Dedicated to the premise of the animal rights movement -- that
only basic legal rights can make possible humane treatment of the vast
majority of nonhuman animals
-- A 12-Step Program to Recover from Animal Use, Exploitation, and
Destruction summarizes practical ways to move society beyond the animal
welfare systems, that have failed to eliminate the present horrible
exploitation, toward the rights the animals need.
1. Nonhuman animals have the moral rights, which should be
established as basic legal rights, not to be used by human beings, not
to be property, and to live according to their natures. Animals should
never be subjected to human-inflicted suffering or interference.
2. Insist on basic legal rights -- not secondary rights without basic ones already in place
-- as the primary goal, with secondary rights and enforcement mechanisms to follow achievement of that goal.
3. Do not confuse "helping animals," "improving conditions" for
exploited animals, or other animal-welfare measures with animal rights
objectives or goals, since animal rights by definition means getting to
where nonhuman animals don't need human help because human beings are
not using or interfering with them.
4. Where animals are known to be suffering due to the failure of the
animal-welfare system to protect them from human beings, demand that
authorities act to remedy the situation and educate about the inherent
inability of the welfare system to protect the animals.
5. Educate in part by debunking claims that animal rights is
anti-human and by demonstrating that animal rights is what humans need
most, just as women's rights benefit men and civil rights benefit
dominant as well as oppressed groups.
6. Communicate that humans are deserving of animal rights that do not
currently exist or are not enforced, and that animal exploitation,
oppression and abuse are original sources of similar mistreatment of
humans. Animal rights should help expand, not diminish, human rights,
except that human beings will no longer see themselves as having the
right to use or interfere with other animals.
7. Educate people about the way capitalism and politics work, to
emphasize that animal rights is a matter of justice rather than personal
traits such as compassion, caring, or empathy. This is not to dismiss
those traits as unimportant -- they're crucial to all interactions among
human beings and between humans and other sentient beings -- but to
heighten understanding of the important difference between the personal
and the political, the incidental and the systemic, feelings and
principles.
Compassion is natural except in a very small percentage of people.
Merely acting on compassion is insufficient to change institutions,
laws, and societies. Injustice isn't due to individual people's lack of
compassion or empathy; it is due to strong incentives to overcome those
positive traits.
8. Campaign to change practices, policies, regulations, and laws
regarding government agencies and institutions that promote and/or
support animal exploitation with public funds.
Current examples include efforts to reform the School Lunch Program;
to end the teaching of "animal science" at our land-grant universities;
and to end public funding of animal experimentation. Additional
possibilities: work to end subsidies to the feed-crop, flesh, milk and
egg industries;
to end county extensions -- direct service to the flesh, milk and egg
industries; to remove promotions of flesh, milk and eggs from county
extension home-economics presentations; to end local, county, state and
federal government purchases of and reimbursements for flesh, milk and
eggs and cleaning products tested on animals; and more.
9. Work to eliminate the public-relations efforts of government
agencies and other publicly funded and subsidized entities (usually on
behalf of private industry at public expense) to maintain and promote
the flesh, milk, and egg industries.
Through their supporters, the flesh, dairy and egg industries
maintain the human-supremacist / speciesist / animal-exploitation status
quo through subordination of up-to-date knowledge to popular false
beliefs (social fictions), as when they promote false notions that human
beings are natural omnivores, that Homo sapiens evolved as hunters, that flesh, milk and eggs are needed in the human diet or are "naturally" consumed by humans.
10. Demand in all circumstances that public entities adhere to the
principle of equal consideration of equal interests by strictly
enforcing Constitutional guarantees, open-records and open-meetings laws
and by relying on substantive empirical evidence for decision-making
when such evidence conflicts with what is popular or what is demanded by
elites.
Since equal consideration of equal interests is basic to animal
rights and to the rule of law by which the United States purports to
govern itself but has remained subordinate to might-makes-right in the
economic, political and legal systems, making equal consideration of
equal interests a top priority in all matters will help direct society
toward equal consideration of all sentient beings' interests and away
from the current human-nonhuman relationship guided by
might-makes-right.
11. Define as victories, meaningful interim results, and achievable
objectives education as to what animal rights is and animal rights'
enormous benefits to human beings.
12. Have faith that small numbers of people can bring about
fundamental change; do not be overly concerned with popularity or the
early lack of popularity of the animal rights message.
Too much emphasis on popularity and support early on was a key factor
in the declared animal rights movement's reverting to animal welfare,
where its strategies, tactics, and language remain for the most part
today.
For further information...
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