I discovered (via Clark Stooksbury) that the current issue of The American Conservative features a lengthy article on factory farming and why conservatives should care about it by Matthew Scully (It’s not online at the AmCon site, but you can read the article at Scully’s personal site here). Scully is a former speechwriter for President Bush and the author of Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy.
Conservatives often balk at the notion of “animal rights,” but Scully points out that if you think (as nearly everyone does) that we have moral obligations toward animals, such as to not treat them with wanton cruelty, this is effectively the same as to say they have a right not to be treated cruelly by us. (Come to think of it, I made a similar argument here, in one of my very first blog posts.)
The other main plank in Scully’s argument is that it makes no sense to say that, for instance, dogs must be protected from cruel treatment but not pigs since there are no morally relevant differences between dogs and pigs that would justify different treatment. As Scully says:
Having conceded the crucial point that some animals rate our moral concern and legal protection, informed conscience turns naturally to other animals—creatures entirely comparable in their awareness, feeling, and capacity for suffering. A dog is not the moral equal of a human being, but a dog is definitely the moral equal of a pig, and it’s only human caprice and economic convenience that say otherwise. We have the problem that these essentially similar creatures are treated in dramatically different ways, unjustified even by the very different purposes we have assigned to them. Our pets are accorded certain protections from cruelty, while the nameless creatures in our factory farms are hardly treated like animals at all. The challenge is one of consistency, of treating moral equals equally, and living according to fair and rational standards of conduct.
This seems to me about as good an example of iron-clad moral argument as we’re likely to get.
Leave a comment