Michael Cook | Friday, 11 July 2008
Apes get rights in Spain
O for the glory days of Spanish radicalism.
Ah for the glory days of the Left in the Spanish Civil War! There was something mad but splendid about being a left-winger 70 years ago. Ah for the Red harridan La Pasionaria and her rants against the “heartless barbarians that would hurl our democratic Spain back down into an abyss of terror and death... ¡No Pasarán! they shall not pass!” Ah for the anarchist hero Durruti and his path to a glorious future: "the only church that illuminates is a burning church."
Whatever else you may say, those guys had ambition, ambition to liberate Spain from oppression. They had vision, bloodthirsty and half insane, to be sure, but it was a vision of a better world for the downtrodden.
How the mighty have slithered! The latest project of the Spanish Left is animal liberation. With the support of the ruling Spanish Socialist Worker’s Party (PSOE), Spain will become the first country in the world to extend some human rights to apes. From now on, the great apes – gorillas, chimpanzees and orang-utans – will enjoy the right to life, the right to the protection of individual liberty, and the right to prohibition of torture. “This is a historic moment in the struggle for animal rights,” Pedro Pozas, the Spanish director of the Great Apes Project, told the London Times. “It will doubtless be remembered as a key moment in the defence of our evolutionary comrades.”
What would La Pasionaria say?
"Bugger evolutionary comrades”! that’s what. "What about the workers?" As the Madrid daily El Mundo noted in an editorial: “With the problems that Spanish farmers and fishermen are experiencing, it is surprising that members of Congress should dedicate their efforts to trying to turn the country of bullfighting into the principal defender of the apes.”
Men like Durriti fought and died to right exaggerated wrongs. The resolution of the Spanish Parliament rights nearly non-existent wrongs. There are no apes native to Spain – apart from Gibraltar. (Perhaps this is all a Machiavellian plot to excuse an invasion to free the Barbary Apes from Britain.) There is no medical experimentation on apes in Spain. In fact, there are only estimated to be 350 apes in Spanish zoos. Activists say that 70 percent of them live in sub-human conditions. What would Durruti say? "Why not – they’re sub-human, aren’t they? How about African illegal immigrants who are alleged to live on Spanish soil in sub-human conditions?"
Most insulting of all to the memory of the true Spanish Left is the treason of abandoning its ideological roots. Nowadays Peter Singer seems to be warming the chair vacated by Marx. Singer is perhaps the world’s leading theorist of animal liberation and it is a declaration inspired by his book The Great Ape Project, co-written with an Italian, Paola Cavalieri, which has been adopted by the Spanish Parliament almost word for word. Singer is the intellectual heir of the first utilitarian Jeremy Bentham. Karl Marx had no time for Bentham’s theories, calling him "the insipid, pedantic, leather-lipped oracle of the commonplace bourgeois intelligence of the nineteenth century".
Why are the colours of the Spanish Left pink and green nowadays, instead of deep Red? Like many other radicals rendered dizzy and disoriented by the overnight disappearance of Marxism, they seem to have lost all sense of what it means to be human. Marxism was root and branch either deranged or evil, but its splinter of good was at least humanist. But adopting a utilitarian philosophy means kissing humanism goodbye forever. Peter Singer believes that: “There is no sound moral reason why possession of basic rights should be limited to members of a particular species... At a minimum, we should recognise basic rights in all beings who show intelligence and awareness (including some level of self-awareness) and who have emotional and social needs.”
The immediate consequence of this is that the more intelligent and aware an animal is, the more deserving of basic rights it is. Unborn and infant humans, comatose humans, retarded humans and senile humans will all be lower in the hierarchy than a healthy chimpanzee, or guinea pig, for that matter. It will be Animal Farm come to life. Replacing Marx’s dream of a classless communist society will be classes of animals of ascending IQs. George Orwell’s slogan, “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others”, will be prophetic in more ways than one. The Communist Manifesto railed against the “naked, shameless, direct, brutal exploitation” fostered by the cash nexus, but the Declaration on Great Apes, which has been endorsed by the Spanish Parliament, creates a IQ nexus in which people will be valued by their consciousness.
Red-blooded heroes of Spanish socialism like Largo Carballero and Prieto must be turning in their grave. They fought to the death to free the proletariat from chains – not chimpanzees. Who are the heartless barbarians now?
Michael Cook is editor of MercatorNet.
Comments (18)
Matthew said...Did the Spanish Parliament extend the legal rights to life, individual liberty, and freedom from torture to unborn apes too? Presumably not, because if it did uncomfortable parallels might be drawn.
Do Spain’s apes now bear legal duties to respect rights to life and liberty in others, and are they subject to prosecution for derogating those duties? I hope so. I’ve heard that male apes are rather prone to violence and it will be important to counteract this with the law. No doubt much of violent disposition of males is due to the structures of patriarchy quite common in traditional, heteronormative ape cultures. Let’s hope that once ape females have full subsidized access to contraception and abortion, and have begun to question stereotyped gender roles, such structures will be undermined.
United States | Saturday, 12 July 2008 at 1:09 am
Ron Henderson said...Men and their ideas come and go as the eternal tides; but the Word of God is sure and steadfast. No wonder it says that “the fool hath said in his heart there is no God.” Ps. 14:1. Add to that another statement: “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Ps. 111:10. Thanks, Spaniards, for verifying the Word of God.
Canada | Saturday, 12 July 2008 at 1:20 am
Percy Sison said...What an irony indeed! People defend the animal rights with tooth and nails but not the right of the unborn. We are loosing our common sense.
Percy Sison
United States | Saturday, 12 July 2008 at 2:30 am
Brian said...Does anyone here plan to criticize Franco’s habits of killing people who disagreed with him and throwing them into mass graves?
United States | Saturday, 12 July 2008 at 12:42 pm
Mariusz Wesolowski said...My congratulations for a well-written article that points out the abysmal hypocrisy of the modern Left (as compared to just hypocrisy of the Left in general.) One small correction: the so-called Barbary apes at Gibraltar are not really apes but monkeys (macaques).
Canada | Saturday, 12 July 2008 at 2:46 pm
David Page said...Brien, they seem to think fascism is OK as long as it is pro-church fascism.
United States | Sunday, 13 July 2008 at 12:55 pm
Ikenna said...It looks like the Spanish lawmakers have been watching too many animations.
Poor apes! They don’t even realize (and never will) the amount of fuss their benevolent “evolutionary relatives” are making over them.
Nigeria | Sunday, 13 July 2008 at 10:05 pm
Paulo Fernandes Coelho said...What about Spain measures that expel Brazilian citizens??? Are they becoming insane?
Everybody knows that 800.000 Spanish citizens came to Brazil, where they were very well received, during the difficult times in that country.
Nevertheless, their descendants are now being expelled from Spain!!!
Brazil | Sunday, 13 July 2008 at 10:15 pm
Geoff Jones said...RE: Brian and David Page.
The fact that I don’t like Socialism doesn’t entail that I therefore like Fascism. I deplore all forms of totalitarianism and I think it would be safe to say that Mr Cook would share this view also.
Australia | Monday, 14 July 2008 at 9:41 am
Andy said...that’s just bizzare! what about spiders and flies, do they get the right to life and right to protection of individual liberty?
New Zealand | Monday, 14 July 2008 at 11:58 am
Mal said...Oh yes, ‘they’ do criticize Franco’s unchristian attitudes and actions, Brian. But, this essay is dealing with another issue.
Australia | Monday, 14 July 2008 at 10:03 pm
sr abella said...Needless to say that after a long passage of time they have come to their senses respecting life of apes which doesnt originate in their backyard, hope they will extend their respect to real people around them and conjugate more in the future. Thats more significant, moreover respect to the unborn, and honor to their inquisition victims.
-- | Monday, 14 July 2008 at 11:46 pm
Dolapo said...Kyrie eleison!
Nigeria | Tuesday, 15 July 2008 at 3:55 am
Brian A. Cook said...I don’t accept totalitarianism from the Left either.
United States | Tuesday, 15 July 2008 at 9:41 am
ck :-) said...hmmm… from Chimps Aren’t Chumps By STEVE ROSS
“In reality, chimpanzees face a severe threat in the wild: their numbers have dropped to about 20 percent of what they were a century ago, as their habitat in equatorial Africa is deforested and they are hunted as bushmeat. And once you know this, it can become more difficult to view chimpanzees as silly subhuman caricatures. Consider that chimpanzees share as much as 98 percent of our genetic makeup. They make and use tools, recognize and identify hundreds of individuals in their groups and learn from others skills like termite fishing. Of course, the reverse is also true: we are 98 percent chimpanzee. Would we condone putting funny clothes on human children so that we could laugh at the way they look like subhuman buffoons?”
The good news is that a growing number of companies, including Honda, Puma and Subaru, have pledged to stop the use of primates in advertisements. The journal Science recently stopped its promotional campaign featuring chimpanzees in hats reading the magazine. That two consecutive Super Bowls have gone by without a major ad campaign featuring a chimpanzee is reason for optimism. Sometimes, success has to be measured in small increments.
Steve Ross is the supervisor of behavioral and cognitive research at the Lester Fisher Center for the Study and Conservation of Apes at the Lincoln Park Zoo.
Philippines | Monday, 21 July 2008 at 8:54 pm
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