ANIMAL
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investigative
coverage
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animal
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1992, ANIMAL PEOPLE has
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The poster for an August 27, 2006 crab feast planned
by the Prince Rupert SPCA looked like a bizarre parody. A grinning cartoon
crab, pink as if already burned, sprawled beneath a beach umbrella. "Live
crab, cooked to eat at the park or cooked to take home," the poster
advertised. A photo of a real crab affirmed that real animals were really
to be boiled--until on August 17 the parent British Columbia SPCA cancelled
the event under pressure personally directed by Sea Shepherd Conservation
Society founder Paul Watson. Watson then pledged to personally make a
donation and urged others to donate to the BC/SPCA.
Though the crab feast was averted, the episode raised issues of posture
and strategy which should be of pre-eminent concern to every humane organization.
"Our mission," the Prince Rupert SPCA web site predictably proclaims,
is "the prevention of cruelty to animals, and promotion of animal
welfare."
Boiling animals to death, as the Prince Rupert SPCA learned, is perceived
as cruel not only by long-established consensus of the humane community,
but also by much of the public. Promoting animal welfare, by any reasonable
definition, includes avoiding acts which may be construed as either endorsing
or participating in cruelty, such as boiling crabs to raise funds.
The Prince Rupert SPCA tried briefly to defend itself by citing the February
2005 conclusion of researchers funded by the Norwegian government that
crustaceans such as crabs and lobsters do not feel pain when boiled. But
the Norwegian government also defends whaling and sealing, against the
weight of world opinion.
Researchers with ties to the Maine lobster industry have comparably defended
boiling crabs and lobsters. But these positions scarcely represent the
prevailing scientific perspective, recently summarized in the Advocates
for Animals publication Cephalopods & Decapod Crustaceans: Their Capacity
To Experience Pain & Suffering (10 Queensferry Street, Edinburgh,
EH2 4PG, Scotland, U.K.).
Further, no matter what anyone in a white lab coat may contend, the simple,
obvious, self-evident conclusion of most people who see crabs or lobsters
trying to crawl out of boiling water is that these animals are being tortured
to death.
As far back as 1952, delegates from 25 nations agreed at a convention
hosted by the World Federation for the Protection of Animals that boiling
live crustaceans sets a bad example of how animals should be treated,
and should be abolished.
As recently as August 10, two members of Animal Rights Croatia locked
themselves into a fish tank to dramatize the plight of boiled lobsters.
The grocery chain Whole Foods earlier in 2006 quit selling live soft-shelled
crabs and lobsters, in recognition that some practices, even if legal
and no matter how lucrative, are too cruel for an enlightened and responsible
business to perpetuate.
Unfortunately, the proposed Prince Rupert SPCA crab feast was not unprecedented.
Animal Advocates Society of British Columbia founder Judy Stone pointed
out that the Prince Rupert SPCA held a crab feast in 2005.
The Prince Rupert SPCA is among the 32 branches of the British Columbia
SPCA, a $20 million a year operation that serves more territory than any
other hands-on humane society in North America. Long intensely critical
of the BC/SPCA for many reasons, Stone has since 2001 fought BC/SPCA efforts
to purge her web site, <www.animaladvocates.com>,
of some of the content. Many of Stone's objections pertain to practices
and policies which remain common among humane societies that hold animal
control contracts. Some of her web site concerns methods that were abandoned
under pressure more than 20 years ago.
But Stone was up to date and on message in pointing out that a humane
society that allows animals to be boiled alive as a fundraiser clearly
has diminished moral authority to speak out against other abuses.
ANIMAL PEOPLE learned through extensive web and file searching that the
Prince Rupert SPCA may not have been completely alone in promoting live
boiling. Oysters are also typically cooked or eaten alive. The Humane
Society of Harford County, Maryland, holds an annual "Bull n' Oyster
Roast." The most recent was on April 28, 2006. IRS Form 990 indicates
that Humane Society of Harford County "special events" net about
$27,000 of an annual budget of almost $700,000, about half of which comes
from animal control contracts.
The live boiling issue can be linked to the larger issue of humane societies
serving meat at public functions, a practice that ANIMAL PEOPLE has editorially
denounced since inception in 1992, and the lack of humane attention to
the suffering of fish.
The September 1994 ANIMAL PEOPLE editorial "Table manners" still
applies:
Excluding meat from humane events is no more than asking participants
to adhere to the rules of the house, on a par with asking church-goers
to refrain from spitting and swearing during sermons or asking bar-goers
to wear shirts and shoes. What people choose to put in their mouths in
their own homes may be their business, but at a humane event, it's our
business--and if we don't make the effort to separate ourselves from the
meat habit, we really can't expect the public to see us as the principled
people we presume to be.
What about fish?
If someone jabbed a hook through the roof of a cat or
dog's mouth, dragged her on the end of a rope, and then either bludgeoned
or drowned her, most of us would immediately seek cruelty charges.
(This proved to be an understatement in view of the global response after
just such an incident on Reunion Island, a French territory in the Indian
Ocean. A single photograph of a dog who survived apparent use as bait,
distributed by news media in July 2005, produced e-mail alerts and calls
for boycotting Reunion Island until mid-October. Despite many allegations,
no other cases were verified.)
If someone threw nets over cats or dogs and drowned them by the million,
presumably to eat, but threw away half the victims as inedible, the hue
and cry might reach Alpha Centauri, ANIMAL PEOPLE continued. Yet the equivalents
are standard fishing practice.
Fish are cold-blooded, and mostly not as intelligent as mammals (despite
some noteworthy exceptions), but their central nervous systems are every
bit as keenly developed. Thus their capacity to suffer is every bit as
acute. That should be reason enough to not eat fish.
At that time, meat and fish were still served at most major humane conferences.
That changed after the No Kill Conferences, 1995-2001, and No More Homeless
Pets conferences, 2000-2005, excluded flesh while attracting more participants
than all but one of the traditional humane conferences. That one, the
annual Expo hosted by the Humane Society of the U.S., went vegetarian
after HSUS president Wayne Pacelle introduced a pro-vegan food policy
in January 2005.
Any humane society participation in animal killing for human consumption
is inappropriate and deplorable, especially in view of the increasingly
well-recognized suffering involved in every phase of raising, transporting,
and killing poultry and hooved livestock, plus the reality that the human
appetite for fish drives the Atlantic Canada and Namibian seal hunts and
Japanese and Norwegian whaling.
Yet actively participating in either a "crab feast" or "oyster
roast" goes well beyond directors merely practicing the denial typical
of mainstream shoppers as they select cellophane-wrapped parts of dead
animals at the supermarket. These events involve humane society representatives
in deliberately doing things to living animals which in most North American
jurisdictions would be crimes and might be felonies if done to a dog or
cat.