Best Practices: Theorizing Animal Liberation With Broader Struggles

My friend Lynne sent me a great article from Thomas Paine's Corner. The article, Can We Shed Our Moral Primitivism Before It Is Too Late is an interview conducted by Anneka Svenska with Philosophy Professor and Animal Liberation Theorist Steve Best. Best situates animal liberation struggle alongside a number of other struggles--abolition, Palestinian Liberation, Earth Liberation, and anti-Nazi movements.

At first I was put off by Best's comparisons between animal and human slavery, his tactical evocations of Martin Luther King Jr, Anti-Nazi liberation movements, The African National Congress' struggle against apartheid, and his assertion: "Realizing that animals suffered far more than human beings in the quantity and quality of their pain, suffering, and death, I shifted from human rights to animal rights activism."

Often, when I've heard people compare human and animal oppression, the argument reinforces white, male, heterosexual privilege as follows: "If we fought racism, sexism, and homophobia, it only follows that we should fight for animal liberation" as though there was not a substantial difference between oppressed people and animals. "If we would liberate blacks, we should obviously liberate beagles."

This racist strand of rhetoric in the animal rights movement is obviously alienating and damaging to liberation struggles. In contrast to this comparison, Best argues that what allowed a culture of patriarchy and racism to enforce slavery were tools and techniques developed and perfected first on animals. He successfully demonstrates the links between human and animal exploitation and links the political economy of animal exploitation with human oppression throughout history. Rather than prioritizing animal liberation over human liberation, he argues that the struggles are inseparable.

Citing that 50 billion animals are killed each year, fueling the industrial, capitalist economy, he makes a compelling case that animal liberation is integral to anti-capitalist struggle against a culture of domination and exploitation. He advocates eloquently for the Animal Liberation Front and emphasizes the importance of both theorizing and engaging in direct action for holistic liberation.

I would be interested to hear your thoughts on Best's interview, particularly regarding his analysis of animal liberation as the most holistic framework and also his analysis of animal rights in relationship to other struggles of liberation using frameworks of race, class, gender, sexuality, ability, etc...

Click here
to go to COUCH POTATO REVOLUTION.

Animal rights

I don't think its fair to compare animal oppression in any way to Black oppression. Animals are not people. Nobody has any idea what goes on in a animals head any more than they do what goes on in mine. Are animals oppressed? I think that humans are the top of the food chain. Humans have been eating meat for thousands of years. Who's to say somebody's diet is wrong or oppressive? I think people should at least cut back on the amount of meat they eat. Restrictions on meat would maybe start to solve some of the hunger problem, and it would give the kingpins a new product for the black market, bandit farmers and PETA agents packing heat. Wouldn't that be a sitcom.

You don't hink is fair? One

You don't hink is fair? One species dominating and imposing its will on all other species for VANITY! Like all oppressive movements, it is essential to make distinctions between those who will be exploited and their oppresors! Oppression is oppresion regardless of species.

Humans who enslave, castrate, experiment on and fillet other animals have had an understandible penchant for pretending tha non-human animals don't feel pain, wear them devouer them without any disquiting tings of guilt or regret. It is so unseemly of us who behave so unfeelingly toward other living, feeling beings to contend that only humans can suffer, their behavior renders such pretensions spacious, they are just like us . Drs. Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan

"In their behavior towards non-human animals, human animals are Nazis" Isaac Bashevis Singer (Nobel Prize winner of literature and Nazi Germany concentration camp surviver)

By far, the suffering, misery and death non human animals endure, is thousands of times grater than all human suffering combined throughout all human history. Humans torture and murder millions of innocent sentient beings daily!

"Life is indeed to be pitied, whose dominating inhabitants are so uconscious and so ethically embryonic that they make life a commodity, mercy a disease and sistematic masacre a past time and profession." Professor John Howard Moor

ABOLISH ANIMAL OPPRESSION

I have great admiration for those who defend the helpless and defendless sentient beings who are exploited by human animals who call themselves "rational". Human animals oppress and exploit all other spesies, nature and its own for greed and vanity without any regard, concern, guilt or remorse.

Man's gluttony is that of a parasite who murders and tortures so savagely and violently for the sake of vanity. It is so arrogant it gives life for the solely purpose to end it violently for the sake of its palate. How brutal of an animal humans are, the most savage of all beasts the most arrogant and dumb who thinks of itself superior to all life, an speciesist animal that destroys and plunders in that behalf, just like white supremacist Nazis or slave traders did.

"The most violent weapon on Earth is the table fork." Mahatma Gandhi
"As long as there are slaughter houses, there will be battle fields." Leo Tolstoy

How can we attain PEACE while devouring disesase, misery, death and world destruction?