| Have Celebrity, PETA Will Travel | |
| Michael Vick and Ingrid Newkirk's Unlikely Alliance | |
|
by Josh Strawn, December 12, 2007
|
|
Since I'm a speciesist animal lover, I find most of PETA's philosophies
about animal rights to be confused misplacements of ideas that evolved
to increase the fitness of the human species. And so, while I might
have fostered many dogs for many different shelters, I still count the
needs of humans as priority number one and flinch more than a little
when I find that 25 million dollars per year (PETA's annual budget)
isn't being spent on, say, anti-genocide campaigning in Darfur or AIDS
relief in Africa. But let's leave aside philosophical quarrels for a
second and assume for a moment that it is unproblematic to devote
massive amounts of human energies and resources to the cause of animal
rights even if it by necessity neglects other human issues. What
should it tell us when we hear that PETA may make Michael Vick a
spokesperson for animal rights?
PETA comes under a great deal of fire even from fellow animal
rights activists for their tactics, which many feel are more show than
service. The currently airing HBO documentary on PETA founder Ingrid
Newkirk shows several organizations disagreeing with her attention
whoring, which they feel gives a bad name to the overall endeavor of
ending cruelty to animals. Now that Michael Vick has taken a course in
empathy for animals, PETA is considering using him in one of their
commercials (no word yet as to whether Vick will be wearing any
clothes):
Newkirk confirmed the group was in discussions with Vick to appear in a PETA public service announcement, but said it would happen only if the message was a strong one.
"If Vick agrees to say: 'Look at me, look how far I've fallen after being a star.' Then we'd be glad to do the announcement," Newkirk said.
Now,
PETA's propensity to sell their message with sex has always just been a
bit silly. It wasn't until they compared animals caged for slaughter
to those killed in Nazi concentration camps that I surmised they were
absolute opportunist nutjobs whose ideas about morality deserved zero
hearing (an opinion only reinforced by the discovery that Newkirk has
written checks out to people who torch university laboratories).
According to PETA's equivalencies, then, a neo-Nazi skinhead who only a
few months ago was convicted of beating a Jewish man to death would,
after a sensitivity course, be a reasonable candidate for speaking out
against anti-Semitism and hate crimes.
But chances are, not many PETA members would agree with
this--maybe not even Newkirk herself. If they don't, it exposes the
conceptual fallacy in their Holocaust ads, and, in a way, the practical
confusion of the overarching PETA mentality--that non-human life is
worthy of reverence and consideration equal to that which we afford
humans. While it may be true that one guilty of a crime can have a
more intimate experience with its evil and thus a deeper understanding
of why it is wrong, it is equally as true that most humans experience a
visceral and deep feeling of repulsion for those guilty of murdering
their own. Nobody wants to see sexually depraved child murderers doing
PSAs on the dangers of internet chatting for minors.
If Vick wants to try to salvage his career by speaking out
against dogfighting on behalf of PETA, that's fine by me. What he did
was disgusting and we should hope that our societies keep a check on
people who increase the suffering of living things for purely
recreational purposes. But we should enjoy PETA's hypocrisy here, as
it simply helps to show why we should punish people like Vick, while
recognizing their crimes are not equal to the killers of
humans--precisely because we know that humans have a tendency to see
themselves in other living organisms (especially those that have some
similar features like eyes noses, etc.). But the main reason this
should concern us is because we know that people who don't make this
essential connection might fail to make it in the case of our fellow
humans.
![]() |
Josh Strawn is the lead singer of Blacklist as well as a signatory and vocal advocate of the Euston Manifesto. More... |
Post new comment