Speaking Out For Those Who Can't!


 

                                                                 Speaking Out For Those Who Can't
 

                                         We can't put an end to human cruelty of animals. But can bring

                                          about change to minify it by the same method used to minify

                                            cruelty to human slaves categorized as property. No, not

                                             a terrible war, but by merely freeing them from the

                                                                     stigma of property.

 

                            

 I am at war with people that abuse, torture,

and wantonly kill animals,

any animal human or non human, in the name

of impulse, greed, need, interest, religion or personal choice.

J. B. Suconik

 

            

 

 

 

                                Animals:

        Why They Must Not Be Brutalized
 

                                                                               J. B. Suconik
                                                                       

                                                                   
 

                                   

                   An author that provides answers to a title.

, 
.                                                        To read the free first ten pages via Email to determine whether or not you wish to learn more, send an Email with your request for the first free ten pages to jbsuconik@aol.com    Do not send money

 Upon receipt of your request we will send via email free copies of the first ten pages of                  Animals Why They Must Not be Brutalized a hard cover 158 page book

 A book entailing valid logical repudiation of the intractable erroneous animals as human property concept, which is a responsible factor of the suffering and violent death of billions of animals every year throughout the world. 

 The pages of this  book  that was purchased for $28.00, and $35.00  can now be yours for $5.00 via Email. should you so wish after reading  the first free ten pages. 

To receive your copy after reading the first free ten pages send, a  check for $5.00 to payee Nuark Publishing ,and your email address to J. B. Suconik 115 Linden Avenue Elmhurst Il 60126 3604 and you will receive via email  the first of two installments of the book several days from receipt of your check. The second installment will be sent within two weeks from receipt of the first.installment of the book.  The book is also available at United States Library of Congress and many  U. S. A. libraries

 

           

 Reviews

 By James A. Cox  Editor- in-Chief  Midwest Book Review                                                       

 "Animals: Why They Must Not Be Brutalized  provides the reader with the relevant facts necessary to disprove fallacious and misleading arguments in support of the animals for recreation, food, research, amusement, and entertainment simply on the basis that we are human and they are not.  Highly recommended, practical reading  for those actively  engaged in or sympathetic to the animals rights and wildlife protection movement. Animals: Why They Must Not Be Brutalized, is  informative, insightful, cogent, challenging, timely, and iconoclastic."

 By Professor Tom Regan

        Regan says: "It covers all the most important issues, and is written simply yet powerfully. I hope all who should  read the book will read his book

 By Rhona Zaid, Ph.D.   "logical and objective formula" 

" In his cohesive approach to the title which draws from legal, historical, and cultural knowledge, Suconik presents compelling arguments for the rights of animals as opposed to animal rights. From the outset he accomplishes a difficult task, to create a  brief yet convenient historical overview of the principle philosophical  and ethical concepts, set within legal analogies, of continuing intolerance toward non human animals. 
      The book covers a wide variety of specific areas, including shelters, fur farming, and usage, vivisection, hunting, and circuses, among many others.
Building his case on a metaphor of the right to property, guaranteed, in theory, to each human under Western democracy, he demonstrates that non human animals have a right to the "property," i.e., the physical bodies that are their own. "Everything that constitutes the cat is the cats own property,"  Thus to deprive a cat of a limb, take his very life, or perhaps more importantly, his liberty, through useless and dangerous (to human and non human animals alike) vivisection experiments-or any other form of  abuse is an infringement of the cat's inalienable right to be a cat. By placing the argument in that context, Suconik erases all  whispers of the absurd from the debate, and offers a
logical and objective formula to guarantee natural rights to all non human animals.                       

       Extending further the legal metaphor to the concept of justice, he draws a parallel between the (once)  practice of slavery in the nineteenth century, and the continuing violence and abuse toward nonhuman animals in the modern world. The analogy accurately reflects attitude. "...the realities of a world in which partisan (i.e., prejudiced)  justice is pandemic comprise, crime and cruelty to which we are habituated." Much as the abolitionists campaigned for a change in attitude, maintains the author, so must advocates of the rights of animals work to secure change.   

        He artfully juxtaposes the central moral and ethical issues of cruelty against all the (other) attendant social consequences that accompany the abuse of nonhuman animals. An excellent example is the chapter on fur "farming," in which he shows the practice as a principle contributor to  pollution and other ecological problems.  He successfully separates the issue from one of self-determination,  a ploy often used by fur trappers and "mongers,"  and their customers, whose selfishness exceeds any understanding of  justice or feelings of compassion. " It is not the legal right to wear fur that is at issue. The issue is the wrongfulness based on cruelty, suffering, and death entailed in the wearing of fur." Suconik who is clearly optimistic about humankind's ability  to learn from history,  imagines  a future where tyranny against its nonhuman brethren will no longer exist.  He reflect the vision shared by all who appreciate and respect the nonhuman animal kingdom."*
*Permission granted by The Civil Abolitionist.

1 n "supporter, backer, champion"  2. According to Thomas Hobbes 1588-1679 human life in a " state of nature" is " solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short."

                         

 By Ed Duvin                                     

 "...Animals: Why They Must Not Be Brutalized is a superb piece of work, and will provide rich nourishment to anyone striving for a just world."

                                                            

 By Kay Sievers 

".

.."The author's language is rich and complex. I admit that several times I stopped to reread a sentence where I had lost the thread of its meaning as I followed the authors elaborate and elegant path through the maze of reason."