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In the summer of 1822, a British politician named Richard Martin pushed a bill through Parliament that seemed, by the standards of the era, absurdly sentimental. "Martin's Act" was the first piece of animal protection legislation in the world, aimed at preventing the "cruel and improper treatment of cattle." Critics laughed. Yet, two centuries later, that single spark has ignited a global ethical movement that questions every aspect of our relationship with non-human beings.
Cultivated meat (lab-grown) and plant-based proteins are changing the game. If we can eat chicken nuggets made from cells in a bioreactor, the welfare vs. rights debate becomes moot. No animal suffers; no animal is exploited. In the summer of 1822, a British politician
While often used interchangeably, animal welfare animal rights No animal suffers; no animal is exploited
Critics of argue it is impractical and misanthropic. If we cannot test life-saving medicines on rats, how do we cure childhood leukemia? If we cannot raise livestock, how do we feed billions of people on arid land unsuitable for crops? Rights, they argue, depend on duties—and a rat cannot understand its duties, nor can a lion respect a gazelle's "right to life." If we cannot raise livestock
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