Animal rights activists are expected to center human struggles — whether through labor justice, racial equity, or anti-colonial narratives — to be seen as relevant or inclusive. Meanwhile, their own cause — the liberation of nonhuman animals from systemic use, commodification, and enslavement — is treated as secondary, optional, or even distracting. This reveals a structural bias: inclusion is not mutual. Animal rights activists are asked to stretch their ethics across species and systems, while others remain comfortably within anthropocentric boundaries…
The concept of collective liberation is often invoked to justify the expectation that animal rights activists should integrate human justice issues into their advocacy. The idea is that capitalism, patriarchy, colonialism, and speciesism are interlocking systems of oppression—and that activists must forge alliances across movements to dismantle them together. In theory, this is compelling. It promises unity, solidarity, and a shared ethical horizon. But in practice, collective liberation often functions as a one-way demand.
Animal rights activists are expected to center human struggles — whether through labor justice, racial equity, or anti-colonial narratives—to be seen as relevant or inclusive. Meanwhile, their own cause — the liberation of nonhuman animals from systemic use, commodification, and enslavement — is treated as secondary, optional, or even distracting. The ethical clarity of veganism is diluted to serve broader human-centered agendas. Other movements—labor unions, racial justice organizations, feminist collectives — rarely adopt intersectionality to include animals.
Their frameworks already assume a human-centered scope, and their calls for solidarity seldom extend to nonhuman victims. This reveals a structural bias: inclusion is not mutual. Animal rights activists are asked to stretch their ethics across species and systems, while others remain comfortably within anthropocentric boundaries.
This asymmetry doesn’t just burden animal rights activists — it exposes a deeper contradiction in how justice is defined and distributed. If collective liberation excludes those most systematically objectified — nonhuman animals — then it risks replicating the very hierarchies it claims to oppose.
This imbalance places a quiet but persistent pressure on animal rights activists. To gain credibility, they must frame their cause through human-centered lenses — health, labor, colonialism, oppression, trauma. Meanwhile, the true message of veganism — the recognition of nonhuman animals as subjects of moral concern, whose lives have intrinsic value beyond their utility to humans — is often sidelined or diluted.
Veganism, at its core, is a moral stance against the systemic use, commodification, and enslavement of sentient beings. When this message is reframed to prioritize human benefit or strategic alliances, the movement risks losing its clarity, its urgency, and its moral foundation. ROLAND AZAR
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