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In Defense of the A.L.F.
from No
Compromise Issue 11
By Rod
Coronado
Since 1985, I have been a member of the Animal Liberation
Front and am currently serving a 57-month sentence in federal
prison for my participation in the 1992 ALF raid on Michigan
State University's Furbearer Research Facility where 32 years
of research intended to benefit the fur farm industry was
destroyed and two mink from the Experimental Fur Farm were
rescued. As a believer in the ALF's campaign of nonviolent
direct action, I would like to respond to Freeman Wicklund's
article on direct action.
Wicklund proposes that the ALF's campaign which has
liberated tens of thousands of animals from suffering and cost
their abusers millions through the nonviolent destruction of
inanimate property used to torture them, has actually resulted
in the increase of animals being exploited. Yet he fails to
present one example of this ever being the case. That was not
the result following the ALF's 1984 raid on the University of
Pennsylvania's Head Injury Laboratory which led to its
closure, nor was it the case in 1991 and 1997 when ALF raids
on Oregon State University's Experimental Fur Farm and Cavel
West's horse slaughterhouse also led to their permanent
closure.
Over the last 15 years, ALF raids on fur retailers have
also led to the closure of dozens of fur shops, and raids in
recent years on fur farms have not only rescued literally tens
of thousands of mink and foxes, but also contributed to the
continuing bankruptcy of these animal concentration camps.
Contrary to Wicklund's supposition, vivisectors such as those
at the University of Arizona, where a 1989 raid resulted in
the liberation of over 1,200 laboratory animals, have
acknowledged that targeting by the ALF has led to the
reduction in the number of animals used in experiments and the
increased vigilance in reducing animal suffering in an attempt
to avoid charges of animal cruelty. We are supposed to believe
that actually achieving these concrete victories towards the
goal of total animal liberation is detrimental and possibly
counter-productive?
While segments of the animal rights movement might accept a
compromise which leaves the current victims of animal abuse in
their present torturous conditions, while hoping that more
passive resistance might reverse the lack of morality among
the world's most powerful industries and governments, we in
the ALF do not. The escalation of institutionalized animal
abuse in this last century has proven that animal abusers are
not guided by morality, but by money. As long as there is a
profit to be made through the exploitation of animals and the
natural world, it will continue despite legitimate
protest.
The ALF, as the underground wing of the animal rights
movement, has for years looked into the eyes of our animal
relations in the laboratories, the factories and on fur farms.
After looking in those eyes, all arguments we have tried to
use to rationalize a less aggressive strategy, for the sake of
a long-term victory are seen by those prisoners as one thing:
betrayal. For those animals suffering today, as we debate the
many ways our movement helps them, surely we should be able to
agree that their immediate liberation whenever possible should
be supported and even encouraged.
The strategic and tactical sacrifice Wicklund proposes the
ALF make by substituting ALF-type direct action for a more
conscious assuaging tactic and strategy, ignores the fact that
both strategies are capable of coexisting for the greater
good, and we need not eliminate any of our diverse means which
have brought about victory for the animals. No one tactic
stands to suffer because of the existence of the other, as
many for years have feared. By questioning the effectiveness
and appropriateness of the ALF's strategy, we are nurturing
our separation from nature and animals, rather than
recognizing our sisterhood and brotherhood with all life that
calls on our hearts to protect those we have chosen to
represent.
When those of us in the animal rights movement truly
embrace the philosophy and belief that all life is sacred,
equal to our own and indeed our very relation, we begin to
realize just how difficult it is to turn away from the tactics
the ALF used to bring about victory here and now for our
nonhuman constituents. The question we in the animal rights
movement should ask ourselves is what course of action would
we justify if it were our own mothers, fathers, sisters,
brothers or dearest loved ones in the torture chambers instead
of unfamiliar nameless animals? Then, is the ALF justified in
its choice of tactics? Once we answer these questions
honestly, we might appreciate that in over 15 years of
operation in America the ALF has yet to cause even one
physical injury-let alone loss of life-in our campaign that
has given liberty to tens of thousands of the silent victims
of human's war against the animal people. Tens of thousands
once loved by those who knew them before their forced
separation.
Still, the ALF is not only the animals' freedom fighters,
but yours, too. Without the support of countless animal rights
activists who have helped find loving homes for liberated
animals and helped finance our campaigns, we would cease to
exist. When the majority in the animal rights movement deems
our actions unnecessary or counterproductive to the goals of
animal liberation, liberations and actions will begin to fade.
It is my experience though, that the majority of us secretly
(if not publicly) cheer when we hear of another ALF raid, such
as those fur farms in the Midwest this past August where
thousands of mink and foxes were given their only chance for
freedom. It is hard to believe that animals or our movement
would be better off without the ALF. Without question, more
animals-not less-are alive and living in peace today because
of the ALF.
In all fairness to those who accuse the ALF of violent
tactics, we must ask ourselves what is violent and nonviolent?
Is a minimal violent response to an attack of violence ever
justified? We may answer the first question, but it is only
for those truly victimized by violence to answer the second,
remembering that Gandhi himself said that, "Violence was
preferable to cowardice...." Is it violent to destroy, with no
harm to any living being, the concrete and steel killing
machines and torture chambers whose sole purpose is the
destruction of innocent life? As the Nuremberg Principles
rightly accused those aware of Nazi war crimes of gross apathy
and inaction, do those of us aware of horrendous crimes
against nature and animals bear any of the moral
responsibility for doing nothing to prevent their suffering
when the only excuse we can cling to is that to do so would
violate the laws of our society and endanger our own
freedom?
The animal rights movement has long explained our moral
obligation towards preventing suffering to the animal races
with words, yet we are sometimes quick to judge and criticize
the ALF who demonstrate that commitment with action: actions
which may be illegal in our unjust society, but most
definitely not immoral or unjustified to the laws of nature
and humanity. Such adherence to a principle of nonviolence as
that practiced by the ALF may be aggressive rather than
passive, but it is still in adherence to even Gandhi's
principles of nonviolence, which never condemned destruction
of property as violence.
The struggle for independence in India and civil rights in
America is often cited as a successful demonstration of the
power of nonviolence, but only someone unfamiliar with these
movements would think passive resistance as exemplified by
Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. was solely responsible for
victory on these two fronts. Wicklund fails to mention the
legitimate segments of both resistances which employed
aggressive nonviolence and even armed struggle, segments which
never were condemned by Gandhi or King, like the Bengali's
revolutionaries whose guerrilla warfare in India surpassed by
years Gandhi's civil disobedience campaign. Nor does he give
credit to African-American nationalists such as Malcolm X, the
Nation of Islam, the Black Panther Party and Angela Davis, who
helped build the foundation of this country's anti-racism
movement which to this day continues its fight against
institutionalized racism without condemnation of those who
believe in self defense and aggressive tactics.
Integral to Wicklund's argument in support of his
definition of non-violence, is the belief that the animal
rights movement must present our struggle to the public via
the media, in a way that will allow it to portray us as
morally superior. While the ALF believes it is
counterproductive to verbally and physically assault anyone,
we do not believe our cause is advanced by passively
demonstrating that we are willing to endure acts of violence
against us. Neither do we demonstrate moral superiority by
helping to create an atmosphere that has seen more physical
violence than any ever witnessed in ALF actions.
With the increase of physical violence against nonviolent
civil disobedience participants, we inadvertently contribute
to the media's ability to shift the focus from the immorality
of animal abuse to the actions of our own activists. It must
also be remembered that historically, movements for social
change have rarely been presented without extreme bias in the
media. This is no coincidence as often media institutions are
business partners with animal abuse industries.
Today's media corporations are controlled by executives
whose business depends largely on advertising dollars supplied
by the industries dependent on animal exploitation. Neither
can we deny that the highly competitive media establishment is
driven not by a desire to present the unbiased truth in
addressing the moral concerns of the world, but by a demand
for news coverage that will sell advertising space and papers,
and boost ratings. If truth and morality were the driving
force behind mainstream journalism, the business practices and
actions of animal and earth destroying industries, the world's
militaries and police would be reported as the true acts of
terrorism that they often are. And the actions-be they legal
or illegal-of the animal rights movement would be presented
for what they really are: actions that not only respect the
sacredness of all life, but also alert the public and
consumers to government and corporate fraud, the endangerment
of human and environmental health; and economic policies that
readily cater to big business at the expense of taxpayers,
public lands and wildlife.
Instead,the media defends the actions of those it profits
from and who share its world view, while using biased
reporting to drive a wedge between the ALF and those who might
otherwise support our actions. Allowing our movement's
strategy to be influenced by the media who retain a vested
interest in animal abuse, is to play into the bloodied hands
of government and big business who hope that the public will
also label the nonviolent actions of the ALF, which spare
innocent life, as acts of terrorism.
Wicklund asks the animal rights movement to determine its
tactics not by its ability to achieve victory against animal
abuse, but by its potential to not offend or isolate the
sensibilities of the media establishment, which reinforces the
lifestyles that sanction animal abuse, or the very people who
themselves create wealth and power through animal abuse.
Pursuing a strategy that hopes to appeal to the morality of
those who rarely if ever demonstrate any towards the non-human
world is noble, but it should not be at the expense of the
very means which have for years spared individual animals from
a life of suffering.
Whether the media presents the animal rights movement in a
favorable light or not has to this day done little to affect
our movement's growth and the public's ability to
differentiate between right and wrong. For this reason, the
ALF's actions throughout the years have been guided by the
determination of what will prevent the suffering of animals in
the future, while also sparing the lives of those presently
being abused. Only secondary consideration is given to whether
such actions will achieve favorable media coverage, something
that is increasingly rare in an age where any challenge
through illegal activity to the unjust economic interests of
this country is labeled as terrorism.
The ALF has never endorsed or participated in physical
violence nor will it ever. The ALF does not support actions
with the intent of slightest risk of causing physical injury
or loss of life and our ability to avoid such violence in
years of operations is no coincidence. We are not fighting a
violent war, but fighting with aggressive nonviolence to end
the one against nonhuman life.
Every member of my past ALF cells who have carried out
raids on laboratories, fur and factory farms and other
institutions of animal abuse in the last 13 years, have been
motivated not by hate or a willingness to rationalize or use
violence, but love and a tremendous sense of compassion for
the other races of life with whom we share the earth. My
fellow Animal Liberation Front volunteers have always been
grounded in such a reverence and respect for life and freedom
that, together, in the course of every ALF action we ever
participated in, we were willing to risk losing our own to
obtain that of our victimized animal relations.
Far from compromising the principles of non-violence, the
ALF's actions have and always will be those of a highly
morally disciplined group of caring human beings, whose
efforts would be hypocritical if they ever sanctioned physical
violence. The ALF exists in part to provide an avenue of
freedom for those innocent beings the animal rights movement
is unable to rescue legally at this time. The ALF brings hope
when others feel hopeless. For the peaceful warriors of the
ALF, nonviolent direct action to save lives remains not our
choice, but every enlightened human being's obligation.
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