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PETA Says "Hang Hunter!" Who Killed Cecil

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PETA — People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals — is anti-human.

Animal-rights ideology — which is sharply distinct from, and inimical to “animal welfare” doctrines — insists that moral value comes from the capacity to feel pain or to suffer. Some call it “painience.”

For a true believer in “animal rights” — not someone who misuses the term when actually supporting animal welfare — humans and animals have equal moral value. As PETA’s alpha wolf, Ingrid Newkirk, once put it, “A rat, is a pig, is a dog, is a boy.”

PETA has now called for the execution of the hunter who killed Cecil the lion. Don’t doubt that they are serious. From the group’s official statement:

Hunting is a coward’s pastime. If, as has been reported, this dentist and his guides lured Cecil out of the park with food so as to shoot him on private property, because shooting him in the park would have been illegal, he needs to be extradited, charged, and, preferably, hanged.

Again, don’t think they aren’t serious. This is the organization that believes Sea World’s orcas are, literally, “slaves.”

It also once campaigned on the noxious notion that eating meat was equivalent to Auschwitz and that owning a leather couch was like, as in the Holocaust, having a lampshade made from human skin on your nightstand.

By the way: PETA once bitterly assailed a Gaza terror group because it killed a donkey in an attack, showing no concern for the human targets whatsoever.

I have strongly criticized the killing of Cecil and its circumstances from an animal-welfare and human-exceptionalist perspective. But it is not akin to murdering a human being.

By calling for capital punishment, PETA has asserted that destroying a lion is akin to murdering a human being, That is what they fervently believe. PETA’s anti-humanism is vividly clearly for all to see.

Photo by user:Robek, repositioned by user:Wulfstan (Own work) [GFDL, CC-BY-SA-3.0 or CC BY 2.5], via Wikimedia Commons.

Cross-posted at The Corner.

Wesley J. Smith

Chair and Senior Fellow, Center on Human Exceptionalism
Wesley J. Smith is Chair and Senior Fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Center on Human Exceptionalism. Wesley is a contributor to National Review and is the author of 14 books, in recent years focusing on human dignity, liberty, and equality. Wesley has been recognized as one of America’s premier public intellectuals on bioethics by National Journal and has been honored by the Human Life Foundation as a “Great Defender of Life” for his work against suicide and euthanasia. Wesley’s most recent book is Culture of Death: The Age of “Do Harm” Medicine, a warning about the dangers to patients of the modern bioethics movement.

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