¶This is a text which, we hope, faces in two directions. On the one hand we hope that it will be read by people interested in animal liberation who want to consider why animal exploitation exists, as well as how. On the other hand, by those who define themselves as anarchists or communists who either dismiss animal liberation altogether or personally sympathise with it but don’t see how it relates to their broader political stance.
¶While there have always been groups and individuals with feet in both
camps, for the most part discussion between those involved in animal
liberation and communists has been at a derisory level. Debate,
in so far as it exists, consists mainly of abuse and rarely moves beyond
the level of comments like wasn’t Hitler a vegetarian
(actually
not – he injected bulls blood
into his testicles, and does this
mean you can’t be a communist and a house painter or an Austrian?).
¶We hope to prompt the beginnings of a real debate about the
relationship between the animal question
and the social
question
. This text does not claim to have all the answers or to be
the communist manifesto
for animals, but we think that it does
pose some of the key questions. Over to you…
§ 1. Capitalism and class society
¶All life on planet earth is becoming increasingly enmeshed in a global economy based on money, profit and exchange – capitalism. Virtually everything has a price on it – food, drink, the soil, homes, plants, animals, the labour of humans. Needs and desires count for nothing – those who cannot afford to pay the price have to do without even if the consequence is death.
¶For the majority of human beings the consequence is a life dominated by work, half-lived in schools, factories, offices and prisons. For many this is compounded by the effects of poverty, war and various forms of oppression. But humans are not the only creatures caught up in this net. Animals of all kinds are subject to the industrial application of suffering and death in the wild, in factory farms and laboratories.
¶It is obvious that the experiences of humans and animals are linked, having a common origin in the same system of production and exchange. But we want to go further and assert that the development and maintenance of capitalism as a system that exploits humans is in some ways dependent upon the abuse of animals. Furthermore the movement that abolishes capitalism by changing the relations between humans – communism – also involves a fundamental transformation of the relations between humans and animals.
§ 1.1 Animals and primitive communism
¶When we talk of the relationship between humans and animals, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that humans are animals too. As we trace back our origins as humans, our ancestry merges with those of other primates. Hominids emerged about 25 million years ago, from which evolved various species of apes including, about 250,000 years ago, homo sapiens. Dental and other evidence suggests that like most modern species of apes, these hominids were primarily vegetarian. Humans do not have the sharp teeth, retractable claws or digestive systems common to carnivores. Although early humans, like other hominids may have sometimes scavenged meat killed by other animals, diet was probably based almost entirely on plant foods.
¶The hunting of larger animals for food, with the increased importance of meat in the diet, may have become more significant when humans encountered colder conditions in which plant foods were harder to come by, particularly in the last Ice Age. Large scale hunting brought with it a more rigid sexual division of labour, as the mobility required effectively excluded women who were pregnant or nursing young children.
¶Hunting also saw the earliest traces of the transformation of free
human activity into something resembling work. This is partly because
hunting requires more effort: On average 240 calories of plant food
can be gathered in one hour, whereas, taking into account the high
failure rate of hunting, it has been estimated that one hour of hunting
produces only 100 calories of food
(Ehrenberg). More importantly
foraging could be undertaken by the whole community and fully integrated
with other social activities such as singing, chatting and childcare.
Hunting on the other hand depended on stealth and silence, and tended to
become the specialised task of able-bodied males.
¶Even once hunting had become established, It is certainly not the
case that all early humans ate meat all of the time. The popular image
of bloodthirsty primitives slaughtering their way through the animal
kingdom is nonsense. The notion of Man the Hunter
whose
principal food is meat, and his principal occupation hunting
has
been criticised as largely a reflection of the interests and
preconceptions of nineteenth-century Western male anthropologists and of
the status of hunting as an upper class pastime in nineteenth century
Europe
(Ehrenberg).
¶So-called hunter gatherer
societies should perhaps be called
forager societies as the gathering of plants, nuts and grains was in
most cases far more fundamental than hunting, and accounted for a higher
proportion of the regular diet. In most modern foraging societies, plant
foods gathered primarily by women account for 60-70 per cent of diet
(Ehrenberg). Different communities across the world would have had
different ideas about animals, and different ways of treating them, but
we can deduce something about their beliefs and practices from cultural
artefacts left behind (e.g. cave paintings), and from similar
communities that have existed until recently.
¶For most of the time humans have existed, they lived in relatively
autonomous and scattered groups, in families (in the broadest sense: the
family grouping all those of the same blood), in tribes
. Their way
of life was essentially communistic. There was no buying and selling, no
wage labour, no state and no private property: Goods were not
produced to be consumed after exchange, after being placed on a market…
The community distributed what it produced according to simple rules,
and everyone directly got what it gave him… Activities were decided
(actually imposed on the group by necessity) and achieved in common, and
their results were shared in common
(Dauvé and Martin).
¶In these societies, the relationship between humans and the rest of
the natural world was completely different to the modern one. The most
significant fact about animals in so-called primitive communism
is that they do not belong to anybody. There is no private ownership of
land, trees, or animals, and no domestication. While some animals may be
hunted, all animals run wild and free. People only take what they need
from nature, and where animals are hunted it is on a limited basis. In
any event there would be no point in indiscriminate mass killing of
animals, as the community would have no means of using or storing the
surplus, and no market on which to sell the surplus. Communities
typically live in a harmonious relationship with their environment; it
is their home and their provider and it is not in their interest to
destroy it, by for instance, exterminating animal species.
¶Animals are not viewed as commodities, but are regarded with a
mixture of awe, wonder, respect and fear. Instead of being seen as
subordinate species, they are seen as separate beings sharing the world
with humans. Often communities adopt a particular animal as their
totem
; animals may be regarded as ancestors or protectors of the
tribe, and may even be worshipped.
§ 1.2 Domestication and domination
¶The relations between humans and other animals, and between humans
themselves, were radically transformed by the development of
agriculture. Agriculture instituted a new relationship with the natural
world: The land itself becomes an instrument of production and the
planet’s species its objects
(Zerzan). Domestication, marked by the
cultivation of plants and the constriction of animals to a particular
place, was a key turning point in the gradual replacement of nomadic
lifestyles with the sedentary systems of states, classes, cities, work
and private property. In this sense, Zerzan argues, in domesticating
animals and plants man necessarily domesticates himself
.
¶We should avoid ascribing to agriculture the role of original
sin
, the singular cause of humanity’s misfortunes and of our
expulsion from some primitive communist Eden. The development of states
and classes were contradictory, complex and contested processes taking
place over many millennia. While the domestication of plants and animals
was an important part of this story, we do not want to suggest that it
was the whole story.
¶Indeed some archaeologists suggest that it was the emergence of
social elites that gave birth to agriculture rather than the other way
round. According to Hodder (1990) The possibility exists that
domestication in the social and symbolic sense occurred prior to
domestication in the economic sense
. Whereas foraging offers
immediate access to food (when it is available), there is a delayed
return for agricultural labour investment
; crops have to be planted,
animals fed and raised before food is available. Thus, The adoption
of more intensive production techniques, leading to agriculture, served
the interests of dominant groups in society in that the new economic
regime ensnared people within social and economic structures on which
they came to depend
. It is in this sense that The domestication
of wild cattle and of the external wild more generally is a metaphor and
mechanism for the control of society
.
¶Some form of agriculture existed for thousands of years without particularly radical social change. The transition from foraging to farming is believed to have begun in the so-called Fertile Crescent (now covered by Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Syria, Israel and Jordan) around 10,000 BC and to have become well-established in this area by 6000 BC. However, only small numbers of animals were kept, with most meat still being obtained from hunting. The main focus of farming was on growing crops using simple technology, rather than the plough; archaeologists sometimes refer to this as horticulture rather than agriculture as such.
¶The real changes took place in the later Neolithic (from around 3000 BC) with the development of intensive agriculture. Animals began to be used for milk and wool products as well as for meat, and to pull the newly invented ploughs and carts. For the first time, humans began to keep large herds and flocks of animals. Systematically separated from the wild and later selectively bred, these domesticated animals gradually became physically distinct from their wild cousins.
¶The social impact of this was enormous. Out of the practice of
animal husbandry
, Camatte argues, grew both the notion of
private property and exchange value
and the rise of
patriarchy
. The amount of labour required in society increased
dramatically with a whole range of new tasks: clearing forests for
grazing land, feeding and tendering animals, milking, processing milk
products, spinning and weaving wool, and so on: farming and food
production… changed from a comparatively small series of tasks which one
woman, or group of women, could have performed with comparatively little
equipment, to a series of complex operations which would have been a
full-time occupation for the whole population
(Ehrenberg).
¶Gender relations were transformed. The demand for labour required
women to have more children (in foraging societies childbirth tends to
be spaced by three or four years). The intensification of women’s work
in reproducing labour excluded them from other tasks. As the importance
of hunting declined, men increasingly took over the farming tasks
previously undertaken by women. Women’s social position declined as
they no longer contributed so much to the daily production of food,
which had been a crucial factor in maintaining the equal status they had
previously enjoyed
(Ehrenberg).
¶It has also been suggested that it was the management of herds of
domestic animals which first gave rise to an interventionist and
manipulative conception of political life… Domestication thus became the
archetypal pattern for other kinds of social subordination. The model
was a paternal one, with the ruler a good shepherd, like the bishop with
his pastoral staff. Loyal, docile animals obeying a considerate master
were an example to all employees
(Thomas).
§ 1.3 Animals as wealth
¶After domestication animals, or at least some species, no longer ran
free. Now they could belong to somebody: Adam Smith noted that along
with crops, herds of animals were the earliest form of private property
(Thomas). This property was not just used to produce food and clothing;
it was also a form of wealth. From the earliest stages of domestication
Meat consumption was the conspicuous display of dominant ruling
power. The more cattle slaughtered, cooked and eaten, the greater the
man
(Spencer).
¶Domesticated animals were a fundamental form of wealth which could
be accumulated and handed on from one generation to the next…. as one
family accumulated more cattle, or acquired better ploughs the gap
between their wealth and that of their neighbours would increase
progressively… A distinction between rich and poor, which is
insignificant in forager societies, develops
(Ehrenberg).
¶As well as being maintained as an embodiment of wealth, animals not
needed for immediate consumption could be traded with other property
owners and even be used as money. In this early stage of the market, as
Marx observed in Capital, The money-form comes to be attached… to the
object of utility which forms the chief element of indigenous alienable
wealth, for example cattle
.
¶As animals became the property of groups or individuals they could be
not only bought and sold, but stolen and fought over. While the
development of hunting required the organisation of part of the
community as a killing machine, the transformation of this into a war
machine to systematically kill other humans may have arisen when for
the first time people owned a resource which it was both worthwhile and
fairly easy to steal
(Ehrenberg).
§ 1.4 Slavery
¶Many of those put to work in early civilisation were slaves. Once it
is taken for granted that animals are mere objects provided for the use
of humans the introduction of slavery simply involves assigning to
certain groups of humans the status of animals. As Marx notes under
slavery, according to the striking expression employed in antiquity, the
worker is distinguishable only as instrumentum vocale [speaking
implement] from an animal, which is instrumentum semi-vocale [semi-mute
implement], and from a lifeless implement, which is instrumentum mutum
[mute instrument]
(Marx, 1867).
¶In the modern period, racist ideology defined black people as more
animal than human, legitimising slavery. Slaves were treated as animals,
having to endure terrible conditions under transportation, the
removal of children and the separation of families, branding with hot
irons, the wearing of collars and chains and even medical
experimentation
. Slaves were sold at markets modelled on livestock
markets, with one contemporary noting that slaves were handled at
markets as we handle beasts
, tested for their fitness and
strength and so on. Unruly slaves were sent to nigger breakers
to
be crushed in the same way that horse breakers
were used to
domesticate wild horses. These techniques were not new, they had been
developed over the last few centuries on farms, in livestock markets, in
abattoirs and… laboratories
. (Meat and dairy produce: symbols of
male power, sexual dominance and racial discrimination, 1997).
¶Similarly, Animal domestication furnished many of the techniques
for dealing with delinquency: bridles for scolding women; cages, chains
and straw for madmen
(Thomas). We could probably add prisons to this
list too, and more recently the use of cattle prods in torture.
§ 1.5 Cows, boys and Indians: Primitive accumulation and animals
¶The animal industry, in particular cattle and sheep farming, has been
central to the spread of capitalist social relations throughout the
world. Marx argued that for capitalism to develop, there has to be a
process of brutal dispossession which he called primitive
accumulation… the historical process of divorcing the producer from the
means of production
. Capitalism requires that all the means of
production (including the land) belong to capital, and that the majority
of the population are reduced to proletarians – people who can only
survive by selling their labour in return for a wage.
¶In pre-capitalist societies, these conditions do not exist. The land
either belongs to nobody or it is divided up into small plots, with most
people having their own plot of land which they either own or can use,
and/or access to common land. People who can grow their own food have no
need to earn money to buy food, and given the choice most would not take
a job in a factory. For this to change, peasants have to be forcibly
deprived of land through conquest, enslavement, robbery [and]
murder
– this history, the history of their expropriation, is
written in the annals of mankind in blood and fire
(Marx, 1867).
¶The historical evidence suggests that not only is capitalism
dependent on ruthless primitive accumulation, but primitive accumulation
relies upon the animal industry. In England, the process of forcibly
driving the peasantry from the land
and enclosing common land
started as early as the late 15th century. But what was it that
motivated the nobility to undertake this? Marx is clear that it was
the rise in the price of the wool
, which made it profitable to
transform arable land into sheep walks
. People were driven from
their homes to make way for sheep, leading Thomas More to write at the
time of a curious land where sheep… swallow down the very men
themselves
.
¶This process was accompanied by the clearance of forest, particularly
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In this period, An
ideology of meat-eating (ennobling the heart, enriching the blood,
encouraging the soldiers) played its part in the formation of the
eighteenth century person… The growth of London meat consumption has
been linked to the development of scientific breeding practices, the
extension of turnpikes and highways, the draining of marshes, the
cutting down of forests
(Linebaugh). As well as opening up grazing
land for animals, this was also aimed at clamping down on the
forest-dwellers, many of them squatters living free from the normal
social constraints of church and manor courts
(Thomas).
¶The Highlands of Scotland were virtually emptied of people in the nineteenth century, as the inhabitants were forcibly removed to make way for sheep, and later deer as the Highlands were turned into a hunting resort for the rich. The Highland Clearances were resisted, but evictions were enforced by the military.
¶The genocidal colonisation of the Americas also featured the
replacement of indigenous people with profitable animals, starting with
Columbus who brought the first cattle and horses to the New World
in 1494. Hollywood’s myth of the epic struggle between cowboys and
Indians might not be historically accurate, but it does express a basic
truth. The dynamic for the dispossession and extermination of native
peoples was often the wish to replace them with cattle.
¶Ironically some of the victims of earlier dispossession helped in
this process. For instance in Patagonia, Araucanian Indians were rounded
up and slaughtered in the 1870s, making way for cattle grazing. Some
Scots helped in this slaughter, exiled in the Highland Clearances,
torn cruelly from their homeland and tossed on to the high seas, they
fetched up in the Falklands, then took part in another brutal clearance
at the other end of the world
(Wangford).
¶Cattle grazing was not the only aspect of the animal industry
important to colonisation. In north America in particular the fur trade
was important, as shown by the crucial role of the Hudson Bay Company.
According to Fredy Perlman, in the late 18th century Fur is Europe’s
oil. The French Empire in America revolves around fur. The nascent
Russian Empire in Siberia is a fur trappers empire
.
¶Primitive accumulation was not driven by a historically inevitable manifest destiny. There had to be an immediate economic incentive to dispossess those living on the land, and this was provided by the profits to be made from animals. In this sense the animal industry was the starting motor of primitive accumulation, without which the subsequent gains for the ruling class (the creation of a proletariat, access to mineral wealth etc.) may not have been realised.
§ 1.6 Animals and the origin of the factory system
¶Capitalism tries to squeeze the last drop of life out of human
beings, intensifying the work process to eliminate all non-productive
movements. It seeks the eradication of any uncontrolled movement of
the hand, any unproductive glance of the eyes, any unwanted wandering of
the mind
(Collectivities). Similarly with animals, the aim is to
eliminate everything that does not contribute to the final product, to
turn them into machines for the conversion of feed into meat or other
commodities.
¶With animals as with humans, the factory system aims to restrict the
movement of the body to maximise profits. Factory farming was already
established by Roman times; Plutarch writes that it is a common
practice to stitch up the eyes of cranes and swans and shut them up in
dark places to fatten
. In seventeenth century England pigs, poultry
and lambs were fattened by being confined indoors in darkness; Geese
were thought to put on weight if the webs of their feet were nailed to
the floor
(Thomas). Then as now, the movement of animals was
restricted because it burned up calories and therefore slowed down
weight gain.
¶The same basic techniques are still in use in modern factory farming, with the addition of new methods of confinement such as individual cages for chickens and piglets. It seems highly likely that the development of the factory for humans in the modern period was influenced by this long history of factory farming. The aim of the factory system was to concentrate human bodies in one place to increase control over their movements. The main difference from factory farms is that humans are only confined for part of the day; capitalism needs their bodies to last longer in order to maximise the labour it can extract from them. With animals, the aim is to fatten them for slaughter in the minimum time – broiler chickens, with a natural lifespan of seven years, are killed when they are seven weeks old.
¶The origins of assembly line production are to be found in the US
beef packing yards of the late 19th century: The packing houses were
the first American industry to create assembly lines, unable to cope
with the constant stream of cattle coming in every day the packinghouse
giants hit on a way of streamlining the slaughter process – they
invented the conveyor belt
(Rifkin).
¶A 1942 publication, financed by a meat-packing company, says: The
slaughtered animals, suspended head downwards from a moving chain, or
conveyor, pass from worker to worker, each of whom performs some
particular step in the process. So efficient has this procedure proved
to be that it has been adopted by many other industries, as for example
in the assembling of automobiles
. Henry Ford acknowledged that the
idea for the automobile assembly line came in a general way from the
overhead trolley that the Chicago packers used in dressing beef
(Adams).
¶As Carol Adams observes it is appropriate that the slaughterhouse has
been used as trope for treatment of the worker in a modern capitalist
society
in works like Upton Sinclair’s the Jungle
and Bertolt
Brecht’s Saint Joan of the Stockyards
. Aside from the historic
link, both the animal and the assembly line worker are treated as an
inert, unthinking object, whose creative, bodily, emotional needs are
ignored
, while the dismemberment of the animal’s body is echoed by
the fragmentation of the individual’s work
on the assembly line
(Adams).
§ 1.7 Good Breeding: the genetic intensification of production
¶Jacques Camatte has talked of the anthropomorphization of capital,
whereby capital raises human beings in its own image: Capital becomes
autonomous by domesticating the human being. After
analysing-dissecting-fragmenting the human being, capital reconstructs
the human being as a function of its process
. With humans, this
process is accomplished not just by ideology but by subjecting the body
to a range of disciplinary regimes: the school, the prison, the
factory.
¶With animals things have gone a stage further with a modification of
the physical bodies of animals to make them more productive. There is a
long history of selective breeding of animals in this way, described by
John Zerzan: the domesticating of animals… defies natural selection
and re-establishes the controllable organic world at a debased
artificial level… Transmuted from a state of freedom to that of helpless
parasites, these animals become completely dependent on man for
survival. In domestic mammals as a rule, the size of the brain becomes
relatively smaller as specimens are produced that devote more energy to
growth and less to activity. Placid, infantilized, typified perhaps by
the sheep, most domesticated of herd mammals; the remarkable
intelligence of wild sheep is completely lost in their tamed
counterparts. The social relationships among domestic animals are
reduced to the crudest essentials. Non-reproductive parts of the life
cycle are minimised, courtship is curtailed, and the animal’s very
capacity to recognise its own species is impaired
.
¶The twentieth century has seen a number of attempts to apply animal
breeding techniques to humans, as promoted by the eugenics movement.
Forced sterilisation and other efforts have been applied to stop the
unfit
and disabled from breeding. While this was applied with the
most ruthless determination in Nazi Germany, eugenics programmes have
also been implemented in social democratic Sweden and elsewhere. In
Britain, eugenics may not have been systematically applied but its ideas
were very influential amongst sections of the ruling class earlier this
century and influenced various state policies. For instance, birth
control pioneers like Marie Stopes were partially motivated by such
concerns.
¶Selective breeding of animals is now being refined through the development of a range of genetic/bio-technological methods. Animal species are being genetically manipulated to develop xenotransplantation (cross species organ transplants), pharming (the production of drugs and other products from genetically-mutated animals) and increased food productivity. Examples of the latter include attempts to develop chickens without feathers and animals whose immune systems attack their own fat cells to produce leaner meat.
¶In a further move in the commodification of life, the European
Parliament has recently voted to allow the patenting of
genetically-mutated animals and plants. Biotechnology companies can now
claim that a mutated animal they have invented
is their exclusive
private property.
¶Camatte anticipates that one possible long-term development of
capitalism could be the mutation of the human being, or rather a
change of the species: production of a perfectly programmable being
which has lost all the characteristics of the species Homo Sapiens
.
The Critical Arts Ensemble suggest that this has already begun as
Individuals of various social groups and classes are forced to submit
their bodies for reconfiguration so that they can function more
efficiently under the obsessively rational imperatives of pancapitalism
(production, consumption, and order)
. In the immediate future the
main mechanisms will be the blending of the organic and the
electromechanical
, new eugenics (linked to genetic screening) and
mood-controlling drugs. Human clones, cyborgs and replicants are the
stuff of science fiction, but the technologies are being developed with
animals which could be used in an attempt to modify human bodies at a
future stage of class society.
§ 1.8 Extermination
¶As with humans, those animals that cannot profitably be integrated
into the productive process are simply discarded. Domestication has
focused on a narrow number of species; others not entirely domesticated
have been preserved for recreational slaughter – such as deer. But many
other species have been exterminated altogether, threatening the
biodiversity of the planet. In colonial India and Africa, the flower
of British manhood indulged in veritable orgies of big game
slaughter
. In north America, the wolf became the symbol of
untamed nature
and was exterminated in most areas, as earlier in
Europe, while between 1850 and 1880, 75 million buffalo were killed by
hunters (Thomas). In each case, mass slaughter was seen as part of the
divinely sanctioned transformation of wilderness into civilisation.
¶The same mania of extermination fuelled the hunting of humans defined
as animals, such as the Aboriginal peoples of Australia, or the
indigenous population of the Philippines, the subject of goo-goo
hunts
after the US conquest of 1898.
¶Many other animal species have disappeared because of the destruction and fragmentation of their habitat. The animal industry is often directly involved in the wrecking of fragile local ecosystems, particularly when forests are cleared to make way for grazing land.
¶Today we are used to seeing the last survivors of endangered species
conserved in zoos. The origin of these zoos formed part of the same
colonial mentality that exterminated so many creatures: the spectacle
of the zoo animal must be understood historically as a spectacle of
colonial or imperial power
(Baker) with the captive animals serving
as simultaneous emblems of human mastery over the natural world and
of English dominion over remote territories
(Ritvo).
§ 1.9 Vivisection
¶Vivisection has been part of scientific practice since the late 17th century. Today experiments on animals are carried out on a vast scale by, among others, private corporations, academic institutions and the military. Nobody seriously denies that this causes suffering to animals, but the counter claim is made that this contributes to meeting human needs.
¶To argue over whether a particular experiment, or class of experiments, is potentially beneficial is to miss the point: capitalist progress, of which vivisection is a part, is a fraud. Put simply it is a myth that science at the service of capital will deliver a never ending series of products which will make our lives easier, healthier, longer.
¶On the contrary, the intensification of the abuse of animals often contributes directly to improving the techniques of domination of human beings. In some cases this is self-evident. The classic example is military research. In the UK, the use of animals in experiments at the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA) at Porton Down in Wiltshire increased steadily in the 1990s, with tests including shooting pigs and monkeys and a range of biological warfare experiments.
¶It may be true that some new drugs could benefit some individuals in spite of being tested on animals. But there are plenty of well-established cures that the majority of the world’s population are denied access to because of their poverty. The same drugs companies which claim to be crusading for human health would rather let people die than allow their patented products to be made available on a non-profit basis. Research into new drugs is aimed at increasing profits not solving medical problems.
¶In any case improving human health is not just a matter of plentiful pills; the most efficient way to help people is to provide clean water, sanitation, food and basic medical care to those currently lacking. The very industrial process which holds out the promise of new life enhancing commodities actually manufactures ill health. New drugs don’t just mean abused animals; they can also mean more factories polluting the air and water with chemicals, more people working longer hours and suffering stress, depression, repetitive strain and the other diseases of civilisation.
¶The answer to the question why does capitalism experiment on
animals?
is because they can’t get away with doing it to
humans
. But there are exceptions – since Porton Down was set up in
1916, tests have also been carried out on more than 12,000 humans,
chiefly military volunteers
duped into taking part for a few
perks without being properly informed of the consequences. Substances
tested have included nerve gas, mustard gas, anthrax and LSD. Hundreds
of ex-servicemen claim that they are suffering from disabilities
including skins and eye disorder, kidney and liver complaints and
depression as a result. It has only recently been revealed that in the
1950s tests of the nerve gas Sarin killed a 20 year old conscript,
Ronald Madison (Guardian, 20.8.99).
§ 1.10 Commodity fetishism and meat
¶In 1998 two pigs escaped from a slaughterhouse in Wiltshire, swam
across the River Avon and ran off into the surrounding countryside. On
the run for a week, the Tamworth Two
became the focus of an
intense media circus; when recaptured they were spared the
slaughterhouse, a newspaper bought the pigs off the owner and found them
a safe home. The contradiction between the sentimentalisation of these
particular pigs and the simultaneous mass consumption of other pigs can
only be explained with reference to Marx’s theory of commodity
fetishism.
¶Commodity fetishism is the process whereby commodities are imbued
with a life of their own with their origins as the product of labour
concealed. It is particularly well-developed in relation to animal
products, whose origins are systematically disavowed by supermarket
packaging and linguistic distancing (pork not pig, beef not cow). This
in turn creates a space for the circulation of a range of semi-magical
symbolic meanings around these animal commodities. Meat is seen not as
the product of factory farm and slaughterhouse, but as a token of
masculinity (real men eat meat
) or as a national totem. So in
France steak follows the index of patriotic values: it helps them to
rise in wartime, it is the very flesh of the French soldier
(Barthes) while across the channel nothing is quite as British as
roast beef
.
¶Recently this fetishism has been partially fractured by disclosures about the animal production process resulting from health scares. In France, blood and offal from animal carcasses, sewage and untreated water were revealed to have been used in making poultry and pig feed; in Belgium dioxin contamination was found in poultry. In Britain there was the BSE epidemic in cows (and in some humans) linked to the practice of feeding cows with protein pellets made from the remains of chicken, as well as outbreaks of E. Coli food poisoning from contaminated meat.
¶The health impact is not confined to those who eat meat. Even the
British government’s advisory committee on the microbiological safety of
food recently warned of the calamitous consequences
of the
overuse of antibiotics in farming (Guardian, 19.8.99). The use of drugs
to speed growth and their routine prescription for whole herds or flocks
to prevent disease is leading to the development of micro-organisms
resistant to antibiotics.
¶Are these problems of capitalism or of meat production per se? Clearly the thirst for profit is a major factor and specific practices could be reformed, and indeed are being reformed. But meat production on anything like the current scale would be impossible without intensive farming. There is a limit to how far it could ever be possible to sanitise an industrial process involving slaughter, blood and the eating of flesh.
¶If meat eating answers a human need, it is a need that many human cultures and an increasing number of individuals do not feel. It is certainly a need for the huge food corporations who depend on it. In modern capitalism it is a need, like smoking, that has to be continually reinforced by marketing, regardless of its effect on people, animals and the environment.
§ 1.11 Hunting and class power
¶In the ancient slave states, hunting became increasingly an
opportunity for the ruling elite to publicise its dominance over lesser
beings
(Serpell). In the Roman Circuses, Emperors would oversee and
participate in the mass slaughter of captured wild animals including
lions, elephants, bears and crocodiles. Archers paid for the privilege
of shooting animals from ringside seats. Gladiators killing each other,
or heretics being tortured, were also part of the entertainment.
¶Hunting has performed a similar function as a display of ruling class
power in modern Britain. For much of the 18th century, fox hunting was
the casual and disorganised pursuit of backwoods squires and
farmers
. The development of regular hunts with their own territories
in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries came about as fox
hunting became the favoured leisure pursuit of the great landowners. As
well as a means of socialisation for upper class males, fox hunting
reaffirmed their prominence in the local community
(Colley).
¶Interestingly in view of the hunting lobby’s claim to defend the
rural way of life this process saw the further subordination of the
countryside to the interests of the wealthy: The very scenery of
Great Britain was now reorganised and re-envisioned in keeping with the
leisure priorities of men of land and substance. Hedges were torn down,
ditches filled, gates and bridges built, tenants
privacy invaded,
all in pursuit of the unfortunate, uneatable fox” (Colley).
¶In the twentieth century hunting has provided a means for the social integration of the non-aristocratic rich into more traditional wealthy circles, and it remains primarily a pursuit of the rich and powerful from the royal family down.
¶Despite this, abolishing hunting would no longer threaten the interests of the ruling class as a whole. Capital is becoming more impersonal and is not dependent on the kind of socialisation offered by hunting to create a coherent dominant class. In fact it is barely dependent on individual rich people at all – the top 200 wealthiest families could be wiped out without affecting the reproduction of capitalism one iota. As a display of ruling class power, hunting is a minor footnote compared with the modern spectacle of high-tech televised warfare. In this context, hunting can now be treated as a moral issue and opposed even by parts of the ruling class. At the time of writing, the prospect of some hunting being banned in the UK is becoming more likely.
¶Such moves will meet with resistance from rural-based sections of the
ruling class and their supporters. The movement to defend hunting
demonstrates all too clearly how the right to kill foxes is tied up with
a wider agenda of defending the interests of landowners (opposition to
rambling etc.). With its threat to unleash a violent petit-bourgeois
small farmers’ backlash under aristocratic patronage, the pro-hunting
Countryside Alliance resembles a classic fascist movement in the making
(albeit one with no chance of taking power), especially as in its right
wing populist take on rural life The Countryside is seen as a place
of all things traditionally British… white, cultured, patriotic,
heterosexual, family centred, beef eating, conservative
(Animal
magazine).
§ 1.12 Working class violence – against animals
¶In addition to the corporate abuse of animals, there is a more
diffuse field of cruelty, exploitation and extermination. Partly this is
driven by economic imperatives – if the choice is between extreme
poverty on the one hand or poaching an elephant to sell its tusks on the
other, it is hardly surprising that animal welfare is low on many
people’s priorities. But there is also an element of the powerless
venting their frustration on those they have power over – animals or
children. Marx notes that the slave treated as a beast of burden or a
tool gives himself the satisfaction of knowing that he is different
by treating the one with brutality and damaging the other
(Marx,
1867).
¶The internalisation of relations of domination partially explains why
some working class men take pleasure in killing animals. Even fox
hunting, while organised by and for the rich, relies on the paid and
unpaid participation of terrier men and a cross-class mix of hunt
followers. This was evident on the mass rally in favour of hunting in
London’s Hyde Park (1997). The presentation of this as some kind of
spontaneous cross-class rural revolt disguised what it actually
demonstrated: the semi-feudal relations of patronage that still exist in
the rural economy. Yet while many were paid or pressured to take part,
it is undeniable that faced with some of the lowest wages and longest
working hours in the country, a section of the rural working class is
prepared to line up with its bosses to defend their miserable situation.
We are reminded of Louise Michel’s insight that The more ferocious a
man is toward animals, the more that man cringes before the people who
dominate them
.
§ 1.13 Beyond humanism
¶Human domination of animals has been justified by Christianity and
humanism, both of which posed the human being at the centre of creation,
the king of the beasts, in nature but not of it. The boundary between
humans and animals was absolute and rigidly policed. Before the
widespread advent of pet keeping, any intimacy with animals was suspect:
in at least half of the well-documented witchcraft cases which were
brought to trial in England, the accused was implicated by the fact that
he or she possessed and displayed affection for one or more animal
companions
(Serpell).
¶The construction of man
in this image has involved the denial
and repression of human needs and desires. Thus whole categories of
human life, such as sex, dancing and nakedness have been denounced by
moralists throughout history as bestial
. Women who step out of
line can be referred to as dogs, bitches, shrews, vixens or cows
(Arkangel).
¶The Italian socialist (and apologist for domestication) Antonio
Gramsci wrote approvingly that The history of industrialism has
always been a continuing struggle … against the element of
(Prison Notebooks).animality
in man. It has been an uninterrupted, often painful and
bloody process of subjugating natural (i.e. animal and primitive)
instincts to a new, more complex and rigid norms and habits of order,
exactitude and precision which can make possible the increasingly
complex forms of collective life which are the necessary consequence of
industrial development
¶In cultures less penetrated by the values of capital, this animality
is something to be admired rather than degraded. Thus an elder of the
Dogon people in Mali once said: Animals are superior to men because
they belong to the bush and don’t have to work. Many animals feed
themselves on what man grows by painful toil
(Horniman).
¶In fact wildlife does provide an implicit critique of human society,
as an inspiration, and contrast with domesticated
society.
Despite attempts to portray all animal social life as amounting to a
permanent war for survival, anyone with cats or dogs knows that much of
their lives are spent playing and lazing around.
¶As Fredy Perlman shows animal activity is the opposite of alienated
labour, much like human activity in primitive communist
societies: A time and motion engineer watching a bear near a berry
patch would not know when to punch the clock… the bear makes no
distinction between work and play. If the engineer has an imagination he
might say that the bear experiences joy from the moment the berries turn
deep red and that none of the bear’s motions are work
.
¶Wild
remains an insult passed on the free (or those who would
be free), just as rioters continue to be denounced as animals and
militant workers as wildcat strikers. But the flipside of this is that
the idea of wildness as liberation will always have a hold on the
imagination of rebels and insurgents (rise like lions after slumber,
in unvanquishable number
– Shelley). If, according to Martin Luther
in 1530 and Pope Leo XIII in 1891, possession of private property is an
essential difference between man and beast (Thomas), then we should be
happy to shake off our human nature
.
§ 1.14 Capitalism and animals today
¶In previous stages of class society, animals were the main form of wealth and sometimes of exchange. Capitalism’s subsequent development was dependent on primitive accumulation, and in many parts of the world it was the rewards of the economic exploitation of animals that provided the incentive to clear people from the land. In early capitalism, animals still provided the main means of transport and were absolutely central to the economy.
¶Today capital has diversified and the animal industry is one among
many. Some would no doubt argue that capital has no imperative to
exploit animals, and that a consistently cruelty free
capitalism
is a possibility. Indeed this view seems to be shared both by
pro-capitalist advocates of market forces liberating animals (through
consumer boycotts), and by anarchists and communists for whom this is
proof
that opposition to animal exploitation offers no threat to
capitalism. Of course it is possible to imagine a theoretical model of
capitalism that does not depend on animals, but this is to confuse an
abstraction with the actually existing capitalism that has emerged as a
result of real historical processes. Similarly we could imagine a
capitalism without racism or women’s oppression, yet both of these have
played a crucial role in maintaining capital’s domination and continue
to exist despite superficial changes to the contrary.
¶It would be a mistake to think that the exploitation of animals is now only of marginal concern to capital. The companies involved in funding animal experiments are some of the world’s largest multinationals. Agri-business is becoming increasingly capitalised. In the past capital was largely invested in the manufacture and retail of products made from animals reared by relatively independent farmers. Today, farmers are going out of business as larger companies take over every stage of the animal industry. For instance, one company, the Grampian Country Food Group supplies one-third of UK chickens to eat (200 million a year). Direct corporate involvement in farming will be accelerated as capital expands its new biotechnological frontier.
¶The animal industry continues to dominate land use in many parts of
the world. In Britain 80% of agricultural land is used directly or
indirectly for meat and dairy production (Spencer). In many parts of the
Third World
, food production is dominated by the growth of
cereals to sell for animal feed in the West rather than to meet local
needs. Animals in factory farms produced huge amounts of waste, with
frequent incidents of pollution of water and land.
¶In Marxist terms, meat production represents the destruction of use-value to increase exchange-value. Food that could be used to feed people is instead fed to animals in order to increase profit. Most of the energy and nutrition this provides is (from an economic point of view) wasted in keeping the cattle alive, rather than directly transferred into muscle. Ten acres of land will support 61 people on a diet of soya beans, 24 on wheat, 10 on maize but only 2 on meat from cattle. Cattle are thus used by capitalism as a form of fixed capital, consuming living and dead labour in order to produce a product (meat) containing increased surplus value.
¶McDonalds has become a totem of capitalist expansion, at the cutting edge of the development of low-waged, casualised work combined with the most advanced spectacular techniques of marketing. No part of the world is held to be completely subordinated to the global market until a McDonalds has opened there. The continuing enclosure of space, marked by deforestation and dispossession is as dependent on the animal industry as the earlier stages of primitive accumulation. Forests are still being cleared for animal grazing or to grow animal feed, peasants cleared from the land to make way for international agri-business. The dynamic of capitalism is towards more control over all life, human or animal. If things move in the opposite direction it will only be because capital has been forced to take a different turn or abolished altogether.
§ 2. Communism
¶Communism is not a programme one puts into practice or makes other
put into practice, but a social movement. Communism is not an ideal to
be realised: it already exists, not as a society, but as an effort, a
task to prepare for. It is the movement which tries to abolish the
conditions of life determined by wage-labour and it will abolish them by
revolution
(Dauvé and Martin). Communism is not a utopian blueprint
for the future nor has it got anything to do with the communist
regimes of the past where capitalism was managed by the state. Communism
is the movement towards the abolition of states, classes, private
property, money and hierarchies of power, and the collective creation of
the means to satisfy our needs and desires.
¶Communism is the continuation of real needs which are now already
at work, but which cannot lead anywhere, which cannot be satisfied,
because the present situation forbids it. Today there are numerous
gestures and attitudes which express not only a refusal of the present
world, but most of all an effort to build a new one
(Dauvé and
Martin). We believe that many of the activities carried out against the
exploitation of animals fall into this category of gestures and
attitudes
and are therefore expressions of the communist
movement.
¶Radicals who scorn the notion of animal liberation have a long tradition to draw upon. Marxist political economy adopted the enlightenment project of the domination of nature in its entirety with the natural world being perceived as an unlimited raw material for industrial progress. Faced with the disastrous ecological consequences of industrial development on the one hand, and the challenge of radical ecological groups on the other, some communists have begun to criticise this model. But few of them have been prepared to extend this critique to the notion of human beings as the only creatures worthy of consideration. To them we say: enemies of civilisation and progress, one step further.
§ 2.1 The secret history of animal liberation
¶We have our own hidden tradition to inspire us. We may not be able to
turn to the founding fathers of communism inc.
for
legitimisation, but over the centuries there have been plenty of rebels
and revolutionaries who have fought for their own liberation and that of
other human beings whilst also denouncing the abuse of animals.
¶As Colin Spencer demonstrates in The Heretic’s Feast: A history of
vegetarianism, arguments against eating animals have been put forward
for at least as far back as written records stretch. While many have
eschewed meat for health reasons, or as part of an ascetic package of
self-denial and sacrifice, it has often been concern for animals that
has been the key factor. In ancient Greece for instance, the Orphic
mystery religion held animal sacrifice and meat eating to be equivalent
to murder. Similar views were apparently held by Pythagorus and his
followers. Many of the arguments still used today for and against eating
animals have been rehearsed for thousands of years. For instance, the
Greek writer Plutarch (AD 46-120) wrote that We can claim no great
right over land animals which are nourished with the same food, inspire
the same air, wash in and drink the same water that we do ourselves; and
when they are slaughtered they make us ashamed
. He called on
carnivores to try meat raw and not to disguise the murdered animal by
the use of ten thousand sweet herbs and spices
.
¶Then as now, vegetarianism was not simply a dietary choice, but had
wider implications in view of the social/symbolic power associated with
meat: To change one’s diet is to throw into doubt the relationship
between gods, men and beasts upon which the whole politico-religious
system of the city rests… To abstain from eating meat in the Greek
city-state is a highly subversive act
(Detienne).
¶In some areas of the world, whole communities have been primarily vegetarian. This may be associated with the influence of Buddhist or Hindu ideas, but it may also be the case that religious ideas simply reflected the existing social practices. The anti-British Indian Mutiny of 1857 was sparked by British ignorance of the importance of vegetarianism. The immediate cause of the Mutiny was the refusal of Indian troops to use rifle cartridges greased with animal fat (since pig fat was used this also offended the Muslim troops).
¶Vegetarianism has often been associated with religious heresies, a
fact adding to their persecution. Cathar heretics brought before the
Emperor Henry III in 1052 were accused of having condemned all eating
of animals, and with the agreement of everybody present he ordered them
to be hanged
(cited in Spencer). In China, an 1141 edict declared:
All vegetarian demon worshippers… shall be strangulated
.
¶It was amongst such heretic tendencies that radical communistic ideas
often flourished, circulating amongst the poor and providing inspiration
for millenarian
revolts. In this context the refusal of meat may
have had a class dimension: another thing about not eating meat which
gave it a social power as a spiritual message, and it was a message
which was preached not only by the Cathars but by other religions which
opposed Catholic orthodoxy in this period, was that meat was the food of
the hunters, of the dominators, of the people who rode horses, the
people who exploited the cultivators of the land, most of whose life was
singularly meatless
(Moore).
¶During and after the English Civil War, vegetarianism was advocated
by some Ranters like John Robins; by a Hackney bricklayer called
Marshall who argued that it was unlawful to kill any creature that
had life
and by Thomas Tryon, who condemned killing and
oppressing his fellow creatures
as well as slavery, war and the
treatment of the insane (Thomas).
¶Concern about the treatment of animals, and in some cases,
vegetarianism was found amongst eighteenth century radicals like William
Blake who wrote that Each outcry of the hunted hare/ A fibre from the
brain does tear
; the atheist John Ritson; and John Oswald (1730-93),
English Jacobin and author of Cry of Nature. Early in the next century
the poet Shelley advocated vegetarianism in his work Queen Mab, which
also denounced war and the rule of kings and commerce.
¶Later in the 19th century the anarchist and Paris communard Louise
Michel declared The origin of my revolt against the powerful was my
horror at the tortures inflicted on animals
. Michel’s fellow Paris
Communard Elisée Reclus, the anarchist communist and geographer, was a
vegetarian who opposed the slaughter of animals for food.
¶Occasionally, opposition to animal abuse was taken up by wider
sections of the working class. In Battersea, south London, there were
riots on the working class Latchmere Estate in 1906 as locals defended
the Brown Dog
anti-vivisection statue from attack by doctors and
medical students.
§ 2.2 The modern animal liberation movement
¶The modern animal liberation movement includes a diverse range of groups and individuals opposing practices such as hunting, vivisection and the slaughter of animals for food. Given what we have argued about the centrality of animals to capitalism, a movement challenging the position of animals could hardly help but impact on capital.
¶However, we are certainly not arguing that this movement is in totality a revolutionary movement confronting capital. Like all social movements, the animal liberation movement contains contradictory tendencies – at the one pole a socially conservative position, uncritical of capitalism, parliamentary politics, hierarchical single-issue campaigns, at the other a non-hierarchical, direct action-based approach placing the particular issue in the wider context of radical social transformation. Between these poles various combinations exist (e.g. socially conservative, single issue-based direct action). These contradictions cut across organisations and even individuals.
¶Despite the criticisms that can be made of animal liberation ideology and practice (some of which we will set out later), some animal liberation actions and attitudes are certainly expressions of communism.
¶A clear example is the practice of liberating animals from farms, kennels and laboratories in the kind of raid pioneered by the Animal Liberation Front in the 1970s. Saving these animals from suffering and an early death directly confronts the logic of capital, abolishing their status as products, commodities and raw materials by reinstating them as living beings outside of the system of production and exchange.
¶Communists have criticised capitalist progress and development, including the idea that science and technology are neutral and will lead to a suffering-free golden age. Animal liberationists have put this critique into practice by, for instance, disrupting research and attacking laboratories.
¶Ideas of animal liberation enrich communist theory by posing the key
question of the relationship between humans and the natural world. Marx
recognised that communism involves the genuine resolution of the
conflict between man and nature and between man and man
(1844), but
his vision of communism as a life where you could hunt in the
morning, rear cattle in the afternoon
suggests that he did not
really think through what this would involve.
¶As Camatte argues, The proletarian movement unfortunately retained
certain presuppositions of capital, in particular… the vision of
progress; the exaltation of science; the necessity of distinguishing the
human from the animal, with the latter being considered in every case
inferior; the idea of the exploitation of nature…. All this meant that
the demand for a human community was kept within the limits of
capital
. Apparent single issue movements focusing on, for instance,
animal liberation are therefore necessary to correct the shortcomings
of the classical revolutionary movement… which had become infested with
notions of power and domination
.
¶Animal liberation perspectives enable us to see that if the
reconciliation of humans and nature is to be more than an empty wish,
concrete measures have to be taken to change the way humans relate to
animals, such as dismantling the technology of factory farming. They
also raise the question of extending the notion of community beyond
humans to embrace other species – the fact that animals may not be able
to participate in the community as active subjects does not mean they
have to be simply objects for human use. As Elisée Reclus argued:
When our civilisation, ferociously individualist as it is, and
dividing the world into as many little hostile States as there are
separate properties and different family households – when its last
bankruptcy shall have been declared… then we shall remember all these
species that have been left behind on our forward route, and shall
endeavour to make of them, not servants or machines, but veritable
companions
.
¶Some anarchists and communists argue that the animal question
is irrelevant because animals cannot fight for themselves: Animals
can never play a part in class recomposition
(Aufheben, 1995). Yet
any class recomposition that does not express the inter-relatedness
between humans and other forms of life risks staying on the terrain of
capital. By this we mean that the working class needs to overcome its
fragmentation and assert itself not only to get a better deal as a
component of the capitalist machine, but to challenge the relationship
between this machine and life on the planet, human, animal and
vegetable.
§ 2.3 Everything that walks on the earth is governed by blows
¶This brings us to the main communist
argument against animal
liberation, that those involved are projecting the horrors of
capitalism away from themselves
rather than fighting for
themselves
. This is sometimes linked to the situationist notion of
radical subjectivity in which revolution is seen as the expression of
individual needs and desires.
¶Such an approach tends to ignore the fact that people are social animals who do not exist as independent beings in themselves. They exist through social interaction, with other humans, animals and the wider environment. The communist impulse is not just a matter of enlightened self-interest but an expression of our wider communal being in this sense. In any case the need to live in a world where the alienation between humans and nature is overcome has always been part of the communist project, and is as important a need as the more obvious material ones like food and housing.
¶We don’t see those who actively express this need as being alienated
from their own, real needs. On the contrary, as an article on the mass
opposition to live animal exports in the mid-1990’s put it: The fact
that people are moved to confront the state by the suffering of animals
at least gives us hope that people are not completely alienated
(Do
or Die).
¶The basis of working class concern about animals is not misplaced
sentimentality (though we think that sentiment is at least as legitimate
a human response as detached scientific rationality) but empathy arising
from a shared condition as beasts of burden: everything that moves on
the earth is governed by blows
(Os Cangaceiros). As we argued
earlier, the techniques of domination of humans and animals are
historically interlinked. For instance, animals are used in experiments
precisely because they are similar to humans in some way. If some one
feels revulsion at the experiments where a cat or monkey has electrodes
planted into their brains, then that is a valid survival
instinct
. Those animals are only tortured in those experiments
because capital wants to be able to do the same thing to people.
¶If this empathy has been largely absent from revolutionary theory, it
has found expression in revolutionary situations. During the Diggers
occupation of St George’s Hill in 1649, Gerrard Winstanley reported that
tender hearts
grieved to see their cows beaten by the lord of the
manor’s bailiffs – after all hadn’t they been subject to the same
beatings? In the Paris Commune (1871) Louise Michel found time between
shooting cops and guarding the barricades to rescue a frightened cat,
arguing in her memoirs that everything fits together, from the bird
whose brood is crushed to the humans whose nest is destroyed by war
(Lowry and Gunter). In prison in 1917, Rosa Luxemburg expressed her
empathy with the buffalo she saw being mistreated from her cell: The
suffering of a dearly loved brother could hardly have moved me more…
Poor wretch, I am as powerless, as dumb, as yourself; I am at one with
you in my pain, my weakness and my longing
(Letter to Sonja
Liebknecht, Dec. 1917).
¶Compassion is not a word found very frequently in revolutionary
discourse, but as Communist Headache argue in relation to animals:
Part of class struggle is the struggle against domination. This
includes understanding how we are dominated and understanding how we are
taught to fetishize domination and so dominate each other within our
class. Domination can be countered by compassion, however this
compassion needs to be rediscovered as part of a class struggle in which
people are coming together in the human community
.
§ 2.4 Confronting the state
¶In practical terms, participation in action against the abuse of animals involves people in confronting the state (the police, the courts, the law, etc.) and developing imaginative strategies for so doing. Hunt sabbing for example can involve the elaborate use of vehicles, communications, maps and other tools to frustrate the efforts of police and hunt supporters to stop them. It also involves a mass defiance of trespass laws, a general refusal to recognise that the countryside belongs to wealthy individuals who are entitled to do what they like to the animals (and people) who live there.
¶Hunt sabbing is one of the few forms of animal-related activity to get a begrudging respect from traditional communists. Uniquely it can involve an unmediated confrontation with individual members of the ruling class. Many hunt sabs despise hunters because of what they do to foxes and because they are rich, although those who go sabbing in the expectation of a weekly re-enactment of the peasants revolt can be disappointed at the reality of hours sitting in the back of vans or sneaking through the woods.
¶While opposition to hunting might not in itself be a marker for subversive attitudes, the act of attempting to sabotage it directly is another matter. New Labour opponents of hunting continue to support the use of repressive legislation against hunt sabs because they recognise the threat posed by groups of (mainly) working class people taking matters into their own hands in defiance of the law.
¶Other struggles have involved mass confrontation with the state. The movement against live animal exports (1994/95) at Shoreham in Kent and Brightlingsea in Essex saw thousands of local people blocking roads and standing up to the police over several months. The successful movement to close Hillgrove Farm in Oxfordshire, a cat breeder for vivisection, involved frequent violent clashes on the regular demos leading up to its closure in summer 1999. In all these cases, thousands of police were unleashed with baton charges and intense surveillance – at Hillgrove police used section 60 of the Criminal Justice Act to stop and search everybody within a 5 mile radius of the farm who appeared to be on their way to demonstrate (Animal magazine). Whatever the limitations of these movements they posed fundamental questions for those involved about the role of the state and the nature of industrial processes.
¶Many people who are or have been involved in action against animal abuse have also been involved in other struggles. In this way, the range of practical skills developed in the animal liberation movement have circulated around struggles, becoming tools that can be applied in different situations. This covers everything from printing a leaflet, or moving vans of people around at short notice to clandestine forms of organisation and prisoner solidarity.
§ 2.5 Beyond the ideology of animal rights
¶Struggles against animal exploitation are (in many cases) an expression of the communist movement, a real social movement suppressing existing conditions. While it addresses only a single issue, animal liberation does pose fundamental questions about the relationship of humans to the world. This can be a starting point for a fundamental questioning of the way we live our lives; on the other hand animal rights ideology can become a limit which prevents a wider critique of society. We need to go beyond this ideology without abandoning what is subversive within what it represents.
¶Spectacular production is obviously keen to keep the unpalatable
side of production hidden
(Law). Those who take the trouble to look
behind the screen can be so overwhelmed by the horrors they find there,
that everything else seems almost irrelevant. The conflict between
humans and animals can come to be regarded as completely overriding any
social contradictions, including class, and some individuals can even
develop a form of misanthropy in which all humans are seen as
intrinsically bad
with the exception of the valiant few who
totally abstain from animal produce.
¶Total abstention is more or less impossible, and to moralistically
condemn others for not going far enough only limits the scope for a
movement to develop. Nevertheless, vegetarianism/veganism is not just a
matter of sanctimonious handwashing. The question of a loving and
respectful relationship with other living beings
necessarily
involves a rejection of nutrition that comes, not only from the
genetic manipulation of animals, but also from their cruel treatment in
battery conditions or laboratories
(Dalla Costa). Not eating animals
brings about qualitative improvement in the well-being of animals (as
well as quantitative reduction in animals killed), even if as an
isolated act it can be commodified and turned into another lifestyle
marketing niche.
¶From the standpoint of animals a vegetarian capitalism would be a step forward. But for reasons we have set out earlier, this is an extremely unlikely outcome given the vested interests of the animal industry and the ingrained habits of daily life under capitalism. Moreover vegetarian capitalism would still be dependent upon the exploitation of human animals and the subordination of all forms of life and their habitats to the needs of the economy. So we would have to say Neither McDonalds nor McCartney but international communism!
¶An overemphasis on boycotting the products of particular companies is
based on a misunderstanding of the nature of capitalism. Capitalism is
more than the combined efforts of bad
multinational corporations.
It is based on social relations mediated by property and money. As long
as these relations exist capitalism will reproduce itself, regardless of
the fate of any particular company. In any case, we can’t really
separate any one enterprise from the workings of the economy as a whole.
Capital flows freely wherever there is a profit to be made, with the
same individuals or institutions investing happily in both bad
multinationals
and cruelty free corporations
.
¶The lack of understanding of the dynamics of present day society, of
a class analysis, can result in attacks on low-level workers in
industries which exploit animals, as if they are as equally responsible
as the managers or bosses. It is ludicrous, as occasionally happens, for
McDonalds workers to be denounced as scum
when their exploitation
is as central to the company’s profits as the dead cows in the buns.
¶We can all recognise these problems, and it suits the views of many anarchists and communists to pretend that all animal liberation activities take place in this reactionary framework. This is not the case. Notably the movement against McDonalds is an actually existing international struggle that takes on work conditions, the critique of the spectacular-commodity and ecological issues as well as animal exploitation, and has even managed to involve meat eaters.
§ 2.6 What’s wrong with rights?
¶We are critical of the notion of animal rights for the same reason that we criticise human rights. The ideology of rights arose with the capitalist revolutions of the 17th and 18th centuries, in particular the French Revolution. This ideology played a political and moral compliment to capitalist economics. In the capitalist market, commodities are exchanged on the basis of equality to a sum of money, whether that commodity is sugar or a week’s work. In the political sphere, people are made equal through the granting of rights to everyone. Behind the facade of rights, the dictatorship of capital perseveres, just as the domination of the worker by capital perseveres behind the equal exchange of the labour market.
¶The notion that we all have rights disguises real inequalities. As Anatole France once said, the rich and the poor alike have the right to sleep on the streets. We all have the right to buy a palace, but we don’t all have the means to do so. As a legalistic concept, rights imply a state to defend and enforce them, which means the preservation of the alienation of individuals from each other, and hence alienation between humans and nature, including other animals.
¶The bourgeois character of rights has become increasingly apparent
with the emphasis on rights and responsibilities. In other words, rights
are conditionally granted only to those who play the game and can just
as easily be taken away. Rights are a limited recognition granted by the
powerful to the less powerful, and as such animal rights
implies
at least a separation between people and animals, and the definitive
superiority of people. The end of animal abuse requires the destruction
of the capitalist, and indeed civilised relationship between humans and
the animal world, and its replacement not with an abstract equality (a
capitalistic notion, as in the equality in market exchange of dissimilar
goods), but with an appreciation of the difference of the other as an
element in social reality.
¶There is a need to move beyond animal rights
as such, in order
to fight more effectively. People need to understand why animal
exploitation occurs as well as how. This is not because we think that
everything has to be postponed until after the revolution
but
because the real emancipation of animals and humans requires a
fundamental social transformation in the direction of communism.
§ 2.7 Animals in a Communist Society
¶Although we would regard aspects of animal liberation as expressions
of communism, opposition to the abuse of animals does not always sit
comfortably with other aspects of the communist movement. Animal
liberation doesn’t just pose an aspect of what appears to be wrong
with capitalism which revolutionaries can then fit into their general
blueprint for class struggle. It makes demands on a both a perceived
revolutionary process and a perceived revolutionary direction
(Communist Headache).
¶In some areas there may be apparent contradictions. For instance in Brazil, landless labourers are occupying land belonging to big landowners and cultivating it, including rearing animals. This is an expression of the communist movement too. But the communist movement is not a monolithic entity united around a party line. It is a dynamic entity composed of diverse, and sometimes contradictory efforts. There are many issues on which a range of different positions are possible – for instance the use of technology.
¶Disagreements would continue even in the society that would emerge as the communist movement developed to a stage where capitalism was in the process of being abolished across large parts of the world. Communism is not the application of a universal moral code, or the creation of a uniform society, and there would be no state or similar mechanism to impose, say, veganism, even if many people thought it desirable. The question of how to live with animals might be resolved in different ways in different times and places. The animal liberation movement would form one pole of the debate.
¶Others might take a different position, arguing perhaps for free range, non-intensive domestication of the goat in the garden variety (although this apparent idyll would probably still have to involve cruel practices like castration and the separation of animals from their social units).
¶We can say with confidence though that the status quo would be untenable, and that there would be a radical transformation of the relations between humans and other species.
¶With the abolition of capitalism, the vested interests of the animal
industry would no longer exist; there would be no corporate propaganda
for meat. The origins of animal products would no longer be disguised;
the production process would be transparent. People would make the
decision about whether to eat animal products on the basis of a clear
understanding of the health and social benefits and the impact on
animals not on the basis of supermarket packaging. This would take place
in the context of a process of radical change involving a questioning of
much that passes for normal
in everyday life. We would also
expect the removal of systematic violence from human relations to create
a generally more compassionate society.
¶As part of the factory system, factory farms would come to an end – who would want to work in them anyway? We would also expect a move to restore wilderness and reduce the amount of land given over to agriculture. As we have seen, growing food for animals and then eating the animals uses up a lot more land than just producing vegetables for humans to eat.
¶Anthropocentric humanism has been detrimental to humans as well as
animals: The brutal confinement of animals ultimately serves only to
separate men and women from their own potentialities
(Surrealist
Group, cited in Law). What Camatte calls the biological dimension of
the revolution
will involve the rediscovery of those aspects of
humanity, some labelled as bestial
, that have been underdeveloped
by capital such as rhythm, imagination and wildness.
¶One consequence of this would be that humans would no longer see
themselves as always above and distinct from other animals:
Communism… is not domination of nature but reconciliation, and thus
regeneration of nature: human beings no longer treat nature simply as an
object for their development, as a useful thing, but as a subject… not
separate from them if only because nature is in them
(Camatte).
PostScript: Anarcho-punk, the ALF and the miners’ strike – a cautionary tale from the 1980s
¶I have a sense of both fear and repugnance when I see comrades who hate their past or, worse still, who mystify it. I’m not denying my past, for example my workerist past; on the contrary, I claim it. If we toss everything away, we live in a condition of permanent schizophrenia. (Sergio Bologna, quoted in Wright 1996)
¶This account of the movement through anarcho-punk to class
politics in the 1980s is very much based on our own experiences. We
think that it is worth talking about because it is also relevant to
other times and situations. Questions about animals and the environment
are often associated with so-called counter-cultural
scenes, and
tend to be jettisoned as people engage with more traditional radical
politics. We can see parallels with the way significant numbers of
politicised hippies
were absorbed by the International Socialists
(now the SWP) and similar groups in the late 1960s/early 1970s. Today
with numbers of anti-roads protesters adopting or moving towards
communist positions, its as well to point out the errors that were made
by the early 80’s generation. Adopting communist analyses can be a step
forward, but not if it means abandoning what is already subversive in
your activity.
¶In the early 1980s the anarchist movement in Britain got the kick up
the arse it sorely needed with an influx of politicised punk activists.
The anarcho-punk scene was associated with nationally-known bands like
Crass, the Poison Girls, and Conflict but in towns across the country
(and indeed across Europe and beyond) thousands of people formed bands,
put on squat gigs and generally raged against the machine. Politically
the emphasis was on a mixture of lifestylist abstention from the
system
(refusal to work, boycotts of everything under the sun) and
direct action against multi-death corporations
. The high point in
Britain came in 1983/84 when thousands of people converged on the
financial centre of London for the Stop the City actions, particularly
targeting firms associated with the arms trade, ecological destruction
and animal exploitation.
¶Animal liberation was central to anarcho-punk. Seemingly every band had at least one song about hunting or vivisection, and record sleeves featured graphic images of animals in various postures of suffering. Many punks adopted a vegan lifestyle and threw themselves into animal activism – punks made up the majority of many hunt sab groups.
¶The same period saw the direct action animal liberation movement reach new heights. The Animal Liberation Front had been established in 1976 and by the early 1980s raids to rescue animals from laboratories and acts of economic sabotage against hunting, factory farming and vivisection targets were becoming increasingly common and enjoying widespread support. The ALF was, and remains, an organisation of decentralised cells, with a parallel supporters group structure putting people in touch with each other, handling press releases, and helping organise prisoner support. As well as the core of regular activists there was a broader fringe of people using the name as a flag of convenience for acts of low-level sabotage such as breaking windows and gluing up locks.
¶Alongside the ALF there was a wider movement of direct action, including militant demonstrations (2000 people entered the military’s Porton Down lab site in 1982) and mass raids on laboratories to gather evidence of animal cruelty (rather than to liberate animals). In 1984 hundreds of people took part in Northern, South East and Eastern Animal Liberation League raids on major laboratories including ICI, Unilever and Wickham. Inevitably state repression and the criminalisation of the movement was stepped up – 25 people were jailed for the Unilever action.
¶1984 also saw the start of the longest and bitterest fought episode in the class struggle for many years in Britain – the miners’ strike. The strike posed a major, and ultimately terminal challenge for anarcho-punk ideology. Crudely, this world view tended to moralistically divide the world into two camps – the good (people who thought and acted like anarcho punks) and the bad (those who collaborated with the system). At the start of the strike many punks would have put the miners in the latter category – after all didn’t most of them eat meat, and weren’t they only fighting because they wanted to work? Facing with increasing social polarisation around the strike, and the inspiring resistance of militant miners, almost everybody jumped the right way off the fence. Led by the Leeds-based Chumbawamba (years before their Top of the Pops days), most anarcho bands including Crass had played miners benefits by the end of the strike.
¶The violence of the miners’ strike also weakened the hold of pacifism
on the punk scene. The new mood was given expression in the paper Class
War, launched in 1983, which combined punk style graphics and imagery
with a language of class violence and revolution. The early Class War
was fairly clear that animal liberation was part of the revolutionary
movement against capitalist society. Announcing the launch of its 1984
Spring Offensive
against the rich, the front cover of the paper
featured a picture of a fox hunter and the slogan you rich fucking
scumbag – we’re gonna get you
. An article in the same issue
declared: Class War fully supports the movement for animal
liberation. Many of us are active in Hunt Saboteurs and take part in
attacks on animal exploitation labs and factories around the
country
.
¶Class War intervened at antivivisection marches denouncing the
bureaucrats of the BUAV
(British Union for the Abolition of
Vivisection) for their fear of the growing militancy of the animal
liberation movement, the increased daring of its attacks on property and
confrontations of the police
. For their troubles they were denounced
by the BUAV as agent provocateurs after clashes with police at Biorex
laboratories in Islington. Class War saw the militancy of the movement
as an inspiration, expressing the hope that violent attacks on animal
exploitation establishments will spill over into violent attacks on
other parts of this shit society
. However as Class War turned itself
into a national federation (without some of its founder members)
embracing more traditional workerist politics, animal liberation
disappeared from view.
¶The anarcho-punk scene began to fragment. Crass called it a day, and scenes across the country fell apart into sometimes acrimonious factions. Some people tried to just carry on as before – an anarcho-punk scene defined by the politics of the early 1980s continues to this day, albeit as a narrow subculture rather than a thriving movement. Some took the lifestyle option to its extreme, taking to the road as travellers or heading off to live on the land in Ireland. Some pursued the drugs option. Some just put it all behind them as a youthful (mis)adventure.
¶Some of those who remained primarily focused on animals were caught up in a spiral of increasing repression and the isolated militancy of a small number of activists. Mass direct action was increasingly eclipsed by arson campaigns, poisoning scares, and even bomb attacks claimed by the Animal Rights Militia.
¶Most of the (ex) anarcho-punks who remained politically engaged were moving in a completely different direction, rediscovering various forms of class struggle politics. Class War benefited most from this, but all the currents of the libertarian/communist milieu experienced an influx of new blood, including the anarcho-syndicalist Direct Action Movement, the Anarchist Communist Federation and the various ultra-left and post-situationist scenes.
¶From the point of view of the development of a radical
anti-capitalist movement this could have been a major step forward,
combining the subversive practice and imagination of the anarcho-punk
scene with a clearer understanding of capitalism and communism. But this
didn’t happen. Instead most people simply jettisoned their previous
views and adopted traditional anarchist or Marxist ideologies wholesale.
Haircuts, clothes and diets changed rapidly as people rushed to adopt
the dead end working class identity
that they had earlier tried
so hard to escape from.
¶Animals were now irrelevant, and if anything eating meat was a badge
of the ordinary people
. Some Vegan police
who had
moralistically condemned others for eating meat, now criticised
vegetarians for not eating meat: the diet changed but the self-righteous
attitude stayed the same. Concern about animals was derided as middle
class and liberal.
¶These views continue to shape the perceptions of many radicals today, particularly those who trace their political development back to the 1980s split in the anarcho-punk scene.
¶With hindsight, the most that can be said about developments of the
1980s was that it represented a step sideways from one confused set of
ideas to another. People were no more or less working class when they
adopted their patronising prolecult
lifestyle than when they were
punks. Being working class has got nothing to do with what you wear, eat
or how you talk – it’s about being subjected to a life dominated by work
(this applies not just to people in waged work, but the unemployed whose
conditions of existence are determined by their relation to the labour
market).
¶Ex-punks starting to eat meat went hand in hand with the reversal of
pacifism into the advocacy of violence and terror, down to the level of
red-blooded
flesh devouring communists advocating a red
terror
. But what was (and is) needed is not the replacement of one
mistaken position with its negative, but a synthesis that goes beyond
the mirror-image opposition.
¶Class struggle anarchists recognised the fundamental social conflicts shaping people’s experiences. But often their critique of the world went little further than a call for the working class to run things, factory farms, slaughterhouses and all. Presumably for them the problem with McDonalds was that it wasn’t democratically run on a not-for-profit basis. Despite its individualist and moralistic emphasis, anarcho-punk did in some ways pose a broader critique of capitalism as a way of life. It refused to take the products on the supermarket shelf at face value, sometimes obsessively documenting the chain of human and animal dispossession leading up to the burger in the bun.
¶And despite having a more coherent world view, many born-again class struggle anarchists actually had a less subversive relation to the world than before. Anarcho-punk did involve a practical critique of the way things are, not just at the level of direct action but in the development of different ways of doing things such as creating alternatives to the commercial distribution of music. For many class struggle anarchists, the development of subversive relations between people was endlessly deferred until after the revolution, or at least until after the next paper sale. We can even see the resurgence of traditional workerist politics as the reintegration of a radical questioning of life under capitalism.
¶Animal liberation may have been written out of the personal biographies and political histories of revolutionary politics, but we would argue that it has made a significant contribution to the development of the communist movement. It has equipped people with a range of practical skills that can be applied in different situations. It has also helped pose the fundamental social question of the relationship between humans and the rest of the natural world.
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