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- From: Mark Crispin <mrc@Tomobiki-Cho.CAC.Washington.EDU>
- Newsgroups: misc.rural
- Subject: Re: the threat from animal-rights and environmentalists
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 22:52:34 -0800 (PST)
- Organization: University of Washington
- Lines: 73
- Message-ID: <MS-C.728031154.377401575.mrc@Tomobiki-Cho.CAC.Washington.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: tomobiki-cho.cac.washington.edu
- In-Reply-To: <1993Jan26.044146.23454@nuscc.nus.sg>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- I am not surprised that someone from Singapore would rise to the
- defense of the authoritarian tendencies of radical environmentalism
- and animal-rights nutsos, given that Singapore itself is an
- authoritarian state which does not tolerate behavior outside of the
- Official Government Approved Standards.
-
- Life must be very easy for Singaporeans. They don't have to worry
- about deciding what to do with their lives because the government
- tells them what to do. The government tells them gum-chewing is bad
- and bans chewing gum; nary a peep of protest. The government tells
- them that smart people must make more babies, they make more babies.
- None of this nasty nonsense of freedom or individual choice in the
- way. None of this having to worry about who to vote for either; the
- ruling People's Action Party only allows one opposition deputy in
- parliament at most so no thought is involved there.
-
- Also, being a city-state, Singaporeans don't have to think about the
- difference in conditions between a rural and an urban area, because
- Singapore doesn't have any rural areas to speak of; 7% of its area is
- cropland and 5% is forest; the rest is industrialized and urban. Only
- 1.2% of the population works in agriculture.
-
- However, elsewhere in the world, there still remains a concept of
- individual choice, freedom, and property rights in some countries.
- Elsewhere in the world, there are farms whose size is greater than the
- entire nation of Singapore. There are even a few countries in which
- the governing political party is periodically turned out of office.
- Such freedoms are under attack in the US as it is elsewhere in the
- world; but they persist nonetheless.
-
- And while some vestige of freedom and property rights remains, there
- will also remain people who remain skeptical of the so-called
- ``experts'' who offer unproven computer models and political/religious
- ideology to back up their claims. The foundation of science is
- skepticism.
-
- If a radical program of land confiscation on the grounds of
- ``environmental preservation'' is to be promulgated, there should be
- some hard scientific evidence to back up these actions; not just
- political ideology. If a cow pasture that has been used as such for
- 60 years is suddenly to be designed as an ``environmentally-sensitive
- wetland'' and confiscated from its owner on an emergency basis, there
- should be scientific proof that such measures are necessary and it
- isn't just a land-grab.
-
- If the radical animal-rights agenda (strict vegetarianism, no animal
- research, no fur or leather, no pets, no work-animals, nor any other
- use of animals) is to be promulgated, there should be some hard
- scientific evidence to back up these actions as being to the benefit
- of humanity (or even to the animals). The Politically Correct around
- the world demand an AIDS vaccine, yet would they volunteer their own
- bodies to a vaccine which had not undergone any animal testing?
-
- No, sir, the narrow-mindedness is on the part of environmentalists and
- animal-rights advocates. No sane person advocates wanton abuse of the
- environment; nor does a sane person sanction ill-treatment of animals.
- On the other hand, it is not the case that an act committed in the
- name of ``the environment'' or ``animal rights'' is necessarily a
- proper, appropriate, or scientifically justifiable act.
-
- It is quite possible to be concerned and active in preserving and
- improving the worldwide environment, yet opposed to environmentalism;
- just as it is quite possible to be concerned and active in improving
- animal welfare, yet opposed to the animal-rights movement. This
- describes a great many rural people. Contrary to urbanite arrogance,
- educated and intelligent people do live on the farm.
-
- It does not, however, require much intelligence or education to
- recognize that the claim that a cow pasture used for 60 years is an
- ``environmentally sensitive wetland'' is of equivalent value to the
- bovine excrement found there.
-
-
-