Animal Scam: the Beastly Abuse of Human Rights."Your brain and your wife's brain will be drilled and burned like you are doing to our lovely animals." In 1990 animal-rights activists mailed this message to Walter Salinger, head of the psychology department at the University of North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. . While the Salingers were not harmed, Animal Scam cites other such threats and actual instances of violence committed by animal-rights extremists. Author Kathleen Marquardt is founder of Putting People First, an advocacy group that defends biomedical bi·o·med·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to biomedicine. 2. Of, relating to, or involving biological, medical, and physical sciences. researchers, pet owners, hunters, and others against animal-rights zealots Zealots (zĕl`əts), Jewish faction traced back to the revolt of the Maccabees (2d cent. B.C.). The name was first recorded by the Jewish historian Josephus as a designation for the Jewish resistance fighters of the war of A.D. 66–73. . The book describes U.S. and Canadian cases in which "animal rightists" (Marquardt's term) have committed arson, burglarized laboratories, and threatened violence against scientists who use animals in their research. Marquardt reveals inconsistencies: For instance, animal-rights advocates consider humans who eat animal products evil, but they act as if animals don't dine on one another. She also digs up some outlandish quotes from well-known animal-rights supporters. "I think |biomedical researchers~ should experiment on murderers," opined singer Doris Day Doris Mary Ann von Kappelhoff (born April 3, 1924)[1] is an American singer, actress, and animal welfare advocate known as Doris Day. A vivacious blonde with a wholesome image, Day was one of the most prolific actresses of the 1950s and 1960s. . "What the hell are they going to do for society to pay us back?" Unfortunately, a litany of horror stories and goofy quotes doesn't constitute an argument against animal rights. Marquardt saves her exposition of animal-rights ideology for the end. Breezing right past the philosophical issues undermines the book's appeal to an important audience: people who are sympathetic to animal welfare but are unwilling to sacrifice medical research or the Kentucky Derby Kentucky Derby One of the classic U.S. Thoroughbred horse races. It was established in 1875 and run annually on the first Saturday in May at Churchill Downs track in Louisville, Ky. With the Preakness and the Belmont Stakes, it makes up U.S. racing's coveted Triple Crown. merely to satisfy a few fanatics. (For a more substantive discussion, see "Liberation Zoology zoology, branch of biology concerned with the study of animal life. From earliest times animals have been vitally important to man; cave art demonstrates the practical and mystical significance animals held for prehistoric man. ," June 1990.) Animal Scam awkwardly grafts animal rights onto the larger environmental movement. Marquardt lumps animal rights groups together with such radical environmentalist environmentalist a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment. organizations as Earth First!, Jeremy Rifkin's Beyond Beef Coalition, and Greenpeace. These organizations do share a Luddite hatred of technology, and Marquardt's discussion of the anti-science underpinnings of animal rights is on the money. But Rifkin does not routinely spike trees or destroy property to get out his message. And pet ownership isn't a big problem for the members of Earth First! Marquardt never makes these distinctions. Her attacks on animal rights often consist of no more than unexamined assertions: Hunting is good, vegetarians don't eat healthy diets, circuses provide wonderful entertainment, and so on. You get the impression that the readers for whom Marquardt is writing eat steak three times a week, bag a couple of deer before breakfast, and catch the rodeo on weekends. There's nothing wrong with any of these activities. But Animal Scam implies that you're woolly-headed unless you do the same. Marquardt relies heavily on secondary sources. That's too bad "That's Too Bad" is the debut single by Tubeway Army, the band which provided the initial musical vehicle for Gary Numan. It was released in February 1978 by independent London record label Beggars Banquet. , because she's a prominent warrior against animal-rights extremism. Aside from a description of a successful legal defense her organization mounted for an animal trainer, the book contains few stories of her encounters with animal-rights supporters. These would certainly be more compelling than examples from other people's articles. And because Marquardt apparently didn't interview Ingrid Newkirk of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is an international nonprofit organization that supports Animal Rights and has spawned a tremendous amount of conflict and controversy from its inception. , the Humane Society's John McArdle, or any editors of animal-rights publications, the reader never discovers how these crusaders respond to a direct challenge. Perhaps no animal rightists would talk to Marquardt, but she does not mention any attempts to reach them. If you want a laundry list laundry list A popular term for a long list of Sx, diseases, or etiologies that share something in common–eg, differential diagnosis of acute abdomen of animal-rights abuses, you'll find it in Animal Scare. A systematic yet accessible assault on the animal-rights movement has not yet been published. |
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