畜牧业、湿市场与 COVID-19:间接激进主义案例研究》(Animal Agriculture, Wet Markets, and COVID-19: a Case Study in Indirect Activism)。

Food ethics Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-05-15 DOI:10.1007/s41055-021-00090-z
Alyse Spiehler, Bob Fischer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在 COVID-19 之前,改革集约化畜牧业的理由非常充分。但不幸的是,集约化畜牧业在上个世纪发展迅速。所有迹象都表明,集约化畜牧业在未来还将继续增长。这对数十亿动物来说是个坏消息。对于那些希望建立动物友好型食品体系的人来说,这也是个坏消息。由于公众并不十分关心动物的困境--或者虽然关心,但对认知失调的容忍度很高--动物活动家经常采取间接行动主义。间接行动主义是指论证某些与行动主义者的主要议程间接相关的事业,为其采取与该议程一致的行动提供理由。在本文中,我们考虑了动物活动家在 COVID-19 流行初期提出的两个间接论点:首先,一些活动家利用 COVID-19 批评集约型畜牧业--其中许多活动家的目标受众是美国人;其次,更温和地说,一些活动家利用 COVID-19 专门谴责湿市场。我们认为,这两种论点都有适得其反的风险:它们有可能助长对动物最不利的制度。然后,我们对这种风险的道德意义进行了评估,得出结论认为,尽管提出这些论点可能是允许的,但反对这样做存在一些严重的道德考量--这些考量并没有通过在讨论中标明动物活动家或任何其他利益相关者对动物的关注而得到解决。在这两种情况下,我们认为都有合理的预防性论据来反对这些活动家所采取的策略。此外,具体到反对湿市场的论点,我们认为预防性论点可以辅以一个侧面约束条件,可以说,动物活动家违反了这一条件,因为他们的行为维护了种族主义和仇外制度。
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Animal Agriculture, Wet Markets, and COVID-19: a Case Study in Indirect Activism.

There were excellent reasons to reform intensive animal agriculture prior to COVID-19. Unfortunately, though, intensive animal agriculture has grown rapidly over the last century. All signs indicate that it will continue to grow in the future. This is bad news for billions of animals. It's also bad news for those who want an animal-friendly food system. Because the public isn't very concerned about the plight of animals-or is concerned, but has a high tolerance for cognitive dissonance-animal activists regularly engage in indirect activism. Indirect activism involves arguing that some cause that's indirectly related to the activist's primary agenda provides reasons to act in ways that are congruent with that agenda. In this paper, we consider the two indirect arguments that animal activists advanced in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic: first, some used COVID-19 to criticize intensive animal agriculture-many of these had US-based audiences as their target; second, and more modestly, some activists used COVID-19 to condemn wet markets specifically. We contend that both arguments had the risk of backfiring: they risked promoting the very systems that are worst for animals. We then assess the moral significance of this risk, concluding that while it may have been permissible to advance these arguments, there were some serious moral considerations against doing so-ones that weren't addressed by flagging animal activists' concern for animals or any other stakeholder in the discussion. In both cases, we think there are plausible precautionary arguments against the strategies that these activists pursued. Additionally, in the case of arguments against wet markets specifically, we contend that the precautionary argument can be supplemented with a side constraint condition that, arguably, activists violated insofar as they were acting in ways that maintain a racist and xenophobic system.

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