The Conservative Case For Animal Welfare
The Minneapolis Daily's Jaon Ketola
While the vegetarian, as misanthrope stereotype, is easily rejected by pointing to the lives of actual vegetarians, a stereotype that’s been harder to shed is the vegetarian as a secular liberal. Not often have religious scholars or conservative intellectuals received airtime in the mass media. The media seem to be more obsessed with ridiculing the fringe element of the vegetarian movement, which admittedly seems to bask in the coverage it gets. Yet Matthew Scully, former speechwriter for President George W. Bush, received widespread acclaim for his book “Dominion,” in which he delivers a conservative and religiously grounded polemic for better treatment of farm animals.
(...)One of Scully’s greatest contributions comes with his interpretation of the Christian creation story, in which God says in Genesis 1:26 (King James version), “Let us make (hu)man(s) in our image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the Earth.” Rather than taking this verse to suggest that humans have divine authority to deal and dispense with animals however they choose, Scully suggests that “dominion” here aligns with the conservative ethic of stewardship. In Scully’s view, God has charged us with a caretaking role with respect to animals, and that in our relationship with farm animals we should practice humane husbandry. The egregious practices inherent in factory-style farming, which Scully delineates throughout his book, are far from meeting the humaneness demanded by a proper treatment ethic.
Scully says that as “a matter of simple decency and an obligation to justice” we should not subject animals to “human cruelty.” While he advocates for greater legal protection for animals, Scully maintains that as consumers we ought to use our purchases to obtain animal products from farms that raise and slaughter animals in humane ways, if we consume animal products at all.
He maintains that we ought to consider why prohibitions exist against taking pictures on corporate farms, why public relations professionals are necessary to represent modern farms and their practices and ultimately why so many of us “don’t want to know” where our food comes from. The distancing most of us do from the production of animal products is indicative of a conflict of conscience that ought to be rectified.
(...)Scully’s perspective is appealing in that it provides a fresh angle with which to address an important issue. His work fills a critical gap in a literature that has been bound in mostly secular, liberal ideologies. At the same time, as Scully reminds us that animal suffering is something conservatives and Christians ought to consider and respond to, he destroys the stereotype of the vegetarian as Chaco-wearing hippie. Conservative, liberal, independent or politically indifferent, we should all consider whether our personal use of animals is indeed humane.
It's a good article. My support for animal welfare and animal liberation is based on secular values, but that's just me. The conservative, Christian case for animal welfare is very strong, and the world would be a much better place if more people follwed it.











