Category Archive | Ethics

May 11, 2006 | Thursday

Poison pen pals’ precarious position

Other contributors have admirably highlighted that this most recent attempt by animal rights activists to rattle GSK’s cage by picking on their shareholders has, in some ways, been a tale of contrasts.  As Tigger pointed out, the letters themselves are cowardly and pathetic, to say nothing of the premise that the Campaign Against Huntingdon Life Sciences (CAHLS) could actually contact, track back, and then name and shame 167,000 individual shareholders.  And which shareholders did activists cravenly choose to write to?  Pensioners – little old ladies – the demographic most likely to be spooked by an ominous missive.  Which is why it’s so gratifying, as GeorginaTheGiraffe underscored, to see that everyone from the news media to government to police has come down on the activists like a ton of bricks, countering cowardice with strength and reason.

But the contradictions don’t end there.  A survey of comments on the letters from various animal rights groups suggests that ‘the movement’ is all over the map:

January 27, 2006 | Friday

Antivivisectionists and the Nuffield Council report

The Fund for the Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments (FRAME) are to be congratulated for publishing four different views of the report of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, which was published last year.

We guess you wouldn’t expect us to agree with the comments from David Thomas, who is legal consultant to the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV). But some of the comments are bizarre by any standard. Mr Thomas expresses surprise that the working party “does not seem to regard laboratory animals themselves as stakeholders”. Just how this might work in practice is not described. Presumably the animals would elect a mouse as their representative. Or would a fish have more time to devote to meetings?

David Thomas starts his essay by pointing out that it is difficult to have “proof” of the correctness of an ethical position. But he has no trouble in putting forward his own views as the right ones. Thomas simply dismisses the arguments of those who defend animal research by saying they are inconsistent “at the heart”. He makes it clear that he agrees only with the abolitionist perspective. We wonder why he bothers to say the NCOB report is a “valuable contribution” to the debate, when the only parts he values are those which reflect his own views.

December 12, 2005 | Monday

The killing fields

Animal rights activist Anita Kumar found herself in what might have been the tricky situation of defending PETA’s record on killing stray cats and dogs on a radio interview this morning for BBC Wales. No problem actually. “There’s a massive overpopulation of cats and dogs” she responded, and euthanazing them is the “only humane thing to do”.

So watch out cats and dogs. Fanatical and ruthless animal rights group PETA are on your tail!

Now here’s a proposition. We have yet to meet anyone from PETA who knows anything about science or research. So why doesn’t PETA let us get on with the genuinely humane task of saving people’s lives - through high quality medical research, a small but vital part of which involves the use of animals. In the meantime, PETA can get on with what it knows best - killing stray animals!

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