Many animal advocates are mourning the results of this month’s election. Donald Trump, a President with deep ties to Big Meat, won a decisive victory; ballot initiatives for animals across the nation failed. (If I can brag a little, I predicted both outcomes.) So it might be surprising to hear that I am more confident than ever in our nation’s progress towards animal rights. As I wrote in Current Affairs today:
This is just a short list, however, of reasons to be optimistic. I was stunned to see that, in the days before the election, The New York Times’ flagship Interview podcast featured, not Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance or former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi—those guests were relegated to less important weeks—but Peter Singer, the animal rights philosopher. I recently asked Peter about some of the things he discussed in that interview, including his provocative claim that we might have an obligation to boycott Thanksgiving. Check out the conversation below. And Singer is one of many thought leaders recently making waves in defense of animal rights—and on both sides of the aisle. On the right, Vivek Ramaswamy, one of Trump’s most influential surrogates and co-chair of the new Department of Government Efficiency (with Elon Musk), recently posted that it “shouldn’t be a partisan issue to end animal cruelty.” On the left, one of the leading progressive intellectuals of our age, Rutger Bregman, called the abuse of animals "the greatest moral catastrophe of our time”—and condemned Democrats for their failure to address the issue. This is the sort of constellation of thought leadership and pressure that foreshadows a rising political movement. But that brings me to the most important point: that political movement starts with you, not great thinkers or prestigious media outlets. One of the most consistent findings in the research on social and political change is that it’s driven by large numbers of ordinary people, many of whom are seen (initially) as “fringe.” The reason people like Vivek and Rutger can publicly defend animal rights is because many people like you come out to support them. (Vivek’s recent post on animals, for example, received an astonishing 55,000 likes!) Social media encouragement, however, is just the tip of the iceberg. We need more people to see their personal power in taking direct action to challenge these systems of violence. I’ll have more to say about that in the weeks to come, including an upcoming newsletter (and conversation with the great James Aspey) on little things you can do to push animal rights this Thanksgiving. But I’ll conclude with ten words that will transform, not just your personal impact, but the animal rights movement’s power for change. Find your voice. Find some friends. And fight like hell. This should be the mantra of our movement. Stay tuned for more. What’s up this week?
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