Reluctance to question humans’ exploitation of animals creates a dangerous disconnect in the public’s understanding of COVID-19 and its ongoing risks.
Image by Rick Aplin
During a global pandemic, likely caused by the exploitation of
animals, humanity’s relationship with other species continues
largely unchanged: meat flies off the shelves and a docu-series
trivializing the plight of captive wild animals is an Emmy-nominated
success. What makes it possible for most humans to continue “as
normal” instead of questioning our relationship with or use of
non-human animals? Perhaps it’s thanks to the social construct we
call speciesism.
Speciesism is defined as the assumption of human superiority leading
to the exploitation of animals. It is an implicit bias that spans
across cultures and renders humans unable or unwilling to connect
animal exploitation to the resulting consequences—current
catastrophe included. Diseases originating from animals, called
zoonoses, have “caused nearly every pandemic in human history” per
TIME Magazine, yet that causal relation is largely relegated to
scientific and activist discussions that don’t permeate the popular
conversation. Widespread reluctance to examine the root cause of the
pandemic is creating a disconnect in the prevailing discourse.
Humanity’s relentless exploitation of animals, especially for food,
dramatically increases opportunities for zoonoses to infect people.
Given the scope and scale of that undertaking, the truly shocking
thing about the COVID-19 pandemic is that it didn’t happen sooner.
By exploiting animals, humans willfully perpetuate the largest
vector for zoonotic disease that would not otherwise exist. And
while no longer interfering with animals is logically the best
approach to prevent future zoonotic pandemics, many people are
reluctant to give up the resulting pleasures, especially animal
products. Society’s collective failure to change accordingly would
be akin to continuing to smoke after a lung cancer diagnosis—with
the whole world obligated to pay the price.
Viewing Zoonoses Through the Lens of Speciesism
Zoonoses outbreaks, which are “mediated by human action in most
cases” per 2012 research, have quadrupled in the past 50 years. A
2013 United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UN FAO)
report calls much of this surge “directly related to the human quest
for more animal-sourced food”—yet speciesism guides the narrative
away from human culpability. Zoonotic pathogens are often described
as “jumping” to humans due to “contact” or “mixing” with animals,
while humanity’s role is neutralized to detectives figuring out
where “problematic interactions” occur. Such framing serves to
mystify the primary reason for the interactions while masking their
exploitative nature.
Humans’ predatory “dominion” over non-human animals is the reason
why zoonoses now account for 75 percent of emerging infectious
diseases. We annually breed, rear, and slaughter domesticated
animals by the billions while destroying biodiverse habitats for
grazing and feed crop production; we hunt, fish, trade, and even
farm trillions more so-called wild animals—all while exploiting
countless others for clothing, entertainment, experimentation, and
sport. Worse, we do so despite having the tools and technology to
phase out animal exploitation altogether. Widespread aversion to
examining avoidable yet normalized violence against animals prevents
honest discourse, and therefore meaningful conclusions, about the
resulting scourges.
Zoonoses rose in prevalence when—surprise!—humans began forcing wild
animals into domestication, largely to serve as our own species’
living “stock,” around 10,000 years ago. Since then, researchers
note, so-called livestock use has continued to present “new health
challenges and new opportunities for emergence of zoonotic
pathogens.” One such “opportunity” resulted in losing up to 90
percent of the Native American population to livestock-derived
zoonotic diseases brought over by European colonists. Today,
slaughterhouse workers and animal farmers are “at the leading edge
of the human-animal interface” and “more likely to become infected
with a zoonotic virus” per CNN. Yet ending that cycle by phasing out
livestock use altogether is largely excluded from the general
conversation. Politicians are unwilling to risk their popularity and
scientists refuse to draw the logical conclusions to which their own
research points, with rare exception.
Humanity has long focused on prevention and response measures for
pandemics that avoid any honest reevaluation of the human behavior
that is primarily driving them: animal exploitation. Instead of
challenging the status quo, mainstream news organizations continue
to reinforce this disconnect by omitting, or even distorting and
blocking, vegan advocacy linking animal consumption to zoonoses. A
recent Sentient Media survey finds that nearly all trending COVID-19
coverage omits the connection between animal exploitation and
pandemics, at best using vague language like “it came from animals.”
Like other oppressive mindsets, speciesism creates an insidious
alternate reality in which we blame the victims (when we bother to
consider them at all) instead of the victimizers.
Who’s to Blame for COVID-19?
The wildlife trade is widely implicated in unleashing the novel
coronavirus, but conventional animal farming may have played an
equally crucial role. Leading virologist Christian Drosten tells the
Guardian that humans create opportunities for coronaviruses to
switch hosts “through our non-natural use of animals—livestock.” At
the China food market linked to early COVID-19 cases, wild animals
mixed with livestock—something TIME calls “a big risk” and the
National Review “a deadly combination.” Per 2014 research,
domesticated animals like livestock serve as “amplifiers” of
pathogens that emerge from wild animals and are “the central ones in
the network” of zoonotic disease transmission. A July 2020 UN report
on preventing the next pandemic reiterates that although wild
animals may harbor zoonotic diseases, livestock act “as a bridge for
transmission between the animal hosts and humans.”
The novel coronavirus may have originated in bats, but it required
an intermediary host to infect its first human. Farming advocacy
group GRAIN calls farmed pigs an “obvious candidate” given their
human-like immune systems, and Scientific American reveals that an
earlier strain of coronavirus likely crossed from bats to pigs. The
latter cites infectious disease epidemiologist Gregory Gray in
warning that “looking for novel coronaviruses in pigs should be a
top priority” due to the massive global scale of pig farming.
Ceasing to breed and consume pigs and other animals—these activities
being the actual root of the problem, versus the bats or pigs
themselves—would be far more effective. Whether or not COVID-19 is
ever traced to humanity’s bacon obsession, it appears inevitable
that our appetites for animals will continue to unleash other
diseases like swine flu and avian flu (despite the livestock
sector’s denial).
The Science Is Clear, Just Not Convenient
Science links zoonotic diseases to animal exploitation and
especially to animal farming. A 2004 joint report by groups
including the World Health Organization identifies “increasing
demand for animal protein” as a “common theme” among the risk
factors for zoonoses’ emergence. The Lancet published research in
2007 linking zoonoses to “the environmental degradation associated
with livestock” and in 2012 to “animal production systems.” Reuters’
coverage of another 2012 study warns “most human [zoonotic]
infections are acquired from the world’s 24 billion livestock,”
adding that “exploding global demand for livestock products means
the problem is likely to get worse.” Now that COVID-19 is here, the
July UN report on pandemic prevention makes clear that increasing
global meat demand only exacerbates future pandemic risk. Referring
to the Spanish Flu of 1918-20 and the novel coronavirus, a group of
doctors writing for the Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention
points out that “the two largest pandemics in the past 100 years
revolve around our food choices—specifically, the consumption of
animals.” Sadly, such credible scientific research continues to
prompt little meaningful action.
Experts have articulated for decades that livestock production risks
catastrophic pandemics; Dr. Michael Greger, author of Bird Flu: A
Virus of Our Own Hatching, details as much in an eerily prescient
2008 presentation. That same year, a GRAIN report on emerging
viruses notes “governments’ unwillingness to confront the dominant
powers of industrial livestock farming”—an unwillingness that
evolutionary biologist Rob Wallace implicates as causing the current
pandemic. He says that the likelihood of the livestock industry
unleashing “a virus that might kill a billion people” is regarded
”as a worthy risk.” A social media poll shows that many animal
consumers willingly accept those terms.
The pandemic risk posed by meat and dairy production is not
exclusive to the most intensive forms of animal farming (often
referred to collectively as factory farming). Per the UN FAO,
suggestions claiming otherwise are “misleading.” Its 2013 report
states that “disease emergence in livestock is not specific to
large-scale, intensive systems” and includes “animals roaming freely
over large areas.” The 1918 influenza pandemic, after all, may have
originated from pig and poultry barns predating today’s
highly-mechanized and concentrated animal feeding operations
(CAFOs). Modern subsistence farming remains anything but industrial,
yet it still contributes to the emergence of zoonoses; 2012 research
finds a strong correlation among dependence on livestock, poverty,
and zoonotic disease. Either way, planetary boundaries dictate that
the vast majority of current global demand for animal products can
only be met by CAFOs, which are known breeding grounds for
pathogens.
Whether free-range or intensive, animal farming also unleashes
zoonoses by destroying habitats. Despite dominating global land use,
livestock production provides just 18 percent of humanity’s calories
and 37 percent of our protein. Extensively transforming forests for
grazing and growing feed encourages emerging diseases by causing
unnatural overlap of domestic and wild species, amplified disease
activity in displaced animals, and disruptions in species
populations that, when balanced, naturally keep diseases more
contained. “Livestock production is the single largest driver of
habitat loss,” a 2015 study states. A 2018 study finds that shifting
to plant-based farming has the extraordinary ability to offset
habitat loss by freeing up an area of land equivalent to the U.S.,
China, the European Union, and Australia combined. An evolution away
from livestock reliance is an unparalleled solution for mitigating
habitat loss.
Of the many experts connecting habitat loss to zoonoses, several
specifically implicate livestock farming. One Health initiative
co-founder Laura H. Kahn links livestock production with “the
widespread deforestation that has contributed to the emergence of
zoonotic diseases.” Pandemics expert Sonia Shah points out that
replacing wild habitats with animal farming “ratchets up the risk of
disease emergence,” yet, “we’ve razed an area around the size of the
continent of Africa to raise animals for slaughter.” Global health
expert Alanna Shaikh says that zoonotic outbreaks are encouraged by
“pushing into the last wild spaces on our planet,” including “when
we burn and plow into the Amazon rainforest so that we can have
cheap land for ranching.” Again—despite the misleading vilification
of vegan-associated foods like soy or even mainstream favorites like
almonds and avocados—ongoing large-scale deforestation and
corresponding habitat destruction are unavoidable without a
widespread dietary shift to plant-based foods.
Incredibly, the extreme biosecurity risks of animal use are not
limited to zoonoses. Livestock production is also driving the rise
of foodborne pathogens like salmonella and E. coli as well as
worsening human antibiotic resistance—categorized by the U.N. as a
developing crisis on par with AIDS and Ebola. Livestock vaccinations
are now being touted as a solution to prevent zoonotic diseases, yet
they only help to stop the spread of existing rather than novel
viruses. In the words of bioethicist Jan Deckers, “As high
populations of farmed animals are maintained only because of human
demand for their products, many consumers of animal products are
more likely to impose diseases upon other human beings compared to
those who refrain from such consumption.” The prevalence of
speciesism prevents most people from taking even a shred of
ownership for the collective consequences of animal exploitation, no
matter how extreme.
Oppressive Behaviors Are Toxic (Literally)
Rather than blaming those we “otherize,” both human and non-human,
significantly decreasing the likelihood of future pandemics requires
ceasing all forms of animal exploitation. Racist rhetoric blaming
China for COVID-19 diverts attention away from humanity’s collective
behaviors that drive the emergence of novel zoonoses. Sam Scarpino,
who advises public health agencies on controlling emerging
epidemics, explains that despite the myopic public focus on Asia,
new flu strains emerge from American livestock operations “almost
every summer.” Farmed animals continue to be transported vast
distances for slaughter in conditions that risk public health at
facilities that prioritize profits over attempted disease reduction.
Vested interests prompt some to decry any meaningful critique of
animal agriculture’s necessity, instead invoking improved monitoring
and regulation—yet humanity has had over 10,000 years to get this
right. The next zoonotic disease outbreak with the potential to
infect humans is already spreading amongst farmed pigs.
The COVID-19 pandemic exemplifies the negative feedback loop often
created when the powerful exploit the vulnerable. Using some animals
for food subjects other animals to laboratory experiments in an
attempt to control the resulting preventable zoonotic diseases and
dooms others still to mass “depopulation.” Animals confined to fur
farms and zoos for fashion and entertainment are even contracting
this virus. As the human death toll continues to rise, the risk of
exposure to COVID-19 compounds the routine exploitation of
slaughterhouse employees. While no one is immune to the health and
ecological consequences of animal exploitation, poor and
marginalized people, primarily communities of color, are often
hardest hit by its negative effects. COVID-19 is no exception.
Even in the midst of a pandemic linked to animal consumption, the
U.S. government continues to favor animal farming over plant-based
food production. As with already-existing farm subsidies, livestock
producers are receiving the lion’s share of COVID-19 agricultural
aid. Slaughterhouses—widely euphemized as “meat plants”—are now
deemed “critical infrastructure,” prompting the Center for
Biological Diversity to observe that “Trump is willing to sacrifice
workers’ lives to prop up the nation’s inhumane and environmentally
destructive addiction to meat.” Although it’s undeniably regressive
to pretend as though abundant alternatives to animal products do not
exist, this particular form of denial spans across the political
parties. The media, in typical form, mischaracterized the predicted
“meat shortage” as a “crisis,” rather than an uncannily-timed
opportunity to socially distance ourselves from meat and dairy. A
USA Today investigation has since exposed that the meat shortage
scenario was highly exaggerated to keep slaughterhouses operating.
Plant-Based Agriculture Has Never Caused a Pandemic
With so much of the current situation beyond our control, there is
something humanity can do to avoid repeating history. The Lancet’s
2007 research advises that “a reduction in livestock production”
would “decrease human contact with new infectious agents,” while its
2012 research finds “wide-scale adoption of a plant-based diet” may
“result in a decreased threat of zoonotic disease.” Infectious
diseases advisor Dr. Daniel Schar names “mitigated risk from
pandemic disease” among the many “planetary health dividends” of
plant-based diets, a sentiment that public health specialist Aysha
Akhtar echoes in her 2014 TEDx Talk. One Health’s Laura Kahn
suggests “consuming less meat (and raising fewer animals for food)”
and “promoting meat alternatives or vegetarian diets.” Among the
lessons that can be gleaned from scientific documentation of how the
novel coronavirus emerged, per Forbes’ Jeff McMahon, is that
humanity needs to “just eat plants.” Scientist Liz Specht writes
that plant-based and cultivated meat is helping to “remove the food
insecurity and zoonotic disease concerns inherent in animal-based
food.” A team of international wildlife and veterinary experts
concludes in a June 2020 report that humanity can “increase
switching to plant-based foods to reduce consumption of, and demand
for, animal products” to reduce the risk of pandemics in a
post-COVID-19 world. Ecologist Carl Safina argues, “What’s needed to
reduce the frequency of new diseases adapting to humans” from
animals “is, basically, to stop farming and eating them.” The group
of doctors writing in the Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention
agrees, urging a reevaluation of, or even a moratorium on, eating
animals. Scientist and physician Vural Özdemir considers COVID-19 as
“a wake-up call to embrace veganism and animal sentience, and stop
wildlife trade and commodification.”
Signs of an urgently-needed change in animal consumption are
starting to surface. At the very least, reports NPR, COVID-19 has
more people “rethinking their relationship” with meat. Sierra Club
notes that because “COVID-19 struck at a time when global meat
demand was [already] declining,” plant-based eating is now becoming
more widely accepted as a form of environmental and political
engagement. A Psychology Today op-ed contemplates a more dramatic
shift to veganism emerging from this pandemic. The New York Times
decisively names slaughterhouses as “the food chain’s weakest link”
while declaring that “the end of meat is here.” A Harvard Political
Review headline calls just as bluntly for the end of animal
agriculture. Other mainstream outlets report that COVID-19 is
catalyzing less reliance on animal protein and more demand for
plant-based meat (for which U.S retail demand surged in March and
April). July headlines report the UN’s projection that the biggest
global meat-eating decline in decades is now underway, due in part
to increasing public distrust of animal products. Many experts
recommend purchasing mostly plant-based foods to stock up pantries
while limiting grocery store trips. Per Specht, “taking animals out
of our food system is easier than we may think”—and now, as many are
experiencing firsthand, so is taking them out of our kitchens.
Systemic roadblocks to veganism, such as food deserts, remain as
deterrents for those in underserved communities, but various
collectives and nonprofits are addressing dietary inequities to
better establish veganism as a right for all. The global benefits to
be gained by making plant-based diets more accessible, in concert
with a widespread rise of both anti-racism and anti-speciesism,
would be transformative.
Contemplating the pandemic’s aftermath, a renowned epidemiologist
told the media that he hopes people will realize that humans are all
“much more alike than different.” Anti-speciesism simply extends
this realization to other sentient species. Those we use and kill
with impunity are at our mercy; now, we all are at the mercy of a
virus unleashed by that abuse of power. The “single and shared
beating heart” begging us to change our ways, as depicted in Kristin
Flyntz’s viral poem, belongs to animals, too. A global pandemic is
just one type of catastrophe on a long list of those related to
animal use. Imagine that it’s potable water (the depletion of which
animal consumption is driving) instead of just hand sanitizer that
we’re fighting over. Or, to quote one Twitter user, “If you think
COVID-19 is scary, wait until antibiotics no longer work.” Embracing
safer, more eco-friendly, and more ethical alternatives to animal
exploitation is our best defense against the next potential pandemic
and countless other preventable emergencies in the making. The idea
that anyone should willfully default to animal violence persists due
to nothing but a stale social construct.
So let’s aim to never “get back to normal.” The truly transformative
wake-up call of COVID-19 would be for humanity to finally
acknowledge the disastrous consequences of all oppressive
hierarchies, including speciesism, and begin to dismantle them,
together, for the benefit of all sentient beings.
Lorelei Plotczyk is the founder of Truth or Drought, a science-based grassroots campaign focused on animal agriculture’s impact on the environment.