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Default Fear Factories: The Case for Compassionate Conservatism – for Animals

http://www.matthewscully.com/fear_factories.htm

Fear Factories: The Case for Compassionate Conservatism – for Animals
By Matthew Scully
The American Conservative, May 23, 2005


A few years ago I began a book about cruelty to animals and about
factory farming in particular, problems that had been in the back of
my mind for a long while. At the time I viewed factory farming as one
of the lesser problems facing humanity—a small wrong on the grand
scale of good and evil but too casually overlooked and too glibly
excused.

This view changed as I acquainted myself with the details and saw a
few typical farms up close. By the time I finished the book, I had
come to view the abuses of industrial farming as a serious moral
problem, a truly rotten business for good reason passed over in polite
conversation. Little wrongs, when left unattended, can grow and spread
to become grave wrongs, and precisely this had happened on our factory
farms.

The result of these ruminations was Dominion: The Power of Man, the
Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy. And though my tome never
quite hit the bestseller lists, there ought to be some special
literary prize for a work highly recommended in both the Wall Street
Journal and Vegetarian Teen. When you enjoy the accolades of PETA and
Policy Review, Deepak Chopra and Gordon Liddy, Peter Singer and
Charles Colson, you can at least take comfort in the diversity of your
readership.

The book also provided an occasion for fellow conservatives to get
beyond their dislike for particular animal-rights groups and to
examine cruelty issues on the merits. Conservatives have a way of
dismissing the subject, as if where animals are concerned nothing very
serious could ever be at stake. And though it is not exactly true that
liberals care more about these issues—you are no more likely to find
reflections or exposés concerning cruelty in The Nation or The New
Republic than in any journal of the Right—it is assumed that
animal-protection causes are a project of the Left, and that the
proper conservative position is to stand warily and firmly against
them.

I had a hunch that the problem was largely one of presentation and
that by applying their own principles to animal-welfare issues
conservatives would find plenty of reasons to be appalled. More to the
point, having acknowledged the problems of cruelty, we could then
support reasonable remedies. Conservatives, after all, aren’t shy
about discoursing on moral standards or reluctant to translate the
most basic of those standards into law. Setting aside the distracting
rhetoric of animal rights, that’s usually what these questions come
down to: what moral standards should guide us in our treatment of
animals, and when must those standards be applied in law?

Industrial livestock farming is among a whole range of animal-welfare
concerns that extends from canned trophy-hunting to whaling to product
testing on animals to all sorts of more obscure enterprises like the
exotic-animal trade and the factory farming of bears in China for bile
believed to hold medicinal and aphrodisiac powers. Surveying the
various uses to which animals are put, some might be defensible,
others abusive and unwarranted, and it’s the job of any conservative
who attends to the subject to figure out which are which. We don’t
need novel theories of rights to do this. The usual distinctions that
conservatives draw between moderation and excess, freedom and license,
moral goods and material goods, rightful power and the abuse of power,
will all do just fine.

As it is, the subject hardly comes up at all among conservatives, and
what commentary we do hear usually takes the form of ridicule directed
at animal-rights groups. Often conservatives side instinctively with
any animal-related industry and those involved, as if a thing is right
just because someone can make money off it or as if our sympathies
belong always with the men just because they are men.

I had an exchange once with an eminent conservative columnist on this
subject. Conversation turned to my book and to factory farming.
Holding his hands out in the “stop” gesture, he said, “I don’t want to
know.” Granted, life on the factory farm is no one’s favorite subject,
but conservative writers often have to think about things that are
disturbing or sad. In this case, we have an intellectually formidable
fellow known to millions for his stern judgments on every matter of
private morality and public policy. Yet nowhere in all his writings do
I find any treatment of any cruelty issue, never mind that if you
asked him he would surely agree that cruelty to animals is a cowardly
and disgraceful sin.

And when the subject is cruelty to farmed animals—the moral standards
being applied in a fundamental human enterprise—suddenly we’re in
forbidden territory and “I don’t want to know” is the best he can do.
But don’t we have a responsibility to know? Maybe the whole subject
could use his fine mind and his good heart.

As for the rights of animals, rights in general are best viewed in
tangible terms, with a view to actual events and consequences. Take
the case of a hunter in Texas named John Lockwood, who has just
pioneered the online safari. At his canned-hunting ranch outside San
Antonio, he’s got a rifle attached to a camera and the camera wired up
to the Internet, so that sportsmen going to Live-shot.com will
actually be able to fire at baited animals by remote control from
their computers. “If the customer were to wound the animal,” explains
the San Antonio Express-News, “a staff person on site could finish it
off.” The “trophy mounts” taken in these heroics will then be prepared
and shipped to the client’s door, and if it catches on Lockwood will
be a rich man.

Very much like animal farming today, the hunting “industry” has seen a
collapse in ethical standards, and only in such an atmosphere could
Lockwood have found inspiration for this latest innovation—denying
wild animals the last shred of respect. Under the laws of Texas and
other states, Lockwood and others in his business use all sorts of
methods once viewed as shameful: baits, blinds, fences to trap hunted
animals in ranches that advertise a “100-percent-guaranteed kill.”
Affluent hunters like to unwind by shooting cage-reared pheasants,
ducks, and other birds, firing away as the fowl of the air are
released before them like skeet, with no limit on the day’s kill.
Hunting supply stores are filled with lures, infrared lights,
high-tech scopes, and other gadgetry to make every man a marksman.

Lockwood doesn’t hear anyone protesting those methods, except for a
few of those nutty activist types. Why shouldn’t he be able to offer
paying customers this new hunting experience as well? It is like
asking a smut-peddler to please have the decency to keep children out
of it. Lockwood is just one step ahead of the rest, and there is no
standard of honor left to stop him.

First impressions are usually correct in questions of cruelty to
animals, and here most of us would agree that Live-shot.com does not
show our fellow man at his best. We would say that the whole thing is
a little tawdry and even depraved, that the creatures Lockwood has “in
stock” are not just commodities. We would say that these animals
deserve better than the fate he has in store for them.

As is invariably the case in animal-rights issues, what we’re really
looking for are safeguards against cruel and presumptuous people. We
are trying to hold people to their obligations, people who could spare
us the trouble if only they would recognize a few limits on their own
conduct.

Conservatives like the sound of “obligation” here, and those who
reviewed Dominion were relieved to find me arguing more from this
angle than from any notion of rights. “What the PETA crowd doesn’t
understand,” Jonah Goldberg wrote, “or what it deliberately confuses,
is that human compassion toward animals is an obligation of humans,
not an entitlement for animals.” Another commentator put the point in
religious terms: “[W]e have a moral duty to respect the animal world
as God’s handiwork, treating animals with ‘the mercy of our Maker’ …
But mercy and respect for animals are completely different from rights
for animals—and we should never confuse the two.” Both writers
confessed they were troubled by factory farming and concluded with the
uplifting thought that we could all profit from further reflection on
our obligation of kindness to farm animals.

The only problem with this insistence on obligation is that after a
while it begins to sounds like a hedge against actually being held to
that obligation. It leaves us with a high-minded attitude but no
accountability, free to act on our obligations or to ignore them
without consequences, personally opposed to cruelty but unwilling to
impose that view on others.

Treating animals decently is like most obligations we face, somewhere
between the most and the least important, a modest but essential
requirement to living with integrity. And it’s not a good sign when
arguments are constantly turned to precisely how much is mandatory and
how much, therefore, we can manage to avoid.

If one is using the word “obligation” seriously, moreover, then there
is no practical difference between an obligation on our end not to
mistreat animals and an entitlement on their end not to be mistreated
by us. Either way, we are required to do and not do the same things.
And either way, somewhere down the logical line, the entitlement would
have to arise from a recognition of the inherent dignity of a living
creature. The moral standing of our fellow creatures may be humble,
but it is absolute and not something within our power to confer or
withhold. All creatures sing their Creator’s praises, as this truth is
variously expressed in the Bible, and are dear to Him for their own
sakes.

A certain moral relativism runs through the arguments of those hostile
or indifferent to animal welfare—as if animals can be of value only
for our sake, as utility or preference decrees. In practice, this
outlook leaves each person to decide for himself when animals rate
moral concern. It even allows us to accept or reject such knowable
facts about animals as their cognitive and emotional capacities, their
conscious experience of pain and happiness.

Elsewhere in contemporary debates, conservatives meet the foe of moral
relativism by pointing out that, like it or not, we are all dealing
with the same set of physiological realities and moral truths. We
don’t each get to decide the facts of science on a situational basis.
We do not each go about bestowing moral value upon things as it
pleases us at the moment. Of course, we do not decide moral truth at
all: we discern it. Human beings in their moral progress learn to
appraise things correctly, using reasoned moral judgment to perceive a
prior order not of our devising.

C.S. Lewis in The Abolition of Man calls this “the doctrine of
objective value, the belief that certain attitudes are really true,
and others really false, to the kind of thing the universe is and the
kind of things we are.” Such words as honor, piety, esteem, and
empathy do not merely describe subjective states of mind, Lewis
reminds us, but speak to objective qualities in the world beyond that
merit those attitudes in us. “[T]o call children delightful or old men
venerable,” he writes, “is not simply to record a psychological fact
about our own parental or filial emotions at the moment, but to
recognize a quality which demands a certain response from us whether
we make it or not.”

This applies to questions of cruelty as well. A kindly attitude toward
animals is not a subjective sentiment; it is the correct moral
response to the objective value of a fellow creature. Here, too,
rational and virtuous conduct consists in giving things their due and
in doing so consistently. If one animal’s pain—say, that of one’s
pet—is real and deserving of sympathy, then the pain of essentially
identical animals is also meaningful, no matter what conventional
distinctions we have made to narrow the scope of our sympathy. If it
is wrong to whip a dog or starve a horse or bait bears for sport or
grossly abuse farm animals, it is wrong for all people in every place.

The problem with moral relativism is that it leads to capriciousness
and the despotic use of power. And the critical distinction here is
not between human obligations and animal rights, but rather between
obligations of charity and obligations of justice.

Active kindness to animals falls into the former category. If you take
in strays or help injured wildlife or donate to animal charities,
those are fine things to do, but no one says you should be compelled
to do them. Refraining from cruelty to animals is a different matter,
an obligation of justice not for us each to weigh for ourselves. It is
not simply unkind behavior, it is unjust behavior, and the prohibition
against it is non-negotiable. Proverbs reminds us of this—“a righteous
man regardeth the life of his beast, but the tender mercies of the
wicked are cruel”—and the laws of America and of every other advanced
nation now recognize the wrongfulness of such conduct with our cruelty
statutes. Often applying felony-level penalties to protect certain
domestic animals, these state and federal statutes declare that even
though your animal may elsewhere in the law be defined as your
property, there are certain things you may not do to that creature,
and if you are found harming or neglecting the animal, you will answer
for your conduct in a court of justice.

There are various reasons the state has an interest in forbidding
cruelty, one of which is that cruelty is degrading to human beings.
The problem is that many thinkers on this subject have strained to
find indirect reasons to explain why cruelty is wrong and thereby to
force animal cruelty into the category of the victimless crime. The
most common of these explanations asks us to believe that acts of
cruelty matter only because the cruel person does moral injury to
himself or sullies his character—as if the man is our sole concern and
the cruelly treated animal is entirely incidental.

Once again, the best test of theory is a real-life example. In 2002,
Judge Alan Glenn of Tennessee’s Court of Criminal Appeals heard the
case of a married couple named Johnson, who had been found guilty of
cruelty to 350 dogs lying sick, starving, or dead in their puppy-mill
kennel—a scene videotaped by police. Here is Judge Glenn’s response to
their supplications for mercy:

“The victims of this crime were animals that could not speak up to the
unbelievable conduct of Judy Fay Johnson and Stanley Paul Johnson that
they suffered. Several of the dogs have died and most had physical
problems such as intestinal worms, mange, eye problems, dental
problems and emotional problems and socialization problems … .
Watching this video of the conditions that these dogs were subjected
to was one of the most deplorable things this Court has observed. …

“[T]his Court finds that probation would not serve the ends of
justice, nor be in the best interest of the public, nor would this
have a deterrent effect for such gross behavior. … The victims were
particularly vulnerable. You treated the victims with exceptional
cruelty. …

“There are those who would argue that you should be confined in a
house trailer with no ventilation or in a cell three-by-seven with
eight or ten other inmates with no plumbing, no exercise and no
opportunity to feel the sun or smell fresh air. However, the courts of
this land have held that such treatment is cruel and inhuman, and it
is. You will not be treated in the same way that you treated these
helpless animals that you abused to make a dollar.”

Only in abstract debates of moral or legal theory would anyone quarrel
with Judge Glenn’s description of the animals as “victims” or deny
that they were entitled to be treated better. Whether we call this a
“right” matters little, least of all to the dogs, since the only right
that any animal could possibly exercise is the right to be free from
human abuse, neglect, or, in a fine old term of law, other “malicious
mischief.” What matters most is that prohibitions against human
cruelty be hard and binding. The sullied souls of the Johnsons are for
the Johnsons to worry about. The business of justice is to punish
their offense and to protect the creatures from human wrongdoing. And
in the end, just as in other matters of morality and justice, the
interests of man are served by doing the right thing for its own sake.

There is only one reason for condemning cruelty that doesn’t beg the
question of exactly why cruelty is a wrong, a vice, or bad for our
character: that the act of cruelty is an intrinsic evil. Animals
cruelly dealt with are not just things, not just an irrelevant detail
in some self-centered moral drama of our own. They matter in their own
right, as they matter to their Creator, and the wrongs of cruelty are
wrongs done to them. As The Catholic Encyclopedia puts this point,
there is a “direct and essential sinfulness of cruelty to the animal
world, irrespective of the results of such conduct on the character of
those who practice it.”

Our cruelty statutes are a good and natural development in Western
law, codifying the claims of animals against human wrongdoing, and,
with the wisdom of men like Judge Glenn, asserting those claims on
their behalf. Such statutes, however, address mostly random or wanton
acts of cruelty. And the persistent animal-welfare questions of our
day center on institutional cruelties—on the vast and systematic
mistreatment of animals that most of us never see.

Having conceded the crucial point that some animals rate our moral
concern and legal protection, informed conscience turns naturally to
other animals—creatures entirely comparable in their awareness,
feeling, and capacity for suffering. A dog is not the moral equal of a
human being, but a dog is definitely the moral equal of a pig, and
it’s only human caprice and economic convenience that say otherwise.
We have the problem that these essentially similar creatures are
treated in dramatically different ways, unjustified even by the very
different purposes we have assigned to them. Our pets are accorded
certain protections from cruelty, while the nameless creatures in our
factory farms are hardly treated like animals at all. The challenge is
one of consistency, of treating moral equals equally, and living
according to fair and rational standards of conduct.

Whatever terminology we settle on, after all the finer philosophical
points have been hashed over, the aim of the exercise is to prohibit
wrongdoing. All rights, in practice, are protections against human
wrongdoing, and here too the point is to arrive at clear and
consistent legal boundaries on the things that one may or may not do
to animals, so that every man is not left to be the judge in his own
case.

More than obligation, moderation, ordered liberty, or any of the other
lofty ideals we hold, what should attune conservatives to all the
problems of animal cruelty—and especially to the modern factory
farm—is our worldly side. The great virtue of conservatism is that it
begins with a realistic assessment of human motivations. We know man
as he is, not only the rational creature but also, as Socrates told
us, the rationalizing creature, with a knack for finding an angle, an
excuse, and a euphemism. Whether it’s the pornographer who thinks
himself a free-speech champion or the abortionist who looks in the
mirror and sees a reproductive health-care services provider,
conservatives are familiar with the type.

So we should not be all that surprised when told that these very same
capacities are often at work in the things that people do to
animals—and all the more so in our $125 billion a year livestock
industry. The human mind, especially when there is money to be had,
can manufacture grand excuses for the exploitation of other human
beings. How much easier it is for people to excuse the wrongs done to
lowly animals.

Where animals are concerned, there is no practice or industry so low
that someone, somewhere, cannot produce a high-sounding reason for it.
The sorriest little miscreant who shoots an elephant, lying in wait by
the water hole in some canned-hunting operation, is just “harvesting
resources,” doing his bit for “conservation.” The swarms of
government-subsidized Canadian seal hunters slaughtering tens of
thousands of newborn pups—hacking to death these unoffending
creatures, even in sight of their mothers—offer themselves as the
brave and independent bearers of tradition. With the same sanctimony
and deep dishonesty, factory-farm corporations like Smithfield Foods,
ConAgra, and Tyson Foods still cling to countrified brand names for
their labels—Clear Run Farms, Murphy Family Farms, Happy Valley—to
convince us and no doubt themselves, too, that they are engaged in
something essential, wholesome, and honorable.

Yet when corporate farmers need barbed wire around their Family Farms
and Happy Valleys and laws to prohibit outsiders from taking
photographs (as is the case in two states) and still other laws to
exempt farm animals from the definition of “animals” as covered in
federal and state cruelty statues, something is amiss. And if
conservatives do nothing else about any other animal issue, we should
attend at least to the factory farms, where the suffering is immense
and we are all asked to be complicit.

If we are going to have our meats and other animal products, there are
natural costs to obtaining them, defined by the duties of animal
husbandry and of veterinary ethics. Factory farming came about when
resourceful men figured out ways of getting around those natural
costs, applying new technologies to raise animals in conditions that
would otherwise kill them by deprivation and disease. With no laws to
stop it, moral concern surrendered entirely to economic calculation,
leaving no limit to the punishments that factory farmers could inflict
to keep costs down and profits up. Corporate farmers hardly speak
anymore of “raising” animals, with the modicum of personal care that
word implies. Animals are “grown” now, like so many crops. Barns
somewhere along the way became “intensive confinement facilities” and
the inhabitants mere “production units.”

The result is a world in which billions of birds, cows, pigs, and
other creatures are locked away, enduring miseries they do not
deserve, for our convenience and pleasure. We belittle the activists
with their radical agenda, scarcely noticing the radical cruelty they
seek to redress.

At the Smithfield mass-confinement hog farms I toured in North
Carolina, the visitor is greeted by a bedlam of squealing, chain
rattling, and horrible roaring. To maximize the use of space and
minimize the need for care, the creatures are encased row after row,
400 to 500 pound mammals trapped without relief inside iron crates
seven feet long and 22 inches wide. They chew maniacally on bars and
chains, as foraging animals will do when denied straw, or engage in
stereotypical nest-building with the straw that isn’t there, or else
just lie there like broken beings. The spirit of the place would be
familiar to police who raided that Tennessee puppy-mill run by Stanley
and Judy Johnson, only instead of 350 tortured animals, millions—and
the law prohibits none of it.

Efforts to outlaw the gestation crate have been dismissed by various
conservative critics as “silly,” “comical,” “ridiculous.” It doesn’t
seem that way up close. The smallest scraps of human charity—a bit of
maternal care, room to roam outdoors, straw to lie on—have long since
been taken away as costly luxuries, and so the pigs know the feel only
of concrete and metal. They lie covered in their own urine and
excrement, with broken legs from trying to escape or just to turn,
covered with festering sores, tumors, ulcers, lesions, or what my
guide shrugged off as the routine “pus pockets.”

C.S. Lewis’s description of animal pain—“begun by Satan’s malice and
perpetrated by man’s desertion of his post”—has literal truth in our
factory farms because they basically run themselves through the
wonders of automation, and the owners are off in spacious corporate
offices reviewing their spreadsheets. Rarely are the creatures’
afflictions examined by a vet or even noticed by the migrant laborers
charged with their care, unless of course some ailment threatens
production—meaning who cares about a lousy ulcer or broken leg, as
long as we’re still getting the piglets?

Kept alive in these conditions only by antibiotics, hormones,
laxatives, and other additives mixed into their machine-fed swill, the
sows leave their crates only to be driven or dragged into other
crates, just as small, to bring forth their piglets. Then it’s back to
the gestation crate for another four months, and so on back and forth
until after seven or eight pregnancies they finally expire from the
punishment of it or else are culled with a club or bolt-gun.

As you can see at www.factoryfarming.com/gallery.htm, industrial
livestock farming operates on an economy of scale, presupposing a
steady attrition rate. The usual comforting rejoinder we hear—that
it’s in the interest of farmers to take good care of their animals—is
false. Each day, in every confinement farm in America, you will find
cull pens littered with dead or dying creatures discarded like trash.

For the piglets, it’s a regimen of teeth cutting, tail docking
(performed with pliers, to heighten the pain of tail chewing and so
deter this natural response to mass confinement), and other
mutilations. After five or six months trapped in one of the grim
warehouses that now pass for barns, they’re trucked off, 355,000 pigs
every day in the life of America, for processing at a furious pace of
thousands per hour by migrants who use earplugs to muffle the screams.
All of these creatures, and billions more across the earth, go to
their deaths knowing nothing of life, and nothing of man, except the
foul, tortured existence of the factory farm, having never even been
outdoors.

But not to worry, as a Smithfield Foods executive assured me, “They
love it.” It’s all “for their own good.” It is a voice conservatives
should instantly recognize, as we do when it tells us that the fetus
feels nothing. Everything about the picture shows bad faith, moral
sloth, and endless excuse-making, all readily answered by conservative
arguments.

We are told “they’re just pigs” or cows or chickens or whatever and
that only urbanites worry about such things, estranged as they are
from the realities of rural life. Actually, all of factory farming
proceeds by a massive denial of reality—the reality that pigs and
other animals are not just production units to be endlessly exploited
but living creatures with natures and needs. The very modesty of those
needs—their humble desires for straw, soil, sunshine—is the gravest
indictment of the men who deny them.

Conservatives are supposed to revere tradition. Factory farming has no
traditions, no rules, no codes of honor, no little decencies to spare
for a fellow creature. The whole thing is an abandonment of rural
values and a betrayal of honorable animal husbandry—to say nothing of
veterinary medicine, with its sworn oath to “protect animal health”
and to “relieve animal suffering.”

Likewise, we are told to look away and think about more serious
things. Human beings simply have far bigger problems to worry about
than the well being of farm animals, and surely all of this zeal would
be better directed at causes of human welfare.

You wouldn’t think that men who are unwilling to grant even a few
extra inches in cage space, so that a pig can turn around, would be in
any position to fault others for pettiness. Why are small acts of
kindness beneath us, but not small acts of cruelty? The larger problem
with this appeal to moral priority, however, is that we are dealing
with suffering that occurs through human agency. Whether it’s
miserliness here, carelessness there, or greed throughout, the result
is rank cruelty for which particular people must answer.

Since refraining from cruelty is an obligation of justice, moreover,
there is no avoiding the implications. All the goods invoked in
defense of factory farming, from the efficiency and higher profits of
the system to the lower costs of the products, are false goods
unjustly derived. No matter what right and praiseworthy things we are
doing elsewhere in life, when we live off a cruel and disgraceful
thing like factory farming, we are to that extent living unjustly, and
that is hardly a trivial problem.

For the religious-minded, and Catholics in particular, no less an
authority than Pope Benedict XVI has explained the spiritual stakes.
Asked recently to weigh in on these very questions, Cardinal Ratzinger
told German journalist Peter Seewald that animals must be respected as
our “companions in creation.” While it is licit to use them for food,
“we cannot just do whatever we want with them. ... Certainly, a sort
of industrial use of creatures, so that geese are fed in such a way as
to produce as large a liver as possible, or hens live so packed
together that they become just caricatures of birds, this degrading of
living creatures to a commodity seems to me in fact to contradict the
relationship of mutuality that comes across in the Bible.”

Factory farmers also assure us that all of this is an inevitable stage
of industrial efficiency. Leave aside the obvious reply that we could
all do a lot of things in life more efficiently if we didn’t have to
trouble ourselves with ethical restraints. Leave aside, too, the tens
of billions of dollars in annual federal subsidies that have helped
megafarms undermine small family farms and the decent communities that
once surrounded them and to give us the illusion of cheap products.
And never mind the collateral damage to land, water, and air that
factory farms cause and the more billions of dollars it costs
taxpayers to clean up after them. Factory farming is a predatory
enterprise, absorbing profit and externalizing costs, unnaturally
propped up by political influence and government subsidies much as
factory-farmed animals are unnaturally sustained by hormones and
antibiotics.

Even if all the economic arguments were correct, conservatives usually
aren’t impressed by breathless talk of inevitable progress. I am asked
sometimes how a conservative could possibly care about animal
suffering in factory farms, but the question is premised on a liberal
caricature of conservatism—the assumption that, for all of our fine
talk about moral values, “compassionate conservatism” and the like,
everything we really care about can be counted in dollars. In the case
of factory farming, and the conservative’s blithe tolerance of it, the
caricature is too close to the truth.

Exactly how far are we all prepared to follow these industrial and
technological advances before pausing to take stock of where things
stand and where it is all tending? Very soon companies like Smithfield
plan to have tens of millions of cloned animals in their factory
farms. Other companies are at work genetically engineering chickens
without feathers so that one day all poultry farmers might be spared
the toil and cost of de-feathering their birds. For years, the many
shills for our livestock industry employed in the “Animal Science” and
“Meat Science” departments of rural universities (we used to call them
Animal Husbandry departments) have been tampering with the genes of
pigs and other animals to locate and expunge that part of their
genetic makeup that makes them stressed in factory farm
conditions—taking away the desire to protect themselves and to live.
Instead of redesigning the factory farm to suit the animals, they are
redesigning the animals to suit the factory farm.

Are there no boundaries of nature and elementary ethics that the
conservative should be the first to see? The hubris of such projects
is beyond belief, only more because of the foolish and frivolous goods
to be gained—blood-free meats and the perfect pork chop.

No one who does not profit from them can look at our modern factory
farms or frenzied slaughter plants or agricultural laboratories with
their featherless chickens and fear-free pigs and think, “Yes, this is
humanity at our finest—exactly as things should be.” Devils charged
with designing a farm could hardly have made it more severe. Least of
all should we look for sanction in Judeo-Christian morality, whose
whole logic is one of gracious condescension, of the proud learning to
be humble, the higher serving the lower, and the strong protecting the
weak.

Those religious conservatives who, in every debate over animal
welfare, rush to remind us that the animals themselves are secondary
and man must come first are exactly right—only they don’t follow their
own thought to its moral conclusion. Somehow, in their pious notions
of stewardship and dominion, we always seem to end up with singular
moral dignity but no singular moral accountability to go with it.

Lofty talk about humanity’s special status among creatures only
invites such questions as: what would the Good Shepherd make of our
factory farms? Where does the creature of conscience get off lording
it over these poor creatures so mercilessly? “How is it possible,” as
Malcolm Muggeridge asked in the years when factory farming began to
spread, “to look for God and sing his praises while insulting and
degrading his creatures? If, as I had thought, all lambs are the Agnus
Dei, then to deprive them of light and the field and their joyous
frisking and the sky is the worst kind of blasphemy.”

The writer B.R. Meyers remarked in The Atlantic, “research could prove
that cows love Jesus, and the line at the McDonald’s drive-through
wouldn’t be one sagging carload shorter the next day …. Has any
generation in history ever been so ready to cause so much suffering
for such a trivial advantage? We deaden our consciences to enjoy—for a
few minutes a day—the taste of blood, the feel of our teeth meeting
through muscle.”

That is a cynical but serious indictment, and we must never let it be
true of us in the choices we each make or urge upon others. If reason
and morality are what set human beings apart from animals, then reason
and morality must always guide us in how we treat them, or else it’s
all just caprice, unbridled appetite with the pretense of piety. When
people say that they like their pork chops, veal, or foie gras just
too much ever to give them up, reason hears in that the voice of
gluttony, willfulness, or at best moral complaisance. What makes a
human being human is precisely the ability to understand that the
suffering of an animal is more important than the taste of a treat.

Of the many conservatives who reviewed Dominion, every last one
conceded that factory farming is a wretched business and a betrayal of
human responsibility. So it should be a short step to agreement that
it also constitutes a serious issue of law and public policy. Having
granted that certain practices are abusive, cruel, and wrong, we must
be prepared actually to do something about them.

Among animal activists, of course, there are some who go too far—there
are in the best of causes. But fairness requires that we judge a cause
by its best advocates instead of making straw men of the worst. There
isn’t much money in championing the cause of animals, so we’re dealing
with some pretty altruistic people who on that account alone deserve
the benefit of the doubt.

If we’re looking for fitting targets for inquiry and scorn, for people
with an angle and a truly pernicious influence, better to start with
groups like Smithfield Foods (my candidate for the worst corporation
in America in its ruthlessness to people and animals alike), the
National Pork Producers Council (a reliable Republican contributor),
or the various think tanks in Washington subsidized by animal-use
industries for intellectual cover.

After the last election, the National Pork Producers Council rejoiced,
“President Bush’s victory ensures that the U.S. pork industry will be
very well positioned for the next four years politically, and pork
producers will benefit from the long-term results of a livestock
agriculture-friendly agenda.” But this is no tribute. And millions of
good people who live in what’s left of America’s small family-farm
communities would themselves rejoice if the president were to announce
that he is prepared to sign a bipartisan bill making some basic
reforms in livestock agriculture.

Bush’s new agriculture secretary, former Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns,
has shown a sympathy for animal welfare. He and the president might
both be surprised at the number and variety of supporters such reforms
would find in the Congress, from Republicans like Chris Smith and
Elton Gallegly in the House to John Ensign and Rick Santorum in the
Senate, along with Democrats such as Robert Byrd, Barbara Boxer, or
the North Carolina congressman who called me in to say that he, too,
was disgusted and saddened by hog farming in his state.

If such matters were ever brought to President Bush’s attention in a
serious way, he would find in the details of factory farming many
things abhorrent to the Christian heart and to his own kindly
instincts. Even if he were to drop into relevant speeches a few of the
prohibited words in modern industrial agriculture (cruel, humane,
compassionate), instead of endlessly flattering corporate farmers for
virtues they lack, that alone would help to set reforms in motion.

We need our conservative values voters to get behind a Humane Farming
Act so that we can all quit averting our eyes. This reform, a set of
explicit federal cruelty statutes with enforcement funding to back it
up, would leave us with farms we could imagine without wincing,
photograph without prosecution, and explain without excuses.

The law would uphold not only the elementary standards of animal
husbandry but also of veterinary ethics, following no more complicated
a principle than that pigs and cows should be able to walk and turn
around, fowl to move about and spread their wings, and all creatures
to know the feel of soil and grass and the warmth of the sun. No need
for labels saying “free-range” or “humanely raised.” They will all be
raised that way. They all get to be treated like animals and not as
unfeeling machines.

On a date certain, mass confinement, sow gestation crates, veal
crates, battery cages, and all such innovations would be prohibited.
This will end livestock agriculture’s moral race to the bottom and
turn the ingenuity of its scientists toward compassionate solutions.
It will remove the federal support that unnaturally serves
agribusiness at the expense of small farms. And it will shift
economies of scale, turning the balance in favor of humane farmers—as
those who run companies like Wal-Mart could do right now by taking
their business away from factory farms.

In all cases, the law would apply to corporate farmers a few simple
rules that better men would have been observing all along: we cannot
just take from these creatures, we must give them something in return.
We owe them a merciful death, and we owe them a merciful life. And
when human beings cannot do something humanely, without degrading both
the creatures and ourselves, then we should not do it at all.

(Matthew Scully served until last fall as special assistant and deputy
director of speechwriting to President George W. Bush. He is the
author of Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and
the Call to Mercy.)