Alt Title: A Case for Supporting the Yes On IP28 Campaign
Note: This post was originally published on the EA Forum and can be found at the following link https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/sNQ7HdcjYEfvM5WXA/how-can-we-get-the-world-to-talk-about-animals-inviolable-1
It is safe to say, that from the middle of January, 1877, until the following October, the most prominent theme of public discussion was this question of suffrage for women. Miners discussed it around their camp-fires, and “freighters” on their long slow journeys over the mountain trails argued pro and con, whether they should “let” women have the ballot. -The History of Woman Suffrage Volume 3
Introduction
Denigrated as “bawling, ranting women, bristling for their rights,” the all-male electorate voted two-to-one rejecting the 1877 ballot measure that would have extended suffrage to the women of Colorado. This was the fourth women’s suffrage ballot initiative to be defeated at the polls, after previous campaigns in Michigan (1874), Nebraska (1871), and Kansas (1867) received similarly unfavorable results—securing only 23%, 22%, and 31% of the vote, respectively. Nevertheless, they persisted. Between 1867 and 1920, fifty-four measures to grant women’s suffrage were on the ballot in states across the country, only fifteen of which were approved by voters prior to the ratification of the 19th amendment. In some states, such as Oregon, it took six attempts before finally receiving the majority of votes cast.
Despite the many “defeats,” the suffragists felt encouraged by what they saw as progress for the movement.
On November 3 the amendment received 39,605 ayes and 51,519 noes, lost by nearly 12,000. For the fifth time the men of South Dakota had denied women the right of representation. The suffrage leaders were not in the least daunted or discouraged.
With all the obstacles which the dominant party could throw in our way, without organization, without money, without political rewards to offer, without any of the means by which elections are usually carried, we gained one-third of all the votes cast!
The amendment was defeated, receiving 35,290 ayes, 57,709 noes, but the workers felt that gains had been made and were more determined than ever not to cease their efforts.
The taunts and jeers of the opposition; all this is passed, but the great principle of human rights which we advocated remains, commending itself more and more to the favor of all good men, confirmed by every year’s experience, and destined at no distant day to find expression in law.
But [in] Kansas, there was no chance of victory…but the seed sown has silently taken root and sprung up everywhere. Or rather, the truths then spoken, and the arguments presented, sinking into the minds and hearts of the men and women who heard them, have been like leaven, slowly but surely operating until it seems to many that nearly the whole public sentiment of Kansas is therewith leavened.
As evident from the quotes above as well as this article’s epigraph—all excerpts from the six-volume History of Woman Suffrage produced by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Joslyn Gage, and Ida Husted Harper—the organizers of the suffrage movement felt that forcing the vote on extending the franchise stimulated widespread public discourse and shifted public sentiment to the point that Congress became “compelled” to submit a federal suffrage amendment. It is my conviction that a similar strategy can be used to codify the inviolable rights of animals.
According to political philosophers Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka, “the idea that animals possess inviolable rights is a very distinctive view which goes beyond what is normally understood by the term animal rights,” and in their book Zoopolis they articulate the following distinction:
In everyday parlance, anyone who argues for greater limits on the use of animals is said to be a defender of animal rights. Thus, someone who advocates that pigs being raised for slaughter should have larger stalls, so as to improve the quality of their short lives, is described as a believer in animal rights. And indeed we can say that such a person believes that animals have a ‘right to humane treatment’. Someone defending a more robust view might argue that humans should not eat animals since we have lots of nutritious alternatives, but that medical experiments on animals are permissible if this is the only way to advance crucial medical knowledge, or that culling wild animals is permissible if this is the only way to save key habitats. We can say that such a person believes animals have a ‘right not to be sacrificed by humans unless an important human or ecological interest is at stake’. These views, whether they endorse a weaker or more robust conception of, are crucially different from the idea that animals have inviolable rights.
This differentiation is not intended to divide or disparage activities that may fall under the broader category of animal rights, but rather to help clarify what I am advocating for. In addition to my view that the suffragists have demonstrated the incredible potential of ballot initiatives for social change, it is also my position that a nationwide campaign forcing the public to vote on protecting animals’ inviolable rights would create the cultural evolution necessary to prevent incremental changes from being undone and to achieve what left social movements refer to as “non-reformist reforms.” In just the same way that the world began considering whether to “let” women have the right to vote, I want the world to earnestly consider whether to “let” animals have the right to a life free from slaughter, hunting, experimentation, confinement, forced breeding, and other forms of exploitation. To make this a reality, I believe we must commence the conversation, build a political bloc, and advocate with authenticity.
Commence the Conversation
Considerable debate is being had about the pros and cons of factory farming, more research than ever before is being published on vegan & plant-based diets, and the animal advocacy movement’s budget continues to grow, but it is readily apparent that the general public is not widely conversing about animals' inviolable rights. Retail workers aren’t discussing how they'd vote on a universal hunting ban, and truck drivers aren’t deliberating over their CB radios about whether they support eliminating the practice of animal slaughter. Revisiting the book Zoopolis, I believe Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka allude to the kinds of campaigns that can commence such conversations.
Campaigns ranging from the very first nineteenth-century anti-cruelty laws to the 2008 Proposition 2 may help or hinder at the margins, but they do not challenge—indeed, do not even address—the social, legal, and political underpinnings of [animal exploitation]. (… ) Accepting that animals are selves or persons will have many implications, the clearest of which is to recognize a range of universal negative rights—the right not to be tortured, experimented on, owned, enslaved, imprisoned, or killed. This would entail the prohibition of current practices of farming, hunting, the commercial pet industry, zoo-keeping, animal experimentation, and many others.