PETA is an example to me of an organization based so purely on an artificial ideology that it is, in fact, utterly heartless in its actual practices. It reminds me of ideologies, both on the left and the right, that for the sake of a principal have been willing to kill millions of human beings. It is the principal that the intellectual philosophy is all important and "one can't make an omelet without breaking eggs."
PETA stands for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. "Ethical" is not the same as kind. "Unethical" as their press releases and internal documents show, is to consider any unequal view or treatment of one animal by another animal to be immoral "speciesism." They truly believe that the life of an ant is absolutely ethically comparable in all ways to the life of my son. My feeding of my cat, playing with it, and taking it to a vet if ill means that I am projecting my evil sense of superiority on the creature and violating its dignity and inherent right to live, and rapidly die, as an autonomous, free living animal in the wilderness. Pet ownership is equivalent to slavery in their view; I am not making this up.
PETA is not pro-pets; it is very much anti-pets. And not even pro-individual animal, but instead it believes in a conceptualized world where no animal "exploits" another. I've forgotten how they view all those carnivores out there, or the competition between even different herbivores for their food and living space, but I am sure that PETA intends to work against these "flaws."
I suppose that we should at least be grateful that PETA was not around to provide the solution that they currently use on escaped home pet "animal slaves" to escaped human slaves in the 1800s.
PETA stands for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. "Ethical" is not the same as kind. "Unethical" as their press releases and internal documents show, is to consider any unequal view or treatment of one animal by another animal to be immoral "speciesism." They truly believe that the life of an ant is absolutely ethically comparable in all ways to the life of my son. My feeding of my cat, playing with it, and taking it to a vet if ill means that I am projecting my evil sense of superiority on the creature and violating its dignity and inherent right to live, and rapidly die, as an autonomous, free living animal in the wilderness. Pet ownership is equivalent to slavery in their view; I am not making this up.
PETA is not pro-pets; it is very much anti-pets. And not even pro-individual animal, but instead it believes in a conceptualized world where no animal "exploits" another. I've forgotten how they view all those carnivores out there, or the competition between even different herbivores for their food and living space, but I am sure that PETA intends to work against these "flaws."
I suppose that we should at least be grateful that PETA was not around to provide the solution that they currently use on escaped home pet "animal slaves" to escaped human slaves in the 1800s.
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