Rick Bogle,
Primate
Freedom
June 2017
Please buy and read "We All Operate in the Same Way." The Use of Animals at the University of Wisconsin-Madison by Rick Bogle
There is no way to dress up vivisection without a gross misrepresentation of the plain facts.
It seems that the elaboration of the facades, the absurdity of the falsehoods, increase in step with the degree of horror the perpetrators are trying to hide. Covering up and hiding atrocities is always despicable. It is particularly odious when taxpayer-funded entities become participants. At that point, it is tantamount to government trying to fool the public into believing something that is the opposite of what it is actually doing and paying others to do.
It seems to be a law of human nature that whenever someone or some group
is routinely doing something evil, and the public learns of it, the person
or group denies it and is compelled to dress it up in a way that is nearly
or even exactly the opposite of reality.
The propaganda from people and organizations whose incomes rest squarely on
hurting and killing animals in the name of $cience are examples of this phenomenon. For as long as I have been reading about the use of animals in
science, people like me have have been pointing to the terrible things
occurring in the labs, while the people working in or in support of the labs
have been claiming that the people hurting and killing the animals care
about them and respect them.
Most of the images above come from a somewhat new website created by the
not-so-new Americans for Medical Progress, whose name is an Orwellian twist
on the group's actual work and goal which is clearly the defense and
promotion of vivisection.
This strategy isn't new. Not at all.
As criticism of slavery in the South escalated, pro-slavery propaganda made
absurd claims about how much slave owners cared for their slaves and how
very happy they were.
The National Holocaust Memorial Museum explains that in response to
growing international awareness of Nazi atrocities, that the Red Cross was
allowed to visit the Theresienstadt ghetto in Czechoslovakia.
"Elaborate measures were taken to disguise conditions in the ghetto and to
portray an atmosphere of normalcy. This footage, showing an orchestral
performance, is part of a German propaganda film made following the Red
Cross visit to Theresienstadt."
The term used for such intentional deceit, the effort to make those on the
outside think things on the inside are much better than they are, is
Potemkin village.
To my knowledge, the most extreme case(s) of using a Potemkin village to delude people are the websites run by the vivisection industry's lobbyists and front groups. They vary a bit, but a common deception is the use of images of attractive people holding seemingly happy animals in a friendly manner, but that representation is a facade that hides a cold and gruesome reality.
These images serve the same purpose as the drawings of happy slaves and
the Nazi's staging at Theresienstadt. They are intended only to deceive.
It seems that the elaboration of the facades, the absurdity of the
falsehoods, increase in step with the degree of horror the perpetrators are
trying to hide. Covering up and hiding atrocities is always despicable. It
is particularly odious when taxpayer-funded entities become participants. At
that point, it is tantamount to government trying to fool the public into
believing something that is the opposite of what it is actually doing and
paying others to do.
Treason is the term used when a citizen betrays their country; I don’t think
there is a word for government hoodwinking citizens, but betrayal comes
close.
The reality hidden behind the smiling faces is much different.
USDA inspection reports, the materials and methods sections of published
papers, undercover videos and photographs reveal an altogether different
world than the happy nonsense and fake news from the industry's
propagandists. To them, the animals are disposable.
Plain unalterable facts make it clear that in many cases the animals are
treated poorly. And even when they are treated relatively well, it is a
prelude to their eventual use. In essentially all cases, their living
conditions are severely constrained and commonly bleak.
There is no way to dress up vivisection without a gross misrepresentation of
the plain facts.
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