People
("People who need people…" and all
that)
by Mark Reinhardt
The other day I was talking to a friend in the animal rights
movement, and I happened to mention that people are my favorite animal.
I guess that didn’t impress her. She looked at me like I’d been
eating those funny mushrooms again, and said, "Oh, I don’t feel
that way at all!"
I can certainly see her point. A quick perusal of the local TV news
on any given night will tell you exactly what kind of selfish and
vicious animals humans are. Kidnapping, rape and grisly serial murders
are everyday events—and that’s just in your neighborhood! It’s all
become so commonplace we take it for granted. Just this past week a
friend of mine came home from a business trip and found her house had
been robbed. Most of what was taken had little or no value to the
thieves, but represented huge sentimental losses to her. Who would do
such a thing? People, that’s who.
Of course, all of this pales in comparison to the horrors of the
factory farm, the slaughterhouse and the medical research laboratory.
There’s seemingly no end to the violence and the suffering, and
virtually everyone we know is in on the action. It’s enough to make
any vegetarian swear off the human race and spend the rest of his/her
life cavorting with frogs and trees.
Okay, so it’s no secret that humans are the only animals that
commit "inhuman" acts. Sometimes, though, that reality can be
overwhelming. It causes us to lose perspective, and that, especially for
vegetarians, is a very bad thing.
In those moments when I’m not too depressed about the state of the
world, I try to focus my attention on the other side of human
existence—the kind and good side of people. Take war, for example.
(Yeah, war. There’s something that makes me want to live out my
life on a deserted island away from people!) But even in war, amidst the
pervasive death and destruction, there are constant examples of humans
doing extraordinary things. People who have lost everything find
something inside them to reach out and give comfort to those in similar
circumstances. People give their very lives for their countries
and causes. (As misdirected as those efforts sometimes are, the act
itself is noble nonetheless.)
And of course astonishing courage, valor and selflessness aren’t
limited to times of war. I see those values in the people I come in
contact with every day—from my friends who are teachers and social
workers, to cancer patients dying with dignity, to the retarded man who
always bags my groceries with a smile and a cheerful greeting. I see it
every day in my vegetarian friends too—people who care so much, and
work so hard to eliminate the suffering and disease and environmental
destruction caused by eating meat.
People are my favorite animal. I think that’s because the same
mental and physical capabilities that allow them to do so many horrible
things empower them to do extraordinary things as well. And I love those
extraordinary things! I can’t watch a space shuttle launch without
getting a lump in my throat, and when I listen to a Beethoven piano
concerto… well, lets just say I’ve never been anywhere closer to
God.
I hate it when I hear meat-eaters say to vegetarians: "You don’t
care about people." It’s an easy cop-out that allows them to feel
better at our expense, and it’s never true. On the other hand, it’s
sad when vegetarians and animal rights activists and environmentalists
get so caught up in their causes that they momentarily lose their
goodwill for humans. Without people the world would be an awfully lonely
and boring place.
"Speciesism" seems to be a bad word in the vegetarian and
animal rights communities. But I suspect all animals are inherently
"speciesist," and a little of that may not be a bad thing for
everyone’s survival. Maybe it’s not so bad to revel in our humanity,
as long as we keep it all in perspective and don’t lose our
compassion. (Compassion—another one of those characteristics that
humans are capable of excelling at!)
Human rights is a mere subset of animal rights, but it’s a necessary
subset. You simply can’t have one without the other. When every
human being on earth finally realizes that it’s imperative to love
animals and humans, that’s when we’ll see real progress.