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April 09, 2008

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Fredrik Fält

Animal Voices had a great podcast interview with two of the founders of Animal Rights Africa. They explained how the links between animal abuse and social injustices can be made very clear in a country like South Africa, where the memories of apartheid still are relatively fresh.

http://www.animalvoices.ca/shows/michele_pickover


Dan

Speciesism, racism, sexism, and ruining the environment for future generations are all the same wrong, all the same injustice: treating morally similar cases differently because of arbitrary (i.e. irrelevant) differences. That people can’t see this is pretty much the essence of the moral imbecility I mentioned in my comment in yesterday’s post.

trent

I am currently reading "Making a Killing" (http://www.makingakillingbook.com/) which talks extensively about the connections amongst these movements.

Gary Francione made a statement in an interview which has always stuck with me: "All forms of discrimination have their particular characteristics but they share in common the commodification of the sentient "other". In that sense, they are all the same."

Elaine Vigneault

I firmly believe all oppressions are linked to each other.

I think the cornerstone principles of movements of liberation are the notions that:
1. The interests of others (humans and nonhumans alike) matter,
2. Those interests ought to be respected in our ethical, economic, and political worlds/ Oppression of those interests is wrong,
3. Difference is not a justification for oppression.

Mary Martin

Here's a blog post from someone who was at One Struggle.
http://www.urbansprout.co.za/one_struggle_review

Notice that it is clearly authored by an environmentalist ("girlsprout"), yet this person ends with:
"The entire event was very much oriented towards a vegan way of life, which could at times be a little daunting. I did, however, leave feeling like my eyes had been forced open; not a comfortable feeling, but a necessary one."

Perhaps the connection between the Planet and the beings who live on it has become a bit clearer as a result of the event for girlsprout.

Bea Elliott

It's frustrating when people fail to connect Animal Rights with other social issues. I realize it's far more complex than this, but here's how it registers with me... If moral consideration is extended to the "least" of beings... rightfully, all "others" would be free from exploitation as well.

And if we could eliminate hierarchal domination, we might live by another simplified rule, one that holds the essence of liberating the "biocommunity", which is this: All that live have a right to be free from force...

This elementary (ahimsa) edict is prescribed in most globalized religions and in civilized world doctrines... The challenge is to get people to embrace this creed without pragmatic exclusions.

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