The Extinction of the Wild in Favor of the Domestic
Our ability to justify our consumption of animals never ceases to amaze me, but I must confess I’m often struck dumb by the claim that by eating animals we’re actually helping them. It’s a popular defense these days, especially since every other attempt to defend this unnecessary, unhealthy, and inhumane habit has failed. It isn’t surprising that in response we would reach for the most improbable and irrational of justifications: “if we stopped eating them, they would all go extinct.”Revealing breathtaking arrogance, proponents of this theory refer to our domestication of animals as a “sacred and mutual bond” whereby we protect animals from the “cruelties of nature” and in return they gift us with their bodies. If manipulating, controlling, confining, and eating someone else constitutes a “mutual bond,” I wonder what you have to do to breach it.
People who feign concern about some unlikely future extinction of domesticated animals would be well advised to remember the wild animals, many of whom have gone extinct or are on the brink of extinction, whose habitats are destroyed and whose lives are ended in favor of their non-native domesticated cousins.
Animal Damage Control, which recently changed its name to the more euphemistic-sounding Wildlife Services, kills millions of wild animals every year on behalf of the private livestock industry, using taxpayers’ dollars. In 2006 alone, they killed 1.6 million wild animals, ranging from coyotes, wolves, and prairie dogs to beavers, sparrows, and egrets.
In fact, no wild animal is safe – not even those considered our “national treasures.” Every year, thousands of wild horses and burros are rounded up by the Bureau of Land Management and either kept in pens or sent to slaughter in order to make more room for millions of cattle and sheep grazing on over 215 million acres of public lands.
The bottom line is that we eat meat because it is a habit that we enjoy, and we add insult to injury by couching this habit in “concern for the animals.” If we have to disguise, rationalize, romanticize, and ritualize eating animals to such a degree, then perhaps we’re not comfortable with it at all.
Labels: animal damage control, compassionate carnivore, domestic livestock, vegan, vegetarian, wild animals


8 Comments:
At 7:07 AM ,
sweetsalty kate said...
Gorgeously written, colleen, eye-opening and sad.
It's another one of those "are you serious?" moments, I think. What gets me lately is the insistence that a person "only eats happy meat", or ethically raised animals - they ask me if I've read Barbara Kingsolver and are all lit up by the rightousness of some bygone era where they delude themselves into thinking that every farm is charlotte's web.
I don't even know where to begin when people say these kinds of things, arguments so easily dismantled, so obviously defensive and desperate. Most times, given that I didn't inspire the defense with an offense (except just by eating at the same table), I say nothing, smile and nod. I feel like enough of a spectacle as it is without stepping forward to be the lightning rod for everyone else's animonsity and guilt.
Anyway, fantastic post. Someday, I hope I'm as brave as you are.
At 8:41 PM ,
Lisa J. said...
I was just directed to this post over at Vegan Soapbox.
A portion of my comment there seems appropriate to your post as well:
This sickens me but also strengthens my resolve to continue a vegan lifestyle even when omni’s ridicule or criticize me. I’ll never understand why being vegan elicits such anger, spite & malice from omni’s. How can anyone defend cruelty? How? HOW?
I will NEVER ever eat meat again. From the time I was 16, I have been vegetarian in some capacity, finally becoming vegan a year ago. It's hard to listen to people criticize my choices when I know they haven't even begun to explore the reasons why I would choose to distance myself from modern "farming" practices.
At 7:40 PM ,
Aeolus said...
Hello Colleen,
Lesli Bisgould, a Canadian animal-rights lawyer, has said:
"We have tried so hard for so long to identify the magic feature that qualitatively distinguishes the human from the nonhuman animals so as to justify the treatment we accord them. While the old favourites have been dismissed by science in the many decades since Darwin first said 'evolution' (they can’t reason, they don’t think, they can’t communicate, they don’t feel pain …) perhaps we have found one after all: let us never underestimate the unique power of the human mind to rationalize – and even make ourselves feel good about – behaviour that is harmful to others."
At 6:15 PM ,
Anonymous said...
Heard you on NPR. Very thoughtful. I shared it with my friends.
I ask people if they care about the environment - they always say yes. I then ask if they will reduce their carbon footprint by not eating meat / fish on one day a week. A Vegetarian Thursday.
I've had positive feedback - mostly people have never thought about a one day abstinence.
I don't care about the reasons people stop being so cruel, just as long as they do something. A little is better than nothing.
At 12:06 AM ,
CherylD said...
I listened to your perspective this morning on NPR. I was so thankful that you were able to express what I know so many of us feel. I've been a veg for 27 years now and long ago gave up expounding on the many reasons I don't eat meat. Most meat eaters I've had dialog with won't let their mind even think about the actual animals they're consuming or the suffering, exploitation and cruelty of the bondage of so many beautiful animals. It's criminal.
You've given me renewed hope. I feel like fighting the fight again. It's worth it.
At 2:43 PM ,
Compassionate Cook said...
I'm so glad, Cheryl. Thank you so much. Please check out www.vegetarianfoodforthought.com. I talk about that dialogue a lot in my podcast. :) Be well.
At 10:10 AM ,
pderitis said...
As lisa j. said, it does make me catch my breath to hear this kind of thing... It seems people have an unending capacity for denial and delusion. But, it also strengthens my resolve in living my life as compassionately as possible towards the other creatures of the world.
At 12:15 PM ,
valwebb said...
Well said, Colleen! I wish I had a dollar for every time a meat-eating friend or colleague told me (a lifelong veg, now 50, and not even so much as a cold in the past 23 years) that "the human body is designed for a meat-based diet, and you can't be healthy without meat protein!" Thanks for an excellent, fair and well-reasoned post.
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