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Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4

Project name?

I'm not sure we had reached consensus about the name and full scope of the project. Had we? Nrets 02:50, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

The scope is likely to evolve over time. I've put up the most obvious themes to get people started. As for the name, as Localzuk said, this is the shortest and most obvious. SlimVirgin (talk) 05:20, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
Agreed on the short & obvious. I don't think it neccessarily excludes other concepts. File:Icons-flag-scotland.png Canæn File:Icons-flag-scotland.png 09:36, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

Evanna Lynch

okay i didn't know where to add this but i know evanna lynch (http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Evanna_Lynch) is a vegetarian i couldn't edit her page so can someone do it please, heres a source (http://evannalynch.net/rhadlon/) and i think it should be added on their as if you look at other B.L.P it is written about them being vegetarians so can someone edit it on their please it was written on their before but people deleted it but if other people have it wrtten down why can't we have it written down on her page thank you

Some distinctions that might be useful

Groups

On the project page, under "Scope," I've separated the list of organizations into three:

The only reason I'm stressing this upfront is that it's something a lot of people get confused over.

1) The ALF is an example of a leaderless resistance movement, not a group. It has no structure, no formal heirarchy, no membership list, and only a brief collection of aims and policies. If you act to further that list of aims, you're a "member" by definition. What being accepted as an ALF activist means is that other ALF activists will regard you as a prisoner of conscience if you're arrested; the Animal Liberation Front Supporters Group will adopt you and you'll be sent letters, money, and they'll help to organize vegan food if you're in jail.

2) Animal rights campaigns like SHAC are also not groups. They are campaign names. They have some formal structure (more so than the ALF), but there's a tremendous amount of overlap of activists, so that SHAC, SPEAK and Save the Newchurch Guinea Pigs (using these only as examples) might consist of most, or even all, of the same people. They have no list of members, no membership fees. They're not registered anywhere. They own no property.

3) Then there are the groups proper: BUAV, PETA, Animal Aid. They may own property, they have members, membership fees, staff, a formal heirarchy. They are what's called "above ground," rather than "underground."

What constitutes an animal rights group?

The animal rights groups/campaigns/movements are opposed to speciesism and the treatment of animals as property. More specifically, they believe that animals should be regarded as persons in law. They may make these declarations openly and clearly, or they may simply be implied by the positions they take. The crucial distinction between the animal rights movement and people/groups who are concerned about animal welfare is that the latter believe animals may be used — as food, entertainment, objects of experimentation, clothing — so long as there is no unnecessary cruelty. Animal rights groups believe that animals may not be used by human beings.

The distinction is a stark one: philosophically, practically, and legally. For example, to become a charity in the U.S. or UK, and I believe also in the rest of Europe, an organization must (in law) exist for the benefit of human beings. All sizeable animal welfare groups, such as the RSPCA, are charities. I'm not aware of any animal rights group that has charitable status, because animal rights groups exist for the benefit of non-human animals, not for the benefit of humans (though I stand to be corrected if, in fact, some have achieved charitable status).

There is some overlap of activists within these organizations. Robin Webb, for example, started off working for the RSPCA (animal welfare); then became the director of Animal Aid (animal rights, above ground); and now runs the Animal Liberation Press Office (animal rights, underground). But the fact that some animal rights activists started their careers in animal welfare groups should not obscure the enormous gulf that separates the two philosophies. SlimVirgin (talk) 05:53, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

There is no requirement under the U.S. tax code for an organization to benefit humans in order to receive charitable status, also referred to as 501(c)3 status. The Internal Revenue Service says:
The exempt purposes set forth in IRC Section 501(c)(3) are charitable, religious, educational, scientific, literary, testing for public safety, fostering national or international amateur sports competition, and the prevention of cruelty to children or animals. [1]
The U.S.-based organizations PETA, In Defense of Animals, and the National Anti-Vivisection Society (among many others) all have 501(c)3 not-for-profit status, according to GuideStar, which reviews charitable organizations and the reports the groups file with the government. GuideStar's wording for each group is, "This organization is a 501(c)(3) Public Charity." -MichaelBluejay 10:23, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

[There are also] Online animal rights communities e.g. Animal Rights in China(ARC) [2] — Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.102.0.176 (talk)

Hey, I'm not sure all people who advocate animal rights believe in assigning animals (even some animals) the status of people. That would imply a full set of rights. Even PETA doesn't go that far. They state "People who support animal rights believe that animals are not ours to use for food, clothing, entertainment, experimentation, or any other purpose and that animals deserve consideration of their best interests". But, for example. they do not argue that animals should vote, serve jury duty, or otherwise be held liable for the laws that humans make. Can an animal break the law? Even in the dream-world of the staunchest animal rights activist I don't think animals get "personhood". BUAV is an animal rights group that focusses on animal testing ONLY. Peter Singer is clear in not assigning the same rights as people have to animals, because many of them do not make sense - and his consideration of the rights animals deserve is based on equal consideration for their suffering. Singer is even not uniformly opposed to animal testing - it should come on a cost-benefit according to suffering, and if an animal experiment reduced suffering en todo, it would be allowable under Singer's ethics. The Dalai Lama has similar beliefs - that the greater compassion is the key, and experiments are fine as long as they lead to greater compassion. Is there an honest-to-goodness animal rights group that wants animals to have the same rights as people? Or do they want 1) equal consideration for their pain and suffering OR 2) equal consideration for their "exploitation" OR 3) equal rights to pursue life as they see fit. In reading over animal rights philosophy, I concluded that the morals and ethics driving the movement are very scattered - and although they would all lead to a drastic reduction in human use of animals, they are not equivalent at their end-points. --Animalresearcher 16:48, 24 August 2006 (UTC)

I'm not aware of any animal rights group that believes in assigning animals the status of "people," if by that you mean human beings. Perhaps you're confusing "people" with "personhood"? SlimVirgin (talk) 17:26, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
I think I am misled when I see the suggestion that animals be regarded as "persons" under law. That clearly implies that animals get the same rights under law as people, such as right to vote and serve on jury duty, right to work for money and pay taxes, liability for their actions under law, etc. When I read about the animal personhood movement, the usual claim is that animal rights proponents want animals to have certain "personhood" rights. I think there is a chasm as wide as the Grand Canyon between regarding an animal as a "person" under law, as you state in the opening of this section, and granting them certain personhood rights. I know it is somewhat semantic, but this is an important philosophical point. Animal rights proponents believe animals should have certain rights normally assigned only to people - but not that they should be regarded with the same rights as people. These are the two sentences I am referring to
The animal rights groups/campaigns/movements are opposed to speciesism and the treatment of animals as property. More specifically, they believe that animals should be regarded as persons in law. Hope this clarifies this distinction. Although it is certainly possible I am misunderstanding something - that would be further reason to clarify the issues about personhood rights and the animal rights movement(s) - so that others do not misunderstand in the same way. --Animalresearcher 17:57, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
Awarding personhood doesn't involve giving animals the same rights as human beings. Do you have a source that supports what you're saying? SlimVirgin (talk) 18:06, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
they believe that animals should be regarded as persons in law. This statement clearly implies that animals would have the same rights as people, it follows in a very straightforward way from use of the English language. I would recommend rewriting it to say they believe that animals should legally have certain personhood rights. I think the latter statement is a much more accurate reflection of the animal personhood movement than the former. The animal personhood movement clearly believes in assigning animals personhood, but then goes on to say that only certain person's rights should be assigned to animals (and of course NONE of people's responsibilities). --Animalresearcher 18:29, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
You won't convince her. It doesn't matter how well-thought your post is, or how obvious the NPOV is, it rarely changes anything. Going 'round and 'round in semantical circles until the other person tires from the game is the most frequently observable activity that SlimVirgin participates in while on these "animal rights" pages. It makes the entire project a joke. Even though it never counted for anything in the past, my interpretation of her wording is the same as yours. That is, the line about "personhood" is misleading to the average reader, who will be unable to make the distinction between "legal personhood" and legal "personhood," regardless of whether quotation marks are used, or even if the word "legal" is thrown in at all. Most people will read that line as saying "Animal rights advocates believe animals should be seen as humans," because they'll use the common definition for "person" not the legal definition, and as such, it's a weasel word, whether SlimVirgin intended it to be or not. It preys on the average user's already held belief that humans are the 'end-all, be-all' of existence and that any attempt of putting other beings on a similar level must mean that person is a lunatic. Kyle Key 11:38, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
I don't believe that...SV probably thought I was referring to something on the main page and not something SV wrote higher on the discussion page. In philosophical debates, semantic consistency is very important, so I wouldn't consider it going round and round at all. And despite my role as an animal researcher, I am interested in the animal rights debate, and in staying on a course that my government believes is both legally and morally sound. If my government says Great Apes are to be given the right not to be included in animal experimentation, so be it. Or monkeys, or rats, etc. The law is the law. There are benefits on both sides of the fence in this case. Wikipedia is about letting both sides be heard. --Animalresearcher 15:39, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
SV is unconcerned with your opinion, whoever you are. Read her pages and her edits. Read about AR and PETA and see the discussions about criticism of these radical groups (indeed, see the discussions about whether they're radical). She has a set agenda and won't allow criticism to see the light of day. These articles (AR, PEta etc) are so skewed and biased thery are nearly laughable. They need reparation and it is your duty as an intellectual to ensure objectivity, credibility, veracity - in short we need the truth! We need to show that most people disagree with their radical position. Most people believe that animals have nuttin but the right to be tasty!DocEss 17:28, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
Please do not forget to assume good faith, as in WP:AGF. Just because people have different points of view doesn't mean they cannot work together constructively on encyclopedia entries by sticking to procedure, citing appropriately referenced materials, etc, basically just following wiki official policies. Ad hominem attacks and criticism of intent are just not constructive. Just add appropriately referenced material supporting views you feel are being shortchanged. --Animalresearcher 15:30, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
I began this journey in good faith. SV has demonstrated tendencies which shake the faith of even the most faithful, with her instant reverts and intractability when it comes to common sense. However, I have faith that someone as intelligent as she is will one day have the faith in her abilities to compose objectively written articles and ignore the emotional need to guard the gate from criticism. I will faithfully continue to try to convince her of the same. Faithfully yours, DocEss 17:10, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
Attacking SlimVirgin appears to be a popular past-time around here. Both your, and Kyle Key's assertions about her are unfair and unfounded. SV may well have an entrenched personal position on AR (your constant and logically-vacuous statement that "animals have nuttin but the right to be tasty" hardly gives you the moral highground on that score), but she most certainly is able to edit from a NPOV position. She has demonstrated time and again that she will accept what may appear to be a "pro-testing" edit when the justification for it is framed logically and in terms on WP policy. See this debate i had with SV as a recent example: Talk:Animal_Liberation_Front/archive2#Terrorist_designation. Sure, i too have locked horns with SV over AR issues. But despite having polar opposite personal views to her, i've found by working with her within policy (as opposed to reverting to personal attacks or sarcasm) progress can and has been made on AR realted articles, making them better. Perhaps you can explain why both i, as an animal experimentor of many years, and Animalresearcher feel able to work constructively with those of differing personal views yet you feel you cannot? Rockpocket 18:02, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
Yawn. What you claim to be unfair and unfounded I claim to be accurate. My quip that "animals have nuttin but the right to be tasty" is not at all logically vacuous! It is what most people believe: most people believe animals have no rights whatsoever! That quip is right on point and serves its purpose well. And it has nothing to do with where I stand on the moral ground. (Moreover where I stand on the moral ground has nothing to do with with truth and accuracy, the two basic characteristics that give an encycloepedia its force and value.) I will keep repeating that little sentence because it is a pharaphrase of the view that most huimans hold. Where does it say in any of the AR/PETA articles that their stances are counter (indeed, oppossite) to what most people believe? Where does it say that many groups vehemently opposes statements like "animals are not ours to eat, wear, experiment on, or use for entertainment"? Where does it say that these beliefs are atypical and have recieved intense opposstion and scathing scrutiny? Where does it acknowledge that most people beleive there is no moral quagmire about animal testing for medical purposes? Where does it acknowledge that humans must treat animals properly? Anytime an editor tries to include those lines of thought SV et al crush the attempt. THAT makes her a target for editors who believe her behavior is stubborn, intractable, counter-productive, biased, agenda-based, difficult and, worst of all, unworthy of someone of her high intelligence. Goodness, I wish you people would de-register your emotional centres in your brains, divorce yourself from pre-conceived ideas and write objective articles. Actually I don't hope you will, I know you will - whether I have to use a whip or a carrot.18:20, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

(reset indent) Provide reliable sources stating the claims you make and i will insert them into the appropriate articles personally. If you stated them in the form you did here ("most people believe...", "many groups vehemently oppose...") they were correctly removed per WP:AWW and WP:V. Your reasoning is comically flawed. You criticise others for lacking objectivity in their edits and then list subjective assertions that you believe you be included in articles. See if you can spot the flaw in logic here:

"animals have nuttin but the right to be tasty" is not at all logically vacuous! It is what most people believe: most people believe animals have no rights whatsoever!

I couldn't have reinforced the point better myself. Your contributions to AR articles are pretty much restricted to criticising others on talk pages in a garrulous manner, thus the only place your "whip" will take you is to WP:PAIN. Rockpocket 19:35, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

Explain flaws, please.DocEss 20:00, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
Ok. I'll paraphrase for clarity. You assert in two sequential sentences:
  • Most people believe animals have the right to be tasty.
  • Most people believe animals have no rights.
Those two statements are mutually exclusive and thus a logical impossibility. You simply reinforced my point that is is logically vacuous to repeatedly state the former in support of your principle argument, which is the latter. That is clearly flawed logic. Rockpocket 21:25, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
How exactly are those statements mutually exclusive? They are barely related. Further, it is hardly POV to sugest most people believe "animals have no rights whatsoever." Most people eat em, wear em, own em, benifit from medicine tested on em. Use your common sense. DocEss 16:11, 8 September 2006 (UTC) <added> Can't you see that the statement "animals have the right to be tasty" is nothing but a quip. It is not meant to be a premise for anything at all - it's like saying "you have the right to shut the hell up" when I would mean that you do not have the right to speak at all, so be quiet. Can't you seet hat? Does everything have to be explained to you? Do you just simple prefer to argue with me in Talk pages so I'm too busy to edit the articles?DocEss 16:20, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
If you can't follow a logical argument like mutual exclusivity, there is little more i can do to explain it to you. I'm fully aware you think you are being funny in repeating that "quip" ad nauseum, but that doesn't help us improve any article in a logical manner (hence it is "logically vacuous" to repeat it so often). Moreover, this principle is something you appear to apply to other editors, but ignore when it reflects on you. Let me quote back to you - in typically uncivil language - something you told another editor yesterday:
"Then I suggest you be quiet. Your observations, however clever to yourself, do not get us closer to the goal." [3]
I, personally, have reached the limit of my tolerance interacting with you, DocEss. Your incredibly uncivil personal attack on Localzuk below was the final straw as far as i am concerned. Thus please be aware that i am asking an admin at WP:PAIN to intervene. Good day. Rockpocket 17:28, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
I don't think I could have said it better than Rockpocket. Your argument is full of unsourced POV. Unless you can provide sources to back up your supposedly commonly held views then they should not be included. The onus is on you to provide sources. 'Common sense' has no part of it, the key things are reliability, verifiability and the ability to edit in a neutral way.-Localzuk (talk) 20:57, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
I know you can't say things better than PocketRocket. We are all aware of that. I wish you could say things better, but alas....Common sense has no part in it? Can I qoute you on that?DocEss 16:11, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
Despite DocEss's garrolous manner, he does seem to have a point here. Based on these sources: [4], [5] majority of people in the US and Britain support animal testing. Although it seems that, when asked whether chimps should have righs, just over half of Americans think that they should [6]. Nrets 21:25, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
There was a debate in the animal testing talk page about this. The problem is that, depending on who commissions the poll, the results are very different. The wording of the question is crucial and subtle changes can give very different poll results. I, personally, was supportive of a section on opinion where polls commissioned by reliable sources could be noted, but that the time, the consensus was against it. Perhaps this issue could be looked at again, however. Rockpocket 21:49, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
Yes, that link to the Chimp poll alludes to this fact. But I think we could probably gather some reliable polls and revisit the issue. I think that as long as we state where the poll comes from, the reader can interpret the results on their own. Nrets 00:43, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

DocEss, the point to be made here is that you CANNOT directly use your common sense. If you see something you believe is wrong in a Wiki page, find a source, cite it, and refer to it in a NPOV manner. Let the sources do the talking, that is what a good encyclopedia does. We are not here to use common sense or perform original research, we are here to source and cite original research that exists elsewhere. On the other hand, I personally believe less than 1 in 1000 people believe in animal rights in the sense pushed by PETA - that animal exploitation of all kinds by humans must be stopped. You can make a checklist. For someone to truly believe that, they would need to be a vegan, avoid western medicine, not have pets, leather, or pest control for rodents. Hence, less than 1 in 1000 practice that (btw, Alex Pacheco is often pictured with a pet dog, and Jerry Vlasak practices western medicine). Right now I'm grappling with ethics and morals in animal rescue (dogs). Dogs "to be euthanized" are picked up, evaluated, and sometimes found homes. Sometimes we pick them up, and they are not a suitable rescue dog. The one at my house now has heartworms badly and kidney problems, but it an otherwise great dog. He doesn't make the grade. Rescue is a heartbreaking practice, because 2-3 million pet dogs and cats are euthanized for population control each year, and no matter how many you find good homes for, at least 10 others are going to be put down, and some of them will need to be euthanized by you. And I wonder for every person dropping molotov cocktails on my colleagues front doorsteps, how many animal rights activists are active in pet rescue? I've never met one. --Animalresearcher 17:56, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

Animalresearcher, all that prose is irrelevant (but nicely written). Moreover, my, your, Sv's, rocketpocket's or anybody's personal opinions of AR don't really matter to an encylopoedia - what matters is that we describe things properly, reflecting truth and accuracy. The point is that these articles are biased and skewed and they don't need to be. I repeat: where does it say in any of the AR/PETA articles that their stances are counter (indeed, oppossite) to what most people believe? Where does it say that many groups vehemently opposes statements like "animals are not ours to eat, wear, experiment on, or use for entertainment"? Where does it say that these beliefs are atypical and have recieved intense opposstion and scathing scrutiny? Where does it acknowledge that most people beleive there is no moral quagmire about animal testing for medical purposes? Where does it acknowledge that humans must treat animals properly? The article must recognize all this or it is biased and in-objective. DocEss 18:05, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
Doc, I agree that these things are missing from the article, do a Google search for "Animal Rights Poll" and you'll find plenty of sources backing up what you say. I listed 3 of them above. I'm sure you could find others. Rather than complain about it, just add it to the article, otherwise people might start to think you're here just to pick a fight. . Nrets 20:10, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
DocEss, no one has countered what you are saying as there is nothing to counter it with. Go ahead and add these things if you can provide verifiably, reliable sources that state it, and that you attribute any claims of such to whoever makes them. It is as simple as that. Most of the argument you have presented has been, IMO, pointless as you have constantly ignored this simple response.-Localzuk (talk) 18:11, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
Loca, I will do exactly that. And then the revert will we come, I can just smell it....DocEss 18:15, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
A revert will only come if the information you present is any of:
And if such a revert were to happen, I would expect a reason would be forthcoming from the editor who did it.-Localzuk (talk) 18:40, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

Activists and Writers

I think that Juliet Gellatley should definately be added to the AR template - both under Activists (as she is the best known in the UK) and internationally but also under AR Writers. 62.25.106.209 15:26, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

She should only be included once, but I do agree that she should be included.-Localzuk (talk) 18:41, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for adding her! 62.25.106.209 09:29, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

Can anyone help weith the entry for Andrew Tyler, whom is the director of Animal Aid. I would greatly appreciate it. I thnk he deserves to have an entry and it could be made fantastic if people will help. As stated, he is the director of Animal Aid which is the largest and best known group in the UK - It is the UK's leading animal rights organisation. Thanks in advance. FK0071a 06:58, 18 September 2006 (UTC) and I also think he shold be added to the Activists section of the Animal Rights template FK0071a 07:24, 18 September 2006 (UTC)

I agree that this information was taken out due t ocopyright and I respect that. However, if someone can work with me to re-write it and find additional information I would greatly appreciate it. 62.25.106.209 07:41, 19 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for adding Andrew Tyler but it needs a great deal of work. 62.25.106.209 09:28, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

Article needed on Oxford Uni as with the Cambridge Uni article on Primate experiments at Cambridge University.

If anyone is good at writing these articles then their is a lot of information to be found on the Animal Aid website at this link [7] and also obviously SPEAK will have lots of information as they are dedicated to it [8] 62.25.106.209 14:24, 19 September 2006 (UTC)

Userbox

I created a userbox if anyone wants to put it on their user page. Colours/image are flexible. I did this just to get started. SlimVirgin (talk) 07:14, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

To use the box add {{user wpar}} to your userpage. File:Icons-flag-scotland.png Canæn File:Icons-flag-scotland.png 09:39, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

Critics

I'd certainly be glad to help you round out this project by adding/editing/critiquing text regarding criticism related to his issue. I think perhaps a Cricism section should be added to the WikiProject Animal rights article itself under Scope, don't you?DocEss 18:25, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

What would such a section contain?-Localzuk (talk) 20:13, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Well let's think about that for a while. We do want to get this right; i.e, we do want to create the most objective, unbiased and indepth yet practicle articles we can, so we shall have to put some thought to this. Any input anyone?DocEss 17:15, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

Animal rights vs. Welfare - move from template talk

  • The following discussion, regarding whether animal welfare should be within the scope of the animal rights project (and template) has been moved here, to allow a larger scope of opinions. Nrets 19:05, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Please do not delete Animal welfare from template, since this article is as related to animal rights as as Animal testing is. Nrets 02:47, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

What on earth does animal welfare have to do with animal rights? Animal rights is about NOT USING ANIMALS and NOT seeing them as property. Animal welfare concentrates on HOW TO USE ANIMALS without being unnecessarily cruel. The two movements are diametrically opposed.
Nrets, it isn't fair of you to be constantly trying to thwart everything I do, while at the same time not knowing anything about animal rights yourself. I'm sorry to speak like this, but this has gone on for too long. If I say black, you say white just for the hell of it. If you think something might be anti-animal rights, you support it, whether it makes sense or not, whether you've understood it or not.
This is an encyclopedia, not a soapbox, not a battleground. If you're interested in animal rights, and know something about it, or want to learn about it, I welcome your participation, no matter your POV. But if all you want to do is oppose, revert, argue, without any basic background in the subject, then it's pointless and destructive. Please either let's find a way to work together or stay out of each other's way. SlimVirgin (talk) 03:00, 19 August 2006 (UTC)


I agree with Nrets. Why delete Animal Welfare? I see your point SlimVirgin, and I happen to agree with it. I think Animal Welfare thwarts the Animal Rights movement. But why delete the entry? Many/Most people feel that AW **IS** an AR topic, and I think it is a related issue. Give people a link to AW and let people make up their own minds Bhuston 14:09, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
Can you find a reliable source showing that AW is an AR topic? What most people think, by the way, is irrelevant. We go by what the authoritative published sources say. It's probably true that most people in the world think that homosexuality is a sin, but we don't add that to Gay. SlimVirgin (talk) 14:13, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
SV, just because I disagree with you does not mean I am "thwarting your every move". I often feel you are doing the same to all my edits. If it was not for the animal rights movement there would be very little in the way of animal welfare, and you very well know this. You really leave no room for gray areas in the way you view the issue, and I feel like you see editors in this issue either for or against you. I have been dealing with animal rights and animal welfarfe issues for a long time and for you to blatantly attack me for not knowing anything about the topic is extremely pedantic and annoying. Nrets 18:20, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
Well then I think we need to find some new way to accommodate one another. It's true that I do find editing the animal rights pages frustrating, because everyone thinks they can have a view without doing any research. I honestly don't get the impression from your editing that you have dealt with animal rights issues and so I wonder whether we're using the term differently. For example, you say "If it was not for the animal rights movement there would be very little in the way of animal welfare ..." But that isn't true, to the best of my knowledge, unless you have some specific campaigners in mind. Perhaps you could say what you mean, and then I'll be able to see where you're coming from. SlimVirgin (talk) 18:28, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
I'm not arguing that there are no incompatibilities between AR and AW positions, but to give an example that you will be familiar with. The case of the Silver Spring monkeys is an example where an incident both led to the creation of PETA and to the Animal Welfare Act of 1985. PETA, which is one of the best known advocates for animal rights, is also an advocate for animal welfare. Whether there are philosophical differences between the 2 positions is irrelevant to the fact that Animal Rights and Welfare are closely related issues. By your logic, Animal testing should also be removed from the template, since it is directly incompatible with animal rights. Finally, to add animal testing but omit animal welfare is a subtle way to introduce POV to the template, which is merely a navigational aid and NOT a place to espouse your POV, a point echoed by Bhouston above. Nrets 00:53, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
What is the POV that is being introduced to the template? SlimVirgin (talk) 19:18, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
No, PETA is not an advocate of the animal welfare position. PETA is an animal rights group. I think you may have misunderstood what the animal welfare position is. Animal welfare groups believe it is all right to eat animals and to use them in experiments. Their focus is purely on the reduction of cruelty. Animal rights groups believe animals should not be used by human beings. If they work toward reducing cruelty, it is only as a side issue, or stop gap. The animal welfare ideology is directly opposed to the animal rights one. It is true that animal rights campaigns can lead to improvements in animal welfare, because for example in the Silver Spring monkeys case, the public was shocked by the evidence animal rights activists found when they took photographs of the lab. But that is very much a byproduct. AR groups don't want animals simply to be treated better in labs. They want the experimentation to stop. Read the introduction to Animal rights, which explains the difference. Describing the difference between them is not introducing a POV; it is a simple statement of fact. SlimVirgin (talk) 01:22, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I realize there is a difference between the two philosophies, but as you state in many of your comments, there is often substantial overlap, where the two intersect. Thus I see no harm in including articles relating to animal welfare in the Animal Rights project and I see no harm in highlighting these in the AR template. Does anybody else have an opinon about this? Nrets 19:12, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Why would you regard animal welfare as so central to animal rights that it needs to be referenced on the template? The lead of the article you want to link to makes clear it is inimical to animal rights: "Animal welfare is the viewpoint that animals, especially those under human care, should not suffer unnecessarily, including where the animals are used for food, work, companionship, or research. This position usually focuses on the morality of human action (or inaction), as opposed to making deeper political or philosophical claims about the status of animals, as is the case for an animal rights viewpoint" (my emphasis). SlimVirgin (talk) 19:16, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I guess I see it the other way around, that animal rights is central to animal welfare. As I said before, you leave no room for any gray areas and portray the AR movement as a coherent whole where you either grant all the same rights to animals as you do to humans, or none at all. But there are middle ground positions that would argue that animals have some rights, such as the right not to suffer, be treated humanely, etc. Such a position, for example is consistent with the quote from Alan Dershowitz I added below. In this middle ground, Animal Welfare does become a central issue. Nrets 19:45, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
As for why animal testing is there, it's because it's one of the two major concerns of the animal rights movement. SlimVirgin (talk) 01:24, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
If i may offer a comment. I would propose that at some level Nrets is talking about animal welfare while SV is talking about Animal Welfare. Clearly the welfare ("quality of life") of all animals is an important issue in both movements. However the movement that has adopted the moniker Animal Welfare has important philosophical differences from that which is labelled Animal Rights. In terms of animal welfare (no caps) - somewhat ironically, it appears to me - the Welfarists accept a less stringent position on overall welfare than the Rightsists. Thus welfare (again, no caps) could be said to me more relevent to the Rights movement than the Welfare movement.
So, (if you are still with me after this linguistic dance) you might think i'm being facetious her, but i'm trying to make a genuine point. As i think Bhuston was hinting at, giving complex movements simple labels can lead to differences in implication/inference depending on the reader. With this in mind, maintaining strict navbox boundaries, on a philosophical basis, should not be required when the articles themselves make the complexities clear. Thats my tuppence anyway. Rockpocket 06:50, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
Animal testing is clearly a strong motivation for much of animal rights. It definitely should be included. Animal welfare encompasses the entire current moral and ethical framework under which animal testing occurs. In as much as animal rights are proposed as a substitution for animal welfare, it is also enormously relevant. But I would only recommend including it as part of the ethical and moral framework currently instantiated into law - the framework that animal rights feels should be changed. --Animalresearcher 18:14, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
My contribution here put in wrong place - I have moved it.DocEss 17:11, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

Alan Dershowitz

I tried to verify the claim thatg Alan Dershowitz supports the notion of animal rights. The source provided simply linked to an article stating that someone said that he did, but quoted no actual source. I found this source from the Harvard Magazine, where Dershowitz is mentioned in the following quote: Dershowitz argued that animals do not have inherent rights, but rather rights vis-à-vis people. In other words, because great apes can show that they suffer, and because people can see that they suffer, it would be humane to make laws to prevent that suffering. "You can't really make the argument that animals have the right to live," he said. "If we did, humans would have to protect the smaller animals in the jungle from the larger animals."

This reads to me as Dershowitz not supporting the idea of extending rights to animals, certainly not to most animals. I suggest we remove the ref to Dershowitz from the AR page and this Project Page until we can get a more authoritative source. I'll see if I can check out from the library Dershowitz's 2004 book "RIGHTS FROM WRONGS: A SECULAR THEORY OF THE ORIGINS OF RIGHTS", which seems to be the source for his view on AR, and see if it really is accurate to leave the WP statemnt as is. Any objections to me removing this? Nrets 19:35, 21 August 2006 (UTC)

Yes, I object to it being removed because it's sourced. If you find a better source, we can by all means revisit the issue. SlimVirgin (talk) 19:41, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Nrets, do you intend to spend your time at this WikiProject raising invalid objections and generally being obstructive? Because if so, let me know so that I don't waste any more time here. The source you quoted makes clear that Dershowitz supports animal rights:
It's still legal to buy our closest living relatives as pets," declared Jane Goodall, the renowned primatologist. "You can buy them on the Internet." She spoke at a symposium on "The Evolving Legal Status of Chimpanzees" cosponsored by Harvard Law School's Student Animal Legal Defense Fund and the nonprofit Chimpanzee Collaboratory; the September conference explored legal protections (and lack of same) for the great apes... Goodall's landmark study of chimpanzees in Tanzania helped redefine the boundaries between animals and humans, the very boundaries that were the symposium's focal point. The event attracted primatologists like Richard Wrangham, Moore professor of biological anthropology, who directs the Kibale Chimpanzee Project in Uganda, as well as legal figures such as Stephen Wise, who taught the first animal-rights law class at Harvard, in 2000, and Frankfurter professor of law Alan Dershowitz. Most speakers took as given that chimpanzees can communicate and emote, and that their rights should be expanded ... Several speakers, including Dershowitz and Goodall, compared the chimpanzees' situation with that of slaves in nineteenth-century America. Going even further, Fouts drew an analogy to Nazi Germany: "We abuse animals to make ourselves feel better, and we justify it," he said—just as Nazis justified their attacks on Jews and the mentally retarded. Dershowitz argued that animals do not have inherent rights, but rather rights vis-à-vis people. In other words, because great apes can show that they suffer, and because people can see that they suffer, it would be humane to make laws to prevent that suffering."
Yet you take the above to mean that he does NOT support animal rights, just because he argues that they are not inherent? Do you understand what he means by that? SlimVirgin (talk) 19:47, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
He is arguing they should be treated humanely, again let's quote Dershowitz in the same article:
Dershowitz argued that animals do not have inherent rights, but rather rights vis-à-vis people. In other words, because great apes can show that they suffer, and because people can see that they suffer, it would be humane to make laws to prevent that suffering. You can't really make the argument that animals have the right to live," he said. "If we did, humans would have to protect the smaller animals in the jungle from the larger animals. (my emphasis)
I really can't see how you interpret this any other way. And I do not appreciate your personal attacks and efforts to portray me as obstructive. Nrets 19:52, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I have never seen a WikiProject people by editors who oppose the topic. It's impossible to proceed at this level. Please tell me what it means to say "animals do not have inherent rights". What does the word "inherent" mean in that context? Are you aware that Peter Singer, possibly the best known of animal rights activists, who wrote what is widely regarded as the "bible" of the animal rights movement, does not believe that animals have inherent rights? Are you saying that means Singer doesn't really support the idea of animal rights/liberation? That all he really wants is for animals to be treated humanely? SlimVirgin (talk) 19:56, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I am not arguing about Peter Singer. All I'm arguing is that the source initially mentioned above as well as my source do not fully reflect Dershowitz's views and we should remove his name until we can find a better source. And please stop trying to bully me out of disagreeing with you and adding personal little jabs at me to your every comment. Nrets 20:17, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
You are still arguing that we should remove his name? You still haven't looked for a source yourself?
Nrets, even the briefest search of Google returns multiple documents showing Dershowitz supports animal rights, because he's extremely well known for it. For example, here, and in his book, Rights from Wrongs: A Secular Theory of the Origins of Rights, 2004, pp. 198-99, chapter "Do Animals have Rights?", he argues: "[W]e have made the somewhat arbitrary decsion to single out our own species — every single member of it — for different and better treatment. Does this subject us to the charge of speciesism? Of course it does, and we cannot justify it except by the fact that in the world in which we live, humans make the rules. This imposes on us a special responsibility to be fair and compassionate to those on whom we impose our rules. Hence the argument for animal rights." SlimVirgin (talk) 20:20, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
I found the same sources you did, and I haven't seen anywhere where it describes what he means by rights. Yes he argues great apes should be afforded rights (fully agree with that), but does he oppose medical research? Is he a vegan? A vegetarian? Does he wear leather shoes? Does he oppose all uses of animals as other activists do? The way he is featured in the WP article/project seems to imply he does, by taking one quote out of context. As I mentoned before, there are gray areas here, and differences. I'm not saying he does or doesn't, just that we need a more accurate source. Nrets 20:29, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
And where does it say that, in order to support animal rights, people have to do any or all of those things???
This situation can't continue. You're not familiar with the subject matter, which is fair enough. But what's not fair enough is to join a WikiProject and continually lodge objections to other people's work on the basis of that lack of knowledge. It would be like me deciding to join WikiProject Nuclear Physics, and turning up with spurious objections based on issues not being sourced the way I would prefer, even though I wasn't familiar with any of the sources and couldn't understand what they were saying — and then being astonished when people objected to my presence there.
I asked you above, but you didn't answer: what does the word "inherent" mean in the context of arguing that animals do not have inherent rights? SlimVirgin (talk) 20:58, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
My understanding is that inherent rights are the same as fundamental rights. In the case of animals, their rights are not inherent to them but come from another source, such as humans. Am I mistaken? Nrets 21:18, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Yes, thank you, that's more or less it. People who argue that rights are inherent are saying the rights exist somehow in virtue of who or what that being is i.e. that they're God given or somehow come from nature. Very few theorists argue this. I doubt Dershowitz argues that human beings have inherent rights either.
That's why I prefer to use the expression animal liberation, because a large number of animal rights supporters aren't rights theorists (though they still argue that animals need to be given legal rights or personhood in order to protect them). But on Wikipedia the term "animal rights" seems to have stuck to describe both camps. SlimVirgin (talk) 22:02, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
"...as the only possessors of souls"? Is this a pretty narrow POV, i would have thought, even in the movement. Rockpocket 02:59, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
I've removed it. SlimVirgin (talk) 00:46, 26 August 2006 (UTC)

The term "those rights are not ours to give or take" is often used by animal rights activists. Although I agree Dershowitz aligns pretty far on the animal rights side of the fence, he CLEARLY believes those rights to give/take belong to humans. They get rights when we decide they get rights, and not because they are intrinsic or fundamental. But also clearly, Dershowitz believes we SHOULD give those rights to animals. At the end of the day, I think the distinction between his position and that of PETA is not really that great (at least as applied to apes). In my book he still lobbies that animals should have rights under law that they do not have today, and that pretty much makes him an animal rights proponent. --Animalresearcher 00:22, 26 August 2006 (UTC)

Aren't rights a two-way street? Would animals, if given "personhood", be expected to respect the property and safety of humans, as humans would be expected to respect the property and safety of animals? How would a situation like that happening recently in Olympia, Washington (attacks by wild raccoons) be handled, were the raccoons to have "personhood"? Would the raccoons be arrested, charged with murder (they have killed several cats, who I assume, would also have "personhood"), put on trial, and (if found guilty) imprisoned? I'm very curious to see how that sort of situation, and other situations where animals run amok would be handled; and if the same standards of behavior that the law sets for humans would be applied. If a wolf eats a rabbit, is it murder, or dinner? --Weirdoactor 09:27, 27 August 2006 (UTC)

I think an animal personhood proponent would argue that humans value pain and suffering of animals to some degree. And to some, the degree to which animal pain and suffering is valued depends on the sentience of the animal. If an animal has a sense of self, can project and anticipate the future, and feels happy and sad, how should we let humans interact with that animal? Is it OK to put the animal in a cage and feed it Harlan monkey biscuits for years on end? Is it OK if the animal receives enrichment, co-habitation, and social contact with other members of its species? Are there animals that humans should simply not use in animal testing? Hunting? As pets? For food? The animal personhood movement is not about giving animals the same rights as people. It is about giving them certain rights, and among members of the movement there is still a wide variety of ethical and moral arguments, and lists of rights animals should have, and which animals should have them. This project is about clarifying those arguments and issues, and how they relate to animal use and laws today.--Animalresearcher 16:25, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
An excellent summary, AR, thank you. SlimVirgin (talk) 18:05, 28 August 2006 (UTC)

Interesting; but I am still left wondering how animal personhood rights affect animal relationships, outside of human interaction (although humans *are* animals, being great apes). Will some sort of enforcement of human standards on animal behavior need to be implemented? If we are to believe that sentience plays a part; who determines that? Humans? Or animals? Can an animal determine its own sentitnce, or that of another animal? I love my feline owners (you know that humans don't own cats, right?); but I recognize their limits insofar as what they understand about the world around them. Even some humans have animal limits to their sentience. Do we judge an animal to be roughly as sentient as a mentally disabled human? Moreso, perhaps? That's a slippery slope, but an interesting discussion, I'll bet. --Weirdoactor 04:13, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

"I love my feline owners ... but I recognize their limits insofar as what they understand about the world around them." That's your first mistake right there, innit. ;-D SlimVirgin (talk) 05:07, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
I'm sure they recognise, with a level of distain, your limits in attempting to understand theirs ;) Rockpocket 05:37, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

Ah. I get it. I should tell them to get jobs, pay rent, and change their own damn litter boxes. I'm such a silly human! Enjoy your fantasy world, guys. --Weirdoactor 12:30, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

I don't think of it as a fantasy world. First of all, you must understand, the animal personhood movement is quite varied. At one extreme, you may have "a human is a dog is a rat is a jellyfish". At the other end, you may have people who simply think that Chimps are intelligent and self-aware enough that a Chimp that poses no threat to humans should not be enslaved to human interests. There is no need to jump from animal rights to thinking that your cat is going to be serving jury duty, and it doesn't serve the debate any useful goal, either. Perhaps the Chimp should not be caged and used as a subject in awake in-vivo physiology experiments. Because it would be considered truly barbaric to impose that on another human (not to mention against the law and even the Geneva Convention). This is a rather interesting set of ethics, morals, and law that is unfolding. You do bring up a good point though - it is entirely probable that animals will also bear some responsibility in order to attain those rights. For example, should a chimp who threatens the lives of humans (like the birthday cake story - google "chimp birthday cake") receive the same rights as a chimp that poses no threat to humans? And if we extend this basic right to chimps, does it morally follow that we would need to protect the lesser animals from the greater animals as we are protecting the chimps from us? Or do we only need to protect animals with some threshold level of self-awareness and/or sentience? --Animalresearcher 16:17, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

Good points, Animalresearcher. In terms of animal testing, I am of the belief that if human volunteers are available, there is no need for animal testing; but animals are cheaper and easier, so that's what most researchers use. Like so many things that human beings do because they are easier and cheaper; this is one of those "buy now, pay later" deals…see: the environment, the failure of the education system, chemically corrupted food, etc. Just out of curiosity; how do those in the animal personhood movement feel about animals cloned with no brains being used for research? Does that eliminate the problem of sentience, or does it open up a whole new can of worms? I think (hope) someday we'll have humans cloned with no brains for organs and testing. But maybe I've been reading too much sci-fi. --Weirdoactor 20:48, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

Animals cloned with no brains? Nrets 21:24, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
Specifically worms? Then forced into cans, to be opened at a later date? Someone, please, think of the children!! Rockpocket 21:51, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
A counter argument comes in the form of "law of the jungle". I have a good reference in mind, but will need to wait until tomorrow to grab quotes from it. Basically, there are many new viruses/bacteria that could threaten humans. Suppose one came along that was devastating, that chimps provided a good animal model, and that devastation to the human race could be avoided by animal testing in a few thousand chimps. Would that be OK? The philosophical argument is that species are inherently in competition, and that IF competition clearly raises its head again, animal rights goes out the window. Or does it? Part of the debate. A similar philosophical argument can be made about the birthday cake chimps. They were terrorizing humans. No one thought twice about killing them. Were those actions just? --Animalresearcher 22:10, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
Joking aside, "rights" as a concept does not exist in nature at the level of the individual. They are not, as mentioned by SV above, inherent. For one to have a "right" to anything, there must be others who accept that right, thus the concept is borne of society.
I would say they are uniquely human, though I guess one could argue there are established "rights" in animal communities also (for example, in meerkat communities everyone understands that the dominant pair are the only ones with the "right" to reproduce). However, the concept of "interspecific" rights is clearly uniquely human.
If we accept that then its not difficult to resolve the moral caveats pointed out above: we simply make an value-judgment based on our own POV. Afterall, thats what the rights movement appears to be. The concept is not one based in strict logic, infact there are huge holes in the logic of some in the rights movement. For example, a general principle invoked is to include species other than human beings within the moral community, but then many of the same activists support the Declaration on Great Apes. If this was accepted, then it would serve to give non-human apes superior rights to other animals, a form of speciesism. In supporting such a movement, one is implicitly accepting that "all animals are not morally equal", and thus some (apes) have more "moral value" than others (fleas). I fail to see how these two moral stances intergrate in a logical manner.
On the other hand, the situation as it stands is, in theory at least, is highly logic based. Its easy to draw a moral line between human rights/benefit and other animals. You hold that line and the moral decisions make themselves. You cross it and, to paraphrase, you find yourself in a seriously big nest of gay vipers. Rockpocket 23:07, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
Reference Nature 437, 30-32 (1 September 2005). (Subscription required) The authors justify the use of chimps by noting the unique research capabilities of the chimp. For example, similarities in immune system allow monoclonal antibodies to be tested in chimps, because the clearance of the monoclonal antibodies is similar in chimps and humans, whereas in monkeys and non-primate mammals the clearance is much faster because their immune systems recognize the monoclonal antibodies as foreign. Hepatitis B and C only cross-infect chimps and humans, and not any other animals to our scientific knowledge. Therefore they provide scientific power in such studies that cannot be replicated elsewhere. Chimps have a malarial parasite similar to the one that infects humans, but not cross-infecting (ie: humans can't get chimp malaria, but its malaria is closely related to human malaria). Malaria is an enormous world health issue. The authors point out these unique capabilities not to suggest that cures will definitely follow, but to suggest that scientifically these are the best bets. We can look backwards in time and know how chimps contributed to our current health treatments, looking forward is far more difficult, but there is good reason to believe human health care will be impacted by research in chimps in the upcoming decades. And currently the USA doesn't import or breed any chimps for its primate facilities. This article of course presents the scientific issues related to projected health care benefits from chimp research - the issue of their pain and suffering is not addressed, nor is the ethical issue of whether their potential pain and suffering from the primate facility testing justifies the potential benefits. If chimps are specifically exempted from animal testing, how does the reduction in their short-term pain and suffering compensate for the lack of reduction in long-term future human pain and suffering. Or is that trade-off immoral just as it would be immoral to experiment on non-consenting humans? Can chimps understand enough to consent? The majority of doomed late cancer patients consent to experimental low-probability therapies that at best may help future patients. Is it immoral to test on a non-consenting chimp but moral to experiment on a late-term human cancer patient? --Animalresearcher 15:01, 30 August 2006 (UTC)

Sort of on subject, but kinda not: I seem to recall reading that for some research, pigs are more like humans (in terms of the needs of the research) than chimps. I can't find the article where I read that. Thoughts? --Weirdoactor 17:58, 30 August 2006 (UTC)

Depends on what you are studying. If, for example, you wanted to study sunburn, then pigs are great and chimps are pretty useless. If you wanted to study leprosy (or quadruplets), then you should get hold of some armadillos. See Model organism for more info. Rockpocket 18:49, 30 August 2006 (UTC)

As per the original proposal, we need to create a guideline for the use of external links on Animal Rights articles. We need to create criteria that links must comply with before being included in articles. Any suggestions?

How about some of these?

  • Is/are the official website(s) of the subject matter discussed in the article.
  • It must add something to the article - so if it is a site critical of the subject matter, it must add more than just a 'rant' to the article. It should also not have 2 sites critical of the subject matter unless they specifically complement the article. This goes for pro sites also.
  • We shouldn't provide lists of different sites ran by a single organisation - for example PETA and their many sites or the CCF and their many sites.
  • There should never be a 'pro' and 'anti' subsection of links.
  • The external links section should be kept short, preferably to a list of less than 10 links.
  • Sites should have a detailed description of their purpose.

Any others/less than these? -Localzuk (talk) 15:09, 23 August 2006 (UTC)

I'm not sure I'd want to see hard-and-fast rules. I don't agree with having fewer than 10 links; more links are good so long as they're useful or informative, in my view. I agree we shouldn't include sites that only rant, or blogs/personal websites., unless the blog is a notable one, or belongs to the person the article is about. SlimVirgin (talk) 17:32, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
Why should there never be a pro and anti subsection? I think it is simply a useful organizational scheme. Nrets 00:41, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
Because people see that as a way of adding their own personal pet project to. We end up having battles of links which obviously are bad. Also, sometimes things are not clear cut pro or anti - some organisations may not support part of something but support other areas. -Localzuk (talk) 10:34, 28 August 2006 (UTC)

About groups

I think if the ones their are staaying then Hillside Animal Sanctuary should be added. [9] [10] They have had a major impact, and also are the central point for animals liberated by the ALF. 62.25.106.209 15:23, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

BUAV are anti-vivisection, so shouldn't the Dr Hadwen Trust, British Anti-Vivisection Association [11], National Anti-Vivisection Society and the Lord Dowding Trust be included? 62.25.106.209 09:32, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

Hi 62.25, I'm not sure what you mean that they should be included. Have they been excluded from somewhere, or do you mean that they should have articles? SlimVirgin (talk) 09:43, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
SlimVirgin, included in the Template I think as the BUAV is. FK0071a 10:08, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
Okay thanks. We can't have everything in the template because it would be too long otherwise, so the most prominent ones are there, and the BUAV is the most prominent of the ones you mentioned. SlimVirgin (talk) 11:14, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

NPOV

Hi all,

Whilst the ambitions set out on your Project Page are indeed very noble I do not believe that you are currently offering a neutral viewpoint. If you are serious about providing both sides of the story then what about wikilinks in your infobox to groups such as Pro-Test as at the moment every single wikilink is to groups who believe that the law should be changed to afford greater protection of Animal Rights.

Wikipedia is a place for neutral writing, please do not consider these comments as advocating either POV, but merely an attempt to introduce some balance.

Martin Hinks 15:15, 25 September 2006 (UTC)

These templates include links to articles directly related to the issue. So the Jew template includes articles about Jews, the Judaism template articles about Judaism etc. The Jew template doesn't include links to articles about neo-Nazis. The Holocaust template doesn't include links to Holocaust deniers. Similarly, the animal rights template includes articles about people and groups who focus on animal rights. Pro-Test has never commented on animal rights, to the best of my knowledge. Although their interests would have an impact on animal rights, the connection is indirect. For the same reason, we wouldn't link to "butcher," "furrier," "meat," or "elephant trainer." SlimVirgin (talk) 16:28, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
The template used at Jew does however contain links to topics on Jewish Persecution including the Holocaust and New Anti Semitism. I would also argue that there is a difference between Pro-Test and butchers! Whilst butchers may, in some people's opinions, violate animal rights, they are not an organisation set up for the sole purpose of campaigning for or against animal rights, they are organisations set up to make profits from the sale of meat. Pro-Test on the other hand is a group set up specifically to promote animal testing. As you link to SPEAK, a group whose sole aim is to protest against vivisection and all animal testing, it would seem that you are presenting the animal testing argument from a non-neutral point of view. Martin Hinks 17:28, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
Pro-Test has not been set up to campaign against animal rights. No one involved in it, to the best of my knowledge, knows anything about the subject or has ever written about it. The people and groups on the template are experts on the subject of animal rights, through their activism, their writing, or their studying. SlimVirgin (talk) 17:47, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
I believe that the point I am trying to make is best shown by quoting the opening sentences of each of the articles in question; SPEAK and Pro-Test:
  • SPEAK, the Voice for the Animals is a British animal rights campaign that aims to end animal experimentation and vivisection in the UK.
  • Pro-Test is a British group that promotes and supports animal testing in medical research.

As you can see, these sentences, which as they are the opening sentences should convey the most important facet of each group, places SPEAK and Pro-Test at distinct opposites within the same field. SPEAK can clearly be said to be an "animal rights" group, with which you appear to agree. The existence of a group such as Pro-Test also indicates that not everyone agrees with the cause promoted by SPEAK. I would also like to point out that Pro-Test seeks to halt any legislation which would stop vivisection - which, by the inclusion of SPEAK in the list, is clearly an issue of "animal rights". Therefore, Pro-Test can be said to be a group that campaigns for the freezing of animal rights legislation at it's curent stage and by this, a group of great relevance to animal rights.

If you are going to argue that anyone not campaigning to increase animal rights (ie. pro-vivisection/testing) is not to be included in the animal rights template then there can never be a neutral point of view presented and the links within the template will not "educate readers" about the animal rights debate, it will merely show them the side that campaigns to increase animal rights. I personally would feel far happier if the template were balanced out so that it could be included on many more pages (such as Pro-Test) which would give the existing articles within this project greater exposure. Martin Hinks 18:21, 25 September 2006 (UTC)


To weigh in:

Perhaps a way to accomidate both positions would be to have a seperate page of "animal rights--criticism" with much the same format as the current page. --C.lettinga 06:12, 23 November 2006 (UTC)

Hi

Hello to all. I'm a newbe to Wikipedia. I took something on the site to heart when it prompted, "Be bold." So I jumped right in.

As you might see I've made a couple additions and deletions to the page, and, well, then I read the sentence, "If you would like to help, please inquire on the talk page." Sorry.

So, here I am, inquiring after the fact. I'd like to join in. The various discussions here are very interesting.

Just so you all know, I'm completely biased and think animals ought to be treated like people. But, I am also interested in seeing the matter presented in a fair and relatively neutral way here, even though some of the sources quotes and cited are anything but neutral.

One other thing, I don't post anywhere on the internet under an alias. If this won't work here, then I won't stay. No biggy.

Hope I didn't mess up the page too much. Rbogle 00:08, 8 October 2006 (UTC)

Hi Rbogle, and welcome to the project and to the madhouse in general. :-) SlimVirgin (talk) 02:13, 8 October 2006 (UTC)

Hi v2

Hi,

I'm a vegan and programmer from Porto Alegre, Brazil (yeah, i'm in the world's barbecue capital). I would like to join you and help to create a neutral philosophical discussion about Animal Rights.

By the way, in my point of view Animal Rights are only "negative" or "passive" rights, like not to be molested or killed. It's just about freedom, nothing else.

Juanmaiz 11:45, 24 October 2006 (UTC)

Good to have you with us, Juanmaiz. SlimVirgin (talk) 12:49, 24 October 2006 (UTC)

Hi, Version 3!

I'm just another person saying hi. I'm not too 'bold' on the web like others, but I'll do my best to play my part in this project. I'm more of a hands-on-in-real-life kinda person, sometimes I forget about the internet, but I love it nonetheless.P.S. I tried saying hi last night, but an error message occured, so I'm trying again now.Eddie mars 06:09, 24 February 2007 (UTC)

Hello Eddie. Welcome to the project and Wikipedia. Glad to have you with us! Rockpocket 07:29, 24 February 2007 (UTC)

Project directory

Hello. The WikiProject Council has recently updated the Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Directory. This new directory includes a variety of categories and subcategories which will, with luck, potentially draw new members to the projects who are interested in those specific subjects. Please review the directory and make any changes to the entries for your project that you see fit. There is also a directory of portals, at User:B2T2/Portal, listing all the existing portals. Feel free to add any of them to the portals or comments section of your entries in the directory. The three columns regarding assessment, peer review, and collaboration are included in the directory for both the use of the projects themselves and for that of others. Having such departments will allow a project to more quickly and easily identify its most important articles and its articles in greatest need of improvement. If you have not already done so, please consider whether your project would benefit from having departments which deal in these matters. It is my hope that all the changes to the directory can be finished by the first of next month. Please feel free to make any changes you see fit to the entries for your project before then. If you should have any questions regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact me. Thank you. B2T2 22:11, 25 October 2006 (UTC)

Vegetarianism & Veganism

Hi all, I notice that as of yet, Vegetarianism and Veganism are not within this project's scope. I would like to propose that at least Veganism be added in. All animal rights groups that I've ever encoutered advocate at least vegetarianism, and if someone has reached Veganism, they've usually also considered animal liberation. For me, Veganism and Animal Liberation are entirley intertwined, and since Animal Liberation is included in the scope of the article, I though it natural that Veganism would be too. Vegans coming from an ethical standpoint, and many from an environmental one, favor Animal Liberation if not Animal Rights, though I don't make a distinction between the two. I'd also like to get more involved users over at Veganism.

So, in short, my proposal: Veganism, as an integral part of Animal Liberation (at least while domestication is still around), be added to the scope of the WikiProject. With a sub-proposal that this be extended to all forms of Vegetarianism. File:Icons-flag-scotland.png Canæn File:Icons-flag-scotland.png 09:58, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

I fully support your opinions, I do believe that we should Definately put vegetarianism/veganism as a main focus of this group.
All in favor?
Cameron Erickson (camxx) 02:54, 26 November 2006 (UTC)

hi, joining project

hi, new user here. see you when I edit something.--C.lettinga 06:08, 23 November 2006 (UTC)

New to Wiki

Greetings!

I created a wikipedia account today and plan on updating/creating a number of vivisection/animal rights related pages. How do I join this group? I'm quite new to everything. JBeckham 23:42, 3 December 2006 (UTC)

Hi and welcome to wikipedia!! To sign up to this project all you need to do is edit the project page (click 'Project Page' at the top of this one) and add your signature to the list of members. -Localzuk(talk) 01:19, 4 December 2006 (UTC)

Foie gras page

It may be of interest to the members of this project that Foie gras page has been blocked following an edit war between a set of clearly partisan foie gras supporters on one side, and myself on the other side. Apart from the usual battles about various sources and their interpretation, there are signs that these people will try to oust the whole "controversy" section from the article, sidetracking it into a specific "Foie gras controversy" article. David Olivier 00:56, 4 December 2006 (UTC)

That's quite a long & involved discussion. I'll try and give it a look-over. File:Icons-flag-scotland.png Canæn File:Icons-flag-scotland.png 18:29, 5 December 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for any help you can give. I think that foie gras is a major issue in the AR debate. Some of it may seem somewhat technical, and a lot of the relevant litterature is in French - your skills can be useful for that, especially if you read the well-documented litterature produced by Stopgavage. Also, it is important to remain objective on all aspects of the debate. I believe that foie gras is one of the most egregious cases of animal abuse, and that that should be apparent from the facts stated on the Foie gras page; without any need to overdo anything. David Olivier 10:43, 7 December 2006 (UTC)

Animal rights subcats

Hi Viriditas. Please can you not divide the animal rights movement category up into smaller, seemingly pointless, mini-cats as it makes then entire thing a mess and overly complex. Instead, can you head over to Wikipedia:WikiProject Animal Rights and post your proposal on the talk page so it can be discussed? Both myself and SlimVirgin disagree with your edits so it would be highly advisable to do this - else we will end up with a silly edit war. Thanks, Localzuk(talk) 14:29, 23 December 2006 (UTC)

Hello. The animal rights movement category was not divided "up into smaller, seemingly pointless, mini-cats" by the addition of Category:Animal rights activists in any way, as at the time of my addition it was only a member of Category:Activists. Your opinion that "it makes then entire thing a mess and overly complex" doesn't make any sense. A proposal on Wikipedia:WikiProject Animal Rights is not required to sort Activists by issue, nor does it impact your project in any way when ARA is only a member of Activists. This is a typical people by occupation/interest categorization that cannot be categorized as ARM. The reasons you give for "disagreeing" and supporting your reversion of cited categorization does not appear to be valid or supported by any kind of argument as far as I can tell, other than WP:OWN. If you wish to continue this discussion, please refer to actual categorization guidelines (like Wikipedia:Categorization of people and others) and join me on Category talk:Animal rights activists. Thank you. —Viriditas | Talk 19:32, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
My issue is that categorising by the people being 'activists' all depends on your view of what an activist is. For example, would you claim that Gill Langley is an AR Activist? or Paul McCartney? My response would be - no. They are known for their support of animal rights, but they are primarily known for other things (ie. Zoologist and Musician). Categorising as 'activists' turns the topic into a 'black and white' division of what/who people are. I would argue that you have too little knowledge of animal rights in order to make such decisions and could very easily make poor decisions about categorising people connected to the movement. (For example, you moved Animal Liberation Front to the activist cat from the AR cat. Why? The ALF is not a group, so aren't activists - it is a name used to cover a certain type of action not a membership of people). Also, removing the activists from the AR movement category (as you seem to be proposing) seems to indicate that you don't think they should be linked to the movement that they are a part of? Is this what you are saying? Also, please assume good faith, as launching into comments about WP:OWN to someone who comments on your talk page regarding 2 editors disagreeing with you is OTT to say the least. I would advise you to take a read of WP:CONSENSUS. Thanks, Localzuk(talk) 19:57, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
Without having a particularly strong view on this issue either way, I would like to point out that you appear to be interpreting the term "activist" differently. Loculzuk's interpretation appears to be "Activist" with a capital "A", while Viriditas' position would appear to encompass a softer, more general, use of the term. Langley probably isn't primarily an Activist, but she certainly does undertake activism (as does McCartney). My personal view is that it would be informative to sub-categorise the individuals involved in the movement, but concur that "Animal rights activists" can be misleading. I'd propose renaming along the lines of "supporters of animal rights" (of which PETA supporters could be a subcat). Rockpocket 20:49, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
I concur with RockPocket on this point - and it should also be a subcat of Animal Rights.-Localzuk(talk) 23:20, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
The problem with "supporter of animal rights" is that it encompasses people who just happen to be members of PETA, for example. I think "animal rights movement" is the most straightforward way to deal with the different types of people who actively contribute to the advocacy of animal rights, either through activism as it's ordinarily understood, or by writing, research, or membership of a government committee (here I'm thinking of people like Stephen R.L. Clark). However the articles are categorized, it needs to be done by people who know something about the movement, otherwise we'll have chaos. I'm going to copy this discussion to Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Animal rights. SlimVirgin (talk) 00:53, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

Reply to Localzuk

Around the beginning of this year, I categorized the animal rights activists, groups, and other cats, cleaning out what was then known as "Animal Liberation Movement". At some point, an editor decided to remove the categories and reverse the diffusion, dumping more than a hundred articles in one category and removing all cross-references. Why this was done was never explained. —Viriditas | Talk 03:28, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

It was undone because you made a mess of it, because you're trying to force people into categories they don't belong to. You've also recreated the List of animal rights activists, which was already deleted (deleted, not blanked) a few weeks ago, and you've added names that arguably don't belong there. We already have an article on the Animal liberation movement. What is the point of having that article, plus a new list article, plus a new category containing the same information? SlimVirgin (talk) 03:47, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Please show me how I made a mess of it, I created necessary categories, grouped relevant members, and diffused from the parent cat into subcats. Please don't make assertions without evidence. Explain what you mean by a "mess" and give examples. The way I see it, the exact opposite occurred. Instead of being able to find groups, activists, and relevant details, one cannot easily find anything now, and the cross-references to other cats are gone. Furthermore, the ARM cat is only meant as a reference to what is now listed as Animal rights, Political movements by issue, Ethical schools and movements, Activism by issue, and Social movements. The members of the category itself should be diffused into relevant categories like all the other movement cats. —Viriditas | Talk 04:03, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
They are not necessary categories. Other than Category:Animal rights, we already have Category:Animal rights movement, Category:Animal Liberation Front, Category:PETA supporters. We don't need another one for people, especially not one with such ambiguous boundaries. There are only 134 pages in the AR movement cat. That is nowhere near enough to have to start considering splitting it up. I think you've misunderstood what a "movement" is. SlimVirgin (talk) 04:09, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Please don't speculate as to what you think I do or don't understand and stick to the topic. I asked you a series of questions that you failed to respond to, and instead you launched into another digression. This is why the discussion was on the category talk page, and not here. —Viriditas | Talk 04:18, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm not speculating. It's obvious by your approach that you're not familiar with the people you're trying to categorize. If you were, we wouldn't be having this discussion. Why on earth would the discussion be different on the category page? SlimVirgin (talk) 04:35, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm familiar with the topic, and the category talk page is an appropriate, neutral place to discuss this issue. —Viriditas | Talk 04:43, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Just to clarify: the list was deleted by another admin, not me. I didn't even know about it until after the fact. SlimVirgin (talk) 03:47, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

Reply to Rockpocket

I am using the criteria of "animal rights activist" based on reliable sources. If there is controversy over such a definition, please point me to a good link. As it stands, I take no position on the definition, nor do I expect the category to mislead with RS are used. This type of category is typical for Category:Activism. ""Supporters of animal rights" is ambiguous, and would probably be difficult to source, although similar people categories do exist. —Viriditas | Talk 03:34, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

It would be a lot easier to source than "animal rights activist." You're not using that criteria because of reliable sources. You said elsewhere you're doing this in order to inflate the Activists category, if I understood you correctly. SlimVirgin (talk) 03:50, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Classifying a person as an "animal rights activist" has nothing to do with inflating a category. Perhaps you mean "populating", but that's part of categorization. I am still awaiting answers to my questions. Thanks. —Viriditas | Talk 04:06, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
No, I do mean "inflating." You seem to want to add names regardless of whether they should really be there. Peter Singer? Very arguable. Please learn something about the movement before trying to involve yourself. SlimVirgin (talk) 04:10, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Please don't attribute motives to editors that have no basis in fact. Please also refrain from discussing what you think I want to do and focus on the category. That's why the discussion was on the appropriate category talk page. The neutral source I provided for Singer was Gale, Environmental Encyclopedia, 2002, p. 1293-1294. and I could find others. Do you have a good, neutral source that says otherwise? —Viriditas | Talk 04:22, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
You see how much work you're going to cause? You know nothing about AR, and so you're going to look in encyclopedias to see who's called an "activist," and if you find one, you're going to add the name, even if they're not an activist; or perhaps we think they are, but they think they're not. I've already had someone e-mail me objecting to the label. From now on, you are going to have to be consulted? And we would have to find a source saying that person was not an activist? No, Viriditas, it can't work that way. If you know something about the AR movement, or want to learn, you're welcome to join this wikiproject. If you don't, please don't jump in without discussion and start recategorizing things, and arguing with and reverting people who object. SlimVirgin (talk) 04:32, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
This discussion is about categorizing Animal rights activists. If you can please address that topic, I would appreciate it. If you can't, then you can request help from the categorization WikiProject (to which I belong) or find a neutral, uninvolved expert on categories, activists, and animal rights to help you. I have no stake in the outcome of who is or who isn't an ARA, only that the correct categories allow the end user to find information. Thank you. —Viriditas | Talk 05:15, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
The end user will not be able to find anything the way you plan to do it, in part because you're going to make things unnecessarily complex, and in part because you have no idea who is and who isn't an activist, so you'll miscategorize, as you've already done. SlimVirgin (talk) 05:18, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
That's a nice crystal ball you have, but let me distract your gaze away from it for a moment. If you feel you can compile an accurate list of ARA, then by all means do it, and lets get on with the cats. Thanks. —Viriditas | Talk 05:34, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
No, it would be a fruitless thing to try to do. The group is too diverse. And I'm not using a crystal ball but judging by what you've done already. SlimVirgin (talk) 05:36, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
You keep saying that without anything to back it up. Convince me. find an Activist cat that is too diverse, and should be deleted, or show me where I have "messed" stuff up. If something is or was miscategorized, then fix it. I really don't see the problem as you describe it. —Viriditas | Talk 05:48, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

Rockpocket, your good idea is essentially a "People associated with Animal rights" category, which works well in addition to Category:Animal rights activism. See how it's used on Category:Anti-war activists, and check out Category:People for some other ideas. —Viriditas | Talk 04:16, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

We have that already. It's called Category:Animal rights movement. Why on earth would you want to change the name to "People associated with ..."? SlimVirgin (talk) 04:32, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I've written nothing of the kind. Please don't twist what I have written. It's right there, above your comment. Look, if you can't discuss the category (which is why this discussion was on the category talk page in the first place) please don't reply. I hope I am wrong, but I feel you are using this WikiProject as a platform to attack me, hoping that other sympathetic editors will join in. I feel that's unfair. —Viriditas | Talk 04:46, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I am using this wikiproject to discuss the issue, which is what it was set up for. You're the one who tried to ignore all the regular editors of the pages and leap in regardless. SlimVirgin (talk) 05:17, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
That's so silly I almost broke a smile. The discussion was occurring on the cat talk page, although being busy at work, I was unable to reply fast enough; I haven't ignored anyone. Please don't mistake silence for ignoring an editor. Many editors have busy lives, and at this time of year, most are on wikibreak. —Viriditas | Talk 05:42, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I meant that each time you've done this, you've started recategorizing without any discussion, even when you know there will be objections. SlimVirgin (talk) 18:00, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Viriditas, the basis of the objection to this subcategorisation is that it overly complicates the grouping of articles related to animal rights. The animal rights movement is full of people who are in completely different positions to each other. On one hand we will have those who go out and do visible activism (such as Greg Avery), then we have those who vocally support animal rights organisations (such as Paul McCartney), then we have those who write on the subject (such as Peter Singer) and also those who are on government committees and support the idea of animal rights. Now, the way you are proposing to group things labels all of these as 'activists' which is, to put in bluntly, wrong. What we have at the moment is a single category which groups them all under the common title of 'Animal Rights Movement' - not indicating their degree of involvement but instead just linking them to the movement.
The statements about you 'messing up' is to do with your seeming lack of understanding of this and the concept of the animal rights movement as a whole.
Also, as the issue of categorising animal rights related people is fundamental to this project, this is the appropriate place to discuss it, not on the talk page for a newly created category which no-one knows about...
I withdraw my support of a 'supporters of animal rights' category as it would overly complicate an already complex issue and its categorisation.-Localzuk(talk) 14:11, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
The community has already stepped in at least once to change a POV category created by this project. I have also noted a number of NPOV tags associated with articles maintained by this project. Since this project is one that concerns itself with advocacy, neutrality must be closely watched. No reasonable explanation has been given for the removal of the animal rights activists category by members of this project, nor do any of the above explanations suffice or rise to the level of evidence. This project should ask for the participation of neutral experts on categorization, activism, and animal rights, in order to protect itself from allegations of bias. The dicussion should take place on the category talk page, and this should be widely advertised in the appropriate venues. It's probably not a good idea to give Wikipedians the impression that this project is not adhering to NPOV policies. —Viriditas | Talk 20:34, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Please stop the implied threats and the hostility. Which "POV category"? The only category change I'm aware of was a move from animal liberation movement to animal rights movement, so which POV category do you mean? And how is this a POV issue anyway? SlimVirgin (talk) 20:41, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
My suggestion was based on the idea that if we wanted to subcategorise the individuals in the movement from the concepts/groups/experiments then it might be best done using the "People associated with Animal rights" wording. It wasn't suggested as a replacement for Category:Animal rights movement and have nothing invested in creating that category, it was simply proposed as a compromise if the issue was primarily the interpretation of term "activist". (To respond to your original question) I do not take issue with your definition, but neither do I take issue with SV/Localzuk's. Its all about context. Rockpocket 09:23, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm going on reliable sources. I've repeatedly asked those who dispute a categorization to explain why and to cite this dispute, but I have never received an answer other than "you don't understand". This is not acceptable. The activists category should contain animal rights activists, and nobody has been able to explain why this category has been removed. If an animal rights "expert" wants to compile a list of ARA's, then more power to them, but a refusal to do so, allow others to do so, and prohibit such categorization without any sound justification is unreasonable. I would like to see a neutral party involved in categorization join this discussion, which is why the discussion should be taking place on the category talk page. —Viriditas | Talk 20:06, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
You're trying to create exactly the same situation that exists at the Lists of Jews articles (list of Jewish jurists, list of British Jews, etc etc). No one knows what definition to use, and there are many around, so the lists are a mess. Some people are included if their mothers are Jews, some with either parent, some with one grandparent (Hitler's criterion), and I've even found one with one great-grandparent. Some of the editors got together to try to find a way round this, and decided to rely on reliable sources, per V and NOR. So any RS that says X is a Jew means that person can be included, even if they're not Jewish by any normal definition and even if they say they're not. It's an absurd situation caused by people creating lists with ambiguous criteria and fuzzy edges. The same thing would happen here. That is why animal rights movement is appropriate. SlimVirgin (talk) 20:37, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
I've never worked on any of those lists, and as I've asked you repeatedly, please stop speculating about my motives and stick to the topic. In that example, I would only support the inclusion of the most notable Jews, so the list would be quite manageable. ARA's would be categorized according to notability, RS, and whenever necessary, comparing sources. The purpose of this category is to sort ARM, and to allow users to browse the activist cats. Movement cats aren't generally used as a container for most articles, but for subcats, since the movement cats allow users to browse by movement. It's the same principle applied at different levels. Now, when these types of cats grow too large, they are sorted by type, which is what you described in your list of Jews example. —Viriditas | Talk 21:03, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Subcatting -- for 2 weeks there's been no further discussion of the subcats, which used to exist, for "activists". If we can't reach consensus here, I'm taking it to Categories for Discussion. --lquilter 18:06, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
I'm not sure what else there is to say, Lquilter. If you read the points above, you'll see the arguments. SlimVirgin (talk) 18:12, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
It seems that regardless of the arguments put forward by us lquilter thinks there should be subcats (evidenced by 'subcatting or cfd' summary). Is there not a third option? To leave things as they are and realise that they are in quite a good category as it is?-Localzuk(talk) 18:19, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
The current system is inconsistent with other "Category:Activists" and other movements. So, no, I don't think it's okay to leave it as it is. To be consistent with "Animal rights movement," we should use the "Animal rights X" terminology; to be consistent with "Category:Activists" and other people categories, we should use the term "Activists". I don't see the problem with the subcat. Categories are not tags, which should be applied to everything relevant; they are hierarchical structures. --lquilter 18:30, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
Yes, Categories are tags. They equate to defining the articles in them as being 'activists' in this case.
Why do you want this consistency? We have outlined above how the movement varies from others considerably - so the movement itself is not consistent with other movements...
Your response simply suggests that you will keep going regardless what those of us who know what we are talking about (with regards AR) say about it.-Localzuk(talk) 18:35, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
Why consistency in categorization? I want consistency to help create a navigable, professional encyclopedia that is user-friendly. --lquilter 18:36, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
With all due respect, I didn't see any descriptions of the AR movement (with which I am, in fact, familiar) that distinguished it from other activist movements in a way that means subcategorizing people is inapplicable. "Activists" versus "theorists" etc. is a line-drawing exercise in any movement.--lquilter 18:39, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
Then perhaps you shouldn't keep fruitlessly trying to force that distinction. SlimVirgin (talk) 18:44, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
I don't think it's fruitless. I think it's a useful subcat. The fact that it is sometimes difficult to class a particular individual as an activist, or not, does not mean that the categorization is "fruitless". --lquilter 18:49, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
Okay, I posted a CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2007 January 5#Category:Animal rights activists. --lquilter 18:36, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
Also -- I started discussion at Category talk:Activists. The problems raised here, while I personally don't think they eliminate the need for an Animal rights activists category, are real issues. They're not unique to Animal rights activists, though, so maybe if we start discussing them thinking them through more broadly we can come up with a good scheme that addresses the common problems and provides appropriate exceptions. --lquilter 22:12, 6 January 2007 (UTC)


Adding my 2cents

After looking over this discussion, I agree with User:SlimVirgin, User:Rockpocket, and User:Localzuk in that adding a subcategory of "AR activists" (or "supporters of AR" or whatever) seems counterproductive and uncessarily complicated. If a given individual is connected with AR issues, their article ought to have references for that for those who are interested in that area of their work. Cat: AR movement seems perfectly servicable. I can see User:Viriditas's point about having a browsable list of activists by association, but that seems to be a project in its own right, and would seemingly require many editors working on many pages to agree to such a thing. Perhaps, if Viriditas desires such a list, then s/he ought to start with another set of activists, as editors working on this cat clearly don't see that as a productive and positive move.--C.lettinga 21:52, 24 December 2006 (UTC)

Thank you for your polite reply. I have worked on standarizing the activist cats for some time, and Category:Animal rights activists is no different. I believe the category was created before this project started, and has been the target of removal for almost a year. As it stands, the discussion about Category:Animal rights activists should be moved back to Category talk:Animal rights activists, as this involves multiple WikiProjects, including Wikipedia:WikiProject Politics, Wikipedia:WikiProject Sociology, and the categorization project. As you are a member of the Animal rights project, it's probably safe to say that this project objects to categorizing Animal rights activists, even though no actual reason has been cited. I don't see the diffusion of categories as "counterproductive and uncessarily complicated", but necessary to enable users to find information. I have provided sources for categorizing animal rights activists, however I would be more than happy to use recommendations from this group to guide the process. If there is a dispute about labeling people as animal rights activists, then please point me to a neutral, reliable source, and I may change my opinion. Even if the articles are allowed to remain in one category, there is no valid objection to prohibiting the addition of activist cats to facillitate cross-referencing. Sadly, this project does not seem focused on helping users find information, but instead focused on preventing information from being found, and some of the POV categorization issues in the past, as well as ongoing POV conflicts on the article pages, leads me to believe that this project is engaging in advocacy. —Viriditas | Talk 01:43, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
First, why not take up C.lettinga's suggestion and continue this work with some other group of activists first? Secondly, we're precisely trying to help people find information by making sure it's not unnecessarily complicated or misleading. You say you might be persuaded if we find a reliable source saying what we are saying, but please stop to think about that. Here you have some people who have worked on animal rights articles for 1-2 years and who therefore know something about them. We are reliable sources for this purpose, because we know the Wikipedia articles, we know how diverse a group the AR movement is, we know how hard it would be to decide who is an "activist" (whatever that means) and who not. Just as it would be very hard for you to produce a reliable source giving a definitive view on who is and is not a Jew, it's hard for us to find a reliable source giving a definitive view on who should count as an animal rights activist; well, harder, because why would any reliable source write about the latter? SlimVirgin (talk) 02:11, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
Your argument is a straw man, compares apples and oranges, and does not address categorization in any way. Animal rights activists are not an ethnicity, nor is it difficult to produce reliable sources on who is a notable ARA (as I did on list of animal rights activists). The movement category requires either diffusion into relevant subcats, or additional cross-references added for users looking for ARA's. There has not been one single, valid objection to categorizing ARA's, nor have any sources been offered demonstrating such objections. The categorization of ARA activists is not reliant upon an advocacy group masquerading as a WikiProject. —Viriditas | Talk 02:45, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
And to clarify your loaded, somewhat misleading statement about "some people who have worked on animal rights articles for 1-2 years", this WikiProject was created four months ago on 01:31, 19 August 2006 by SlimVirgin. I originally worked on the categories in the beginning of the year, and I will be requesting the full page histories for review. —Viriditas | Talk 03:03, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
Incidentally, just to clarify one point: in case you think we're all speaking from the same POV about AR, we're not. Some of us on this page incline towards an animal rights perspective, and some incline against. You said earlier you thought it was a POV issue, but didn't say what the POV might be, and I genuinely can't see it. SlimVirgin (talk) 02:14, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
I already stated several times that I have worked on multiple groups of activist categories. Also, when I asked for expert sources, I am referring to verifiable citations outside Wikipedia. I will be restarting this discussion again on the category talk page for the reasons I gave above. Please do not move or alter the discussion in any way. Thank you. —Viriditas | Talk 02:30, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
Ah, well, this explains what's going on. I, too, have been trying to clean up the Category:Activists category, and noted that a number of people who are described in their articles as "animal rights activists" are simply dumped as "Category:Activists". The logical response is to do with animal rights activism what has been done with human rights activism, environmental activism, and so on -- have a subcategory within the movement for the activists within the movement; the activists subcategory is listed both under "activists" and the specific movement. The problem is that most folks here are talking only about the animal rights perspective, but Viriditas (and I) are coming at this from a holistic wikipedia perspective. ... Within a movement / activism category, it works well (and is encyclopedic) to have subcats of activists, (people and groups), scholars, history, and so on. Yes, sometimes it's hard to define activists from supporters from leaders from politicians -- that's a line-drawing exercise that is applicable to every category. But it doesn't stop you from adequately categorizing things as it is. Right now, with 100+ members in a cat, it's not useful because it's too hard to wade through it. And by including such disparate things as activists, philosophies, groups, and so on, all in the same category, you can't adequately categorize the category. --lquilter 01:35, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
Subcatting -- for 2 weeks there's been no further discussion of the subcats, which used to exist, for "activists". If we can't reach consensus here, I'm taking it to Categories for Discussion. --lquilter 18:07, 5 January 2007 (UTC)

thoughts on categorization

  • Okay, I'm putting this here because it's a response to an earlier comment here. And my hope is it might further future discussions of categorization here.
Earlier, we had a brief discussion of tags versus categorization, which stuck in my head. I think the confusion may shed some light on the different approaches that Viriditas and I have been using, versus some of the response here. Sorry if this is old news to anyone.
Localzuk said that "Yes, categories are tags." in response to my comment that "Categories are not tags ... they are hierarchical structures." I was talking about the purposes of categorization and using tags in an information-categorizing term-of-art sense. Please look at the wp article for tagging (Tag (metadata)) which describes tags as "Tags are usually chosen informally and personally by the author/creator of the item — i.e. not usually as part of some formally defined classification scheme." Wikipedia's categorization scheme is not a tagging scheme; it's a hierarchical structure, a formally defined classification scheme.
Tags are completely appropriate for applying the same tag to all related articles in an informal way, and that's how everything is currently classed in Category:Animal rights movement. Unfortunately, this is not how the wikipedia categories are used. Hierarchical / taxonomies (like the WP categorization scheme) let us classify things in multiple hierarchies. So Category:Animal rights activists would be classed under activists, which would be classed under people by occupation -- a biographical cat. It would also be classed under the Category:Animal rights movement category. The articles are classed by subject and also by the kinds of things they are.
Now, it may be that the "Activists" category or the "Animal rights" category are the the right terminology. But the subject articles within Category:Animal rights movement are not well-served by being outside the categories for the kinds of things they are.
Thoughts for discussion? --lquilter 01:17, 10 January 2007 (UTC)

Wikipedia Day Awards

Hello, all. It was initially my hope to try to have this done as part of Esperanza's proposal for an appreciation week to end on Wikipedia Day, January 15. However, several people have once again proposed the entirety of Esperanza for deletion, so that might not work. It was the intention of the Appreciation Week proposal to set aside a given time when the various individuals who have made significant, valuable contributions to the encyclopedia would be recognized and honored. I believe that, with some effort, this could still be done. My proposal is to, with luck, try to organize the various WikiProjects and other entities of wikipedia to take part in a larger celebrartion of its contributors to take place in January, probably beginning January 15, 2007. I have created yet another new subpage for myself (a weakness of mine, I'm afraid) at User talk:Badbilltucker/Appreciation Week where I would greatly appreciate any indications from the members of this project as to whether and how they might be willing and/or able to assist in recognizing the contributions of our editors. Thank you for your attention. Badbilltucker 23:23, 29 December 2006 (UTC)

I want in

I would like to join the project. I am not sure what I can do to help, but I'll do what I can.

As for your arguments, STOP IT!!! All about the animal rights wikis are people fighting over such petty issues! We need to focus on making the project educational and POSITIVE. With everyone fighting, people will be driven away, and that is exactly what we DON'T want to happen. A divided cause is a hopeless cause, I say.

I'm certain that most people researching, or just purusing the animal rights wikis are interested in supporting the animal rights' cause. If this project isn't united, or at least cooperating, it WILL fail.

Also, there cannot be any emphasis on eco-terrorism. The majority of people (including myself) don't want to support that type of movement. It will likely deter people from the cause.

Finally, I know that we all have strong opinions on the matter, but whatever they are, they need to be stated (if at all) in a positive way. People will not be (as) offended by an opinion if the person who stated it is respectful to their opposition.

I apologize for this becoming a lecture... I don't mean to sound condescending. Truly.

-Pittlers

Hello Pittlers and welcome to the Wikiproject. I've removed your email address from your signoff, as its not a good idea to list it unless you wish spambots to flood your inbox with viagra ads. Instead of just writing your name in future, we recommend you signoff with 4 tildes (~~~~), which will result in an automatic signature and time stamp.
Regarding joining, it would be great to have you on board. First of all, add your name to the list of participants. Then get involved! The pages within the scope of the project can be found at Category:Animal rights movement, there are plenty that could be expanded or referenced better. Also, feel free to create new articles. One final note. The nature of the project is not to "support" the animal rights' cause or to deemphasize eco-terrorism. Its to ensure the movement is described accurately, comprehensively and neutrally. I know for sure there are members that are opposed to animal rights philosophies, and there may even be members that support or carry out direct action (i.e. are "eco-terrorists"). Indeed, I personally think a wide range of participants is essential to make this project succeed, as its important that we continue to challenge perspectives to ensure our articles are as neutral as possible. Participants from all philosophies are welcome, so long as they abide by the WP policies. We welcome your input and do feel free to ask if there is anything we can help you with. Rockpocket 22:14, 1 January 2007 (UTC)

mainspace categorization for project page

Categorization segregates mainspace (encyclopedia articles) from wikipedia maintenance/project pages. So someone (not me, because I'm involved in other categorization discussions with members of this project) should remove the Category:Animal rights from the project page. --lquilter 16:58, 10 January 2007 (UTC)

stubsorting etc

I'm doing a lot of person-stub-sorting, including in the activists category, and will simply file people whose articles describe themselves as "Animal rights activists" in the category Category:Animal rights movement. Sorry to just dump them in a big category, which seems really inappropriate to me. --lquilter 22:18, 13 January 2007 (UTC)

Hi Lquilter, please don't put them in that category indiscriminately. They should only be in the AR movement if reliable sources (not Wikipedia) indicate they belong there, by calling them AR advocates, activists etc. If they're just people who support PETA, they should go in Category:PETA supporters. But please make sure there are third party sources, and that it's not the Wikipedia articles you're using as sources. SlimVirgin (talk) 23:46, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
I'm refraining from all categorization relating to Animal rights movement articles, even though it ends up meaning one can't properly clean up & diffuse other categories. However, I'll still be available for discussion here. However, I note that discussion on categorization here has largely happened only when people made changes -- so if people would prefer to reach consensus before changes, then there needs to be discussion. It's not really a good solution to simply naysay to categorization; and then not discuss the various issues relating to categorization. Like it or not, categorization at Animal rights movement affects other categorization trees, and so the issues will keep coming up. Better to discuss and try to reach consensus, or when consensus can't be reached, to try to bring in more people / third opinions / etc. --lquilter 17:11, 19 January 2007 (UTC)

Help requested

Can I ask if the article at Working terrier should come under this Wikiproject? Whether or not it should, I have come here from [12] to seek advice. What seem to me to be relevant cited edits are being reverted without explanation and my requests to discuss at the talk page are met with abuse. It seems to me that there are issues of WP:Civility and WP:OWN here. I would appreciate the advice of experienced editors on the extent to which animal welfare issues are relevant to this article. MikeHobday 21:55, 16 January 2007 (UTC)

Seems SV has offered her opinion on the matter, however, I would say that that article is suitable to come under this Wikiproject's care. I'll add the template. Rockpocket 07:33, 24 February 2007 (UTC)

Hello and questions

Hello. I've been on Wikipedia for many years but have just recently gotten into animal rights (thanks to Gary L. Francione) and have been making minor changes to some related pages (and observing all the arguments on Veganism), so I thought I should join this project.

I had a couple of questions about the page templates: it wasn't clear to me what the criteria is for adding them to pages. Three pages I've happened upon might be candidates for inclusion in this project: United Poultry Concerns, Animal rights and the Holocaust, Animal rights and antisemitism (oh, than last one seems to have been deleted, which is probably just as well). So, what's the usual process? Trent 04:55, 9 March 2007 (UTC)

Hello, and welcome to the project. Others may have a different opinion, but I tend to be bold and add the page templates to articles that have a significant interest to the AR field (interpret that as you wish). Both the articles you mention appear to be excellent candidates to me. Its also helpful if you list the articles here, as this brings them to the attention of other project members who may be able to improve them. Rockpocket 18:19, 9 March 2007 (UTC)

Hi

Ok, so I have been reading wikipedia for years, but never edited anything. Then, well some friends and I started our own using mediawiki software. I am coming to realize that there is a possibility for soem trading of information, and I was wondering if there was any protocall for that.

I am also hoping, (this may be a big no no on wikipedia... sorry) if any of you who are more experienced with wikipedia could help us sort of establish things, content would be great, but we especially need help with the infastructure. All of us are pretty new to wiki.

The focus is on consumer activism. The idea is to share and build information about companies, charities, products, really anything that people spend money on, and analyzing what effects that has. Animal rights, human rights, and environmental impact are the main concerns.

The reason we decided to keep it seperate from wikipedia, is because of the whole point of view thing. We are trying to be objective, but also trying to sort of come to an agreed viewpoint. The idea is to consolidate our spending to support good companies, and boycott the especially bad ones.

Anyway, I am really struggling with making templates, and establishing protocall for writing articles... the site isnt exactly open to the internat-public yet. We want to have it really nice first. But anyone willing to help get things started would be very much appreciated.

Please leave a comment on my user page, or email me if you can/will help, or with any ideas, suggestions, flame... <email removed>

PS... If this is completeyly inapropriate go ahead and delete it. I just wasnt really sure where or how to best approach experienced wikipedia users.

Amazingdave 02:33, 11 March 2007 (UTC)

Hi Dave, I don't think there is any problem with asking for help here. I have removed your email address to save you from the spambots, but interested editors can find it via the linked diff. Of course, pretty much all the material on WP is free to use under the terms of the GFDL license, so feel free to "steal" whatever you like from us (but please cite the source and share alike). You might like to have a look at our simplified ruleset as a start on how to formulate writing protocols. Rockpocket 03:27, 11 March 2007 (UTC)

Plant rights

Plants, like animals, don't want to be killed for their lands and nutrients. Shouldn't there be an article on Plant rights? For example, it will forbid the removal of trees from lands for houses when apartments could be built to house more people. People who love life and support animal rights but neglect plants are hypocrites. Protect trees and plants! —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 141.213.198.142 (talk) 03:59, 11 March 2007 (UTC).

There should also be an article on Plant welfare for those who believe plants can be cleared from lands for housing, and for other good intentions such as removal of invasive plant species, but unnecessary removal or damage to single plants or plant parts for aesthetic values such as mowing the lawn or removal of weeds on sidewalks should be forbidden.--141.213.198.142 04:10, 11 March 2007 (UTC)

First of all this is not the place for orginal research - if the term "plant rights" really exists, then give a link and we'll talk about it. Secondly, if you actually read this article you'll see terms like "sentience" which is largely defining why plants are excluded from rights. Happy easter, sir. --Lhademmor 10:22, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
It's not original research. Look http://www.google.com/search?q=plant+rights&rls=com.microsoft:en-us&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&startIndex=&startPage=1 There's also a "plant pain" and a thing called "plant intelligence." Now you can start talking about Plant rights. Happy easter to you too.--141.213.198.142 19:48, 25 March 2007 (UTC)

World Laboratory Animal Liberation Week

World Laboratory Animal Liberation Week is this coming week (April 22nd - 28th, 2007), so we can probably expect extra visitors on AR pages and extra vandalism on animal experimentation and associated pages. Lets be vigilant, people. Rockpocket 23:28, 20 April 2007 (UTC)

Joining Animal Rights Project

Hi - I'm fairly new to Wiki but I found this page after looking for some information on Ingrid Newkirk of PETA. That page looks like it's been changed so much there's hardly anything left. I'll work out some changes and post them to the discussion page of that page and probably check out the other pages in this project. This is a great topic because it's so current and controversial so there are a lot of POV's, so keeping Wiki NPOV will be a challenge! Bob98133 14:44, 23 May 2007 (UTC)

Animal rights license for images

Hi! I have some images related to animal rights, and I've been thinking about uploading them (on Commons). Usually I like to license the images with very few conditions, but not this time. I've been thinking something like this:

For all uses
GFDL
GFDL

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.

WikiProject Animal rights/Archive 1

For promotion of animal rights and protection
Creative Commons Attribution iconCreative Commons Share Alike icon

This image is licensed under the Creative Commons
Attribution ShareAlike License v. 2.5:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/ for the purpose of promoting animal rights and protection. Category:Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 files

For promotion of animal rights and protection in posters, movies (where cc-by-sa would be cumbersome but I can't think of any more examples)

The copyright holder of this image allows anyone to use it for promotion of animal rights and protection in posters and movies; including unrestricted redistribution, commercial use, and modification.

The images are free so that they could be used to for causes I do not adhere to but GFDL is, on the other hand, a very cumbersome license.

Is this something you would be willing to use with your photos? Or would you like to change something, maybe make something clearer? The aim is that we could have a ready template to be used on Commons. Samulili 20:27, 24 May 2007 (UTC)

Unbalanced

I am a former vegan whose physical and mental health was badly damaged by my time as a vegan, who lost many relationships and much of my reputation over the issue. I now feel very differently, and have plenty of argumentative resources to alter the world's perception of this sensitive issue in a way that allows for some resolution. But I've had no success attempting to balance any of these articles, because I had to figure all this out on my own - which is my whole point. Interesting, thought-provoking and controversial counterarguments to veganism and animal rights are being supressed; I never had access to any such thing because vegans are too biased to even allow for the presentation of an alternative point of view.

So, there is no resource that explains the counterarguments that finally changed my life, and because of that they will never make the shallow wikipedia 'cut' of being well-referenced - as if an idea can't be important unless it's referenced to another author.

All of these articles are fairly badly balanced. Only the animal rights page contains any information concerning the counterargument, and it IS right in the header, as it should be. People frequently read only the header of long, boring wikipedia articles, and not including an explanation of the counterargument is bad scholarship - on your part.

All of them are stock from ten years ago, the same misleading, overzealous ivory-tower arguments that ruined my personal life. And I'd like to change them, to be sure that no one else has to suffer my fate - literally, I battle incurable mental problems because of this diet, and I'm trying to explain how I'm battling them and what's working - simply because the veganism pages on wikipedia are being edited by vegans. This is a primary resource on the internet, and one that most young people turn to to research new topics. A life choice as dramatic and important as this would benefit from a treatment that contains TOO MUCH philosophy, argument, conceptual sparring and in general "information" of a logical, not a referenced academic, nature.

If you all suppress attempts to improve these articles because you don't want additional information to be available to the reader, you are failing in your duty. I'm sorry to sound harsh, but you are in over your head if you can't negotiate with someone who has a way of improving the balance of these articles. - Repeat2341 01:40, 3 July 2007 (UTC)


Just for reference, here is the "rough draft" content I keep trying to add. An editors job here, according to the wiki rules, is to edit, and not delete, the new content, but that's what other editors here keep doing. I'm not going to get blocked over this; I've turned the issue over to mediation (http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_mediation#Veganism) because I think SlimVirgin, Bob... and others on here are obvious partisans who cannot be trusted to reliably work with these articles.

The content: f you are considering vegetarianism, you should also be aware that vegan groups will not provide you with the notion that animals in feedlots do nothing except eat, are protected from the elements, and are killed as swiftly and humanely as the needs of the average working family (emotional, mental and physical) will allow. Many people feel that farm animals lives are among the easiest on the planet, might be preferred to life in the wild, and that vegetarianism as it is presented does not stand up in a larger intellectual context. Many vegans live socially and physically sheltered lives, and this is considered to be important to the overall evaluation of this concept.

— Preceding unsigned comment added by Repeat2341 (talkcontribs) 02:48, 3 July 2007 (UTC)

... I should add, very seriously, and not as an insult but because this issue is of life importance, that I have met hundreds and hundreds of vegans and vegetarians in my life, and not one of them works a physically demaning or socially "very diverse" job. The expression "ivory tower" comes to mind, and I get the strong impression that most vegans simply have no concept - at all - of how hard most people's lives are, or the damage they're doing to society by eroding the comfort and emotional sustenance people derive from food. I have not completely enjoyed a meal in more than a decade over this. Most people in my situation - who can't turn to drugs and alchohol and escapism and driving around the country and big parties, like every vegan I've ever met - who work hard 50 weeks a year, go home to loud kids, never, ever got the chance to see Europe and so on - would completely crack up and destroy their families if they had to deal with what I've had to deal with. And you don't even care! It's astonishing; you've lost touch with compassion so much that you won't even rethink something this major.

Real people all over the world struggle emotionally and depend on food, because they have few other resources. Not presenting balanced information to kids who want to be good people is... so partisan and unfair it's sickening. Wikipedia will effect the future of human history. You have responsibilities you are ignoring. I'm not talking about animal testing. I'm not talking about the circus. I'm talking about you, the editor, admitting that living in a henhouse and eating all day sounds easier than hauling heavy ass beams around your whole life and getting nagged and annoyed and confused and belittled, struggling with enduring anger, and so on. You need to reevaluate and grow and allow that you may have become a little bit of a cheater - in your own head, with your own thoughts - to avoid admitting things like this, to be a "good part of your cause." Or you need to stop editing wikipedia and leave it to people who understand the dynamics better. And I'm not talking about me; I don't have the time for this, I work for a living.

And all this over animals sitting around, out of the weather, eating. All this because vegans are too scarred by their psychedelic experiences to take the concept that they're out of touch with the real world seriously - I mean, really, really, seriously, as a part of a larger and more important worldview concerning the stability of society. All this because some naturalist hippies with no responsibilities turned a health and environmental issue into a major ethical one without any real clarity.

It's extremely frustrating. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Repeat2341 (talkcontribs) 03:01, 3 July 2007 (UTC)

I'm not opposing improving conditions in farms; I believe in that. The site link I originally tried to add, without success, was to a page (http://feedlotradio.org) endorsing playing music for feedlot animals. I oppose crowding, I think the conditions should be "favorable." I'm just trying to get a point in on these pages FOR the point of view that conditions already ARE good. Because many, many people feel this way, and it's unfair not to share that because I'm not an ivory tower author. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Repeat2341 (talkcontribs) 03:27, 3 July 2007 (UTC)


Update: The Mediation committee rejected my request at this time, because I have not yet exhausted all the other avenues of mediation. I am attempting to open various other avenues of discussion:

Village Pump: http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Village_pump_%28assistance%29#Veganism

Third Opinion: http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Third_opinion#Veganism

Wikiquette: http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiquette_alerts#Veganism

Request for Comment: http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Politics http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Religion_and_philosophy


Mediation Cabal: http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Wikipedia:Mediation_Cabal/Cases/2007-07-03_WikiProject_Animal_rights


  • The case with the Mediation Cabal has been closed; unfortunately, there is nothing here to mediate. As has been mentioned by quite a few other editors on your talk page and at the Village pump request you opened, spamming your website to add your personal viewpoint to an article violates Wikipedia policy. Regardless of how logical the argument, adding your own opinions is considered original research. Thank you for your contributions and please let me know if there's anything I can do to further assist. Shell babelfish 18:33, 6 July 2007 (UTC)

Declaw Userbox

Hey guys I made a userbox on declawing animals at {{User:PatPeter/User nocatdeclaw}}

<userbox removed per WP:SOAP, Rockpocket 18:26, 5 July 2007 (UTC)>

If you guys think it is good then I could add it as a subpage of this WikiProject instead of my userspace. -PatPeter 16:55, 5 July 2007 (UTC)

Once again, please note that WP is not a soapbox and should not be used to promote any particular POV. Similarly, the purpose of this Wikiproject is not to promote AR, but to ensure that the issues are covered in an encyclopaedic way. You are free to declare your POV on declawing on your userpage, but it is not somthing our Wikiproject should be hosting. Rockpocket 18:26, 5 July 2007 (UTC)

Assessment scheme

I've made inquiries about a bot to run a setup for assessments, but if anyone is prepared to help out with creating the category system I'll be happy to set up the template at least. Richard001 11:00, 17 July 2007 (UTC)

Hi Richard. I'd be happy to help out in any way I can, though I'm not entirely sure how bot assisted assessments work. Rockpocket 17:51, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
With the bot I just mean a bot could probably set the whole thing up by itself. I've asked about it at the bot requests page anyway. How about I set the template up and explain what needs doing in terms of categories, and you create them for me? Richard001 23:33, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
Sounds good. Feel free to do so here or, if you prefer, on my talk page. Rockpocket 23:46, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
Ok. So I think this categorization scheme is up and running with no major problems. The instructions need to be tweaked a bit, I'll get around to that soon, but otherwise things seem fine. Now all we need to do is start assessing. So, if anyone has some time to kill, choose some articles from Category:Unassessed Animal rights articles, read the instructions at Wikipedia:WikiProject Animal rights/Assessment and get assessing. Thanks, also, to Richard001 for getting this off the ground. Rockpocket 07:26, 19 July 2007 (UTC)

Neutrality again

I was recruited to join this project with the assurance that it encompasses all sides of animal rights question, including animal welfare, and that it is a collaborative mix of people trying to accurately document the complex information available on these issues. While I can see some of this on this discussion page, I see almost none of it on the main project "article" (except for one sentence in the introduction). Right now the main page sounds like clear advocacy -- only the most extremist animal right views are correct, there are no links to moderate let alone opposition organizations, etc.

If this is openly an advocacy project then it has no business being on wikipedia. If it is really about documenting the issues and arguments around animal rights and its alternatives (e.g. animal welfare, animal use) then I'd like to join. But if that's true, the first thing I'd do is a major edit of the main page. Comments?--Jaibe 11:32, 22 July 2007 (UTC)

This project is there to provide a central discussion and organisation point for the general improvement of Animal Rights related articles. This won't include animal welfare, as that is a completely separate issue and in most situations is actually in direct contrast with the rights arguments. All sides of the rights argument are useful, so long as they are kept under control and NPOV is maintained. What we don't want is a project which is unbalanced, either way. If you look through the editor list you will see several editors who hold views that are in opposition with animal rights, such as Rockpocket - and they are some of the most valued editors of the project. What we don't want, is editors who simply edit in a POV manner constantly.
So, the introductory paragraph is quite correct - the project is here to educate people about the animal rights concept and the related movement. The rest of the page follows the standard project layout, outlining scope, membership and related articles. How is this almost none? I don't understand...-Localzuk(talk) 11:58, 22 July 2007 (UTC)
Just like East & West are both directions, Red & Green are both colours, and Dogs & Cats are both carnivores, so Animal Rights, Animal Welfare & Animal Use are all positions on how humans should treat animals. Any group that refuses to discuss Animal Welfare is not seriously objective about Animal Rights. In fact, as you point out, it is impossible to take a stance on animal rights without simultaneously taking one on animal welfare, so to ignore that half of the debate is taking a strong PoV. The one sentence on the project page which seems neutral to me is "We aim to provide intelligent, nuanced, three-dimensional coverage of the topic, not propaganda or simplistic knee-jerk responses, whether for or against." But the response to my query makes it hard to believe that is true.--Jaibe 07:24, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
No, that would make the scope of the project too far reaching. This is a project that covers Animal Rights and Animal Liberation. To say that Animal Welfare is a part of that is simply not true. Yes, the 2 entwine sometimes but they are completely disparate movements with different ideals and different goals. What you are suggesting is like Wikipedia:WikiProject Fascism also covering Communism and Capitalism. The different ideologies are so different that they should be dealt with seperately.
So, if you want Animal Welfare to be covered, by all means start a project on that subject, but it should simply not be part of this one simply because it sometimes is related to Animal Rights.
Also, how does my response make you think that "We aim to provide intelligent, nuanced, three-dimensional coverage of the topic, not propaganda or simplistic knee-jerk responses, whether for or against." is not true? I am getting to a stage of complete confusion, as you are simply not understanding the scope of the project.-Localzuk(talk) 11:29, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
I think the introduction adequately addresses the primary focus of this project (which is made clear in the title). As Localzuk says, I oppose animal rights in general, but I don't really have a problem that i'm part of a project that has its main focus on AR issues. Its not as if the intro is promoting AR, it is promoting interest in AR, which is very different and somthing I do subscribe to. What matters to me is that the article output is neutral and balanced. I think that is generally the case.
In practice, animal welfare (and pro-animal experimentation) issues tend to be included in our remit anyway (as can be seen from the articles in the parent category), due to the overlap of positions in the philosophical spectrum. We are a pretty small wikiproject as it is, and fragmenting those of us that are anti-AR into pro-experimentation and welfare wikiprojects seems counterproductive to me. My advice is to look past the title and intro and join us in improving what really matters - the encyclopaedia. Rockpocket 18:49, 28 July 2007 (UTC)

Animals project proposal

I think it's both a pity and somewhat illogical that we have no animal WikiProject despite the fact that there are over 20 projects that are basically its daughters. There are also other projects that could emerge from it in the future, such as one on animal behavior. The project would provide a central place for people from all animal projects to talk, a central set of guidelines for articles on animals and zoology, and an assessment system for articles related to animals. If you are interested in creating such a project please visit Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Tree of life#Animals project to discuss. Richard001 09:04, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

The following projects would come under the parentage of this project:

Humans are naturally plant-eaters (i.e. meat-eating is unnatural)

I want to use this table below. It's very useful. I wanted to use it in the article Ethics of eating meat. But didn't find it appropriate because that article dealt with "ethics" and not "the level of biological normalcy" of meat-eating. I think eating other animals who, were it not solely for the sheer voracity of meat-eating people, could have been alive, is no less barbaric than cannibalism.


Humans are naturally plant-eaters
according to the best evidence: our bodies
by Michael Bluejay • June 2002 • Updated March 2012

A fair look at the evidence shows that humans are optimized for eating plant foods, according to the best evidence: our bodies.  We're most similar to other plant-eaters, and drastically different from carnivores and true omnivores.Those who insist that humans are omnivores, especially if their argument is basedon canine teeth, would do well to look at what the evidence actually shows. We'll cover that below.
I first wrote this article many years ago, but sincethen Milton Mills, M.D. wrote an excellent paper which covers the anatomy of eating, so let's skip right to my table-ized summary of his research:

Humans are biologically herbivores

Carnivores
Omnivores
Herbivores
Humans
Facial muscles
Reduced to allow wide mouth gape
Reduced
Well-developed
Well-developed
Jaw type
Angle not expanded
Angle not expanded
Expanded angle
Expanded angle
Jaw joint location
On same plane as molar teeth
On same plane as molar teeth
Above the plane of the molars
Above the plane of the molars
Jaw motion
Shearing; minimal side-to-side motion
Shearing; minimal side-to-side motion No shear; good side-to-side, front-to-back
No shear; good side-to-side, front-to-back
Major jaw muscles
Temporalis
Temporalis
Masseter and ptergoids
Masseter and pterygoids
Mouth opening vs. head size
Large
Large
Small
Small
Teeth: Incisors
Short and pointed
Short and pointed
Broad, flattened and spade-shaped
Broad, flattened and spade-shaped
Teeth: Canines
Long, sharp, and curved
Long, sharp and curved
Dull and short or long (for defense) or none
Short and blunted
Teeth: Molars
Sharp, jagged and blade-shaped
Sharp blades and/or flattened
Flattened with cusps vs. complex surface
Flattened with nodular cusps
Chewing
None; swallows food whole
Swallows food whole and/or simple crushing
Extensive chewing necessary
Extensive chewing necessary
Saliva
No digestive enzymes
No digestive enzymes
Carbohydrate digesting enzymes
Carbohydrate digesting enzymes
Stomach type
Simple
Simple
Simple or multiple chambers
Simple
Stomach acidity with food in stomach ≤ pH 1
≤ pH 1
pH 4-5
pH 4-5
Length of small intestine
3-6 times body length
4-6 times body length
10-12+ times body length
10-11 times body length
Colon
Simple, short, and smooth
Simple, short, and smooth
Long, complex; may be sacculated
Long, sacculated
Liver
Can detoxify vitamin A
Can detoxify vitamin A
Cannot detoxify vitamin A
Cannot detoxify vitamin A
Kidney
Extremely concentrated urine
Extremely concentrated urine
Moderately concentrated urine
Moderately concentrated urine
Nails
Sharp claws
Sharp claws
Flattened nails or blunt hooves
Flattened nails

The details are in Mills' paper (PDF). The rest of this article covers mostly angles not in that paper, and since it's long, here's a condensed version:

  • The anatomical evidence tells us that we're optimized for eating almost exclusively plant foods. The only way to come to another conclusion is to ignore the bulk of the anatomical evidence, which is what my critics do. (They either use inferior evidence, such as disputed assumptions about the prehistoric diet, or they cherry-pick the anatomical evidence while ignoring the bulk of it.)
  • The animals most similar to us, the other primates, eat an almost exclusively vegan diet.
  • "Omnivore" doesn't mean 50% plants and 50% animals. Many consider chimpanzees to be omnivores but 95-99% of their diet is plants, and most of the rest isn't meat, it's termites. If humans are omnivores, then the anatomical evidence suggests that we're the same kind: the kind that eats almost exclusively plant foods.
  • Saying we're omnivores because we're capable of eating meat is simply silly. We're capable of eating cardboard, too. And by the "capable" argument, then cats are omnivores, since nearly every commercial cat food has plant ingredients. (Check the label.) Nobody would ever make the argument that cats are omnivores based on what they're capable of eating. But they sure make that argument for humans, enthusiastically.
  • Our so-called "canine teeth" are "canine" in name only. Other plant-eaters (like gorillas, horses, and hippos) have "canines", and chimps, who are almost exclusively vegan, have massive canines compared to ours. (See picture)
  • Our early ancestors from at least four million years ago were almost exclusively vegetarian. (see source)
  • We sleep about the same amount of time as other herbivores, and less than carnivores and true omnivores.
  • The most common cause of choking deaths is eating meat. (source) Real carnivores and omnivores don't have that problem.

    The meat-eating reader already has half a dozen objections to this before s/he's even read the rest of the article, and I will address those objections specifically, but first let me address them generally: It's human nature to want to feel that what we're doing is right, proper, and logical. When we're confronted with something that suggests that our current practices are not the best ones, it's uncomfortable. We can either consider that our choices may not have been the best ones, which is extremely disturbing, or we can reject that premise without truly considering it, so that we don't have to feel bad about our actions. That's the more comfortable approach. And we do this by searching our minds for any arguments we can for why the challenge must be wrong, to justify our current behavior. This practice is so common psychologists have a name for it: cognitive dissonance.

    Think about that for a moment: Our feeling that our current actions are correct isn't based on our arguments. Rather, our actions come first and then we come up with the arguments to try to support those actions. If we were truly logical, we'd consider the evidence first and then decide the best course of action. But often we have it in reverse, because it's too difficult to accept that we might have been wrong.

    This is particularly true when it comes to vegetarianism. It's easy to identify because the anti-vegetarian arguments are usually so extreme, compared to other kinds of discourse. A person who would never normally suggest something so fantastic as the idea that plants can think and feel pain, will suddenly all but lunge for such an argument when they feel their meat-eating ways are being questioned, and they're looking for a way to justify it.  That's psychology for you.

    I used to be in the same position as most readers probably are now.  Long ago my eating habits were challenged by a book I ran across in the library. I didn't want to consider it fairly, because I wanted to keep eating meat. I'd grown up eating it, and I liked it. So I came up with various weak defenses to justify my behavior. But deep down I knew I was kidding myself, and practicing a form of intellectual cowardice. Eventually I knew I had to consider the arguments honestly.

    So I challenge you: stop trying to figure out ways that I "must" be wrong even before you've bothered to read the rest of this article. Instead, read it, and actually consider it rather than reflexively trying to come out with ways to dismiss it out of hand. You can certainly still disagree after you've considered all the evidence -- but not before.

    Most meat-eating readers will find it necessary to try to defeat me, at least in their minds, so let's agree that that would mean providing more and better evidence for your position. One does not win the argument by making a single point, as most of the critics who email me seem to think. The evidence favoring a plant diet for humans is clear, convincing, and overwhelming. There is definitely some evidence for the other side, to be sure, but it's simply not nearly as strong. While you think this would be obvious, I mention it because my critics seem to believe that whoever makes the fewest and weakest points has presented the most convincing case. They somehow seem to believe that all the evidence I present somehow vanishes into thin air when they present their lone argument.

    Evidence that humans are primarily plant-eatersEvidence to the contrary

    Many believe that lunging at at the minority of evidence in the red box makes their position compelling. But it doesn't. The only way to make that position compelling is to present more and better evidence, not to pretend that the green box doesn't exist.

    [skipping some part of the source article]


    "Vitamin B12. End of story."

    I'm not joking when I tack on "End of story" to the sample counter-arguments. People actually make them that way, literally.

    B12 isn't made by animals, it's made by bacteria. (source) It's found where things are unclean. (And meat is dirty.) This easily explains why historically it's been easy to get B12, because until recently we didn't live in a sanitized environment. Plants pulled from the ground and not washed scrupulously have B12 from the surrounding soil. (source) Vegans should take a B12 supplement, not because veganism is unnatural, but because the modern diet is too clean to contain reliable natural sources of dirty B12.

    B12 is also found in lakes, before the water is sanitized. (source) Also, consider that chimpanzees' main non-plant food is termites, and termites are loaded with B12. (source)

    Incidentally, our need for B12 is tiny -- 3 micrograms a day. Not milligrams, micrograms. The amount of B12 you need for your entire life is smaller than four grains of rice. (More on Vitamin B12 from John McDougall, M.D)

    "You're not considering evolution."

    Of course I'm not. Humans' hunting skills are relatively recent in our history but evolution takes place over a much longer period of time. In short, we haven't been hunting for long enough for our anatomy to favor a mixed plant-animal diet.

    Source article