Groups need to band
together
By Walt Hutchens
March 26,2007
I can't tell you how
encouraging it was to read the recent remarks by Congressman Stenholm and
others to the effect that the agriculture industry needs to do a better job
against the animal rights movement.
He's also right that "We've all got to get into it together," working to
defend each other's rights and freedoms as our own.
The attack is even broader than farming and ranching: Hunting, use of
animals in education and medical research, circuses, zoos, and the keeping
and breeding of pets are also under attack and from exactly the same groups.
Across the board, HSUS is in the lead with dozens of lobbyists and literally
hundreds of programs aimed at making all keeping and use of animals so
difficult and expensive that most people will have to stop.
My wife and I have spent nearly all of our free time for
the last five years defending the right of hobbyists like ourselves to
produce one or two litters a year of carefully home bred dogs without the
government looking over our shoulder and requiring paperwork and fees at
every turn. In that time we've seen the attack in our state go from one or
two anti-pet laws per year to over twenty, often with two or three versions
of the same bill. Five years ago, Virginia had one animal rights group
sponsoring laws; we now have three or four.
The pet world has the same difficulty working together as farmers: when the
attack falls on commercial pet breeders, hobbyists may be unconcerned or
even cheer, while pet rescuers may support any anti-breeding law. "Divide
and conquer" is an explicit strategy for animal rightists, one that we must
all learn to counter if we are to have a hope of winning.
Cooperation needs to be even broader. We are not farmers but we now speak
out against any law that would tell farmers or ranchers how to run their
operations. NAIS as a mandatory system, the horse slaughter bills, anti fois
gras, veal farming, and farrowing pen bills; we've opposed them all. We will
continue to do so: I hope that farmers and farm and ranch organizations will
oppose all bills seeking to extend regulation of pet ownership and breeding
because the best of them are exactly as good as the bills attacking you.
We are all in this together. Together, I hope, we will defeat the animal
rights movement so that our children and theirs will be able to enjoy the
many choices in foods and pets that we have available today.
Walt Hutchens, Timbreblue Whippets, Lexington, Virginia, Pet-Law
Originally published at High Plains Journal
Copyright © Walt Hutchens, REXANO
Photos Copyright © Zuzana Kukol
www.REXANO.org