans can, with courage, acknowledge that the whole war has to end. With courage, we can end it through withdrawing our participation in it. Until we do, all kinds of atrocious things will happen to the non-human beings of the world, often behind closed doors, with activists only able to campaign against some of the most obvious and grotesque.

So we’re challenging our society to stop regarding other animals as our commodities. Not to sell them or the products of their bodies any more.

But is that the whole animal-rights platform? No. It’s not just about what other animals won’t be; it’s also about what they will be. There’s a special energy generated when we cease to define animal rights by focusing on what we oppose, and shift the emphasis to what we envision, advance, and celebrate.

Free-roaming animals walk, fly and swim just outside our walls and fences. How do we ensure they continue doing so? This means more than just leaving them alone or forgetting about them. To let them be takes active intervention, to stop policies and practices that encroach on other animals. Never has this challenge been more important. Our human population is approaching seven billion on this fragile planet and we all want to go to our shopping malls, which are built on concrete where habitat once was. Folded under our earthmovers, moved out of the way by development, other animals might be non-property…and gone forever. Many already are.

All told, at least forty percent of the known species on the planet Earth are currently faced with an extinction risk. It’s no good talking about rights for animals who will not be around to experience life at all.

That’s the context in which we must work, with the world’s physical reality changing much more rapidly than could have been predicted in the seventies, eighties and nineties, when many animal-rights texts were written. Meanwhile, we’re all being affected by changes in the economic climate. Even as you read this, shelters are doing all they can with strained resources to help the animals who arrive at their doors because people have lost their jobs and believe they can no longer afford to keep their pets. Refuges have to decide whether to take in more animals or keep paying support staff; sometimes, there isn’t money for both. And free-living animals are often far out of sight, and far out of mind.

As we clear ever more space for our houses, roads, yards and paddocks, as we bring domestic animals onto the planet in ever greater numbers, what has happened to the free-living animal communities? Where are the wolves, the bobcats, and other animals who once walked over the land on their terms?

Addressing our fears

Often, if we think other animals could harm us, or even if they just look at us sideways, we eliminate them. Humans are turning up everywhere. If our control over others is the default mode, they will be wiped off the continent; it’s only a matter of at what rate. In the rare event that a mountain lion is spotted in California, residents will say these big cats are beautiful, but “they don’t belong here” and the answer is to “take them out.” Why?

The deepest and most comprehensive question for our social movement is why and how modern human society has developed through patterns of domination; and the greatest challenge we face is imagining humanity without the master role. Is it our fear of free animals’ power (over our children, our dogs, our cows, the back yard at night, the woods our government claims for the people, our own bodies) that keeps us from imagining another identity for ourselves?

Although abolishing animals’ legal property status is important, these questions about domination, and what we’d be if we redefine humanity, take us deeper still.

It’s hard to imagine doing this. But look at what we stand to lose, collectively and individually, if we don’t overcome the habits connected with dominion over the planet’s life. Because of our farming customs, deforestation, our exploitation of the land and seas, and our waste, extinctions are occurring at least a hundred times the normal background rate; that is at the most conservative end of the estimates. United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon notes that human expansion is wiping out species at about a thousand times the natural rate of extinction, and that “business as usual is not an option.”

There is one encouraging factor: We have a platform. The idea of animal rights has become kind of a big deal. Today’s animal advocates are the stuff of talk-show conversations. How can we translate this into support for a sustainable and fair future for conscious living beings on Earth?

Healing a culture begins with healing oneself; similarly, nurturing our movement begins with nurturing ourselves. Knowing who we are as individuals, and being clear about our personal goals, enables us to find like-minded people, put our support in the right places, and determine how to live and relish our days. It helps us nourish an organizational base for change — and that matters in our age, when animal use has become high-tech and regulated at the level of global economics.

Wherever we get together and dare to undo old hierarchies, we can anticipate vehement attacks that mischaracterize our efforts. Expect resistance; it happens when one pushes for genuine moral progress. Yet we can be confident in our ability to transform our own being and our society. As children, before learning of classifications and hierarchies, we delighted in the variations of animals and enjoyed their presence. We, and everybody else, had to be taught that we’re destined to control and consume them.

We can reverse this learning, and teach ourselves to live and move with respect. And it will grow from there. That’s what organizing is about. Contrary to what some have said, we are not engaged in a social “war” and we are not going to prevail through targeting “the enemy.” When the animal-rights message prevails, it won’t look like an attack. It won’t look like heroes trouncing villains, saints slaying dragons; no, it will look like invincible weeds, the roots of trees, rising up slowly from beneath the concrete.

TODAY’S QUESTION: If someone gave you a million dollars that can be used for animal rights advocacy, how would you use it? (Answer in the comments section below!). Best of Luck!

Image Source: Image 1


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33 Responses to “Home for the Free: Cultivating Animal Rights”

  1. avatar pferal says:

    RT @OneGreenPlanet: 2 amazing posts, 2 amazing columnists, 1 amazing prize. Read: http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsand… & http://www.onegreenplanet.org/lifestyle/… by @pferal …

  2. avatar VeganSwagg says:

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  3. avatar lokacomotumadre says:

    RT @OneGreenPlanet: Curious about what a positive vision of animal rights looks like? read this http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsand… #vegan #animalrights

  4. avatar 1144Rebekah says:

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  5. avatar janetivesblog says:

    RT @OneGreenPlanet: Home for the Free: Cultivating Animal Rights – The public, the activist community, and the… http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsand… …

  6. RT @OneGreenPlanet: Home for the Free: Cultivating Animal Rights – The public, the activist community, and the… http://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsand… …

  7. avatar Bailey Williams says:

    Wow! I can’t express how impressed I’m with this site. Another great article!

    I would use a million dollars to come up with a hypnotic drug and lure people into changing there minds so they become repulsed by animal products. A mental shift is desperately needed and while all the other ideas are great, I am desperate to witness change during my lifetime!

  8. avatar Paula B Brynildsen says:

    Hi all,
    I know I’m far away from the US, but I’ll give it a try. If I was so lucky as to receive 1 million U$D, (that is about 5.8 million NOK), I would start the first wildlife hospital in this country. Yes, you read it right, Nirway, the country in the world that has many years scored the highest in human welfare, democracy and peace, has a non existence of wildlife rehabilitation centers. Our laws are also extremely restrictive when it comes to allowing anyone to help injured wild animals. Sweden, on the other side, has an effective network of rehabilitation centers. If I were the lucky recipient of that money, I would start a state of the art hospital for wild animals, and since I’m a veterinarian, I would work hard to make it successful. The long term financing would be provided by giving courses on wildlife rehanging for people that want to do good for animals, and cooperating with our main Charity, Dyrebeskyttelsen. I would also try to spread the message about animal rights, and inform the public about veganism and why it is probably our only hope for the planet, the animals and people.
    Best regards, from a cold morning in Oslo.

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  10. avatar Neelu Madhok says:

    Hi its a great offer wow a million dollars will be enough for us to expand our animal shelter, we would be able to accomodate more animals and be able to give them healthy feed, best of medicines, best of care . Maybe some more vets –beside the four we have now and a big team of animal lovers like me to adopt the animals –the advertisements and publicity can be taken care of .This will save many animals and the animal haters too will be able to rest in peace.

  11. avatar blair says:

    wow, some really great, practical ideas here. i agree that a million bucks doesn’t go as far as it used to. being a less-than-creative type personally, i’d use it to subsidise other creative types to produce media (artwork, books, music, short films) that explore our relationship with animals and provide a message that no-one, including other animals, exists to be someone else’s means to an end.

    but i really like the idea of using it as a seed fund/investment for greater things too! (@Rob, @Jennifer Bunker). gotta get me this book…

  12. avatar Lee Hall says:

    Thank you, friends, for the supportive words as well as the creative ideas. I’m so happy one of the conversationalists here will win the book. “If I had a million dollars…” is an intriguing thought experiment, One Green Planet–an interesting take on focusing and goal-setting. While we’re on the topic of support, the space for dialogue opened by progressive media is valuable, and here is a venue that can help us flourish as a movement. Thank you for inviting me to contribute.

    In my opinion, we need to start our work by envisioning a culture that respects habitat and animal rights. Then outline the long-term goals, so we can proceed to plan the short-term steps that will bring the desired cultural shift into being. A workshop for doing exactly this is included in On Their Own Terms.

    And this, by the way, I could write because of Nectar Bat Press. To sum up the story behind Nectar Bat: Say you write a cookbook. And say you have an introduction in that cookbook that explains why we need vegan cookbooks. Say you explain in the manuscript that behind every conventional mocha latte there’s a veal calf. If your publishers are like ours, they’ll tell you they’re concerned about marketing the book and ask you remove that line. Its tone, they’ll say, won’t be good for sales.

    So we need to make our culture safe for principled publishers. We need to get the message out to the youngsters too, and I’m starting to contemplate how to write for children.

    What else to support? Hoorah for the vegan restaurants, the co-ops…and the power of art to enlighten! And festivals!

    I notice that several people have suggested good ways to help the money replenish itself. I love the idea of community land trusts in key bio-regions where wild spaces are threatened with destruction. Also, support is well deserved by the vibrant vegan-organic movement: the growers’ groups themselves, and the people who know how to guide the agricultural transition. Example: Harold Brown founded the project Farmkind as a resource for farmers who want to convert from animal agribusiness to plant growing. That’s really putting the “culture” back into agriculture.

    Thank you for suggesting we support the day-to-day work of spay-neuter and shelters and lifetime refuges. It’s the work of a movement to support its refugees–and yes, we should encourage people to stop putting animals into commerce and into positions of dependence in the first place, as we model respect for Earth and all the planet’s residents. Interwoven here is the essential reality, as Tom says, that all animals depend on the ecology. Just as space must be reclaimed from animal agribusiness, I’d think we must strive to ultimately make sanctuaries obsolete; for they, too, usurp the lands. And freedom even from benign control is demanded by the best reading of animal rights.

    Other worthy recipients, I think, would connect environmental law clinics and animal-rights groups. The University of Denver’s environmental law clinic has formed a pro bono alliance with Friends of Animals, CARE of the Delaware Valley, and also other groups that have what’s considered an environmental focus (such as WildEarth Guardians); we all need to get together and align our work. Funding for open-to-the-community conferences that bring animal-rights ideals and habitat-related policy together would help make it so. It’s pro bono in the deepest sense when lawyers, students, and community advocates challenge grazing, logging, fracking; when they defend deer and coyotes; when they challenge commercial uses of animals or the selling out of their environment. Such advocacy isn’t a lucrative undertaking, so it needs to be appreciated, with funds marked for it. We could talk a lot about sites of education, ways we need to see new and ecologically relevant ideas take off in philosophy departments etc.

    Thanks to everybody for taking the time to talk here and offer some practical tips for the vegan imagination. It feels as though we’re hanging out, sharing our ideas and setting our goals, in a vegan café with a garden amidst the trees, and I’m looking forward to hearing the local musicians.

    Love & liberation,

    Lee.

    PS: Elaine, you’d get a discount for that order.

  13. avatar Mike Maybury says:

    Use $1 million as a fund to encourage:
    1. vegans worldwide to set up restaurants and stores on the lines of existing businesses and cooperatives.
    2.educators and practitioners need to network together with vegans worldwide.
    Without such an alternative business and professional structure, we will never reach past the 1% of the population.

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