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Responsible Policies
for Animals, Inc.
Factsheet #7 |
www.RPAforAll.org |
PO Box 891
Glenside, PA
RPA4all@aol.com |
How Businesses Can Help Animals
Businesses
and businesspersons have enormous
influence throughout society.
They have dramatically improved
the quality of life for many millions
of people by determining how various
components of nature shall be
transformed into human wealth
and how that wealth shall be distributed.
The astonishing success of our
species, which owes much to business
and commerce, has been hard on
nonhuman animals, the beings closest
to humans in being able to feel
and think. Business can remain
profitable and help create the
world we all want to live in:
one in which the suffering of
human and nonhuman animals alike
is minimized. Here are some of
the ways businesses can help accomplish
that. Responsible Policies for
Animals is glad to give presentations
and provide more information on
these matters.
Consider
nonhuman animals in making decisions
that affect them.
Think of all consequences for
nonhuman animals of practices
that affect them. Because
businesses vary, this is different
for different businesses. Avoid
perpetuating notions that
nonhuman animals are not worthy
of consideration or are only worth
considering when no
expense is involved. Consider
all individual animals, not only
"endangered species."
Help
restore the traditional business
ethic that profit is not the only
important thing.
Favor
choices that minimize impact on
nonhumans over those with high
impact.
As opposed to
merely caring, thinking it is
wrong to hurt animals, or wishing
animals
were not abused for human purposes,
take steps that help eliminate
animal suffering.
Accept
responsibility as far as the business's
impact reaches.
Few business
managers would personally rub
soap in a rabbit's eyes, but
many allow
products to be used in their
business facilities that are
cruelly tested on nonhuman
animals. Most people agree the
ways animals are raised for
food today cruel, but most
businesses still use company
funds to purchase animals' flesh,
milk, and eggs.
Question
received notions of nonhuman animals
and the human-animal relationship.
Notions that
animals do not suffer, think,
communicate, or experience emotions
have long
since been proven untrue. Same
with notions that human beings
evolved as "hunter-
gatherers," are natural
"meat" eaters, or
need to kill animals to manage
ecosystems. Same
with notions that everything
in nature, including nonhuman
animals, exists for human use.
Minimize
resource use.
With 6.4 billion
human beings now living on Earth
- 1,300 times as many as existed
when
agriculture began and led to
settled living - there is no
land-use, resource-extraction,
or food-production method that
does not harm animals or their
homes. But plant-based foods
are produced using much less
water, topsoil, oil, and other
crucial resources than animal
products. Coal-burning electrical
power plants emit mercury that
turns up in the tissues of animals
living thousands of miles from
the nearest power plant. Entire
mountaintops are being removed
and dumped into river valleys
for coal extraction. Oil extraction
will reach its peak in the lifetimes
of most people living today.
Changes in human ways of life
that will be necessary as oil
becomes more costly and less
available could devastate nonhuman
animals. Keeping such basic
matters in mind when making
business decisions and plans
can make a big difference for
defenseless nonhuman animals.
Encourage
clientele and businesses to minimize
impact on nonhuman animals.
Offer incentives
for customers to reuse bags
and other containers. Bags are
made from
trees, oil, and other scarce
resources and are transported
by polluting and resource-intensive
vehicles. Thirty years ago the
U.S. saw a trend toward reusing
bags at stores and purchasing
reusable bags that can last
for decades. Reusing bags is
the norm in many other European
countries. It should be in the
U.S. as well.
Help
guide the community toward humane
and away from inhumane practices.
Following the
lead of many baseball stadiums
that now offer delicious soy
hot dogs is more humane, healthier,
more ecologically sound and
therefore more patriotic for
picnics, Independence Day celebrations,
and other events than serving
those nasty old flesh hot dogs.
Many other choices also can
do more good than harm.
Don't
support promotional or fundraising
activities that include animal
exploitation.
Using animals
for entertainment - circuses,
other traveling animal acts,
zoos, petting zoos,
carriages pulled by horses --
is never humane. There are always
better ways - for the animals
and for people and businesses.
Teaching children that nonhuman
animals exist to entertain people
perpetuates needless animal
exploitation.
Assume
where animals are used and/or
killed, they're made to suffer.
"Humane"
slaughter is a fantasy. Humans
have never exploited other animals
because doing so was humane.
Laws and regulations do not
protect animals used in any
industry. People need not be
otherwise cruel or unusual to
inflict pain on nonhuman animals
in their jobs or to accept ideologies
or attitudes that help them
rationalize animal exploitation.
Assume
"demand" for products
or activities involving animal
exploitation is created by industry
and does not reflect genuine human
needs.
For generations,
the "meat," milk,
and egg industries produced
"educational" materials
used to teach schoolchildren
about nutrition and health.
They misinformed millions of
people. "Genuine leather"
isn't more genuine than any
other material. Animal testing
is not related to the safety
of any product. It is required
for biomedical products and
not for personal-care or household
products. The imprisonment and
beating of elephants and other
animals do not make "the
greatest show on Earth"
great; they make it inferior
to more humane forms of entertainment.
Don't
fear change.
Just
as we should not cause significant
change or disruption for the
sake of change, we
needn't fear change in and of
itself. Everything we enjoy
resulted from change. Life itself
came to exist through change.
There never has been and never
will be a time without significant
change. Working together to
ensure that change will be for
the better and not for the worse
is the task of business and
society as a whole. The big
changes nonhuman animals need
will also benefit the vast majority
of human beings.
Remember
nature's contribution.
It
is estimated that nature contributes
about $33 trillion each year
to the human economy. The largest
animal-exploiting industries
- especially the flesh, milk,
and egg industries - diminish
nature's capacity to continue
providing humans with basic
needs such as clean water and
sufficient topsoil to produce
enough food for the large and
growing human population. Recognizing
nonhuman animals' basic rights
not to be used for human purposes
and not to be subjected to pain,
hunger, thirst, or fear will
help ensure nature's capacity
to continue supporting human
life and civilizations.
Revised
April 2005
Donations
to Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., are tax-deductible as allowed
by law.
Responsible
Policies for Animals, Inc., P.O. Box 891, Glenside, PA 19038
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