Doggies and Demerol
Katherine Mangu-Ward | November 9, 2007, 3:16pm
PETA's Ingrid Newkirk broke her arm and told the sad tale of her injury thusly:
"Just as I was setting out to launch my new book, Let’s Have a Dog Party!, I met a wet floor and went splat, neatly snapping the bones in my wrist. Ooh, the pain! Thank goodness for IV drips."
The hypocrisy squad at The Center for Consumer Freedom is on Newkirk like white on rice:
The kicker:
Ingrid Newkirk, you may recall, once told a reporter that “even if animal research resulted in a cure for AIDS, we’d be against it.” Fair enough. But there’s a big difference between talking the talk and walking the walk.
Ron Bailey-style disclosure: My husband used to work for the Center for Consumer Freedom.
Addition disclosure: I, too, love IV Demerol.
Mr. Nice Guy | November 9, 2007, 8:57pm | #
"If any of the answers is NO, explain why that is morally different than me shooting dogs to find new trauma treatments. Bet you don't respond, fuckin' coward."
Well S sub D I might argue that there is a big difference between the bug killed by a pesticide and the dog. I might say that biologists actually think there is a huge difference between the two (which is actually WHY they do trauma tests on dogs and not aphids for example).
I might say there is a huge difference between the kind of pain an animal goes through in some expermintation and what could go on through humane farming.
The problem with your reasoning is you assume that all animal welfare folks think alike: that we are all grungy granola munching folks worrying about exploitation of silk worms. That is the only picture that conservative and libertarian think tanks, whose funders have an interest in marginalizing animal rights and/or animal welfare, put forward of such folks. But c'mon, certianly you are smart enough to get out there, do the work, and read some animal rights and welfare books, talk to ome folks, etc..Don't be led by the nose so easily my friend!
If you did that you would find that most animal rights folks do NOT hold the belief that because something is alive it must have the right to vote or something. The position of animal rights and welfare folks is actually easily summed up, the infliction of pain on any creature is wrong to the extent that the creature
1. can experience pain
or
2. has some reasoning capacity
(I say "or" because you have some, more utilitarian folks like P. Singer who ground the right in capacity for pain, and others such as T. Regan or Wise who ground it in rationality).
A common attack on animal rights folks is "what about plants, or lice etc". But it's plain that there is a vast difference in the ability to feel pain of a dog and a plant or louse. If our views are grounded in the above then this is strictly no problem...
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: show me the morally relevant difference between a human infant that is terminally ill (and therefore will not ever reach a state of "reason") and a pig that would make it OK to torture the latter but not the former. Neither can reason, contract, understand rights/obligaitons, both can feel pain, etc...