Fighting for animal liberation and an end to speciesism
It is important to understand that there are significant differences among those who regard themselves as vegans.
One important difference is between those who maintain that veganism is merely a way of reducing suffering, and those who maintain that it is a fundamental commitment to justice, nonviolence, and a recognition
of the moral personhood of nonhuman animals.
The difference between these two groups is not merely a matter of abstract theory—it has profound practical consequences.
The prevailing position on veganism among new welfarists is that veganism is a way—one way—of reducing suffering. Understand in this manner, veganism is no different than cage-free eggs or meat produced from a slaughterhouse designed by PETA-award winner Temple Grandin.
These are, new welfarists claim, all just ways of reducing suffering.
If X chooses to reduce suffering by being a vegan, great; if Y chooses to reduce suffering by eating cage-free eggs, great. If X decides to reduce suffering on Monday by eating no animal products and on Tuesday
by eating “humanely” produced animal products, that’s fine. To maintain that, as a moral matter, X should be a vegan on Monday and Tuesday and every other day is “absolutist,” “fundamentalist,” or “fanatical.”
People like Peter Singer, and groups like “Vegan” Outreach and PETA maintain this position. For example, Singer maintains that being a “conscientious omnivore” is a “defensible ethical position.” He claims that being a consistent vegan is “fanatical.” He is a “flexible” vegan who will be non-vegan when it is convenient. He talks about the “luxury” of eating meat and other products from animals who have been well treated, in his view, and killed “humanely.” PETA claims that adherence to veganism as a matter of principle is a matter of “personal purity,” “narcissistic cultural fad,” and “fanatical
obsession.” “Vegan” Outreach makes the emphasis on suffering clear and downplays the use of animals in claiming that veganism is not an end in itself. It is not a dogma or religion,
nor a list of forbidden ingredients or immutable laws—it is only a tool
for opposing cruelty and reducing suffering.
A fundamental assumption of the new welfarist position is that killing animals does not per se inflict a harm on them. Animals do not care that we use and kill them; they only care about how we treat them and kill them. As long as they don’t suffer too much, animals are indifferent to our using them. They have no interest in
continued existence.
It is this thinking that has led to the “happy” meat/animal products movement, which has been the most serious setback in the struggle for justice for nonhumans in decades. It is this thinking that leads PETA and Singer to maintain that we may have a moral obligation not to be vegan in situations in which others will be annoyed or disconcerted by insistence on veganism.
I reject this view. I believe that it is speciesist to maintain that nonhumans must have minds similar to human minds in order to have an interest in continued existence. Any sentient being has an interest in
continued life in that she prefers, wants, or desires to remain alive.
We can no more justify using nonhumans as human resources than we can justify human slavery. Animal use and slavery have at least one important point in common: both institutions treat sentient beings
exclusively as resources of others. That cannot be justified with
respect to humans; it cannot be justified with respect to nonhumans—however “humanely” we treat them.
The abolitionist approach sees veganism as the application of the principle of abolition to the life of the individual. It is our personal expression that we embrace the moral personhood of all
sentient beings and we reject the status of nonhumans as chattel
property. Veganism is an essential part of our commitment to
nonviolence.
Veganism is not just a way of reducing suffering; it is what justice for nonhumans requires at the very least. It is not the last step in our journey to reject the moral schizophrenia that characterizes the
human/nonhuman relationship; it is the first step. If animals
have any moral significance, then we cannot eat, wear, or use them. A
vegan is not a vegan only on Mondays, or only when it is convenient. A vegan is a vegan all the time.
I would no more not be vegan just because my being vegan made someone
else uncomfortable than I would remain silent if someone told a racist
joke or harassed a woman because to object would make the perpetrator
uncomfortable.
It is no more “absolutist” or “fanatical” to be a consistent vegan as it is to be consistent in one’s rejection of rape or pedophilia. Indeed, to characterize consistent veganism as “absolutist” is itself
speciesist precisely because we would not so characterize our complete
rejection of fundamental forms of human exploitation.
If you are not vegan, go vegan. It really is easy. It is better for our health and reduces the violence that we do to ourselves. It is better for the planet and reduces the harm that we do to the home of
sentient beings and to the ecosystems that sustain all life. But, most
importantly, it’s the morally right thing to do. We all say we reject
violence. Let’s take what we say seriously. Let’s take an important
step to reduce violence in the world starting with what we put in our
mouths or on our bodies.
And remember, it’s not an impossibility: THE WORLD IS VEGAN! If you want it!
Gary L. Francione
©2010 Gary L. Francione
http://www.abolitionistapproach.com
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