Humanize From Discovery Institute's Center on Human Exceptionalism
Topic

plant rights

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A mountain lion is striding confidently across a rocky hillside in its natural habitat. The majestic feline moves gracefully, showcasing its powerful and agile movements on the uneven terrain.
Image Credit: vadosloginov - Adobe Stock

Now, It’s Wild Animals’ Rights

The push to grant rights to, well, everything continues apace. Now, a long piece in the progressive publication Current Affairs argues that “Wild Animals Deserve Rights, Too.” Animal-rights activist Michael Burrows writes: Wild animals deserve our attention and respect, for the same reasons that we should care about any creature: they are sentient, with recognizable social behaviors and emotions, and just like humans their lives have intrinsic value. But wild animals are also unique, simply by virtue of existing outside of the sphere of human stewardship. They live their lives mostly out of our sight, and we have no hands-on role in their breeding or care. Still, our current system of land management treats wild animals as simply another variable in our nation’s supply-and-demand graph, to be kept Read More ›

african-american-gardener-looking-at-freshly-picked-from-the-ground-golden-beets-at-community-communal-garden-stockpack-adobe-stock
african american gardener looking at freshly picked from the ground golden beets at community communal garden
Image Credit: Joshua Resnick - Adobe Stock

Again with the ‘Plants Are Intelligent’ Nonsense

Periodically, the mainstream media focus on advocacy for the idea that plants are intelligent and/or moral beings. For example, the New York Times ran a column some years back asserting that peas are persons. Why? Pea plants release chemicals in the soil that alert other pea plants of drought conditions. Read More ›