There are many solutions to animal welfare and rights issues, including:
These have evolved into the (Mellor & Reid), which focuses on promoting positive experiences (nutrition, environment, health, behavior, mental state) rather than merely avoiding negatives. There are many solutions to animal welfare and
From this viewpoint, the issue isn't just how we use animals, but that we use them at all. This philosophy often draws parallels between animal rights and human civil rights, arguing that "speciesism"—discrimination based on species—is a prejudice similar to racism or sexism. For a strict rights advocate, the ultimate goal is the end of animal farming, animal testing, and the use of animals in entertainment like circuses or rodeos. The Modern Intersection For a strict rights advocate, the ultimate goal
However, the two camps share a common enemy: . The most urgent reality is that 70 billion land animals are slaughtered annually for human consumption, and countless billions more live in conditions that meet the legal definition of torture. For a strict rights advocate