Missouri Legalizes Fishing With Bare Hands

Missouri Conservation Committee agreed in late 2004 to a trial season of handfishing in that state for summer 2005.

Some variety of handfishing is already legal in 11 states, though in Missouri it has long been punishable by a fine. Critics of handfishing argue that participants will inevitably target the most sexually mature fish and thus disproportionately deplete the number of fish capable of breeding.

According to the Associated Press, handfishing is also not for the faint of heart,

It can also be dangerous: Noodlers [another term for handfishing] hold their breath for long periods under water and sometimes come up with fistfuls of agitated snakes or snapping turtles instead of fish.

Missouri\’s handfishing season will last from June 1 through July 15, 2005. Handfishers will buy a $7 permit and can catch five catfish daily, with fish under 22 inches long having to be thrown back. In addition, handfishing will only be legal along specific parts of the Fabius, St. Francis and Mississippi rivers.

Source:

\">Missouri approves fishing with bare hands. Scott Charlton, Associated Press, December 28, 2004.

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Killing Dogs to Save People in Wake of Tsunami

Shortly after the horrendous tsunami that struck southeast Asia, the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu faced a problem with feral dogs that were attacking refugees, especially around mealtime. Tamil Nadu responded by organizing roundups of stray dogs and then killing the feral dogs.

Shantha Sheela Nair, who headed up relief efforts in Tamil Nadu, told the Daily Telegraph that a gruesome after-effect of the tsunami apparently led the dogs to begin focusing on human beings,

The starving dogs\’ behavior changed after they began eating animal and human corpses washed ashore soon after the tsunami.

After the bodies were cleared, the dogs apparently began threatening and attacking humans at refugee shelters.

According to the Daily Telegraph, stray dogs are a major problem in India and responsible for a staggering 20,000 rabies deaths each year. People who dump the carcasses of animals in centralized places have encouraged the emergence of packs of carrion-eating dogs which can end up attacking human beings.

Source:

Cull begins after feral dogs attack survivors. Rahul Bedi, The Daily Telegraph, January 1, 2005.

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PETA Wants Jimmy Carter to Give Up Angling

After former U.S. president Jimmy Carter appeared on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno and described how he was accidentally hooked on the face while fishing, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals fired off a letter urging Carter to give up his \”cruel\” habit of fishing.

Karin Robertson, PETA\’s Fish Empathy Project Manager, wrote to Carter saying,

I am writing on the behalf of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the world\’s largest animal rights organization, with more than 800,000 members and supporters worldwide. I am writing to ask you to please consider recent research indicating that fish are as intelligent as dogs and cats and to most respectfully ask that you take up hiking, bird-watching, or boating without your rod and reel as an alternative to fishing, which causes the animals on the end of the line immeasurable agony.

I have grown up deeply impressed by your dedication to making the world a kinder, better place. Your post-presidential missions, both internationally and domestically, rightly impress the entire world. That\’s why we are optimistic that our plea on behalf of other species will fall on sympathetic ears.

I heard you discussing, on Jay Leno\’s program, how you were hooked through the face while fishing and the agony of having the hook pulled out of your face while you were held down. Our hope is that this experience may have given you a little insight into the fish\’s point of view–every hooked fish experiences the physical agony that you went through.< /p>

Beyond the fact that fish feel pain in the same way and to the same degree that you and I do, please consider that fish are also interesting individuals–as worthy of our concern as any dog or cat, animals you would never deliberately hook through the mouth, of course.

Bruce Friedrich chimed in that unlike Carter, fish \”can\’t go to the hospital\” for their injuries (well, if they\’d get jobs and a decent health plan . . .)

Sources:

PETA has a beef with Jimmy Carter\’s fishing. U.S. News and World Report, January 10, 2005.

PETA Encourages President Jimmy Carter to Show Fish Some Empathy! Press Release, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Undated.

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More Joan Dunayer on Animal Rights vs. Animal Rights Welfarists

In response to criticism of her book, Speciesism, and specifically its attacks on the more non-abolitionist elements of the animal rights movement, Joan Dunayer recently posted a long section of her book which deals with this topic to animal rights mailing list AR-News.

Dunayer charges that animal rights activists who work for reform of certain practices are hypocritical or, at the least, not true to their ideals,

Asking KFC or any other company to implement less-cruel slaughter of chickens conveys this message: \”It\’s alright for you to kill chickens, provided that you do it in the least cruel way.\” As David Nilbert has stated, nonhuman advocates shouldn\’t ask a company to sell body parts from chickens slaughtered less cruelly; they should demand that the company \”stop selling fried body parts of chickens altogether.\” . . .

\”Welfarist\” campaigning perpetuates a speciesist double standard between humans and nonhumans. As expressed by Francione, treating \”the nonhuman context different from the human context\” indicates \”species bias.\”

If I were in a Nazi concentration camp and someone on the outside asked me, \”Do you want me to work for better living conditions, more-humane deaths in the gas chamber, or the liberation of all concentration camps?\” I\’d answer, \”Liberation.\” In fact, I\’d find the question bizarre and offensive. I\’d regard any focus on better living conditions or more-\”humane\” deaths as immoral. It\’s equally immoral to focus on better living conditions or more-\”humane\” killing of enslaves and slaughtered nonhumans.

. . .

Time, money, and effort always are limited. Activists should devote every available minute and dollar to reducing the number of victims and bringing the day of emancipation closer — by promoting veganism and building public support for nonhuman rights. Over the long term, the best way to reduce hen suffering is to increase opposition to hen enslavement, not to seek \”improvements\” in that enslavement.

Dunayer goes on to argue that animal rights activists who campaign for improved treatment of animals might actually increase their suffering,

Groups such as UPC and AVAR have campaigned against total-starvation forced molting. A ban on any or all types of forced molting would be \”welfarist,\” not abolitionist. Such a ban-actually a requirement that enslavers give hens adequate food and water-would leave hens to be killed when their egg laying declines.

The forced-molting issue epitomizes the tradeoffs that \”reforms\” often entail. A ban on forced molting would mean that many more chickens would be enslaved and murdered. \”Laying hens\” would pass through the egg industry at a faster pace: egg-factory owners who previously used forced molting would \”dispose of\” and \”replace\” them after a shorter period. The number of hens and roosters used as breeders also would increase. So would the number of male chicks born and killed.

Even so, Paul Shapiro, Campaigns Director of Compassion Over Killing, has argued that, overall, a forced-molting ban might reduce the suffering of chickens because forced molting causes suffering and prolongs the time during which a hen lives in horrendously cruel conditions. Whether or not the total amount of chicken suffering would be less without forced molting-which is impossible to determine-what are we doing when we ask that the longer suffering of fewer individuals be replaced with the shorter suffering of many more individuals? We never would say of innocent humans, \”Please improve the conditions of those who are imprisoned and killed, but imprison and kill more people.\” Do we really want more hens and roosters living lives of utter misery and more male chicks being born only to be suffocated or ground up alive? To a rights advocate, the whole idea of attempting to calculate which causes more suffering-torturing and killing fewer chickens over a longer period or torturing and killing more chickens over a shorter period-is morally objectionable. Either way, chickens suffer and die. Either way, their moral rights are completely violated. Remember: chickens shouldn\’t be imprisoned in the first place.

According to an industry article on forced molting, the low-nutrition method of starvation was developed because \”animal welfare interests\” criticized the no-food method as \”inhumane\”; the new method \”addresses the negative welfare connotation that fasting has with animal welfare organizations and consumers.\” In other words, while continuing to starve hens, the industry now will claim to feed them. As a result, consumers will feel better about eating eggs.

Of course as Norm Phelps noted in his review of Speciesism, what Dunayer is calling for in practice is no improvement and no abolition, since liberation in Western societies is a non-starter. Lets hope all activists adopt Dunayer\’s views!

Source:

Speciesism. Joan Dunayer, 2004.

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Norm Phelps Reviews Joan Dunayer\’s Speciesism

The Fund for Animals\’ Norm Phelps recently reviewed Joan Dunayer\’s latest missive, Speciesism. Speciesism, like all of Dunayer\’s animal rights work, is strictly abolitionist with little room for dissent. Phelps doesn\’t have a problem with Dunayers\’ abolitionist arguments, but rather disagrees with Dunayer on how to get there.

So, for example, Phelps describes the following excerpt by Dunayer as \”an intellectually consistent ethic of moral equality for all sentient beings\”,

Sentience, defined as any capacity to experience, is the only logical and fair basis for rights. In nonspeciesist philosophy, all sentient beings have rights. What\’s more, all sentient beings are equal. Any needless harm to nonhumans should be viewed with the same disapproval as comparable harm to humans. Am I saying that a firefly is as fully entitled to moral consideration as a rabbit or bonobo? Yes. Am I saying that a spider has as much right to life as an egret or a human? Yes. I see no logically consistent reason to say otherwise.

Phelps has no problem with this insane logic, but he cannot quite stomach the way Dunayer wants to put it in practice. As he puts it, \”Unfortunately, what is elegant in theory can become hopelessly tangled upon contact with reality.\”

That reality includes Dunayer\’s attack on animal rights groups including United Poultry Concerns, Compassion Over Killing, and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. In her book, Dunayer writes,

If I were in a Nazi concentration camp, and someone on the outside asked me, \”Do you want me to work for better living conditions, more humane deaths in the gas chambers, or the liberation of all concentration camps?\” I\’d answer \”Liberation.\” I\’d regard any focus on better living conditions and more \”humane\” deaths as immoral.

They just can\’t resist the Nazi comparisons at this point. Godwin\’s Law is alive and well with the animal rights movement.

But Phelps disagrees,

It is this two-pronged approach — with its simultaneous, and not entirely consistent, emphases on both liberation and reform — that is critical to success in the real world in which animals are suffering and being killed. Dunayer\’s Nazi concentration camp illustration is based on the unstated assumption that animal liberation can be achieved within a fairly near time frame. But since it clearly cannot be, refusing to work for better living conditions and less painful and terrifying deaths amounts to a betrayal of the animals whom we are professing to help. We must resist the temptation to sacrifice real-world results on the altar of an ivory-tower consistency because what we are really sacrificing is animals.

Someday, maybe, they\’ll be able to treat spiders and humans as morally equal, but for now they need to concentrate on more humane slaughter methods. And if Phelps doesn\’t think animal liberation is right around the corner, why does The Fund for Animals keep issuing press releases saying things like it is the beginning of the end for hunting?

Its kind of amusing to see Phelps then turn to a critique of Dunayer which is a pretty good indictment of the entire animal rights movement,

Like religious fundamentalists, Joan Dunayer believes that she has found the only path to salvation and that all who do not agree with her are giving aid and comfort to the enemy. And in fact, her faith that rigid adherence to logically consistent theory is the sole route to liberation has something of the aura of religious zealotry about it. And like fundamentalists religion, her faith is not empirically based. There is absolutely no evidence to support Dunayer\’s claim that working for \”welfarist\” reforms retards liberation. Historically, the notion that the road to social change lies in strict submission to an elegant orthodoxy has always led, not to the utopia that was promised, but to failure, disaster, or both.

Come on, Norm — religious-like zealotry? Adherence to bizarrely impossible ideals? Holier than thou attitudes? Don\’t pretend as if Dunayer has a monopoly on those traits; they\’re pervasive in the animal rights movement.

Again, people used to e-mail me complaining that I was distorting animal rights activists by suggesting they might grant rights even to insects, but Dunayer says spiders and humans are morally equal and the best Phelps can muster is that its a great ideal that is nonetheless impractical for now.

Source:

Trying to Walk Before We Can Crawl. Norm Phelps, Satya, January 2005.

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PETA Unveils Bloody Col. Sanders Bobblehead

As part of its campaign against KFC, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals recently produced 2,000 \”Cruel Colonel\” dolls. The dolls are bobbleheads showing a Colonel Sanders character with a bloody knife and chicken.

According to the a PETA press release,

The 6-inch, painted ceramic dolls will be handed out at select protests across the country and are a clever way to remind people about KFC’s cruel treatment of chickens. Ask the bobblehead colonel if he likes to torture animals—and see what his response is!

In The Roanoke Times, the Center for Consumer Freedom\’s David Martosko suggested that PETA activist might hand the bobbleheads out to children, \”which fits right into their \’Let\’s get \’em young attitude.\’\” That prompted PETA\” Joe Hinkle to lie to Roanoke Times reporter Mike Hudson. Hudson reported,

Hinkle says PETA \”never hands out things to children under the age of 13 without parents\’ permission.\”

Hinkle is a liar. In May 2004, PETA sent activists to Capitol Middle School in Baton Rouge to hand out PETA\’s \”Chicken Chumps\” trading cards. Here\’s what the Talon News reported,

Students at Capitol Middle School in Baton Rouge could soon be trading some new \”stomach-turning\” cards while waiting for the bus thanks to an outreach effort by one of America\’s leading animal rights organizations.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) will be handing out \”Chicken Chumps\” trading cards to students as they leave school on Thursday after the school refused to allow the group to give its \”Hidden Lives of Chickens\” presentation during school hours.

PETA\’s Vegan Campaign Coordinator Matt Rice will hand the cards out to kids at 2:10 p.m. as they leave school. He will be joined by two activists. One will be in a chicken costume holding a sign saying \”I\’m No Nugget,\” and another will be wearing a television that will show chickens being slaughtered to make the nuggets the children love to eat.

\”Kids would chuck their buckets of chicken into the nearest trash can if they knew how birds suffer in the meat industry,\” Rice said on Wednesday.

Most of the children at Capitol Middle School, which serves 6th-8th grade, would be under 13 (not to mention its just funny how half the time they say they don\’t target children at all, half the time they do, and the other half they only target kids 13 and over — nothing with PETA ever adds up).

Sources:

PETA Doll ruffles KFC\’s feathers. Mike Hudson, The Roanoke Times, January 8, 2005.

Animal Rights Activists Again Target School Kids. Charles Mahaleris, Talon News, May 20, 2004.

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Fur Stores — Activist Protest Helped Increase Sales

A couple of Guerneville, California fur stores recently claimed than an end-of-year protest by a local animal rights group help send their Christmas sales through the roof.

Mikki Herman of Kings & Queens Vintage Clothing in Guerneville told The Press Democrat that the publicity from newspaper and television coverage of the protests helped drive her seasonal sales. Herman told The Press Democrat,

It\’s so amazing. A lot of people came in to support me and shop in Guerneville. Some people who were buying a fur said they never thought to buy a fur, but they felt a compulsion to make a statement.

Jennifer Neely of Memories That Linger told The Press Democrat that although customers stayed away during the first few days of the protest, sales spiked shortly afterward,

I had a bunny farmer come in and spend $300 on Christmas ornaments. You couldn\’t buy publicity like this.

However, Alex Bury of Sonoma People for Animal Rights dismissed the claims of increased sales, chalking it up to friends and family of the store owners who wanted to make a statement. Bury told The Press Democrat,

Our tourist base is very progressive. They won\’t want to see furs or fur protests.

. . .

We\’re getting tons of e-mails and phone calls from people who want to get involved. What the last few weeks of protest have shown me is that most locals are against fur. We\’re going to represent them and animals suffering in traps and continue to ask for fur to be removed.

Which is interesting because, according to The Press Democrat,

In recent weeks, counter protesters have shown up at the protests carrying their own signs and supporting merchants\’ and consumers\’ rights to buy and sell what they choose.

Source:

Merchants say fur protests backfired. Carol Benfell, The Press Democrat, December 31, 2004.

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Anti-Fur Activists Get Naked in South Korea

Anti-fur activists with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals held a nude demonstration in Seoul, South Korea, to protest fur.

Lisa Franzetta and Christina Cho painted their bodies with leopard prints and carried signs reading, \”Only Animals Should Wear Fur.\”

The protest lasted only briefly, however, before police showed up and forced the two into a police car. The Chosun Ilbo quoted an unnamed police officer as saying,

We thought about charging them with a criminal count of putting on an obscene performance, but we judged that to be too severe, so we are considering plans to write them up for a misdemeanor such as exposure and deporting them.

Sources:

Animal rights group plans naked rally Friday. The Chosun Ilbo, January 6, 2005.

Naked Animal Rights\’ Rally Grinds Downtown Seoul to a Halt. The Chosun Ilbo, January 7, 2005.

Activists protest fur clothing in downtown Seoul? The China Post, January 8, 2005.

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Judge Rejects William Cottrell Appeal

A judge this month rejected an appeal for a new trial by convicted arsonist William Cottrell.

Cottrell, 24, was convicted on 8 of 9 charges related to the August 2003 arson of SUVs at a California car dealership. The arson was claimed by the Earth Liberation Front.

Cottrell\’s lawyers initially wanted to offer a defense based on Cottrell\’s autism diagnosis. They wanted to argue that he had diminished culpability for the crimes because his autism made it difficult for him to understand what he was getting involved in.

The trial judge ruled that the Cottrell could not use the autism defense, but after his conviction his lawyers appealed asking for a new trial on the grounds that the judge should have allowed the autism defense.

Instead, U.S. District Judge R. Gary Klausner denied Cottrell\’s request, essentially finding that the trial judge was correct that Cottrell\’s autism was irrelevant in determining Cottrell\’s guilt or innocence.

Cottrell is scheduled to be sentenced March 7.

Source:

Judge rejects bid for new trial by convicted arsonist. Associated Press, January 3, 2005.

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Karen Davis on Holocaust Comparisons

Karen Davis recently wrote a lengthy response to critics who complain about animal rights activists comparing the condition of animals slaughtered for food to the victims of the Holocaust. A Tale of Two Holocausts argues that, if anything, animals actually suffer more than human beings, and that the term \”Holocaust\” could be said to have been misappropriated by the animals\’ oppressors.

Brian O\’Connor has an interesting analysis of Davis\’ work, of which the following prefatory remark is worth noting before looking at the particulars of Davis\’ claims,

\”A Tale of Two Holocausts\” is tedious and pedantic, and weaves together cliched themes of Animal Rights moral equivalence with the fallacious logical operators of the sort \”what if\” \”could well be\” \”some say\” \”can\’t show otherwise\” \”\’can\’ equals \’should\’\” that wouldn\’t pass muster in any peer reviewed journal other than a post-modern rag specializing in the ivory-tower equivalent of \”alien abduction\” conspiracy theories (\”You weren\’t there — I was abducted. Prove me wrong!\”). \”Two Holocausts\” differs little from other such tracts either in its challenged logic or in pretentiousness, neither of which is an asset. But don\’t take my word for it — plod through the entire thing yourself.

To put it a bit more bluntly, its a boring, rambling piece that, as O\’Connor points out, relies on a lot of weasel words to doesn\’t form any sort of coherent point. But there are some interesting things Davis has to say along the way.

The first thing that stands out is Davis\’ assertion that not only is it appropriate to compare the condition of animals with the suffering that human beings suffered during the Holocaust or any number of other genocides, mass murders and ethnic cleansings, but animals may actually suffer more more than humans in such situations. That\’s right, a herd of cattle destined for slaughter may suffer more than a family of Jews murdered by the Nazis.

Davis writes (emphasis added),

Notwithstanding, it is reasonable to assume that animals imprisoned within confinement systems suffer even more, in certain respects, than do humans who are similarly confined. This occurs in a similar way that a mentally impaired person might experience dimensions of suffering in being rough-handled, imprisoned, and shouted at that elude a person capable of conceptualizing the experience. Indeed, one who is capable of conceptualizing one’s own suffering may be unable to grasp what it feels like to suffer without being able to conceptualize it, of being in a condition that could add to, rather than reduce, the suffering. It is in this quite different sense from what is usually meant, when we are told that it is “meaningless” to compare the suffering of a chicken with that of a human being, that the claim resonates. The biologist, Marian Stamp Dawkins, says that other animal species “may suffer in states that no human has ever dreamed of or experienced” (Dawkins 1985, 29). Matthew Scully writes in Dominion of the pain and suffering of animals in human confinement systems:

For all we know, their pain may sometimes seem more immediate, blunt, arbitrary, and inescapable than ours. Walk through an animal shelter or slaughterhouse and you wonder if animal suffering might not at times be all the more terrifying and all-encompassing without benefit of the words and concepts that for us, after all, confer not only meaning but consolation. Whatever’s going on inside their heads, it doesn’t seem “mere” to them. (2002, 7)

. . .

[After the 9/11 attack] I compared all this to the relatively satisfying lives of the majority of human victims of 9/11 prior to the attack and added that we humans have a plethora of palliatives, ranging from proclaiming ourselves heroes and plotting revenge against our malefactors to the consolation of family and friends and the relief of painkilling drugs and alcoholic beverages. Moreover, whereas human animals have the ability to make some sort of sense of the tragedy, the chickens, in contrast, have no cognitive insulation, no compensation, presumably no comprehension of the causes of their suffering, and thus no psychological relief from their suffering. The fact that intensively raised chickens are forced to live in systems that reflect our dispositions, not theirs, and that these systems are inimical to their basic nature (as revealed by their behavior, physical breakdown, and other indicators), shows that they are suffering in ways that could equal and even exceed anything that we have known. Industry sources note, for example, that hens caged for egg production are so overwrought that they exhibit the \”emotionality” of “hysteria,” and that something as simple as an electrical storm can produce “an outbreak of hysteria” in four-to-eight-week-old “broiler” chickens confined by the thousands in buildings (Bell and Weaver 2002, 89; Clark, et al. 2004, 2).

You will notice the abundance of qualifiers that O\’Connor sites as rendering the essay all but pointless. Animals may, could, might, etc. Of course they also may not, could not or might not, so why bother with simple conjecture after conjecture?

Davis\’ claim that an animals inability to conceptualize any pain it feels might make that pain worse is odd given that conceptualization of pain is generally viewed as increasing the severity of the pain, and genocide, mass murder and ordinary every day murder has frequently incorporated said conceptualization to increase the horror of murder. Consider, for example, the civilians kidnapped by terrorists in Iraq and publicly paraded on video before being beheaded. Along with the physical pain of such a gruesome murder, those poor souls have had to endure torture and the psychological pain of their own conceptualizations of what was likely to happen to them.

We see this in our culture when human beings talk of death that occurs almost instantaneously or when an individual is unconscious as being a more \”peaceful\” death than one that occurs with the full conscious awareness of the individual. This is certainly an odd idea if being able to consciously conceptualize pain and death minimizes the pain relative to not being able to conceptualized pain and death.

Davis also addressed the odd subject of \”Who \’Owns\’ the Holocaust?\” Here Davis suggests that the Jews — oppressors of animals, after all — may have improperly appropriated the term \”Holocaust\” for their own purposes.

Davis writes (emphasis added),

The word holocaust is not species-specific, and therefore Jews have no ownership rights over it. From whatever source the word “Holocaust,” as it is now employed, came from, Jews have taken it over from the Greek word, holokauston, which in ancient times denoted their own and others’ cultural practice of sacrificing animals, to designate the Nazi extermination of the European Jews.4 Conceivably, those animals could complain that their experience of being forcibly turned into burnt offerings (and to please or sate a god they would not necessarily have acknowledged as their god) has been unjustly appropriated by their victimizers, who are robbing them of their original experience of suffering. Through PETA’s “Holocaust on Your Plate” exhibit, the animals reclaim their experience, past, present, and future. Taking the animals’ view it may be said of them, as Bruno Bettelheim said of the millions of Jews and others who were systematically slaughtered by the Nazis, that “while these millions were slaughtered for an idea, they did not die for one” (Bettelheim 1980, 93).

Ah yes, the Jews unfairly appropriated the word Holocaust from the animals, and are continuing to oppress the animals by thereby diminish the suffering they cause to animals. You just can\’t make this stuff up.

There is one final thing of note in the essay. Davis feels the need to quote from left wing activist Ward Churchill who, according to Davis\’ notes, wrote the forward to Steven Best and Anthony Nocella\’s collection, Terrorists or Freedom Fighters: Reflections on the Liberation of Animals. Here\’s what Davis says of Churchill,

In A Little Matter of Genocide: Holocaust and Denial in the Americas 1492 to the Present, Native American scholar Ward Churchill writes that the experience of the Jews under the Nazis “is unique only in the sense that all such phenomena exhibit unique characteristics. Genocide, as the nazis practiced it, was never something suffered exclusively by the Jews, nor were the nazis singularly guilty of its practice” (Churchill, 1997, 35-36). Furthermore, Churchill argues in his Forward to Terrorists or Freedom Fighters: Reflections on the Liberation of Animals: “Given that the key to the ‘genocidal mentality’ resides, as virtually all commentators agree, in the perpetrators’ conscious ‘dehumanization of the Other’ they have set themselves to exterminating, it follows that removal of the self-assigned license enjoyed by humans to do as they will to/with nonhumans can only serve to better the lot of humans targeted for dehumanization/subjugation/eradication” (Churchill 2004, 2-3).

It is interesting that Davis would cite Churchill and that Best and Nocella would choose him to write the forward to their book. Churchill is infamous for, among a lot of other things, statements he made that were as outrageous as Davis\’ about 9/11. In an essay entitled \”Sometimes People Push Back,\” Churchill compared the victims of the 9/11 attack to Nazis,

Well, really. Let\’s get a grip here, shall we? True enough, they [the victims of the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center] were civilians of a sort. But innocent? Gimme a break. They formed a technocratic corps at the very heart of America\’s global financial empire – the \”mighty engine of profit\” to which the military dimension of U.S. policy has always been enslaved – and they did so both willingly and knowingly. Recourse to \”ignorance\” – a derivative, after all, of the word \”ignore\” – counts as less than an excuse among this relatively well-educated elite. To the extent that any of them were unaware of the costs and consequences to others of what they were involved in – and in many cases excelling at – it was because of their absolute refusal to see. More likely, it was because they were too busy braying, incessantly and self-importantly, into their cell phones, arranging power lunches and stock transactions, each of which translated, conveniently out of sight, mind and smelling distance, into the starved and rotting flesh of infants. If there was a better, more effective, or in fact any other way of visiting some penalty befitting their participation upon the little Eichmanns inhabiting the sterile sanctuary of the twin towers, I\’d really be interested in hearing about it.

Davis, Best, Churchill — what a lovely group of like-minded individuals.

Sources:

A Tale of Two Holocausts. Karen Davis, Animal Liberation Philosophy and Policy Journal, Volume II, Issue 2.

\”Some People Push Back\” On the Justice of Roosting Chickens . Ward Churchill, 2001.

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