Defending the Undefendable: Michael Vick, Dog Killer
by Todd Steinberg
by
Todd Steinberg
I have been
studying libertarian theory for the better part of two years now,
and last year I read Walter Block's Defending
the Undefendable with much alacrity. Afterwards, I wondered
if there were any "lost chapters" that he could have written,
especially now that over 30 years have passed since it was first
published. Inspired by recent events, I have taken an opportunity
to write about someone who clearly needs to be defended.
Two years ago,
when professional football player Michael Vick was arrested for
financing and organizing dog fights in his backyard, he didn't have
a single friend. When a person leaves a dog in his car without rolling
down the windows, we look upon the owner as an irresponsible felon,
so you can imagine the outrage when people learned that Michael
Vick had trained dogs and put them in harm's way for the sake of
sport.
Now that Michael
Vick is out of prison, perhaps we can have a conversation as to
why he was arrested in the first place. I take the position that
animals are private property and that as long as Michael Vick peaceably
acquired the dogs, it's nobody's right to tell him what he can and
cannot do with his possessions.
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Though some
may find dogfighting to be barbaric and uncivilized, that is no
reason why the practice should be outlawed. Currently, there are
thousands of businesses whose purpose is to raise animals, slaughter
them, cut them into manageable pieces, package them, and ship them
worldwide. There are advertising and marketing operations that aim
to increase our consumption of animals. Television networks regularly
feature people who demonstrate their ability to cook animals in
novel ways so that we do not grow bored of their taste. These people
learn their techniques from schools built for this purpose and some
of the graduates write books about the art of cooking and eating
of animals.
So if one believes
that fighting animals is barbaric, then certainly eating
them is just as barbaric if not worse. Some people believe it's
inhumane to use animals for any purpose, whether it be for food,
clothing, shelter, milking, sport, burden, service, companionship,
exhibition, or experimentation. If we were to take the position
that animals have equal rights, then no human has more rights than
any other animal. We couldn't make any distinction between an elephant
and a nematode for if we did, we'd quickly revert to a system where
humans are more equal than cows, and cows are more equal than chickens.
For a system of animal rights to work, humans could only do what
they wanted to do so long as they weren't infringing on the rights
on any other animal.
If an absolute
system of animal rights were adopted, then we'd have no choice but
for all of us to go vegan. However, even if we all unanimously decided
to refrain from consuming meat and dairy, it wouldn't be enough
to save us from having to violate the rights of animals on a regular
basis. If we were to dig up a parcel of land to plant crops, we
are disrupting the ecosystem of whatever animals reside there. Even
if we were to forgo cultivation and revert to the gathering of nuts
and berries, we are again encroaching on the private property of
animals such as bears and squirrels who acquired homesteading rights
to the nut trees and berry bushes long before humans arrived there.
Though
we may personally feel it's immoral to eat animals or milk them,
keep them as pets or beasts of burden, it's equally immoral to throw
someone in a cage and take their property for not adequately following
someone else's arbitrary rules on the proper treatment of animals.
Declaring animals as private property is the only moral and consistent
way to deal with the topic of animal cruelty. It is your right to
do what you will with the animals you own just as it's your neighbor's
right to tell you how much better your life would be if you'd minimize
your animal consumption.
Greater than
the cruelty of animals is the cruelty of hypocrisy. The day Michael
Vick was charged with the crime of endangering animals, how many
of the arresting FBI agents had bacon with their breakfast?
June
3, 2009
Todd Steinberg
[send him mail] works with
his family at a wholesale
teddy bear company in Dallas. In his spare time he is furiously
working on his cartoon, "Don’t
Tell My Wife I’m a Cult Leader," which he plans to unleash
on the Internet and beyond in 2009.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
Todd
Steinberg Archives
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