Vegan lifestyle articles that discuss ways of living in peace with humans, animals, and the environment.
Gary Francione,
Animal
Rights: The Abolitionist Approach
August 2017
You may also be thinking, “but what if I were starving on a desert island”? The short answer: you aren’t, have never been, and are highly unlikely to ever be. But even if you were, then the element of compulsion and necessity would be present that would make your killing an animal morally excusable. No one reading this is experiencing such compulsion or necessity that removes their moral choices from this framework.
In our discussions about veganism, a common—almost
unquestioned—assumption is that veganism is a matter of choice. What is
meant by this is not simply that we can choose whether or not to eat, wear,
or use animal products because these choices are not prohibited by law, but
that we have no moral obligation to choose to be vegan. Veganism is like
what movies we choose to see, or what art or music we like. There’s not
really a moral right or wrong about it.
We want to take issue with that and maintain that there is a moral right and
wrong about the matter and that you do have a moral obligation to go vegan.
But, we also want to show you that you actually agree with us.
Every day, there are stories about how someone did some terrible thing to an
animal without any good reason. These stories often involve dogs and cats,
but they often involve other animals. We do not think that it is
controversial to say that our conventional wisdom about animals is that we
think that they matter less than humans do and that it is morally acceptable
to prefer us over them, but only in situations in which there is some
compulsion or necessity. Most of us think that the assertion that it is
morally wrong to inflict unnecessary suffering or death on animals is
completely uncontroversial. We don’t think that it’s a matter of choice; we
think it’s a matter of moral obligation.
And what necessity means in this context is also not at all controversial.
We all agree that that it is wrong to inflict suffering and death on animals
because to do so brings us pleasure, is convenient, or is amusing. Why does
84% of the British public oppose fox hunting? That is simple. They think
that the pleasure or amusement of the hunters does not justify the
infliction of terrible suffering and a violent death on the fox. They don’t
think that hunters should have the right to choose to engage in fox hunting.
There’s a moral right and wrong here, and they regard it as morally wrong.
We use animals for a variety of purposes but our most numerically
significant use of animals is for food. We kill and eat an estimated 60
billion land animals and one trillion sea animals every year. The most
“humanely” (whatever that means) raised and slaughtered animals experience
significant pain and distress during their lives and at the time of their
deaths. CCTV cameras in slaughterhouses won’t do anything to affect that.
Surely, we need to be able to justify the suffering that we impose on the
animals we eat. We need to be able to offer a reason that plausibly includes
some necessity or compulsion.
The problem is that we cannot do so.
There is no need for us to consume animal products in order to achieve
optimal health. Leading governmental authorities and professional
organizations around the world accept that we can live in a perfectly
healthy way without consuming meat, dairy, and eggs. Indeed, an increasing
number of mainstream health professionals are expressing the view that
animal products are harmful for human health and that many diseases are
linked with our diets of animal protein and animal fat. And there is no
longer any doubt that animal agriculture is an utter and unequivocal
ecological disaster.
So what is the best justification we have for inflicting suffering and death
on the animals we eat? Palate pleasure. Amusement. That’s about it. And how
is that any different from the pleasure and amusement of those who hunt
foxes?
At this point, you may be thinking that there is certainly a difference
between you and those who do things like hunt foxes—they participate in it
directly and you just buy animal products at the store. That may represent a
psychological difference but there is no moral difference between the person
who does the killing and the person who pays someone else to do the killing.
Indeed, the law is clear that the person who pulls the trigger and the
person who pays to have the trigger pulled are both guilty of murder.
You may also be thinking, “but what if I were starving on a desert island”?
The short answer: you aren’t, have never been, and are highly unlikely to
ever be. But even if you were, then the element of compulsion and necessity
would be present that would make your killing an animal morally excusable.
No one reading this is experiencing such compulsion or necessity that
removes their moral choices from this framework.
It is clear that, as a society, and as individuals, we are struggling with
the matter of our moral obligation to nonhumans. The one thing that is clear
is that even if we stay with our conventional wisdom, which is very much
anthropocentric, and we don’t venture into animal rights theory, there is a
right and wrong here. Veganism in diet is the default position established
by what we all claim to believe. And once we stop eating them, it becomes
clear why we should not exploit them in every other context–for clothing,
entertainment, etc.–as well.
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