Animal Changes

Animal Changes is the topic of the final episode of Season One of the N*EW* Thoughts podcast

I open with a viral Donald Trump claim about immigrants eating pets and use it to explore how we dehumanize people by turning them into “animals.”

I then trace my own journey from a hunting childhood to a Christian conversion and tentative vegetarianism, share stories of my companion pets, and criticize careless hunting and factory farming.

The episode brings in thinkers—Derrida, Ken Stone, Carol J. Adams, Val Plumwood, and Martha Nussbaum—to discuss animal sentience, the predator–prey dynamic in the Bible, and the ethical implications of edibility and sacrifice.

I encourage us to treat sentient animals as beings with species-specific lives, call for more compassionate practices, and close the season by asking listeners to “rest from cruel dominion” and rethink our relationship to animals.

EXPLORE:

Read a preview of Tony’s essay, *The Bible Isn’t Edible.* 

Read Tony’s sermon, *Rest From Cruel Dominion.*

Read *Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy* by Matthew Scully.

Read *The Animal That Therefore I Am* by Jacques Derrida.

Read *Reading the Hebrew Bible with Animal Studies* by Ken Stone.

Read *The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegan Critical Theory* by Carol J. Adams.

Read *The Eye of the Crocodile* by Val Plumwood (edited by Lorraine Shannon).

Read *Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility* by Martha C. Nussbaum. 

Read “Questions of Biblical Ambivalence and Authority Under A Tree Outside Delhi; Or, The Postcolonial And The Postmodern” in *Postcolonial Biblical Criticism: Interdisciplinary Intersections*, by Stephen D. Moore:

Read *Jacob’s Wound: Homoerotic Narrative in the Literature of Ancient Israel* by Theodore Jennings, Jr.

On the Urgent Matter of the Bible; Or, On How Vegetarians Should Use The Bible

AI-generated image depicting Genesis 27, emphasizing vv 16-17, inscribed on the skin of a goat.


“Vegetarianism is an act of the imagination. It reflects an ability to imagine alternatives to the texts of meat.” (Adams 2024 [1990], 180).

  1. How Should Vegetarians Use the Bible?

New Testament scholar Stephen Moore draws our attention to a “notable interfacing” of postcolonial, poststructuralist, and biblical readings in Homi Bhabha’s essay, “Signs Taken for Wonders” (2005, 81). This “is one essay in which Bhabha is more than usually emphatic,” Moore observes, “that the colonized are engaged in active subversion of the colonizer’s discourse, in this case, the colonizer’s Scripture” (2005, 90).

Moore explains that in “Signs Taken for Wonders,” Bhabha describes a gathering in May 1817 of “some 500 souls, men, women, and children, seated in the shade of trees [outside Delhi] and engaged in scripture reading and debate” (2005, 86). The souls gathered in the shade are taught by an Indian missionary, who tells them, “These books . . . teach the religion of the European Sahibs. It is THEIR book; and they have printed it in our language, for our use.” Hearing this, someone replies, “Ah! no, that cannot be, for they eat flesh” (2005, 91, italics added).

The 500 agree to be baptized, but they refuse to receive the Eucharist “because the Europeans eat cow’s flesh, and this will never do for us” (Moore 2005, 91). They decline to complete the Catholic initiation process by receiving the vegetarian Meal of meals, the Eucharist, because Europeans eat meat, especially cow’s flesh.

But what do the Indian people, who believe cows are sacred, do with the Bible of the European meat-eaters? A second missionary observes that “[every Indian] would gladly receive a Bible. Why? That he may store it up with curiosity; sell it for a few pice, or use it for waste paper” (Moore 2005, 92)

For “every Indian,” the Bible of the Western meat-eaters is a collector’s item, a cheap commodity, or toilet paper. Moore describes such uses of biblical literature as forms of “resistant reading of the colonial Bible” (Moore 2005, 92, emphasis original)

Such resistant reading practices, “ones that resist by refusing to read,” hover over the surfaces of the Bible. They enable resistance “by remaining at the level of the material signifier, the papery substance itself—wondrously thin, almost transparent, yet wholly tangible . . .” (Moore 2005, 92).

The nearly 175-year-old example of 500 Indian Christian vegetarians, including children, might shock modern Western vegetarian readers of biblical literature into the realization that the Bible can be used in surprising ways, but it isn’t edible. While the contemporary Bible is plant-based, at least in its printed forms, papyrus is not the material condition of the Bible. The Bible is meatier than it first appears, at least to its modern readers.

As we will soon discover, the intuition of the 500 Indian Christian souls—that the Bible’s meatiness is inside-out—is more than confirmed by the texts that make up biblical literature. In fact, biblical literature is structurally wedded to a predator-prey dynamic. This presents a serious problem for the Bible’s Western vegetarian and vegan readers.

In what follows, I attend to the Bible’s material condition, to the reason for its textual survival—namely, dead animals. I then make the predator-prey logic that runs through biblical literature visible. Finally, through a (re)reading of Stéphane Mallarmé’s “Crisis of Verse” and 2 Samuel 6, I propose a queer vegetarian hermeneutics that refuses the “common sense” of (divine) predation and intervenes in it, letting fall through the meaty “sheet” of the Western Book of books queer possibilities for anti-predatory (non)human animal relations.

This essay is seeking a home in an academic journal; so, the rest of it has been omitted while the essay is under consideration for publication elsewhere. I hope you enjoyed this small preview of its theme and argument!


WORKS CITED

Adams, Carol. J. 2024. The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegan Critical Theory. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. Original work published in 1990.

Bhabha, Homi. 2004. The Location of Culture. London and New York: Routledge.

Mallarmé, Stéphane. 2007. “Crisis in Verse.” In Divagations. Translated by Barbara Johnson, 201-211. Cambridge, MA and London: Belknap Press. Original work published in 1897.

Moore, Stephen. D. 2005. Questions of Biblical Ambivalence and Authority Under A Tree Outside Delhi; Or, The Postcolonial And The Postmodern. In Postcolonial Biblical Criticism: Interdisciplinary Intersections. Edited by Stephen D. Moore and Fernando F. Segovia, 79-96. London and New York: T & T Clark International.


The Anti-Homoness of Straight Hipster Politics: On Homo Family Values and the Question of Political Change

David Wojnarowicz, Untitled (Genet), 1990


1.

Hipster irony appeals to overly earnest straight people, especially straight men (and their sometimes adoring queer fans).

Here’s one version of straight hipsterism: Acceptance of homosexuality and homo marriage occurred relatively quickly in the U.S. because homosexuality and homo marriage aren’t really hip.

The homo who desires to marry and build a family wants nothing more, according to the hipster, than to be “one of the boys.” In other words, the legal/political recognition of homos and their family values is not real political change.

2.

Hipsters aren’t wrong, to be fair, for having some fun at the expense of homos who, like hipsters, want to keep their position high up the ladder of respectability and be cool.

Some homos want nothing more than to be straight (but not that straight).

The problem is that hipster self-righteousness requires a sacrifice: homo difference and dignity.

3.

To the hipster, homoness is the enemy of coolness. Homoness is the recapitulation of normie-cis-white-male-straightness. 

That’s why I think hipster irony is just really fucking dull. It’s more of the same: straight (male) resentment and self-righteousness masquerading as progressive politics.

Nothing irritates hipsters more than homo joy and affluence.

4.

That’s why, to riff on David Halperin’s description of straight hipster irony in How To Be Gay (2012)straight hipsters just love to turn homos and their family values into the new normie straight dude. Homos become “fodder for [hispter] irony”: 

By acknowledging straight hipsters’ affection for such quaint cultural forms and practices [like marriage], while refusing to express that affection except in a grotesque, exaggerated fashion, in case someone should get the wrong idea, straight hipster irony maintains and consolidates (though it’s much too cool to flaunt it) a distant and disengaged position for hipsters—that is, a position of relative social privilege (395-96).

Straight hipster irony enables you to distance yourself from your straightness while castigating the desires of homos who want to marry and build families of their own.

5.

Here’s an example of hipster homo (but not that homo) love: “It is weirdly possible to imagine a scenario,” writes one Substack hipster, “where the United States becomes a violently misogynistic white ethnostate, but gay marriage still remains the law of the land.”

Is our hipster arguing that the reason homos and homo marriage gained relatively quick cultural acceptance is that they fit, hand in glove, within the normie logic of “a violently misogynistic white ethnostate”?

Is our hipster asserting that homos and their family values enjoy popular support in the U.S. because they are entirely compatible with normie-cis-white supremacy-straight-guyness (pronouns: he/bruh)? 

Who needs enemies when you have allies like the hipster! 

6.

In his view, homos and their family values have achieved quick legal/political victories because they have chosen to suck the cock of cis-white-straight-dudeness.

“Pointing out that context,” our hipster claims, “is not a critique of the movements that succeeded as being ‘secretly’ conservative or oppressive, but instead a critique of the society that only lets itself do good things for bad reasons” (emphasis added). 

Who needs enemies when you have neighbors like that! 

7.

Anyway, according to the hipster view, Pete Buttegig won the Democratic presidential primary in Iowa in 2019 because he just loves sucking white dick.

Any evidence to the contrary is evidence of a cover-up. 

Yasmin Nair, for example, asserts that even the Buttigieg kids are part of a secret, oppressive conservative plot to win white-normie-straight-bruh political power: 

Given their talent for curation, it’s hard not to wonder if the Buttigieges didn’t also choose their [biracial] children as carefully as Melania Trump chose her outfits. This doesn’t mean that the pair don’t love their incredibly adorable children, but given that even Chasten looks like he was chosen from a catalog of ‘Good Gay Men,’ it’s safe to say that even the most seemingly personal details of Pete’s life are carefully chosen.

8.

Hipster paranoia (i.e., nothing good can happen in people’s hearts or society) may also explain why our hipster fails to mention the HIV/AIDS crisis in his essay.

While the hipster does recognize that straight opposition to homo love was (remains?) violent and horrific, extending well into the 1990s before giving way to growing support for homos and their family values starting in the early 2000s, he does not seem to know that the 1990s were also the worst years of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in, for example, Chicago.

The hipster can’t even entertain the idea that witnessing homos suffering and dying in large numbers because of a demonic virus, which our government was too slow to address, might have been a bridge to compassion that led to a genuine change of heart among our fellow citizens. 

9.

And because any legal/political recognition is necessarily a form of assimilation, the hipster can’t risk acknowledging (or take seriously) the substantial legal/political recognitions won by Black and Trans* people over the past few decades.

So, he doesn’t mention that the vast majority of Americans support some form of police reform. Likewise, the hipster doesn’t seem to realize that most Americans do support Trans* people. Our hipster, however, dismisses the very real gender dysphoria experienced by Trans* youth, categorizing it as a common experience for all youth going through puberty.

Also, our hipster doesn’t mention that it was a conservative Supreme Court Justice, Neil Gorsuch, who authored the majority opinion in Bostock v. Clayton County, which declared it unconstitutional to discriminate against Trans* people in the workplace. 

Finally, the hipster’s faith in the straight coddling of homo desire likely blinds him to the fact that the Supreme Court is considering whether or not to relitigate the constitutionality of same-sex marriage on Friday, November 7th, 2025 (Thankfully, the Court chose [for now] not to relitigate homo marriage. It sure must be nice not to have one’s dignity up for routine legal review.)

10. 

Homos and their family values gained quick acceptance, according to sophisticated hipsters, because they offered a lifeline to normie-cis-white-straight-maleness.

In reality, it was the other way around. 

Homosexual activists made surprising use of a straight male invention: the concept of homosexuality.

Homo identity politics was so successful (like all forms of Black, Trans,* and Women’s respectability/identity politics before and after it) precisely because it compromised with the protocols of the dominant masculinist culture, the culture—then, now, and for the foreseeable future—in power.

Specifically, homo identity politics accepted the conservative logic that sex(uality) is gender and gender is sex(uality). 

The idea that homoness is anything more than a sexuality, anything other than a sexual orientation/identity—like a culture, a specific lifestyle, or a uniquely “feminine” way of relating to women, men, and the world—remains a controversial subject in homo circles. 

Take a look at Andrew Sullivan’s Virtually Normal (1996) and Horace Griffin’s Their Own Receive Them Not (2010)–very different versions of homo identity politics.

In How To Be Gay (2012), Halperin cogently analyzes the history of homo identity politics—the history, that is, of what Judith Butler calls a “necessary error” (Bodies That Matter [1993], 175).  

11.

Homo political gains have, indeed, come at the expense of a different history: the history of (homo)sexuality.

The concept of homosexuality was created in the late 1800s (and with the publication of the RSV, incorporated into various biblical texts in the 1940s), but I am more interested in the history of what terms like “homosexuality” are meant to describe—namely, desire. 

We are, in a sense, “born that way.” We are born as wild and wildly desiring animals, entirely dependent on the care of our parents and society—the very “institutions” that frustrate our desires.

Although no one knows what causes one’s sexual orientation, David Halperin offers a promising idea. He claims that “[l]ong before they ever have sex . . . young people have genre” (343).

Briefly, genres are formal rules that govern specific social interactions. Halperin explains that what a server might say to a complete stranger in Ann Arbor differs from what a server in Paris might say in a similar situation without causing a scandal (131). 

Genres are also pragmatic. “[T]hey provide people, in their daily practices, with concrete means of interacting with one another and negotiating specific social situations—and they instruct them in the right ways to do so (132).

Halperin suggests that genre might be all that’s necessary to create consistent, persistent, and insistent non-standard or queer relationships with mainstream cultural forms, including marriage, masculinity, authenticity, abjection, and so on. Halperin writes,

[Genre] may be all [children] need in order to forge certain non-standard relations to normative sexual and gender identities. For by making non-standard emotional connections to cultural forms, they effectively refuse the pressing social invitation to assume a conventional, heteronormative positioning and they effectively acquire non-standard sexual and gender identities, identifications, and orientations (343).

Once acquired, a non-standard relationship to cultural forms becomes, like everything experienced in our youth, difficult to change in adulthood. There are no “fresh starts.”

The second chance that is your adult life is an opportunity to change, to the extent possible, your biological and cultural heritage. If you’re lucky, your adult life is a question: What am I interested in?

12.

Our hipster believes homos have failed to launch. For him, homos and their family values easily fit into the standard mold of normie-cis-white-straight-family values. Acceptance of homo family values is not, according to hipsters, a genuine legal/political change.

Queer theoretical differences, like those between Leo Bersani and Judith Butler (1995), David Halperin and Leo Bersani (1996), Martha Nussbaum and Judith Butler (1999), Lee Edelman’s No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive (2004) and How To Be Gay (2012), are all about the character of and possibilities for real political change.

In a forthcoming essay, I argue that Martha Nussbaum misjudges Judith Butler’s politics as “hip quietism.” Instead, I argue, Butler’s politics is a subtle form of compromised resistance to the norms of straightness.

To be clear, Nussbaum is not opposed to resistance as a political strategy. She is not a radical political figure. For example, Nussbaum does not believe, as Michal Warner does, that “marriage is unethical” (The Trouble With Normal [1999], vii). 

In her review of Warner’s book, Nussbaum highlights the importance of cultural forms and routines for most people (232). Still, I believe she is too optimistic about the kind of change humans can achieve to appreciate the subtlety of Butler’s queer politics. 

13.

It is manifestly true that Butler’s theory is highly pessimistic about the potential for legal/political change. Our being here is premised on being subject to the desires, norms, and influences of the dominant culture. 

Even so, Butler clearly has faith in the possibility of change. Performativity is their term for a limited but creatively resistant form of freedom. 

“The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and lesbian sexuality,” Butler argues in Gender Trouble (1990), “does not mean that those constructs determine gay and lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or reducible to those constructs. . . . The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its claims to naturalness and originality” (158, emphasis original). 

The Butlerian subject is us. It is normal and queer. 

14.

In the essay on Butler I hope to finish soon, I also argue that How To Be Gay may be read as a redescription of Butler’s political ambition, as initially described in Gender Trouble and Bodies That Matter.

Halperin’s understanding of the politics of homo subculture perfectly captures the character of Butler’s queer politics.

Their queer politics “reckons with the world as it is, with the way we lived and still live now, and [seek] less to change the world than to resist its inflictions (even at the cost of appearing reactionary, rather than progressive)—[thereby offering] an important emotional and political resource . . . to many different kinds of socially disqualified people, at least to those whose sense of irredeemable wrongness makes them willing to pay the achingly high price for it” (219-220). 

15.

In summary, participation in what’s normal is not a matter of personal choice.

You can’t choose your sex(uality) or gender (realities created and enforced by the dominant culture before we come into the world and learn to speak its language).

That comforts some homos. And why should homos be different from nearly everyone else? 

In any case, it is also true that the dominant regime can’t completely control what you do with its normative categories. 

As Fester from the Addams Family reminds us, “Normal is difficult to achieve.”

That’s why queer politics also appeals to many homos. Failing to take “normal” too seriously is the point of queer politics.

16.

But our hipster advises us to embrace a politics of fluidity. We are advised not to stress about sex(uality) and gender norms.

I guess we are to entirely forget our hipster’s essay, wherein he ranks similarly situated minority groups on a ladder of value. If homos are even on his ladder, we are farthest away from the heavenly clouds of political coolness.

17.

The hipster seems to believe that recognizing the legitimate suffering of the hip and queer, Black communities, and Trans* people requires a sacrifice: the difference and dignity of homos. 

If that’s right, the hipster’s argument collaborates with HIV/AIDS. It collaborates with evil. 

Meanwhile, the option of carefully attending to admittedly uncool forms of queer desire remains available, if seldom considered and even less often taken—at least by straight (male) hipsters and their adoring queer fans.  

Free Speech, Free Reign: The Pious Speech of Andrew Sullivan

Another chapter in the radicalization of young Andrew Sullivan, generated by AI based on the essay below –


“Words connect with the rational part of our brains; images target the sub-rational. And in a sub-rational world, liberal democracy simply cannot exist” Andrew Sullivan 


Andrew Sullivan can’t get enough of the video of Charlie Kirk’s murder. In a recent Substack, he claims to have “watched that video a couple of times.” 

The video of Kirk’s shooting, along with the recording of a young Ukrainian woman’s murder on a train in Charlotte, North Carolina, especially the quasi-beheading character of the killings, seem to have reinvigorated Sullivan’s old-world imagination. 

Sullivan correctly notes that these truly horrific murders attack two core principles of any decent democratic society: “the right to be safe in public, and the right to speak freely without fear.” Sadly, Sullivan goes on to write a Tudor-era fiction, and he needs villains.

Andrew enlists “the woke” as his story’s villains: Muslims, critical theorists of all kinds, anti-exclusionary feminists like Judith Butler, faggy gays, Trans* activists, Black activists, and others. These villains are those who Sullivan believes can’t handle the truth: speech is never violent. 

“The woke left, especially in the fringes the mainstream left adamantly refuses to rein in, condemn, or control,” Sullivan asserts, “bears some responsibility [for Kirk’s murder], because it has long equated speech with violence.” The “deeply illiberal idea” that a “bullet is no different in kind than a verbal provocation” has, according to Andrew, been forced upon a nonconsenting “young generation” by “the academic and journalistic left.”

Sullivan believes that speech and violent behavior are fundamentally separate realities, and he ridicules the supposedly woke notion that speech and violent actions can—and do—overlap. However, every democracy acknowledges a connection between speech acts and violent or hateful conduct. 

In the U.S., the law makes a distinction between what is considered harm and actual harm. For example, it may hurt Andrew’s feelings if I call him a twat—but legally, my disagreement with Andrew is actionable only if I slap or scratch him. Actual harm involves a physical toll (Martha Nussbaum points out that courts recognize that smell can cause actual harm. See Nussbaum, Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame and the Law [2004], e.g., 158-163). 

A similar logic applies when distinguishing between speech, protected by the First Amendment, and conduct, which the law can restrict. Consider R.A.V. v. St. Paul (1992), a case Judith Butler discusses in Excitable Speech (1997).

In R.A.V. v. St. Paul, the Supreme Court ruled that a white person burning a cross in a Black family’s front yard is speech, not violent or harmful conduct. Therefore, St. Paul’s ordinance banning such burnings was declared unconstitutional. 

The Court corrected itself in Virginia v. Black (2003). In this case, the Court ruled that Virginia’s law banning all cross burnings, regardless of context, is unconstitutional. However, the Court also decided that when context shows that a speech act, like cross burning, is intended to cause harm, it becomes unprotected speech and may be lawfully regulated. 

U.S. courts distinguish between speech and violent acts (e.g., burning a cross at a klan rally). In these cases, words can—and do—act like bullets, piercing our psyches with unforgiving force, but that doesn’t make them unlawful or punishable by law. 

U.S. courts also acknowledge a connection between speech and violent acts (e.g., a klan member burning a cross on a Black family’s yard). Every democracy affirms that words can—and do—act like bullets when they are fired off with the intent, for example, of inciting a mob to attack the U.S. Capitol.

Andrew’s beef with his young woke despisers (he’s consistently miffed that the young woke don’t like him) is that they won’t make a distinction between speech and violence. Thus, the young woke believe, according to Sullivan, that violence/self-defense/legal regulation is always justified agianst speech they don’t like because such speech is always actually harmful speech.

Sullivan, on the other hand, contends that speech is never actually harmful. Words can never actually hurt us. Thus, violence/self-defense/legal regulation is never justified against speech.

So what?

Denying any overlap between speech and violent conduct enables Sullivan to neatly drop all speech acts in one bucket and all violent acts in another. Charlie Kirk’s public murder on a college campus in Utah, the young Ukrainian woman’s slaying on a train in Charlotte, and George Floyd’s death at the knees of a white cop in Minneapolis all go in the same bucket. 

Likewise, arguments against gay marriage and abortion are treated similarly to arguments that deny or demean Trans* existence and oppose parents’ rights to make healthcare decisions for their Trans* children (while at the same time justifying the right of religious conservatives to determine the character of their children’s public school education [see also the New Thoughts Podcast, episode 4, Sex Changes]). 

Sullivan’s refusal to recognize any link between speech and violent or hateful behavior allows him to take rhetorical aim from a high position on the whitewashed tomb of piety. “Tell the truth fearlessly,” Andrew preaches, “but always be open to correction. Decency, civility, nonviolence, humor, humility, grace: these are the virtues a free society needs to endure.” 

Yet, without irony, humor, or humility, Sullivan claims, “It is never ‘hate’ to tell the truth: that men are not women; that children cannot meaningfully consent to sex changes. . . ,” while insisting that “the mainstream left . . . rein in, condemn, or control” the so-called “woke left,” including, presumably, parents of Trans* children (emphasis added). 

It is dishonest, absurd, and manifestly wrong to either (a) collapse the distinction between speech and violent actions or to (b) deny any connection between speech and hateful acts. But what should a fair democracy do about and with disturbing speech?

The delicious irony is that Sullivan’s answer to that question (i.e., no regulation) closely resembles Judith Butler’s, as it is presented in Excitable Speech (1997).

Although Butler does acknowledge the overlap between speech and harm—arguing that speech can harm the human subject (i.e., the human being) because the subject is made of language—their solution to hurtful speech is resistant speech: more speech (of a different kind).

In fact, it is Butler’s reasonable, in my view, insistence that resistant speech acts–rather than political/legal intervention/regulation, are the solution to, say, fascist speech acts, that contributes to Martha Nussbaum’s damming assessment of Butler’s theory–worked out in Gender Trouble (1990) through to The Psychic Life of Power (1997)–as “quietism.”

Nussbaum concludes that Butler’s theory “collaborates with evil” (see Nussbaum, Philosophical Interventions [2012/1999], 215; responses and Nussbaum’s reply, 215-222).

I cover the specifics of Butler’s theory and Nussbaum’s critique of it in a forthcoming essay. For now, I want to emphasize what is at stake (at least for us villains) in denying any link between speech and violent or hateful behavior, namely, the monarchic spirit manifestly possessing some speech acts is allowed to go entirely unchecked.

As I was reading Sullivan’s Substack, I kept thinking about Anne Boleyn as she’s portrayed in the Broadway musical SIX. In the song “Sorry, Not Sorry,” Boleyn reflects on her tonsorial audacity. 

Speaking of Catherine of Aragon, she says, “[King Henry VIII] doesn’t wanna bang you / Somebody hang you. . . . / Mate, what was I meant to do? . . . / Sorry, not sorry ’bout what I said / I’m just tryna have some fun / Don’t worry, don’t worry, don’t lose your head / I didn’t mean to hurt anyone.” 

Later, Anne recalls Henry taking issue with her flirtatious behavior with other men. She responds, “Mate, just shut up / I wouldn’t be such a b- / If you could get it up. . . . And now he’s going ’round like off with her head. Yeah, I’m pretty sure he means it (seems it).”

Even while lamenting that Trump is incapable of cooling the rhetorical temperature, and demanding that we “[c]ool the rhetoric,” Sullivan denies that what he—and any of us—says has any real consequences. Kirk/Andrew desperately wants us to believe that he is just having some good ole, traditional political fun. Like, what is he meant to do?

Don’t lose your head, Andrew. 

Kirk/Andrew’s “free” speech leads to the free reign of conservatives over the most vulnerable in U.S. society, such as immigrants, Trans* adults and children, Muslims, and others. 

That’s why any just democracy should make speech acts that re-create and re-enforce a U.S. caste system, speech acts that come at the cost of the dignity of others, speech acts that demean and subjugate fellow citizens—and those who aspire to become citizens—not worth the cost of such illiberal behavior. 

We can begin to rid our democracy of its monarchic spirits by supporting, defending, and fully funding a rigorous public school education in the sciences and humanities.

Coming Soon

– AI generated image based on the content of the post below –

This summer has been full for our family! We have been traveling a lot, including to Alaska, and next week we’re heading to New York to catch Broadway shows like Six, Death Becomes Her, Hamilton, and Maybe Happy Ending. So, the time to read, write, and cast has been compressed!

But here is what I am working on:

For Gay Thoughts, I am working on an essay bringing together Judith Butler, Martha Nussbaum, and Adam Phillips on the purposes of theory. I will call it When (Not) To Play Around.

Speaking of Butler, I was enjoying a dry cappuccino at Cup of Joe in Raleigh yesterday–rereading Gender Trouble–and the only reality that perplexed me at all was the young woman dressed like a cat, acting like a cat, and talking (in that voice we sometimes speak to cats) to her cat stuffies that she had laid out on her table as she … studied? (Sometimes she would scold them, making me laugh— but I physically jumped when she unexpectedly lunged into my space!).

As for Butler’s writing, it was not only thrilling but entirely comprehensible. I loved rereading it as much as when I first read it (although the pleasures associated with reading Gender Trouble now are informed by decades more study, whereby I earned my views about gender, identification, and many of the primary sources Butler reads).

If you have not read Gender Trouble, why not? Alternatively, here’s a great, short YouTube video of Butler explaining gender.

For New Thoughts, I am working on two new episodes. The first, Sex Changes: On Trans* Desire(s)–will feature Butler, specifically their recent book, Who’s Afraid of Gender? Kara Fisher has a great interview with Butler on her podcast. Listen in here.

I am also working on an episode regarding Social Media Changes and Teens. It will feature a conversation between Jonathan Haidt’s book, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness, and Matt Ritchel’s book, How We Grow Up: Understanding Adolescence.

Animal Changes The NEW Thoughts Podcast

Host Tony Hoshaw opens with a viral Donald Trump claim about immigrants eating pets and uses it to explore how we dehumanize people by turning them into "animals." He traces his own journey from a hunting childhood to a Christian conversion and tentative vegetarianism, shares stories of his companion pets, and criticizes careless hunting and factory farming. The episode brings in thinkers—Derrida, Ken Stone, Carol J. Adams, Val Plumwood, and Martha Nussbaum—to discuss animal sentience, the predator–prey dynamic in the Bible, and the ethical implications of edibility and sacrifice. Hoshaw argues for treating sentient animals as beings with species-specific lives, calls for more compassionate practices, and closes the season asking listeners to "rest from cruel dominion" and rethink our relationship to animals. EXPLORE: Read a preview of Tony's essay, *The Bible Isn't Edible* here: https://gay-thoughts.com/2025/12/04/on-the-urgent-matter-of-the-bible-or-on-how-vegetarians-should-use-the-bible/ Read Tony's sermon, *Rest From Cruel Dominion* here: https://gay-thoughts.com/2024/05/15/rest-from-cruel-dominion-embracing-mercy-on-the-sabbath-day/ Read *Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy* by Matthew Scully: https://www.amazon.com/Dominion-Power-Suffering-Animals-Mercy/dp/0312319738 Read *The Animal That Therefore I Am* by Jacques Derrida: https://www.amazon.com/Animal-Therefore-Perspectives-Continental-Philosophy/dp/082322791X Read *Reading the Hebrew Bible with Animal Studies* by Ken Stone: https://www.sup.org/books/religious-studies/reading-hebrew-bible-animal-studies Read *The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegan Critical Theory* by Carol J. Adams: https://caroljadams.com/spom-the-book Read *The Eye of the Crocodile* by Val Plumwood (edited by Lorraine Shannon): https://press.anu.edu.au/publications/eye-crocodile Read *Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility* by Martha C. Nussbaum: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Justice-for-Animals/Martha-C-Nussbaum/9781982102517 Read "Questions of Biblical Ambivalence and Authority Under A Tree Outside Delhi; Or, The Postcolonial And The Postmodern" in *Postcolonial Biblical Criticism: Interdisciplinary Intersections*, by Stephen D. Moore: https://www.amazon.com/Postcolonial-Biblical-Criticism-Interdisciplinary-Postcolonialism/dp/0567045307 Read *Jacob's Wound: Homoerotic Narrative in the Literature of Ancient Israel* by Theodore Jennings, Jr.: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/jacobs-wound-9780826417121/      
  1. Animal Changes
  2. Social Changes
  3. Sex Changes
  4. Summer Update
  5. Sexual Changes

Thanks for staying tuned in!

And remember: even if you are (headed) back to school, there is still time left to enjoy the summer!

Does the resurrection of the dead make sense?

Sir Stanley Spencer, The Resurrection, Cookham, 1924-7

Quick thought(s) on the sense of resurrection, the interruption of sentient animal thriving, and the experience of life:

Resurrection: an unnatural event (i.e., an act of God or a miracle) whereby sentient animals are returned to significant striving/thriving (i.e., to purposeful living) after the experience of dying and remaining dead for more than one day.

The resurrection of the dead is surely an irrational/unnatural idea. Yet, I think it does make sense as an expression of sentient animal desire for uninterrupted thriving.

Sentient animals strive significantly; that is, they engage in long-term projects, like family building (see, e.g., Martha Nussbaum, Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility–or my reading of the relevant philosophical arguments, though for a different reason, here). Significant striving is purposeful living. Purpose is an enjoyable characteristic of sentient animals’ thriving.

Thriving is a source of pleasure, although pain may be a temporary feature of it. Child-birth, for example, is typically painful–but the aim of family-building requires it. The aim of thriving may require a brief interruption of it.

Long-term or incurable pain impedes thriving. Thriving does not require it. Thus, sentient animals rightly avoid the experience of such pain.

Pain is caused by either natural or social causes. Pain is caused by, for example, certain genetic abnormalities that are unrelated to social factors, like environmental pollution. Pain not attributable to social causes is necessarily a form of harm because it is not the fault of any sentient animal or group of animals and impedes thriving.

Pain attributable to social causes can also be a form of harm. For example, the attainment of academic or artistic achievement may require the short-term experience of pain. Its cause is social/cultural–but it is not directly caused either by the neglect or intent of a sentient animal or group of animals. Nonetheless, it does temporarily impede thriving.

Pain is unjust when its cause, due to neglect or intent, is attributable to another sentient animal or group of sentient animals (i.e., society). It seriously impedes sentient animal thriving. Its duration is irrelevant, as it is pain unrelated to the aim of thriving.

Death interrupts animal thriving. Thus, it is also a source of pain. As such, death is either a very serious harm or, when it is directly linked to social factors, it is an injustice.

The desire for resurrection does not make sense if death is morally neutral–simply a natural fact. If life is not an unqualified good to us, then why would we want more of it?

As an obviously serious interruption of animal thriving, death harms sentient animal life. The resurrection of the dead makes more sense if life is a good that death interrupts. Resurrection makes sense as an expression of desire for uninterrupted animal thriving.

Animal thriving is good. It is the embodiment of justice. Thriving is what sentient animals want. Death gets in the way of it.

Resurrection is, by definition, an act of God. And while you may be willing to grant that resurrection makes sense as an expression of desire to cure the suffering caused by death, namely the interruption of sentient animal thriving—you are likely not as eager to entertain the idea that it is reasonable to think that a divine being will, in fact, overturn death.

Surely, logical argument will fail to convince us of the reasonableness of divine intervention in the natural order of things (i.e., death interrupts thriving). Widespread agreement to the main premises of such an argument—for example, the reality of a divine being—is not likely. Moreover, appeals to authority (i.e., “It’s the word of God!”) will fail us. Thriving entails the freedom to think for ourselves.

But what of our experience of life?

Our experience of life is a source of information when logic or reason cannot help us. Experience, for example, of the tenacity or exuberance of life—the way in which nature is constantly churning out life from death—is not proof of the resurrection—but such experience (and desire for more time to live, to carry out one’s projects) is intimately related to the shared reality of sentient animal life.

It seems feasible for us to use our shared physical senses to observe/feel that life is not easily knocked down—and when it is, it tends to get back up again. Even nature seems to point beyond itself–to something it cannot achieve on its own.

Reason and experience take us to the banks of the Jordan. Death is not good for us. While we may recognize a shared desire to thrive, we can’t be certain of future thriving. But if we are willing to look, there seem to be promising signs of future thriving within and before us.

Compassion Is for The Dogs?

Photography by Elke Vogelsang

 I. Canine Compassion, Human Anger

In Luke 16:19-31, commonly known as the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus, flexuous, slobbery canine tongues perform the politics of compassion. As Lazarus lay sick and dying at the gate of the rich man who “feasted sumptuously every day,” only “the dogs would come and lick his sores” (vv. 19, 21).

The dogs represent a “fugitive moment of compassion” in a parable that otherwise seems designed to normalize retributive anger and closely related feelings, like disgust and fear.1 The allure of retributive anger is greatly diminished in and through flappy tongues of compassion.

In Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice (2013), Martha Nussbaum identifies “the experience of compassion” as a point of connection between humans and animals, focusing her analysis of nonhuman animal compassion on elephants and dogs (142). She defines compassion as “a painful emotion directed at the serious suffering of another creature or creatures” (142).2

We know that dogs (and elephants) are capable of great acts of compassion. Describing the specific character of canine compassion promises to enrich our reading of Luke’s parable, renamed below as the Parable of (Un)Compassionate Tongues, by helping us better understand human compassion’s character.

As we will see, compassion is grounded in formative experiences of love and reciprocity. Initially, it is the stable love of our parents that enables us to transcend our original narcissism. We slowly learn to bring the experiences of others into our thoughts and to care about them. Following Donald Winnicott, Nussbaum argues that arts and culture constitute “potential space” for adults to play with compassion and learn to expand the sphere of their concern.

Original narcissism, or radical evil, is an ongoing challenge to our efforts to hone our attunement to the suffering of others. Nussbaum agrees with Kant: radical evil is an innate tendency. However, it is likely activated by the structure of human development. We are born fearful creatures, prone to feelings like anger at the world and the people in it for not behaving according to our expectations.3

The Greeks understood excessive anger, “obsessive, destructive, existing only to inflict pain and ill,” as a doglike emotion.4 Doglike is how Aeschylus describes the Furies, divine, feminine figures of retribution, in Oresteia.5 Nussbaum observes that “[t]he Greeks were far enough removed from fancy domesticated dog breeds and close enough to raw scenes of canine killing to associate dogs, consistently, with hideous disregard for the victim’s pain.”

Greek dogs would not be out of place in Luke’s parable. The politics of emotion that the Parable of (Un)Compassionate Tongues seems designed to evoke is that of retributive anger.

Defining anger in Aristotelian terms, Nussbaum argues that we experience anger when 1) we believe an object we care about has been meaningfully harmed and 2) we further believe that the harm done to the valued object has been “wrongfully inflicted.”6

Readers of Luke 16:19-31 surely care about Lazarus, and there is no doubt that the rich man’s failure to recognize Lazarus’s dire need for assistance is a form of wrongfully inflicted harm.

Readers of the parable are likely unconcerned about—or even pleased by—how the parable ends: the rich man is tormented in Hades. He is left with no hope of a different eternal outcome for his surviving family members.

Nussbaum persuasively argues that the desire for retribution is a defining characteristic of the experience of anger. She contends that retributive anger is normatively problematic for at least three reasons.7

Retribution is morally questionable because we often get angry over events of little consequence (e.g., someone you’ve met several times forgets your name or someone honks the horn at you in the elementary school carpool lane). Retributive anger is morally dubious because it may be inspired by something that is no one’s fault. Nussbaum points out that the “world is full of accidents.”8 Finally, punishing anger is politically unhelpful because it does not inspire efforts to ensure the wrongful act will not happen again.

Retributive anger is backward-facing, directed at punishing the wrongdoer rather than ensuring a more just outcome in the future (which may entail a future-directed form of punishment). The desire for (eternal) retribution that anger enflames distracts us from bettering our shared earthly existence by fostering emotions that can ground a spirited commitment to the core liberal value of equal dignity.

Readers of Luke 16:19-31 are liable to be led astray by its central theme: retribution. The brief appearance of the parable’s compassionate dogs challenges us to feel differently and to embrace a politics of emotion that celebrates and cherishes equal animal dignity: the politics of compassion. It is to the details of the parable that we now turn.

II. The Parable of (Un)Compassionate Tongues

Luke 16:19-31 begins by contrasting the unnamed rich man’s excessive wealth with Lazarus’s extreme need. The rich man is “dressed in purple and fine linen,” and he feasts “sumptuously every day” (v. 19). He does not seem to notice poor Lazarus dying at his gate, dressed in sores and starving. Lazarus lusts after the food that falls from the rich man’s table (vv. 20-21).

The food falling from the table may explain why dogs are around the rich man’s home. They understand the pain of hunger and illness. Perhaps that is why the dogs notice Lazarus’s suffering and come and lick his sores (v. 21).

In their commentary on the Gospel of Luke, New Testament scholars Amy-Jill Levine and Ben Witherington III write, “Lazarus’s only companions are dogs, whose licking might have provided him both medicinal benefits and emotional comfort.”9 

Lazarus dies without the companionship of his own species. We assume his death is due to complications caused by illness and starvation (v. 22).

We are not told if Lazarus is buried. We only know that the angels care for him after his death, carrying him away from the rich man’s gate and delivering him into Abraham’s embrace in Paradise (v. 22).

The rich man also dies. He is buried before appearing alone in Hades (vv. 22-23).

Looking out from Hades, the formerly rich man sees “Abraham far away with Lazarus at his side” (v. 23). “[T]ormented” by the flames of Hades and suffering from horrible thirst, the cursed man asks Abraham to have mercy on him and to send Lazarus to, in effect, lick him—to wet his dry tongue (v. 24).

The destitute man’s calm request for compassion is revealing.10 The formerly rich man recognizes Lazarus and knows him by name. A lack of familiarity with Lazarus cannot explain the poor man’s failure to notice him dying at his gate.

Though he is in Hades, the rich man behaves like a privileged man. He asks for the one he presumes is now Abraham’s servant, Lazarus, to come and serve him and quench his thirst.

In Hades, the rich man is “tormented,” “in agony,” horribly thirsty, “in flames.” Yet, he calmly and eloquently asks Abraham for relief (vv. 23-24). The formerly decadent man’s good-mannered request for Abraham to grant him relief conflicts with the terms of the text that indicate he is suffering extreme agony.

Abraham denies the rich man’s request for assistance. Abraham reasons that the formerly rich man hoarded “good things” in his earthly life and is receiving what he deserves in the afterlife: “evil things” (v. 25).

The fortunes of the rich man and Lazarus are reversed in the afterlife. Lazarus is “comforted,” and the rich man is “in agony” (v. 25).

Even if one wanted to offer compassion to the thirsty man, Abraham points out the impassable chasm between them (v. 26). Levine and Witherington III comment that “[t]here is no shuttle service from Hades to heaven.”11

Realizing his fate is sealed, the cursed man advocates for his surviving brothers. He asks Abraham to send Lazarus to warn his brothers about eternal torment (vv. 27-30).

Again, Abraham denies the formerly privileged man’s request for relief. His brothers have Moses (i.e., the Torah) and the Prophets. “If they do not listen to [them], neither will they be convinced even if someone rises from the dead” (v. 31).

III. Compassion Is for The Dogs.

The parable concludes just as it began: with a destitute man seeking relief from his suffering with no hope of receiving it. In the formerly rich man’s case, we exclaim, “Justice prevails!”

The rationale for our uncompassionate response to the previously rich man’s suffering is clarified if we name him Brian Thompson, the recently murdered CEO of UnitedHealthcare. As the CEO of a healthcare company that routinely denied claims, Thompson represents serious harm to the values and people we cherish—and harm inflicted wrongfully.

Compassion must be for the dogs. How else are we to explain the widespread online celebration of and thirsty reaction to Thompson’s murderer? Compassion for Thompson and his family: denied.

I don’t read Abraham’s refusal to offer compassion to the penniless man as a normative statement about either Jewish theology or the afterlife. However, his refusal to help the suffering man does raise a question for us to consider: Do we want a(n after)life wherein some (i.e., “the evil”) suffer without the possibility of even a crumb of relief?

I don’t believe we want such a(n after)life. If I am right, considering a few more questions is worth our time.

What is compassion? What impedes it? What does it promise? The tongues of the parable’s dogs are unexpected guides to understanding human-animal compassion and its political promise.

IV. Human and Canine Compassion

In Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice (2013), Nussbaum turns to animal studies to identify the kinds of emotions that can aid nations aspiring to justice in “motivating good policies and rendering them stable” (137). She identifies “the experience of compassion” as a point of connection between humans and animals, focusing her analysis of nonhuman animal compassion on elephants and dogs (142). In my reading of Nussbaum’s work below, I focus on canine compassion.

Nussbaum defines compassion as “a painful emotion directed at the serious suffering of another creature or creatures” (142). For humans, compassion entails four thoughts, the first three of which are included in the philosophical tradition.

First, “there is a thought of seriousness” (142).12 We feel compassion when we judge someone else’s suffering as significant rather than as, for example, a form of discomfort or an inconvenience.

Second, there “is the thought of nonfault” (143). Generally, nonfault means that we feel compassion when we determine that someone is not entirely to blame for their suffering. In more complicated circumstances, we typically feel compassion for someone’s suffering caused by the least blameworthy aspects of their situation.

Third, there “is the thought of similar possibilities” (144). We typically feel compassion for someone like us: someone “who has possibilities in life that are similar” (144). Nussbaum argues that this thought is included in the philosophical tradition of compassion but is not conceptually necessary.

We can feel compassion for others even if we do not see “their predicament as like one that we would experience” (144). Nussbaum emphasizes the significance of this thought for “preventing or undoing denial of our own animal nature; its absence is thus a grave danger” (144).

Finally, Nussbaum adds a fourth thought to the three traditional ones above: “the eudaimonistic thought” (144).  We feel compassion for the suffering of someone we consider “among the important parts” of our lives.

Nussbaum is not referring to “egoism.” She means that “the things that occasion a strong emotional response in us are things that correspond to what we have invested with importance in our thoughts, implicit or explicit, about what is important in life, our conception of flourishing” (145).

Lazarus must have mattered to the dogs of Luke’s parable because they respond to his suffering compassionately. It is now well established that animals are aware of suffering, “and they notice it very keenly” (147).

However, animals do not think of suffering in terms of blame. Like young children sometimes do, animals focus “on suffering without asking who is to blame” (147). Animals notice suffering but do not perceive fault—at least not to a significant degree. Thus, Nussbaum focuses her analysis of animal compassion on seriousness, similar possibilities, and eudaimonistic thought.

Animal compassion takes many forms, just as human compassion—some simple and some complex. The most complex form of compassion entails perspective-taking: “behavior that shows concern for what the other creature is suffering” (149). Perspective-taking also takes more or less complex forms.

Dogs do not typically pass the mirror test, so their understanding of another’s suffering is likely muddled. Their perspective-taking is a simple one.

To better define the perspective-taking of dogs, consider the following case:

George Pitcher and Ed Cone are watching TV one night in their Princeton home: a documentary about a little boy in England with a congenital heart ailment. [The boy dies]. Pitcher, sitting on the floor, found his eyes filled with tears. Instantly, their two dogs, Lupa and Remus, rushed to him, almost pushing him over, and licked his eyes and cheeks with plaintive whimpers (150).13

The dogs notice Pitcher’s suffering, which looks serious to them. However, they cannot know whether his suffering is, in fact, severe. Nussbaum observes that if Pitcher’s tears were due to having to pay “a just amount of tax,” the dogs would still comfort him (151).

Pitcher’s dogs do not consider who is to blame for his suffering. In his own book about dogs, “Pitcher . . . suggests that the judgment of fault is usually a defect, and animals are better off morally because they lack it” (152).14

With Nussbaum, we are rightly skeptical of the claim that determining fault is generally a moral defect. Dogs are storied for loving humans who cruelly mistreat them.

Moreover, determining fault can help women and minority groups identify reasons to assert their equal dignity (152-153). Yet, “we can certainly observe that humans often find fault erroneously, hastily, and on the basis of bad social norms. . . . To that extent, looking to animals for guidance would seem the right thing to do” (153).

Lupa and Remus may have some awareness of similar possibilities. Before coming into the care of Pitcher and Cone, Lupa and Remus had been abused. Even the sight of a stick terrorized them. Therefore, they may imagine “such bad events as future possibilities for themselves” (155).

Pitcher’s dogs respond compassionately to his suffering because they understand it, and he matters to them. However, Nussbaum notes that animal eudaimonistic thought is inflexible and narrow.

Animal compassion is directed at members of their own species or familiar group members. Noticing the tears of a stranger, Lupa and Remus will not show them compassion.

Dogs are capable of moving acts of compassion. The character of their dog-specific compassion promises to enrich our interpretation of Luke’s parable and potentially gift us with compassionate tongues.

V. Speaking in Compassionate Tongues

“[T]he dogs would come and lick his sores” (v. 21). They notice Lazarus’s suffering, and while the dogs cannot determine its actual seriousness, Lazarus’s pain seems grave to them.

The dogs know what it is like to experience illness and hunger. Cleaning and soothing Lazarus’s sores with their kind tongues, the dogs demonstrate that they perceive Lazarus’s suffering as a possibility for them.

Like many other animal behaviors, dogs licking a sick man’s sores may inspire disgust in us human animals. Lazarus’s body would likely repel readers if they encountered him outside their front doors.

Disgust is a powerful feeling that often impedes the politics of compassion. That is why, at least for one badass, holy bitch, “licking” sores is an important spiritual exercise.15

In The Spiritual Dialogue (1522), it is reported that Catherine of Genoa is led by the Spirit to ill people “with foul-smelling sores, the stench of which was so great that it was hard to stay close to them” (131).

She is commanded to put the sores in her mouth. “She put them in her mouth, and so many times she was freed from natural repugnance; but since the smell continued to give her nausea she rubbed her nose with the pus until she freed herself of that revulsion” (131).

“Licking” sores and similar practices, such as eating lice, are physical means to a specific spiritual end: Catherine wants to annihilate “Human Frailty,” which is, for her, connected to the “animal body, without reason, power, will, or memory” (125).

Catherine overcomes “Human Frailty” by overcoming its tendency to feel disgust for what is bodily. This is an essential spiritual goal for Catherine because disgust for what is bodily prevents her from becoming an animal body, a non-willing vessel of the Spirit.

The author asserts that Catherine’s actions are “loathesome” and “contrary to human nature” (131). However, “in forcing herself to obey the Spirit, Catherine was heartened in her resolve to help the desperately sick” (131).

Catherine rightly notices that human disdain for the animal body, its secretions, smells, sounds, etc., impedes the politics of compassion. However, Catherine’s spirituality is normatively problematic—and for reasons that go well beyond its underlying metaphysics.

Catherine’s “loathesome” practices are unreasonable because we are rightly concerned about the potentially adverse health outcomes associated with ingesting materials such as pus and feces.

Moreover, compassion does not require us to eat the pus from the sores of the ill or the lice from the heads of the poor. While Catherine’s desire to overcome disgust to help the severely sick and poor is admirable, it is clear that they are merely means to Catherine’s spiritual end: ceasing to exist as a will-full individual.

Finally, we know that animals are not mindless vessels of instinct. Most animals are sentient: they understand themselves, the world around them, and what is good (and bad) for their specific lives.16

Significantly, animals do not have to unlearn disgust for what is animal, namely the body. Only human animals learn to loathe the animal body and participate in the evil politics of projective disgust, defining some humans—such as women, Black men, Jews, and gay men—as wild animals and treating them as such, as what is outside the sphere of equal dignity.17

The parable’s dogs do not have to repent of disgust to lick the sores that cover Lazarus’s body. His sores do not disgust them. By licking his sores, they embody a dog-specific form of compassion that respects Lazarus as an end.

The rich man’s failure to recognize Lazarus’s suffering and offer a compassionate response is also dog-like. As his behavior in Hades amply attests, the rich man does not consider Lazarus a pack member.

Like the dogs, the rich man will not think of offering compassion to someone not in his family group. Unlike the dogs, the rich man can learn to expand his circle of concern to include all animals.

Yet, the rich man is all too human. Abraham expresses a theological view the rich man likely finds agreeable: Lazarus is to blame for his condition.

Illness, poverty, and suffering are associated with “evil things.” As Nussbaum argues, the “capacity to think about fault and choice is . . . a necessary part of moral life. And yet, it can go badly astray. . . . [I]t is very convenient to blame the poor for their poverty and to refuse compassion on that account” (158).18

The dogs cannot consider blame in their response to Lazarus’s suffering. His suffering is serious to them, and his life matters to them. He is one of their own.

The dogs also know what it is like to experience illness and hunger. So, they extend compassion to Lazarus. They speak compassion in flappy, drooly tongues.

VI. The Afterlives of (Un)Compassionate Tongues

During his earthly life, Lazarus is treated like a dog. The dogs recognize him as one of their own and lick his wounds.

I think Lazarus represents their sal(i)v(a)ific compassion in Paradise. However, the fact that he does not use his tongue troubles my reading of Lazarus as a tongue of compassion.

Several years ago, a New Testament scholar noticed I was reading Luke’s Parable of (Un)Compassionate Tongues on a long flight from San Diego. It was the lectionary text for the upcoming Sunday, and I was trying out a sermonic version of this essay.

The Scholar asked me what I thought about the parable. I shared that I had problems with the politics of retributive anger I read in the story. The Scholar expressed surprise. As a gay Black man, he read Abraham as Lazarus’s advocate, as his tongue. The Scholar argued that, in and through Abraham, Lazarus is liberated from his earthly oppressor.

I agree with the Scholar: Lazarus does not require compassion in the afterlife. However, what is the justification for withholding it from the formerly rich man? There is only one morally normative reason for denying him compassion: we do not believe his situation requires it.

As we discovered earlier, the formerly rich man’s composed request for relief undercuts the idea that he is experiencing extreme agony in Hades. However, we are told that he is “being tormented” in Hades (v. 23). We also know that he wishes to warn his family to avoid a similar fate (vv. 27-31).

Even so, the man does not seem to know he is suffering. Nussbaum writes, “If we think . . . that a person is unaware of a predicament that is really bad . . . , then we will have compassion for that person even if the person doesn’t think [their] situation is bad” (143). We have reason to believe that his suffering is bad.

We are not explicitly told why the rich man did not recognize Lazarus’s suffering and offer assistance. Furthermore, we cannot underestimate the power of bad theology and destructive social norms to deform one’s sensitivity to the suffering of others.

There is a degree of moral ambiguity in the parable. I do not conclude that the cursed man is entirely to blame for his suffering.

Like power, wealth is not one thing, nor is it simply a monetary reality, something we can locate neatly, like in a bank account. Generosity is often difficult for anyone who has worked hard to possess anything potentially beneficial to the common good.

The formerly rich man’s suffering is certainly a possibility for us. If it were not, the parable itself would not be necessary.

The formerly rich man, Brian Thompson, does not matter to everyone. He failed during his earthly life to respond compassionately to the suffering of others. He is an object of social disgust.

The horrible irony is that if we fail to offer compassion to the formerly rich man, we become like the earthly rich man and complicit in undermining the basis of any thriving liberal society: commitment to equal dignity.

Advocates of dignity like Gandhi, King, and Mandela understood the threat posed by punishing anger to the value of equal dignity. They rejected the politics of retributive anger.19

Of course, we can reject their examples and deny compassion to the formerly rich man. If we do so, let us admit that rigorous moral reasoning does not support that choice. But what of the fact that neither Lazarus nor Abraham offers the cursed man compassion?

Suffering outside the gates of plenty and blessing, the previously content man asks Abraham to have mercy on him. Abraham argues that he is not a source of salvation.

He did not save the ill and starving Lazarus. He cannot save the formerly rich man from his suffering in Hades. According to Abraham, salvation is found in the Torah and the Prophets.

The parable itself is an interpretation of the Law of Moses and the Prophets. From it, we learn two lessons. The first lesson is that compassion is the morally correct animal response to the legitimate suffering of others. The dogs embody this lesson.

The second lesson we learn is that it is right to trust one’s fellow animals to respond compassionately to legitimate suffering. The Greek of Luke’s parable suggests that Lazarus was placed at the rich man’s gate—he did not just wander there himself.

Lazarus’s friends/neighbors trusted the rich man to recognize Lazarus’s pain and hoped he would use his resources to relieve it. While the dogs gave Lazarus what his friends/neighbors trusted the rich man to, they were nonetheless correct in placing their faith in him to act compassionately.

There is a third lesson for us to recognize. Luke’s Jesus emphasizes it after sharing the parable: people can and do change (17:1-10).

Luke 16:19-31 emphasizes the importance of change but does so in a way that tends to evoke fear and encourage disgust and retributive anger. The parable is for a specific group of readers, like the ungenerous wealthy. They had better change their ways before it’s too late.

Change is not possible in the afterlife. Eternal punishment is a delicious thought—at least when the objects of it are one’s enemies, or “those people,” or the one percent.

The problem: retributive anger does not improve our lives; it worsens our lives by creating the conditions for afterlives of violence. Moreover, fear and disgust do not make people good; they make people tyrants.

Nonetheless, the Parable of (Un)Compassionate Tongues does not entertain offering compassion to the suffering man in Hades. The parable does hint at the possibility of a change in the afterlife’s policy toward those suffering in Hades.  

The formerly rich man is likely shocked by Abraham’s refusal to help him or his family. His belief in a theological outlook that privileges the privileged is shaken.

The shock of Abraham’s lack of compassion for his suffering can become a persuasive reason for the poor man to seek compassion elsewhere. This elsewhere is Lazarus.

The formerly rich man can wet his dry tongue by directly addressing Lazarus: “Brother Lazarus, ask our Father Abraham to have mercy on me.” In this way, the destitute man affirms that he, like Lazarus, depends on his fellow animals to recognize his suffering and offer compassion.

Lazarus understands what it is like to suffer alone without hope of relief. His initial silence is likely motivated by an unwillingness to humiliate the man who did not recognize his earthly suffering and whose suffering is not adequately addressed by Abraham.

If that is true, when the formerly rich man asks Lazarus to help him, Lazarus will likely break his silence and offer assistance, asking Abraham to create a way for the man to travel from Hades to Paradise.

Abraham, recognizing the formerly rich man’s change of heart and Lazarus’s willingness to offer the man compassion, will likely extend compassion to the formerly rich man.

Significantly, compassion need not overlook the tormented man’s past behavior or its role in causing his present suffering—but it will neither hold him to that lousy behavior forever nor deny aid due to the thought of fault.

Abraham’s compassion can look like a future-oriented pathway between Hades and Paradise that encourages and fosters education in the value of equal dignity.

Clearly, my interpretation of the afterlife exceeds the limits of the text alone. My argument does not rely on it. The lesson is the same: “The advice to humans is not to wait for external intervention from the heavens: instead, we must arrange to have mercy on, and to love, one another.”20

Licked by the textual tongue of the parable, I have remained stubbornly hopeful and committed to reading Luke 16:19-31 in the spirit of the floppy, comforting tongues of the dogs. However, while trying to hold onto compassion and the value of equal dignity, I have neglected to directly acknowledge a profound loss.

VII. Radical Evil and The Politics of Compassion

We have lost Lazarus. We rightly feel both grief and Transition-Anger at the tragic loss of a friend.

Transition-Anger is Nussbaum’s term for future-oriented anger or “protest without payback.”21 It acknowledges our outrage at injustice and powerlessness to return Lazarus from the dead.

Transition-anger motivates us to do what we can to ensure others do not suffer the same fate as Lazarus. We can peacefully protest public blindness to the suffering of the poor. We can work with our neighbors to foster a spirit of reciprocity in our communities. We can organize to elect and donate to officials committed to creating caring governmental agencies.

The work of mourning is another difficult task we can do together.22 Mourning the loss of Lazarus, we internalize our shared mortality.

Accepting the reality of death, we potentially undo our anthropodenial: the rejection of our animal condition. To flourish, we must trust and rely on others. Our grief can enable a common effort to celebrate and embody respect for equal dignity.

The work of mourning and Transition-Anger are compassionate responses to animal suffering. They are grounded in love and generosity, in the experience of animal vulnerability. However, the experience of vulnerability is also the fertile soil from which radical evil grows.

In Political Emotions, Nussbaum argues that radical evil is rooted in “our bodily helplessness” and “our cognitive sophistication.” It is radical because it is “rooted in the very structure of human development” (190). It is evil because it is the intentional, active thwarting of equal dignity.

Following Kant, Nussbaum concedes that radical evil is likely an innate tendency. Thus, it is independent of social circumstances, like poverty or wealth.

Moreover, although radical evil is supported by some aspects of our “animal heritage,” it is a tendency unique to human animals. It is likely activated by the structure of human development (167).

The infant is a creature of anxiety. “Their helplessness produces an intense anxiety that is not mitigated by trust in the world or its people” (173). They attempt to overcome helplessness through control, “making other people [their slaves]” (173).

The way out of original narcissism is love and reciprocity. Initially, their parents’ love encourages the infant to “trust in an uncertain world and the people in it” (176). The stable, reliable love of parents creates a pathway for the infant’s eros, “its . . . outward-moving curiosity” (176).

In and through play, the infant explores the world and hones its developing concern for others. The infant learns to offer love to others.

I return to play below. For now, we recognize that original narcissism is incurable; it is an intractable feature of our interpersonal and political lives.

Original narcissism is the ground of possibility for retributive anger and the closely related politics of disgust and fear. The ongoing experience of bodily helplessness/vulnerability can cause us to become tyrants again.

Feeling out of control, we are tempted to blame and punish others, project our animal condition onto specific groups of people, like women and minorities, and distrust people who do not obey dominant cultural expectations.

Nussbaum argues that the ongoing experience of loving relationships and playfulness in arts and culture immunizes us against the persistence of viral narcissism.

The arts and culture constitute, to use Donald Winnicott’s term, “potential space,” space outside of our interpersonal relationships to try “roles and options . . . without real-life stress” (181).

Summarizing Winnicott, Nussbaum writes, “In adult life . . . the infant’s experience of trust, reciprocity, and creativity finds a wide range of outlets, in culture and the arts, that deepen and renew the experience of transcending narcissism” (181).

In Luke’s literary tale of the (Un)Compassionate Tongues, the dogs evoke a spirit of loving generosity. The memory of their wiggly tongues potentially helps us remember formative experiences of love and care that can continue to ground our faith in a politics of compassion.

As I write this essay, I remember my childhood friend, Keppa, a Boston Terrier. My grandmother, Lorraine, convinced me to choose Keppa from the litter because she was the runt. Keppa loved me, but she loved my grandmother far more than me or anyone else.

Keppa made us aware of her connection to my grandma in many ways. For example, when she was let out of my house early every morning to relieve herself, she would run next door to my grandparents’ home. Refusing to return to me when I called her, she spent her day with my grandmother, eventually moving in with my grandparents when I moved away to college.

I was home when Keppa died. I remember that my grandfather cried. It was the first and only time I witnessed him express sadness. I was in my early twenties.

I carried Keppa in my arms to her final resting place. My grandmother could not bear to be present for her burial.

Remembering Keppa—and how could I forget the licks I received right after she had eaten a dead fish taken from a nearby irrigation canal—I remember my loving grandparents, especially my grandmother.

Like Keppa, I received a lot of care from my grandmother. I also went to her house almost every morning for breakfast and conversation before school.

I continue to remember Keppa and my grandmother, Lorraine. Every December, I hang ornaments on the Christmas tree in their memories. During this time of year, Lorraine and Keppa are again side by side.

Nussbaum argues that nations aspiring to justice must tap into these formative interpersonal experiences of love and generosity because they ground a spirited concern for others, including serious animal suffering and the associated value of equal dignity, that can stabilize the politics of compassion (177).

Given the constant pull of original narcissism in public life, a resilient collective commitment to compassion would be no small achievement.

There is no guarantee that readers of Luke 16:19-31 will be inspired by the squiggly, compassionate tongues of the dogs to remember formative experiences of love and reciprocity that can ground a stable commitment to a politics of compassion. The parable’s politics of retributive anger is the text’s more evident and satisfying theme.

But if compassionate canine tongues manage to wet our dry tongues, I think we will agree that the politics of compassion is for the dogs. It is for every animal.


NOTES:

  1. See the “Introduction to the Thirty-Fifth Anniversary Edition of a People’s History of the United States” (2015) by Anthony Arnove. ↩︎
  2. See also Nussbaum, Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility (2023), 12-15. ↩︎
  3. See Nussbaum, The Monarchy of Fear: A Philosopher Looks At Our Political Crisis (2018), 24. See my reading of the same text, “How Fear Influenced the 2024 Election Outcome,” here. ↩︎
  4. Citations in this paragraph are from Nussbaum, Anger and Forgiveness: Resentment, Generosity, Justice (2016), 2. ↩︎
  5. The Romans also thought anger was a feminine feeling. See Nussbaum, Anger and Forgiveness, 44-45. ↩︎
  6. See Nussbaum, The Monarchy of Fear. She discusses anger in chapter 3, “Anger, Child of Fear,” 63-95. See also Anger and Forgiveness, and Justice for Animals, 15-16. ↩︎
  7. See Monarchy of Fear, 80-84. For an extended discussion of anger’s errors, see Anger and Forgiveness, 14-35. ↩︎
  8. Monarchy of Fear, 82. ↩︎
  9. See Levine and Witherington III, The Gospel of Luke (Cambridge Bible Commentary [2018]), 453. They also note that “the standard move” is to “see the dogs as adding a note of ‘uncleanness’ . . . ” (453). They argue that this move is “unnecessary and erroneous” (453). ↩︎
  10. See The Gospel of Luke, 455, for the insights I outline below. ↩︎
  11. Gospel of Luke, 456. ↩︎
  12. Emphasis is original unless otherwise noted. ↩︎
  13. George Pitcher was a philosopher, and Edward Cone was a composer and Pitcher’s partner. See Politics of Emotion, 418n31. See Justice for Animals, xx-xxi. ↩︎
  14. See George Pitcher, The Dogs Who Came To Stay (1995). ↩︎
  15. I am using bitch here in a Lizzoian spirit, but Catherine would likely not mind the less flattering meaning of the term also intentionally echoed here. ↩︎
  16. On animal sentience, see Nussbaum, Justice for Animals, chapter 6, “Sentience and Striving,” 118-153. ↩︎
  17. See Nussbaum, Political Emotions, 158-160, 182-191. See also Nussbaum, Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law (2004), From Disgust to Humanity: Sexual Orientation and Constitutional Law (2010), and Monarchy of Fear, 107. ↩︎
  18. The parable’s logic is less neat. The idea seems to be that our earthly moral judgments are often very wrong. In this life, good people receive evil things, and wicked people receive good things. However, the afterlife does not overturn the underlying logic; it corrects it. Good people receive good things in the afterlife, and evil people receive evil things. But we are not given any reason to believe that Lazarus is good and the rich man is wicked. Normal people make grave moral mistakes. And if the message is that the poor are always good by virtue of being poor and the rich are always wicked by virtue of being rich, then we cannot account for the ubiquitousness of radical evil. ↩︎
  19. See Nussbaum, Anger and Forgiveness, 218-237, for a detailed reading of these figures’ rejection of retributive anger. ↩︎
  20. I have taken this quote from Nussbaum, The Tenderness of Silent Minds: Benjamin Britten and his War Requiem (2024), 245-246. She is reading the final moments of War Requiem. The Chorus sings, in part, “May the Choir of Angels receive thee / and with Lazarus, once poor / may thou have eternal rest.” Britten and his partner, Pears, were both dog lovers. ↩︎
  21. For a full account of Nussbaum’s understanding of Transiton-Anger, see Anger and Forgiveness, 35-40. See also Monarchy of Fear, 88-95, Justice for Animals, 16. ↩︎
  22. For grief, see Political Emotions, 201-202, and Anger and Forgiveness, 47-48. ↩︎

How Fear Influenced the 2024 Election Outcome

Käthe Kollwitz, Seed Corn Must Not Be Ground, 1942.

I. How Did This Happen? Fear.

Donald Trump, a man who fomented an insurrection, was convicted of multiple felonies, found liable for sexual assault, and allegedly stole national security secrets, to name only a few of his past accomplishments, is now President-elect Trump, again.

How did this happen?! Fear.

Fear motivated millions of Americans to vote for Trump. Fear is what millions of Americans, especially the most vulnerable, are feeling right now. Their fear is amplified by the expressed commitments of Trump’s disturbing picks to lead government agencies to deport millions of immigrants, target trans* youth and adults, and otherwise embody the spirit of Project 2025.1

To claim that fear motivated Trump-aligned voters to go to the polls is not to trivialize their genuine concerns. Likewise, recognizing widespread fear among those who, like me, voted against Trump’s policies and cruel impulses does not mean looking down on them.

Fear can animate freedom movements and underly concerns about one’s pocketbook and safety. It is a uniquely powerful emotion that influences our actions far more than we would like to admit.

Sometimes, our fear is justified. Other times, it is not grounded in data, facts, or evidence. In either case, fear is self-protective in character. 

Attuning ourselves to emotions like fear also helps us keep our shared humanity at the forefront of our politics. For example, focusing on our propensity to fear does not require vilifying any one group of voters.

We must think critically about fear. The goal of this difficult work is a more hopeful politics. Moving away from fear, we move toward honest conversations about who and what we love.

II. What Is Fear?

In The Monarchy of Fear: A Philosopher Looks At Our Political Crisis (2018), a book inspired by Hillary Clinton’s electoral loss to Donald Trump in 2016, Martha C. Nussbaum observes that the experience of fear is “genetically first among the emotions” (20). It is our first feeling.

Fear is born of vulnerability. You are born into the world in a state of need. Some part of the world around you must provide for your needs, or you will die. “The only way you can get what you need is to make some other part of the world get it for you. . . . Human life, Rousseau understood, begins not in democracy but in monarchy. The baby . . . has no way of surviving except by making slaves of others” (21-22).2

The infant knows nothing of trust and regularity. Infants live in the moment. Haunting each moment of an infant’s satisfaction is fear: the perception that some part of the world (a “bad object”) will harm them, and there is nothing they can do about it (26-28). Fear involves the perception of danger and vulnerability.

We experience fear from the start of our lives, and it persists because we, human animals, are inherently vulnerable. “Fear. . .persists beneath all [our emotions] and infects them all, nibbling around the edges of love and reciprocity” (20).

“In the experience of fear, we draw on a common animal heritage. . . . Fear goes straight back to the reptilian brain” (27). Yet, as Joseph LeDoux argues, fear is not “‘in’ the amygdala” (27).3 Primal fear sticks with us but is “followed, later, by complicated, learned forms of that emotion” (28, emphasis mine).

The consciousness of death is a significant lesson in our education. Our awareness of death is beneficially motivating. It inspires us to avoid disaster and to create societies and laws that help us do the same. The recognition of death “might produce, as Rousseau devoutly hoped, compassion and reciprocity: we band together to protect one another from hunger, disease, and war” (43). However, a beneficial awareness of death requires a “concept of our well-being and of what, and who, threatens it” (44). What constitutes a “bad object” may have been straightforward at an earlier point in our evolutionary history, but it is not as clear today.

If we are to avoid disaster, we require a clear picture of what threatens our well-being. Our snake brains, families, clergy, and political leaders all contribute to our understanding of what we should fear. Nussbaum summarizes Aristotle’s rules for political leaders who desire to “whip up” our fear:

  1. “[P]ortray the impending event as highly significant for survival or well-being”
  2. “[M]ake people think it is close at hand”
  3. “[M]ake people think that things are out of control—they can’t ward off the bad thing easily on their own.”
  4. “[S]peakers must arrange to be trustworthy” (44-45).4

Our government deploys an Aristotelian approach to effectively whip up fear when a hurricane is barreling toward a coastline. We tend to trust the calls of state and local officials to evacuate our homes before the hurricane arrives because the evidence, facts, and data support the conclusion that our fear is justified. Yet, “our basic propensity to fear [makes] democratic societies . . . highly vulnerable to manipulation” (45).

Nussbaum draws on psychological research to describe two “heuristics” of fear. The first is the “availability heuristic,” and the second is the “cascade heuristic,” which has two aspects: reputational and informational (47-51).5 These heuristics can function to overwhelm our ability to carefully consider costs and benefits, instead activating our instinctual impulses.

Donald Trump effectively deploys each of the heuristics of fear. Trump uses the availability heuristic, creating an image of danger that is readily available to voters. He imagines that our country is being overrun by dangerous immigrants. To make the image even more visceral, Trump raises the specter of contamination, stating that immigrants are tainting American blood, infecting our country, and even, like rabid, wild animals, eating our beloved cats and dogs.6

According to Trump, immigrants are violently transgressing our borders, stealing our well-being, and trashing our country. The unprotected hole(s) of the national body lead to further fears, such as the erosion of gender norms, especially the “weakening” of normative American masculinity, which is imagined as a potent threat to American military might.  

The Trumpian image of a national body being raped by, for example, Haitian and Mexican intruders is immediately accessible to voters, and it inspires fear. Trump combines the availability heuristic with the cascade heuristic, motivating people to band together to overcome a(n imagined) threat to their well-being.

Trump’s base trusts him, and they believe immigrants pose an imminent threat to their personal security (the reputational aspect of the cascade heuristic). The threat is amplified by taking at face value new information linking immigration to the economy (jobs and housing costs), trans* liberty, race, national security concerns, and so on (the informational aspect of the cascade heuristic).

The heuristics of fear are highly motivating. They compel us to act together to avoid immediate danger. The problem arises when the fear they amplify is not based on a sober assessment of evidence, facts, data, or our experiences.

There are good reasons to avoid the path of a tornado and to act to stop or mitigate human threats like terrorist acts, acts of war, poverty, starvation, environmental pollution, and climate change. However, when our fear is unwarranted, it can destabilize democracy.

III. The Family of Fear: Anger, Disgust, and Envy

Fear, like anger, is sometimes well-grounded. However, anger born of unwarranted fear threatens to upend a democratic society.7

“According to Aristotle, anger is a response to significant damage to something or someone one cares about, and a damage that the angry person believes to have been wrongfully inflicted” (72). That’s reasonable enough, but what is often left out of our accounts of anger (although “[a]ll Western philosophers who talk about anger include” it) is the wish for retribution (73).8

What is most problematic about anger is the built-in desire for retribution. Retribution is problematic because we often get angry at actual wrongs that are not hugely important (e.g., someone forgets your name or cuts you off in traffic). Even when the wrongs are significant, retribution does not erase them or the pain they cause—and in some cases, there is no wrongdoer to punish. “The world is full of accidents” (82).

If we apply ourselves, anger and retribution can be separated, with the aim of ensuring a better future for everyone. Nussbaum calls this Transition-Anger, and she observes that parents know this type of anger well. Parents know that anger caused by actual wrongs can be turned toward ensuring better future outcomes that benefit the child and the entire family. Politically, peaceful protest and future-oriented punishments are examples of Transition-Anger.

Anger inspired by unwarranted fear leads us in an altogether different direction. When the world does not work the way we want it to, it is easy to blame others. “The act of pinning blame and pursuing the ‘bad guy’ is deeply consoling. It makes us feel control rather than helplessness” (82).

We compensate for our helplessness by believing that the world is just. Our faith in a “just world” leads us to think that the wrongs that happen to others are their own fault, while the wrongs that happen to us are the fault of others (82-83).

The Salem witch trials illustrate this point. Nussbaum notes “that a preponderant number of the witch blamers were young men entering adulthood, afflicted by the woes of an insecure colony in a new world: economic uncertainty, a harsh climate, political instability. How easy, then, to blame the whole thing on witches, usually elderly unpopular women, who can easily be targeted and whose death brings temporary satisfaction of mind” (83).

Retribution, whether inspired by well-grounded anger or not, does nothing to right a wrong or solve a genuine problem. It makes our lives worse. Therefore, we should be concerned about Trump’s manifest desire to be a figure of retribution. “One of the trickiest problems in politics is to persist in a determined search for solutions without letting fear deflect us onto the track of anger’s errors” (93).

Born of unwarranted fear, disgust, like fear-driven anger, “often leads us astray” (100). Disgust, unlike anger, “does not require wrongdoing or the threat of wrongdoing to get going.” It is an emotion inspired by our animality and mortality, “triggered . . . by bodily characteristics” that are or seem to be related to death and decay (100).9

According to researchers, disgust “is an aversion to contact that is motivated by the thought of contamination” (105). It is related to the fear of being tainted or infected by death and decay (106). Nussbaum points out that we are the only animals that try to sanitize ourselves through projects of transcendence, attempting to deny or forget our mortality/animality.

It is not easy to deny our bodies—their holes, smells, sounds, folds, secretions, excrement. So, we project our disgust onto others like Jews, trans* persons, Muslims, women, Black people, queers, people with disabilities, and immigrants. These groups come to figure change, animality, the erosion of tradition, and, if not controlled or eliminated, the infection of the traditional social body.

The way projective disgust works to stigmatize and isolate others is not predictable. For example, imagine a Mexican male—an immigrant in the U.S. illegally, working at a slaughterhouse—who supports Donald Trump. He argues that while he knows Trump is set on a policy of mass deportation, he does not believe Trump will deport family-oriented Latinos like him. However, many Mexican Americans fear being associated with Latinos like him, and they welcome his deportation.10

Envy is the third child of fear. It is the fear of “not having what one desperately needs to have” (140). It is “a painful emotion that focuses on the advantages of others, comparing one’s own situation unfavorable to theirs” (137). Again, there is a fantasy underlying this emotion, namely, a fantasy that “others have the good things and I do not . . .” (139).

Envy is dangerous because it combines feelings of powerlessness, inferiority, and despair. It works like this: Others have what you do not, and you are powerless to obtain those things. Not having those things makes you less than in the eyes of your neighbors who possess them. You will never be able to attain those good things that you desire.

Even when it is true that others have good things and you do not, envy functions like retribution: “it is destructive hostility” (140). Envy seeks to ruin the lives of those imagined to have all the good things you desire. In other words, envy-based fear does not contribute to a rights-based society that can provide the essential goods we all need to thrive and empower people to build their desired lives (163).

IV. Objects of Fear: Women

The family of fear gathers around the bodies of women. There is anger that “women have gotten out of hand” (169). There is disgust inspired by women’s bodies (a feeling not incompatible with male desire for those same bodies). There is envy related to women “enjoying unparalleled success in American life” (169). Nussbaum argues that “we don’t have to choose. All three are occurring, and they reinforce one another” (169). She also observes that this “same dynamic plays a role in hostility to immigrants” (171).

We have made progress: most men are no longer sexist. The idea that women are inherently inferior is just too obviously false. Nowadays, many men prefer outright misogyny: the act of putting women “back in their place.”

Men are not the only ones, of course, who support Trump. Women, especially white women, also support Trump. It may be that some women can put aside his explicit denigration of their bodies because they agree with many of his policies.

Other women may support Trump precisely for denigrating “those women,” women like Bette Midler, Carly Fiorina, Hillary Clinton, and Michele Obama. The status of “traditional women” is inextricably linked to taking care of and supporting the men and children in their lives. Traditional women “object on moral or religious grounds to women who pursue independence and career success . . . (185). Traditional women channel their anger at “uppity” women for diluting their brand.

Nussbaum argues, and I wholeheartedly agree, that “we should honor” any parent who chooses to stay home and care for children (and extended family). However, “the traditional model, which gave men free choice and told women that they had no choice, is surely wrong in a society of equals” (186). 

Envy also plays a role in white male perceptions of women’s successes beyond the traditional family. “There’s no doubt that white men, particularly in the lower middle classes, are indeed losing out” (191). The problem is that some white men seem beleaguered by the fantasy that they are being replaced by immigrants, women, and others in, for example, the workforce.

This is a powerful and dangerous fantasy due to the role a deep sense of entitlement plays in it. Some white men feel that employment and other forms of social success are their birthright. In that case, hostility is the only maladaptive tool left for them to secure a good future, at least for themselves.

Disgust is mixed into this potent, anti-democratic mixture, justifying the control of women’s more animal-like bodies and the enforcement of their lower status. The critical point is that this mixture of anger, envy, and disgust does not solve serious social problems. It does not prepare white men for the economy of the future. It does not ultimately prevent women, gay men, immigrants, and people of color from achieving their dreams. The family of fear mix maintains the status quo by undercutting the spirit of reciprocity, the spirit we require to provide for our collective needs, strengthen our democracy, and defend ourselves from a very real threat to our well-being: tyranny.

V. Resisting The Monarchy of Fear: Hope, Faith, and Love

Fear reacts to uncertainty by controlling others or voting for a tyrant, someone who promises to control others for us (212). Hope reacts to uncertainty by trusting others “to be independent and themselves” (211). We hope for a desired outcome precisely because it is not assured; it is an outcome we cannot control or guarantee. Thus, hope is not based on “probabilistic beliefs” (202-206).

Fear constricts our vision, while hope expands it (212). Hope entails an optimistic outlook (even when facing dangers of which we are rightly fearful). Moreover, hope can potentially motivate us to work toward a positive vision of our well-being.

“Idle hope” is not connected to optimistic action. “Pragmatic hope” is linked to an action plan. It is hope determined to realize a “valuable goal” (206-207).

However, hope is not naive. Kant “believed that we have a duty, during our lives, to engage in actions that produce valuable social goals. . . . Kant also understood . . . that when we look around us it is difficult to sustain our efforts . . . . He said that if we ask our own hearts the question, ‘Is the human race as a whole likable, or is it an object to be regarded with distaste?’ we just don’t know what to say” (208).11

For Kant, hope is a “practical postulate.” We can’t exactly justify hope. We hope “for the sake of the good action it may enable” (209).

Nussbaum reminds us that Saint Paul relates hope to faith and love, teaching that love is the greatest of the three (213, 1 Corinthians 13:13).12 Martin Luther King, Jr. follows in this tradition, “albeit not in a theistic and theological way, but in a this-worldly way that embraces all Americans” (213). King advocated for this-worldly faith in the power of protests and marches to effect meaningful change.

Rational faith is the belief in “[r]eal human beings and real human life.” It entails embracing “something that flawed human beings are capable of and might really do” (214). It also entails believing that “our opponents [have the capacity] for reasoning and a range of human emotions, whether badly developed and used or not” (216).

“Philosophy by itself shows how we can respect our enemies; it does not show us how to love them. For that we need the arts, and many of us need religion” (233). By love, Nussbaum does not mean either romantic love or the kind that would pertain to friendship. She means “a love that simply consists in seeing the other person as fully human, and capable at some level of good and of change” (216).

Fear, whether warranted or not, is protectionist in character. It defends the self (personal or social, “the larger self”) against imagined and real threats. Hope does not discount the wisdom of well-grounded fear; hope is simply not beholden to it. Hope envisions a social world of openness and trust.

We know that the pathway from fear to hope is fraught with challenges. In 2024, hope and change did not work; fear and the same did. What steps can we take to start moving again down the road that leads away from fear and toward hope?

Nussbaum defines six practices that potentially speak to our fear and enable a politics of hope. They are the arts, philosophy (i.e., Socratic dialogue), religion, protest movements, justice studies, and compulsory national service. It is easy to see the appeal of many of these practices for Nussbaum’s students at the University of Chicago. They are immediately accessible to her students. However, several of the listed practices feel different here and now as I write on November 13, 2024.

To the degree that the Socratic method entails civilly attending to conservative arguments against gay marriage or abortion access, as scholars like Nussbaum and Katie Wilson, author of Scarlet A: The Ethics, Law, and Politics of Ordinary Abortion (2018), believe it does—then it is likely that many of us will not become/continue as philosophers.13 After the fall of Roe and in a time of increasingly reasonable speculation about the possibility of Congress passing a national abortion ban and the conservative majority of the Supreme Court weakening or even overturning Obergefell, I don’t think many of us have the patience or the will to engage in this form of dialogue.

Motivated by Trump’s outrageous policies and cruelty, protest movements saw some initial successes during Trump’s first term. However, they ended up being largely ineffective in the long run. One reason for this is that they were not consistently focused on building the kind of political power that can get people elected and that can lead to the implementation of policies and the passing of laws in Congress. In some cases, the ideas generated by these movements were manifestly political poison pills (e.g., “defund the police”).14

Religion is another sore spot, especially for many LGBTQ+ individuals. I sought ordination in the early 2000s, when Presbyterians refused to ordain openly gay and proud individuals. The PC(USA) changed its position in 2011, and at great cost to its unity and size. In 2004, a twenty-something-kid embracing his sexual freedom, I decided it was better for me to find a new spiritual home. Ultimately, I stopped going to church.

Trump’s electoral victory in 2016 inspired me to return to church life after a decade-long break from it (much to the chagrin of my atheist husband). I am now a member of and ordained in the United Church of Christ.

The church I attend is, at least for me, a source of hope. Our senior pastor is a lesbian, and our entire leadership staff is composed of women. My church is Christ-centered, high-functioning, and justice-oriented (e.g., the church regularly provides meals to people emerging from poverty, supplies hygiene kits and furniture to relocating refugee families, grows food for a local organization that feeds people living below a certain income level, builds homes with Habitat for Humanity, advocates for low-income housing, regularly participates in community service projects, and partners with two local churches, one historically black, to fight racism).

In the early 1970s, the UCC became the first denomination in Christendom to ordain an openly gay man. However, the UCC is not a utopia. Churches in the UCC do not share one mind on the question of welcoming LGBTQ persons, especially those more defined by our sexuality.15

Evangelizing Christians is still necessary work, and it is hard work. It is often dispiriting and emotionally painful work. Consider the unfortunate rise of Christian nationalism and the fact that the vast majority of Christian voters (Black Protestants being a notable exception) pulled the lever for Trump in 2024, while Jews, Muslims, and the religiously unaffiliated broke decisively for Harris/Walz.

Whatever their downsides, Nussbaum’s practices of hope are potentially beneficial to many people seeking to get moving again, to move beyond fear into hopeful, democratic action. Given her attunement to psychoanalytic thinking, particularly Winnicott’s object relations theory, I find it interesting that Nussbaum does not explicitly define psychoanalysis as a practice of hope.

Nussbaum clearly imagines each of her hope practices as a form of the “talking cure” (61). Each is, in its own way, a “facilitating environment,” a community in which one may learn to speak and speak to one’s fears, thereby enabling hopeful movement in the world.16

Nonetheless, I think psychoanalysis deserves its own place on the list. Psychoanalysis, as a particular way of listening and speaking that is related to but not synonymous with the arts, activism, religion, justice, philosophy, and service, is a messier, less reasoned form of hopeful (dis)agreement.

VI. A Practice of Hope: Thinking Psychoanalytically

On Wanting to Change (2021), an extended reflection on the discontents of conversion by psychoanalyst Adam Phillips, is an excellent example of psychoanalytic thinking as a practice of hope. In this case, the object of fear is change. Phillips writes,

Both psychoanalysis and American Pragmatism are driven by a desire to help the individual keep things moving. For both Freud and [William] James, the enemy of pleasure and growth was stuckness, addiction, fixity, stasis. They teach us about the temptations of stultification, of the allure of inertia, of the wish to attack our own development; and they suggest, as we shall see, that conversion experiences all too easily become the desire for a change that will finally put a stop to the need for change; change in the direction of what is, to all intents and purposes, a satisfying and reassuring paralysis (converts to religious fundamentalism are not supposed to convert again to something else). They suggest, in significantly different ways, that we are so ambivalent about changing because there is nothing else we can do but change (as though, paradoxically, the fact that we change is the biggest threat to our freedom). And so psychoanalysis and pragmatism try to make wanting to change both appealing and inspiring, as opposed to it being some ineluctable, evolutionary, biological drive, or fate (“Preface”).17

Conversion in psychoanalysis functions like belief in a just world: it is a fantasy of control. Paradoxically, conversion—again, in its psychoanalytic form—is a type of change that promises to end change. “We talk of serial monogamists, and serial killers, but we don’t talk of serial converters” (6).

Why, however, do we want to control change by putting an end to it? What are we afraid of?

In the first chapter of On Wanting to Change, entitled “Conversion Hysteria,” Phillips analyzes a policy change. In 2012, the British Association for Counseling and Psychotherapy (BACP) changed its policy on conversion therapy, the goal of which is to convert homosexuals to heterosexuals. According to reporting by the Guardian, the BACP told its members that it “opposes any psychological treatment such as ‘reparative’ or ‘conversion’ therapy, which is based upon the assumption that homosexuality is a mental disorder, or based on the premise that the client/patient should change his/her sexuality” (4).

Phillips observes the forces of fear in BACP’s letter to its members. The letter implicitly reveals serious disagreement within BACP’s ranks. It manifests BACP’s desire to end the debate once and for all. BACP’s logic, if not its policy position, is entirely agreeable to those therapists who support conversion therapy, as it is the logic of conversion therapy itself. It is the kind of change someone or something demands of you.

Another irony is that BACP’s desire to end debate and force its members to convert to its official position is done in the name of liberal pluralism. “Like [John Stuart] Mill, the BACP believes that not only the individual but his whole society is the beneficiary of diverse sexualities, this being itself a judgement despite its promotion of supposedly ‘non-judgemental attitudes.’ Conversion therapies are opposed to diversity” (12).

An additional irony is that conversion is, like psychoanalysis, dependent on the power of language. Conversation makes us susceptible to conversion. “And, indeed, what do we think language is like, language being the primary medium of conversion, if it can have this kind of effect on people (language also being the medium of psychoanalysis and all the other talking therapies)? And one answer would be that, consciously or unconsciously, we think of language as daemonic. We think of ourselves as doing things with words, while language does things to us” (18).

Phillips, to be clear, is not defending conversion therapy, at least not the kind that demands homosexuals change into heterosexuals. Yes, sexuality, as Freud taught, can be converted—it can, that is, be displaced onto other areas of your life—which is to say it cannot be changed, only hidden. Phillips writes,

What [Freud] called “a capacity for conversion” was a capacity to change while remaining the same, a capacity not to renounce anything and replace what has been supposedly lost. “In neurosis,” Freud’s daughter Anna wrote in The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defence (1936), “whenever a particular gratification of instinct is repressed, some substitute is found for it. In hysteria this is done by conversion, i.e. the sexual excitation finds discharge in other bodily zones or processes which have become sexualized.” You don’t renounce the sexual desire, you sexualize other areas of your life: instead of being a voyeur, you love reading. Conversion, that is to say – in its psychoanalytic version – is a way of not having to change. It is the way the individual sustains the desires that sustain her (22, emphasis mine).

Conversion is often a form of aversion to conversation about your desire. It is a means of avoiding conversation about something disturbing, like who or what you love. Perhaps what the BACP does not want to talk about is the object of its love: namely, conversion therapists.

Phillips reminds us that the “word ‘conversion’ itself breaks down into a con version, ‘con’ meaning ‘to know, learn, study carefully’ or ‘to swindle, trick, to persuade by dishonest means. . . . I think psychoanalysis is best described as a form of honest persuasion. Or that, at least, is what it aspires to be” (19).

If we are lucky, our first honest “conversations” are with our mothers. Nussbaum notes that, for Winnicott, the “mother” represents a role and not a sexed person (34).18 She also recognizes that our moral character develops in and through this relationship or conversation. As the child begins to “relate to [their] parents as whole people,” they begin to develop “‘a capacity for concern’: the parent must not be destroyed” (34).

For Nussbaum, morality “operates in tandem with love, since it is love that leads the child to feel the badness of its own aggression” (34). What, however, if aggression is how the child tries to escape from the “conversation”?

“There is in [our susceptibility to change], whatever else there is,” Phillips writes, “a terrified misogyny; and a terror of our earlier, more dependent selves. A terror of something about love, and a terror about what the loss of love exposes” (15).

In psychoanalysis, the mother is “the woman who first, and hopefully often, converted us – the mother who was, in Christopher Bollas’s phrase, our first and formative ‘transformational object,’ the woman who, through her care, could radically change our mood; and ourselves as infants and young children desiring and depending on such benign conversion experiences as were possible” (15-16). According to Bollas, our earliest experiences of maternal conversions follow us into adult life. We seek an object that “promises to transform the self.”19

The subject of an honest conversation about conversion may be the disturbing power of maternal love “to transform the self.” Maternal love may be what we both fear and desire most of all, so we keep playing with conversion therapies.

“Conversion experiences all too easily, then, have a mixed but not actually a bad echo, both historically and personally,” Philips argues. “We want to get over them, and we don’t. We crave them, and we fear their failure or their unavailability. They link us to our losses, and they remind us of extraordinary boons and benefits. We crave them as opportunities and we fear them as tyrannies” (16, emphasis mine).

Freud was a Jew; he knew that sometimes one must convert to stay alive—to sustain their Jewish life in a hostile Christian and/or Nazi world (20-21). It is not the change they want; it is the change that is demanded of them, the only “change” available when honest conversation is a legitimate source of fear.

The change we genuinely fear is of a different variety because it is genuine change. It is the conversion we experience, if we are lucky, in conversation with our good enough “mothers.”

The recognition of the power of maternal love as a source of fear is reason to hope. We may learn that our fear of her love is not warranted. Thus, we need not hide our desire for it in aggression toward it.


Laura Vazquez Rodriguez, Inseparable, 2019.  

VII. A Vision of Hope: The Maternal City

Nussbaum argues that “[p]olitics begins where we begin” (21). Where we begin—again, if we are lucky—is in the good enough love of our “mothers.”

The politics of love is not and has never been fashionable. Remember, Hillary Clinton wanted to talk to you about love and kindness in 2016. Again, a majority of my fellow citizens living in 3 electorally significant states listened to what Donald Trump had to say instead.20

Hate did not win in 2016 or in 2024. Fear of maternal love did. To understand why maternal love frightens us, we have only to think about the religious practice of loving God.

For example, Christians claim to love God. They allegedly demonstrate this love in and through their love for their fellow human beings. Typically, Christians believe that Jesus Christ unites the two loves. For Christians, Jesus is both fully God and fully human. This means that, to love people, Christians must love what they can neither see nor possess, at least in this world, in people: God or the Other.

David M. Halperin observes that the “notion that all desire for the Other is really desire for God goes back to the origins of Christianity or at least to its Platonic roots in Augustine (Friedrich Nietzsche said that Christianity was simply ‘Platonism for the masses’ . . . ).”21 Halperin argues that the moral implications of how Augustine loves mortal objects are made clear in Book 8 of On the Trinity, “by which time Augustine had found the perfect boyfriend in Saint Paul, a lover who is not only dead but who died long before Augustine was born. What Augustine prizes now is the love with which he loves the goodness of Paul, which makes the practice of loving something you can do all by yourself or at least outside the presence of another living person.”22

Notice that Augustine does not love Paul. Augustine, in Platonic fashion, “loves the goodness of Paul.”

Plato, according to Halperin, thought that “erôs is . . . an irrational—or, rather, supra-rational—passion, a mania . . . erôs [qua erôs] . . . is ultimately a transcendental force.”23 Halperin argues that, for Plato, the “ultimate aim of erotic desire [erôs qua erôs] . . . is the lover’s perpetual possession of the good . . . and its ultimate object is the beautiful.”24 In other words, “[the value one pursues] cannot be possessed by possessing . . . things: it transcends the objects that are the media in or through which it constitutes itself.”25

Christian love of the other entirely depends on their loving the Other, God or Goodness, in the muck of the other’s flesh. Halperin observes that “Plato’s transcendental theory of desire offers . . . a cure to our suffering, a cure shaped from the start by the reality of the suffering it would spare us, but it can provide this cure only by abolishing the epistemic tension in love . . . by saving us once and for all from love’s irony”: we desire an ideal that we can never possess so long as our love is for a mortal object.26

Halperin strongly implies that the goodness of Saint Paul is a replacement for Augustine’s dead boyfriend: “a nameless boy of his own age, a fellow Manichean heretic, who got sick, was baptized while unconscious, renounced Manicheanism and returned to Christianity, resisted Augustine’s efforts to talk him out of it, and died when their friendship, ‘sweeter to me above and beyond all the sweetnesses of my life at that time,’ had barely lasted an entire year.”27 The experience of losing (what or who we) love disposes us to love what can never be lost because it is ultimately absent, at least in this world: God or the ideal.

Augustine is the ancient poster boy of conversion therapy. He learns to love another man, but only the one in his head. He learns to hide his love for another man in his love for God.

In the context of describing the conversions of both Paul and Augustine, Phillips asks, “[W]hat do we want to be converted away from? And can conversion really do the trick?” (70). Is the benefit of conversion worth the cost?

The final chapter of (third) Isaiah gives us reason to believe that the benefits of conversion are not worth the costs. Isaiah 66:1-24 is brimming with the spirit of hostile destruction: anger, disgust, and a future replete with envy. This is the final word, literally the final sentence of (third) Isaiah: “And they shall go out and look at the dead bodies of the people who have rebelled against me [i.e., God]; for their worm shall not die, their fire shall not be quenched, and they shall be an abhorrence to all flesh” (66:24).

Does loving God give us the life we want? Do we want to love God, or do we love God because the alternative feels too frightening?

In the midst of the tragedy that is the final chapter of (third) Isaiah, there is what historian Howard Zinn describes as the “past’s fugitive moments of compassion rather than . . . its solid centuries of warfare.”28 At the center of Divine retribution is a fugitive moment of compassion, the maternal city, we may desire and desire to center in our analysis:

Rejoice with Jerusalem, and be glad for her,
    all you who love her;
rejoice with her in joy,
    all you who mourn over her—
that you may nurse and be satisfied
    from her consoling breast,
that you may drink deeply with delight
    from her glorious bosom.

For thus says the Lord:
I will extend prosperity to her like a river
    and the wealth of the nations like an overflowing stream,
and you shall nurse and be carried on her arm
    and bounced on her knees.
As a mother comforts her child,
    so I will comfort you;
    you shall be comforted in Jerusalem.

 You shall see, and your heart shall rejoice;
    your bodies shall flourish like the grass . . . . (Isaiah 66:10-14).

Centering the city may seem like an unfortunate choice in an essay that seeks, in part, to make sense of the appeal of Donald Trump, whose passionate supporters live mostly in rural towns and counties across the country. In The Country and The City (1975), Raymond Williams writes, “‘Country’ and ‘city’ are very powerful words, and this is not surprising when we remember how much they seem to stand in for the experience of human communities” (1).

For me, the city is an especially powerful word. In the early 2000s, I moved from rural Idaho to Chicago. It was in Chicago that I learned how to be gay—that is, how (not) to love.

The city was, for me, a “consoling breast,” a place to “drink deeply with delight.” Chicago carried me on “her arm, and dandled [me] on her knees.” I cried a lot in Chicago, and I was always “comforted” by her. I met the man who became my husband in Chicago, and many of my closest friends still live there or are from there.

Williams also observes that “[p]owerful hostile associations have . . . developed: on the city as a place of noise, worldliness and ambition; on the country as a place of backwardness, ignorance, limitation” (1). As novels like Balzac’s Lily of the Valley, and Brontë’s Wuthering Heights make clear, the city and the country have much more in common than we often imagine they do.

Chicago is, as conservative media likes to point out, full of “worldliness.” Like many small towns, it is filled with anger, disgust, and envy (just watch The Dressmaker [2015]). Just as my small hometown is beset by social challenges like cruelty, racism, poverty, boredom, and provincialism, so is life in Chicago made precarious by high taxes, high rents, high crime, racial strife and segregation, economic inequality, enormous potholes, smelly El cars, corrupt politicians, a troubled public education system, and the hubris of union bosses.

Loving God may seem like the just solution to these seemingly unsolvable, maddening human problems. Or, it may be an all too common way we avoid having a hopeful conversation about who or what we want to love.

An alternative to loving God may be found in an unlikely place: the letters of Saint Paul. Halperin hedges his bets when he argues that the “notion that all desire for the Other is really desire for God goes back to the origins of Christianity or at least to its Platonic roots in Augustine” (emphasis mine). Halperin may be implying that Paul is to blame for all our problems, but the fourth century is, in fact, “the [origin] of Christianity.” Paul was long gone by then.29

Paul, for his part, collapses the dual commandment to love God and to love one another into one simple, straightforward command: love one another (e.g., Romans 13:8-12). The radical character of Pauline love is often entirely lost on religious people (and on many of Paul’s cultured despisers).

Religious people, in particular, may be susceptible to Donald Trump’s message because the politics of love and kindness is a genuine threat to the monarchy of fear. It actually threatens the self-protective self. It represents a project of self-transformation, represented by the (theological) cliché, “Open your hearts.” Yet, if we really think about it, the benefits of (re)creating a maternal city seem to outweigh the costs of giving up on our fear. At the very least, it is a possibility worth talking about.


Notes:

  1. The U.S. of House of Representatives is even now, November 18, 2024, trying to change House rules to bar the first openly trans* woman elected to Congress, Delaware state senator Sarah McBride, from using the women’s restroom. The effort is being led by Nancy Mace. When asked if she has spoken to McBride, Mace declared, “Sarah McBride doesn’t get a say. I mean, this is a biological man.” The next day, on her X account, she apparently called for respect and kindness. What is Mace afraid of? ↩︎
  2. See Rousseau, Emilie: or On Education (1762), Book I, 66. Nussbaum does not “follow the details of his views, but develops his initial insight in [her] own way” (22). ↩︎
  3. See Joseph LeDoux, The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life (1998). ↩︎
  4. See Aristotle, Rhetoric I.2,9 and II.5. ↩︎
  5. See, e.g., Cass R. Sunstein, Risk and Reason: Safety, Law and Environment (2002). ↩︎
  6. Trump does not make a distinction between immigrants and refugees. The essential difference being that refugees are seeking asylum and residing in the U.S. legally. ↩︎
  7. See also Nussbaum, Anger and Forgiveness: Resentment, Generosity, Justice (2018). ↩︎
  8. See, Aristotle, Rhetoric, II.2. ↩︎
  9. See also Nussbaum, Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law (2004), dedicated to David Halperin, and From Disgust to Humanity: Sexual Orientation and Constitutional Law (2010). See the final chapter of the latter text for a rigorous defense of sex work and public sex. ↩︎
  10. It was reported on November 13, 2024 that Trump desires to deport one million immigrants a year. Just today, November 18, 2024, Trump promised to deploy the U.S. military in this operation. Hopefully, his demonstrated incompetence will stop him from implementing this and other cruel policies. ↩︎
  11. See Kant, “On the Common Saying: That May Be True in Theory, But It Is of No Use in Practice,” in Kant: Political Writings (1991), ed. Hans Reiss. ↩︎
  12. It is in the context of describing a reasonable love that Paul asserts that he “put an end to childish ways” (1 Corinthians 13:11). Perhaps he means that what constitutes love is not always clear, at least to adults. “For now we see in a mirror, dimly” (13:12). ↩︎
  13. See Nussbaum, Monarchy of Fear, 226-231. ↩︎
  14. Defund the police” is a very powerful theological idea, at least to this gay white Christian theologian. As a politics, especially one attuned to people’s propensity to fear, it is toxic, especially to political campaigns that agree on the need for reforms in policing. ↩︎
  15. See Michael Warner, The Trouble With Normal: Sex, Politics, and the Ethics of Queer Life (1999): “So although sex is public in this mass-mediatized culture to a degree that is probably without parallel in world history [esp. now, in 2024], it is also true that anyone who is associated with actual sex can be particularly demonized . . . . But some people are more exposed in their sexuality than others” (23). ↩︎
  16. Cancel culture” has generally proven deleterious to the necessary task of creating environments wherein people may share disturbing thoughts, even and especially about what and who they fear. While I do not make an easy distinction between a person and their thoughts/actions, I do believe that a person can change their thought/actions, and so they can become a different kind of person. Honest, open, safe, and ongoing dialogue is, I believe, essential to this effort. ↩︎
  17. All references are to the Kindle edition. ↩︎
  18. Nussbaum writes, “(Winnicott made it clear that that ‘mother’ was not a specifically gendered person. . . .”) (34, emphasis mine). The “mother” is manifestly a gendered role. So, I have used sex in this context to indicate that “mother” can be either a male or a female person. ↩︎
  19. See Bollas, The Shadow of the Object: Psychoanalysis of the Unthought Known (2017). ↩︎
  20. Foucault asserts that “[i]magining a sexual act that does not conform to the law or to nature, that’s not what upsets people. But that individuals might begin to love each other, that’s the problem. That goes against the grain of social institutions. . . . The institutional regulations cannot approve such. . . . relations: relations that produce a short circuit and introduce love where there ought to be law, regularity, and custom.” David M. Halperin cites Foucault’s comments made in an interview with Le Bitioux, et al., “De l’amitié come mode de vie,” 38, in Saint Foucault: Towards A Gay Hagiography (1995), 98. See, further, now Halperin, “Queer Love,” Critical Inquiry, 45.2 (Winter 2019): 396-419. ↩︎
  21. See David M. Halperin, “What Is Sex For?,” Critical Inquiry 43 (Autumn 2016): 1-31, esp. 28. ↩︎
  22. See Halperin, “The Best Lover,” in Dead Lovers: Erotic Bonds and the Study of Premodern Europe (2007), eds. Basil Dufallo and Peggy McCracken, 8-21, esp. 12-14. Halperin again alludes to Augustine in How To Be Gay (2012). See the book’s epigraph. ↩︎
  23. See Halperin, “Platonic Erôs and What Men Call Love,” Ancient Philosophy 5 (1987): 161-204, esp. 163. ↩︎
  24. Halperin, “Platonic Erôs,” 168. ↩︎
  25. Halperin, “Platonic Erôs,” 168. ↩︎
  26. See Halperin, “Loves Irony: Six Remarks on Platonic Eros,” in Erotikon: Essays on Eros, Ancient and Modern (2005), eds. Shadi Bartsch and Thomas Bartscherer, 48-58, esp. 52. ↩︎
  27. Halperin, “The Best Lover,” 13, and Augustine, Confessions 4.4.7. ↩︎
  28. See the “Introduction to the Thirty-Fifth Anniversary Edition of a People’s History of the United States” (2015) by Anthony Arnove. ↩︎
  29. See, e.g., Rosemary Radford Reuther, “Judaism and Christianity: Two Fourth-Century Religions,” in Sciences Religieuses / Studies in Religion 2 (1972): 1-10. ↩︎

Rest From Cruel Dominion: Embracing Mercy on the Sabbath Day

[5/20/24: Sermon writing is a laborious process, and most clergy spend a lot of time, in the midst of hospital visits, countless meetings and emails, and other obligations, getting it just right. I posted my first draft of this sermon, to be given June 2nd, on May 15th. It has undergone a lot of changes, but I think I am hitting the right notes now. **Guiding statement: I propose to preach that we rest from cruel dominion, from thwarting animal justice and restoration, and to the end of becoming compassionate and merciful sovereigns of the earth.** We all need help with (sermon) writing well. Thomas Long is, in my opinion, the best help for writers of sermons.]

I.

Human animals rule the land. We rule the air. We rule the seas. We have dominion over the earth.

I completely agree with Matthew Scully, a Republican, when we argues in his eloquent and moving book, Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy—I entirely agree with his argument that “[t]he term dominion carries no insult to our fellow [,non-human animal] creatures. We are all set forth into the world with different gifts and attributes. Their gifts, the ones their Creator intended for them, are good for many things—governing just isn’t one of them. Someone has to assume dominion, and looking around the earth we seem to be the best candidates. . . ” (12).

That truth doesn’t make us better or more valuable or less animal than, say, pigs, octopuses, cows, elephants or bats. Our dominion merely reflects our difference, our unique—yet completely animal—place in the world.

So the question we face today—and every day—is not whether we have dominion over the earth—we manifestly do—the question we face is a much more difficult one: What kind of sovereigns are we?

Are we merciful, compassionate, filled with wonder at the sheer diversity of life all around us and so are sovereigns committed to respecting and protecting the inherent dignity of all animal life?

Or, Are we cruel sovereigns, rulers who thwart animal access to justice and to restoration.

II.

We are so very often cruel sovereigns of the earth.

Our cruel reign is sometimes expressed through our faith in what Martha Nussbaum identifies, in her powerful and life-changing book, Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility—in what she identifies as our faith in a Romantic view of nature.

We enjoy Romantic thoughts of “Natural” spaces—and of “Natural” people, too. We love to imagine that there are, out there somewhere, pristine, self-regulated, balanced places and self-sufficient, rural people.

The Romantic idea of “Nature” intoxicates us, but when we sober up and actually observe nature, I think we start to agree with the 19th-century philosopher John Stuart Mill: “Nature is cruel and thoughtless.”

When we sober up, when we are truly in nature, I think we begin to learn what ecologists teach us: “balance of nature” is a nice slogan for fruit and veggie supplements, but no such thing exists in nature.

And rural poverty and isolation from needed resources, like quality healthcare, may be, from the Romantic point of view, the “Natural” order of things, but that is just another reason for us to sober up.

Our faith in “Nature” makes us neglectful; it enables us to ignore the suffering of our fellow creatures. But we are not always neglectful, are we? Sensing that our fellow creatures, including members of our own species, can serve the needs of some dominant group, we force them to serve the free market.

Consider the slaughterhouses throughout our county. Who works there? What do they do all day? And what creatures are killed there? How many are killed there? And how are they killed there? And what’s the big deal? For some answers, read a book like Steven Wise’s An American Trilogy: Death, Slavery, and Dominion on the Banks of the Cape Fear River.

If we open our hearts, we may feel the cries for mercy coming from slaughterhouses all over our country and from those allegedly pristine Natural places. Feeling those cries, we may even be persuaded to rest from our cruel dominion.

III.

God asked us, in the 4th Commandment we read earlier, God asked us to take a break from our cruel dominion. We are asked to rest from cruel dominion on the Sabbath and to remember that God liberated us from the regime of cruelty.

That’s nice—but carefully consider the logic of the Sabbath Commandment: Liberation from slavery in Egypt is the justification for pausing the institution of slavery among those liberated from it. You heard the text: Let your male and female slaves rest on the Sabbath day. I guess you can take the slaves out of Egypt but you can’t take the Egypt out of the liberated slaves—except, maybe, on the Sabbath Day.

But there is a reason the command to let female and male slaves rest on the Sabbath is repeated twice: cruel dominion is all too often the policy of the Sabbath Day.

The story we read from Mark teaches us that cruelty has become a Sabbath Day tradition. Consider this story, another version of the pious cruelty Mark critiques:

All of 17-years-old, I attended a winter church retreat in McCall, Idaho. I managed to get very sick while at the retreat.

I will spare you the details of all the ways my body was trying to expel the sickness.

Anyway, I ended up in hospital, stayed the night on an IV, and returned to the retreat in the morning, in time for breakfast. I walked into the cafeteria and nearly vomited at the sight and smells of sausages and bacon. I consigned myself to hunger.

Later that morning, we gathered for worship and for communion. The chunk of communion bread I ate was so satisfying that, after the service, I went back to the communion table, and I started to chow down on the huge loaf of leftover bread.

It felt so good.

As I was being restored, clergy So-And-So walked over to me and calmly, but with a tone, reminded me that I was eating the body of Christ—and he suggested I stop eating it like a wild animal, by which he meant I should just stop eating it altogether; communion was over.

Being a good teenager, I just completely ignored him. I was not going to be blocked from what I needed to heal.

I hope we have the courage to teach our youth that lesson: sometimes holy trouble will look like totally ignoring religious people. Sometimes, even as your hand is being swatted away by church folks, you just have to keep reaching out your hand and ripping off huge chunks of bread, of justice, of healing. Even on Sundays, in the name of Jesus, you may have to find the courage and tenacity to resist cruel dominion.

Cruel dominion, all the ways, through our inaction and action, we block animals from justice and restoration—cruel dominion is so often a Sunday tradition. But tradition is not destiny. We don’t have to be like clergy So-And-So, blocking people from food, from healing, from justice. We can do something different, if only for one day a week. We can obey the 4th Commandment; we can rest from our cruel dominion.

IV.

Some of you have may noticed a story about the Hurricanes a few weeks ago. I know we have Canes fans in here today. Maybe you saw a story about them entitled, in part, “Hurricanes Use Rest As A Weapon.”

What they did was refuse to practice early in the morning on game day. They went out of their way to get on the ice the day before the game, choosing to rest on the morning of the game. The Canes know what we all know: rest impacts how we perform.

Rest makes us smarter. Rest makes us stronger. Rest makes us patient. Rest makes us merciful and compassionate. Rest makes us woke. 

Woke just means that cruel dominion exhausts us. If we’re woke, that just means we want a break from all forms of cruel dominion.

Rested, we may wake up woke, ready to forsake all forms of slavery, all forms of cruel dominion.

Rested, we may even begin to hear that part of the 4th Commandment that asks us to give animals a rest. Rested, we may start to consider animals as something other than property to be used and as something other than food to be eaten. Rested, we may find it in ourselves to liberate animals from slavery to us.

V.

Philosopher Jeremy Bentham was right when he compared our treatment of animals to slavery. Our cruel dominion over animals can even be hidden in practices that are actually good from our fellow creatures. Think about some of the reasons we stop eating meat:

We stop eating meat to save rainforests, as our meat eating habits require more and more land to raise all those cattle. There are 1.7 billion cows on the face of the earth, and all those cows weigh more than all wild land mammals combined.

We stop eating meat because cows produce more greenhouses gases than our entire transportation sector, changing our environment.

We stop eating meat because it is not healthy for us.

We may even stop eating meat because we oppose cruelty to animals, and industrial farming is terribly cruel to animals. We have an intuitive sense that if we are cruel to animals, that if we support such cruelty, we will also be cruel to one another.

But notice: all that concern, it’s all about us.

Rested, we may realize what Aristotle did: animals like pigs, cows, and chickens “are self-maintaining systems who pursue a good and matter to themselves.” Rested, we may grasp that most animals, including all the ones we like to eat, are sentient creatures.

Sentience is about a lot more than feeling pleasure and pain. It also means that you have an opinion of yourself; you see yourself in a certain way, and you see others in your group, and other objects in the world, in a certain way. And you move accordingly, you move in a way that aligns with your sense of yourself and your sense of how the objects in your world conform to your understanding of what is good and what is bad for you.

Rested, we may grasp that the sow is sentient; she was not created to be food for us; she was created to pursue her goods: a long, satisfying life, and friendship, intimacy, family, nutrition, play, secure housing; rested, we may now understand that the sow desires to pursue her projects and to accomplish her goals.

Rested, the smell of sausages and bacon on the Sabbath may make us want to vomit.

Rested, we may come to this table and reach out our hands, not to kill and eat our fellow creatures, but to be restored by the taste of bread and of grapes.

VI.

Now, I understand if you were with me until that last bit about not eating sentient animals, like pigs. I get it.

I became a vegetarian just last November after I read Nussbaum’s book—and by the reactions of many family and friends, you would think being a vegetarian is the most weirdest thing to be in the world!

Yes, of course vegetarianism is weird, especially if the reason you are a vegetarian is rooted in animal studies, in the fact that most animals, including all of the ones we just love to eat, are sentient in the most expansive sense of the word.

Of course vegetarianism is weird; from day one we have been taught that justice is not a thing for non-human animals to enjoy.

Of course vegetarianism is weird; from day one we have been taught that justice is not a thing for non-human animals to enjoy. Humans animals are entitled to justice; cows, pigs, and chickens are entitled to ketchup.

Again, I completely agree with Matthew Scully. He writes, “I am betting that in the Book of Life ‘[They] had mercy on the creatures’ is going to count for more than ‘[They] ate well” (45).

Rested, we may even learn that it’s possible to forsake cruelty and to eat well!

VII.

On the sabbath day, just for one day, let’s rest from our cruel dominion; let’s eat more bread and drink more wine (I mean, grape juice).  And if you just can’t, there is good news for you: right now, in Singapore, synthetic meat is on the menu. It’s “real,” and it’s lab grown. And I imagine it will come our way soon.

For today, let’s start simple; let’s embrace the deepest truth of our faith: God liberated us from cruel dominion.

Today, let it be heard and believed that God gave the middle finger to cruel dominion: God delivered the Messiah Jesus, crucified, dead, and buried, from the grave. 

So today, let us really rest from cruel dominion; it’s just done day; it’s just one small act—but tomorrow, rested, you may wake up woke, ready to play the game of dominion differently, ready to become the human animals God created us to become: kind and merciful sovereigns of the earth.

May it be so.

Amen.

Martha Nussbaum, Justice for Animals, and *the Ethical Problem* of Animal Predation

I.

Animal predation is an ethical problem. Smart human intervention is required to address it. Or so Martha Nussbaum argues in Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2022):

We need above all to convince people that predation is a problem. Too many people grow up excited and enthralled by predation, and this has had a bad effect on our entire culture. It’s important to keep pointing out that antelopes were not made to be food, they were made to live antelope lives. The fact that they so often do not get to live those lives is a problem, and since we are in charge everywhere we need to figure out how much we can and should do about it (252).

Nussbaum’s analysis of “the wild” comes late in Justice for Animals (see chapter 10, “The ‘Wild’ and Human Responsibility”), and there is a reason for that: the idea that we should somehow intervene in “the wild,” especially in “wild” behaviors like animal predation, will likely strike many readers as totally bizarre. So, it’s important to step back and acquaint ourselves with the development of Nussbaum’s argument before we directly engage the character of animal predatory behavior as an ethical problem in chapter 10.

Below is an outline of what is covered in this overview:

  • What is justice? (chapter 1, section II. below)
  • Inadequate approaches to animal ethics (chapters 2-4, section III. below)
  • Nussbaum’s Capability Approach (CA) to animal justice (chapter 5, section IV. below)
  • Sentience and the subjects of (in)justice (chapter 6, section V. below)
  • When is death a harm? (chapter 7, section VI. below)
  • The Problem of Predation (chapter 10, section VII. below)

In a forthcoming post, “What Do Sentient Creatures Want?,” I will test Nussbaum’s argument for human intervention in animal predation against serious philosophical and ecological objections to said interference. In that post I will also explain why I ultimately side with Nussbaum. For now, our task is to trace the ecological and philosophical trajectory of Nussbaum’s overall argument in Justice for Animals, namely that animals are subjects of (in)justice.

II.

Nussbaum begins by defining what she means by justice. She defines justice largely by contrasting it with injustice. “[T]he general intuition should be emerging more clearly: injustice centrally involves significant striving blocked by not just harm but also wrongful thwarting, whether negligent or deliberate” (8, emphasis original).

“Significant striving” means that particular animals move with intention to obtain what is significant to them (e.g., shelter, play, friendship, etc.). When significant striving, deliberate movement to obtain “what is reasonably significant” to a particular animal, is unjustly blocked, it entails more than harm. An animal may encounter any number of harms in the course of their significant striving, harms such as illness or a storm that destroys their nest (or worse). These harms are no one’s fault. Wrongful thwarting entails fault.

We are right to think that when someone with the power to act does so in a way they know, or should know, will wrongfully thwart another animal’s thriving, we are dealing with unjust action. We are also right to think that when someone with the power to act fails to exert that power in a way they know, or should know, will prevent the wrongful undermining of another animal’s thriving, we are dealing with unjust inaction (i.e., neglect).

For example, a child destroying a bird’s nest is wrongful thwarting of a bird’s significant striving. Likewise, a parenting standing idly by as their kid smashes the nest is inaction that constitutes a wrongful thwarting of a bird’s significant striving. Justice, by contrast, is related to laws, norms, and institutions that reasonably support and enable significant striving.

But how do we get here, to the place where we (human animals) understand animal lives in terms of (in)justice? How do we get beyond the view of someone like John Rawls who thought that while animals are worthy of our compassion, “they could not be treated justly or unjustly” (9). The ultimate answer to those questions is animal sentience. But for now, Nussbaum emphasizes three emotions that “have the potential to help us beyond our daily context” (9). They are:

  • Wonder, “like love, is epistemic: it leads us out of ourselves and awakens a nascent ethical concern” (12).
  • Compassion is feeling “pain at the significant suffering of another creature” (12).
  • Outrage “is a form of anger . . . . [this] species of anger turns to face forward, and its aim is to create a better future. For that reason I will call it Transition-Anger [because it is without a retributive wish] (15).1

When these emotions are ethically attuned and joined together they lead us in the right direction: “Wonder arrests our attention and draws us out of ourselves, inspiring curiosity about an alien world. Compassion links us to the suffering animal in a powerful emotional experience. Transition-Anger prepares us for action” (16).

In addition to these ethically attuned and intertwined emotions, we need a good theory for comprehending animal lives as subjects of (in)justice. Nussbaum carefully assesses three major approaches to animal ethics, and she points out how they fail to adequately comprehend animal lives as subjects of (in)justice.

III.

The “So Like Us” approach to animal ethics is the first of the three approaches to animal ethics Nussbaum reviews, and it is the the subject of chapter 2. The most influential advocate of this approach is Steven Wise.

The idea is that certain animals are like human beings, approximating human capabilities, and so they should be treated accordingly. Nussbaum contends that “[t]his theory is too narrow, unworthy of the alienness and sheer diversity of animal lives. And it is counterproductive as a strategy to expand animal entitlements” (19-20).

Yet, this approach has managed to strike the ears of US judges with a basic Western education. It is that Western education that Nussbaum summarizes and to the end of further highlighting why the “So Like Us” theory is too limited in its scope and inadequate to guide our future efforts toward animal justice.

The main idea underlying a basic Western education in animal ethics is the religious idea of the scala naturae: a fixed, natural ladder with humans on the top and other animals following on a descending scale of value/worth. This religious idea is often attributed to Aristotle, but Nussbaum is not convinced it is his idea, at least not in its popular, religious form.2

The “So Like Us” theory plays on the religious idea of the scala naturae, arguing that while apes, for example, have not risen to the level of human beings on the ladder, they have come up pretty close. So, it would seem reasonable to grant them legal rights associated with human personhood.

There are many problems with this view. They are:

  • “[M]ost of the animal world still lies outside [as they are too unlike us] in the dark domain of thinghood” (31).
  • “The image of the scala naturae is not drawn from looking at nature, and it does not correspond to what we see when we look at nature . . . “ (31).
  • “It leads to ugly projects in which humans imagine transcending their animal bodies by casting aspersions on the smells and fluids of the body” (32).
  • “[I]t leads to a focus on artificial performances that are not really characteristic of the species as it lives its life in the wild [i.e., (sign) language abilities]” (33).  
  • Wise and others, like Thomas White, privilege “likeness over strangeness [although White has since adopted the CA approach]” (38).

The second view of animal ethics Nussbaum assesses is that of the British Utilitarians. They are the subject of chapter 3. While they emphasize “the commonality of all animals in our shared pain,” they still come up short of animal justice in some essential ways (39).

The British Utilitarians Nussbaum has in mind are Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill, and Henry Sedgwick. She also includes Peter Singer, an Australian philosopher and close follower of British Utilitarian ideas, in her analysis of Utilitarian thought applied to animal ethics.

Utilitarian thinkers advanced animal rights in critical ways. Bentham, for example, compared “our treatment of other animals to slavery” (40). He also recognized that animals suffer; “suffering [is] a common bond among all animals” (56). The key ethical facts for Bentham are pleasure and pain. “The aim of a rational politics should be to maximize the net balance of pleasure over pain in the universe” (40).

Bentham also challenged the idea of the natural ladder. “[Animals] should not be treated as things or property, and their interests should be treated with as much attention as those of humans, ‘allowance made for the difference in point of sensibility.'” In other words, “similar interests should be treated similarly, but something that is irrelevant to the interests of the creature should not matter in thinking about its needs” (43). Utilitarians also recognize animal sentience, and the importance of sentience as a threshold for defining the subject of (in)justice (see section V. below).

The main problem with Utilitarian animal ethics is the singular focus on pain and pleasure. While Mill takes a more nuanced view of pleasure (including the fact that we may take pleasure in terrible things, like killing animals), the singular focus on pleasure and pain ignores the fact that animal “lives have other relevant aspects: dignity, social capacity, play, planning, and free movement among others” (56).

The third theory of animal ethics Nussbaum reviews is that of Christine Korsgaard. Korsgaard fashions animal ethics in Kantian terms: animals are ends in themselves and not merely means. The difficulty with her theory is the character of and undue emphasis on human rationality or moral reasoning.

Kant did not hold animals in high esteem because he believed they lacked “the capacity for ethical choice” and so, citing Kant, they may be used “as we please” (58). Kant did, however, argue against the cruel treatment of animals. He thought unkindness to animals made humans unkind to one another. Nonetheless, Kantian ethics is important for its emphasis on the “inviolability and dignity of the individual creature” (58).

The central idea Korsgaard takes from Kantian ethics and applies to animal ethics is the second version of the Categorical Imperative: “So act that you use humanity, in your own person as well as in the person of any other, always at the same time as an end, never merely as a means.” How this imperative applies to animals, and not just to “humanity,” is in need of further explanation.

Kant thought that humans, on account of our unique ability to reflect ethically and to make choices, are the only species “who can be obligated and have duties” (65, emphasis original). Korsgaard argues that it does not follow that “we are the only creatures who can be the objects of duties, creatures to whom duties are owed” (65, emphasis original). This is so, not for Kantian, but for Aristotelian reasons.

Aristotle thought animals are “self-maintaining systems who pursue a good and who matter to themselves” (65). If we accept this view, as both Korsgaard and Nussbaum do, it follows that human animals are ethically obligated to respect and value the, to use Nussbaum’s term, “significant striving” of animals. We have an ethical obligation to treat animals as ends and not merely as means, that is, if we wish to be ethically consistent.

The fact that my cat is an animal with goals and purposes does not, however, collapse the difference(s) between my cat and myself, leading us back to a “So Like Us” approach to animal ethics. My cat is to be treated as an end and not merely as a means because of his catness and not because he resembles something approximating my humanness. Korsgaard, Nussbaum contends, “avoids most of the errors of the ‘So Like Us’ approach, but in the end she ties herself to a version of it: the value of animals is derivative from likeness to humanity” (67).

The significant difference between Korsgaard and Nussbaum is the line the former draws between special human rationality (i.e., autonomous will) and animal nature. For Nussbaum, “all of our capacities are part of our animal nature” (65). So, human rationality, human ethical reasoning, may make me different from, say, my cat, but it doesn’t make me somehow less animal (to be clear, Korsgaard rejects human superiority), and it doesn’t make my cat a machine of instincts, a creature incapable of a cat specific kind of ethical reasoning.

Animals studies alert us to the ethical capabilities of many kinds of animals. “[Sperm whales, macaws, chimpanzees a]ll have social mechanisms for teaching young members appropriate social norms, thus developing instinctual endowments in a direction that promotes group and individual welfare. And isn’t that really what all good parents are trying to do?” (75). In other words, good sperm whale parents teach their children how to be good sperm whales.

Nussbaum takes from Kant the emphasis on individual animal worth. She takes from Aristotle the emphasis on the dignity of all animals. Developing her own approach, she avoids all the pitfalls mentioned earlier: the split between rationality and nature, the myopic focus on maximizing aggregate pleasure, and the emphasis on animal likeness to human animal capabilities.

IV.

In chapter 5, Nussbaum describes her Capabilities Approach and begins to show how it applies to animal ethics. What is the Capabilities Approach?

The CA “argues that a society is even minimally just only if it secures to each individual citizen a minimum threshold amount of a list of Central Capabilities, which are defined as substantial freedoms, or opportunities for choice and action in areas of life that people in general have reason to value. . . it emphasizes material empowerment more than do many rights-based approaches [, and] it leaves spaces for individual freedom” (80, emphasis original).

Like Korsgaard’s Kantian inspired theory, CA understands “each individual creature . . . as having dignity that law and politics must respect, treating that individual as an end, not simply as a means” (81). It does not, however, set human moral powers above “other aspects of animal living, and it sees all human powers as parts of the equipment of a mortal and vulnerable animal who deserves a fair shake in life–as do all sentient animals” (81).

CA moves beyond a simple, singular focus on GDP, a national measure of economic health. “Short-sighted development policies often aim to make people feel good rather than to empower them. ‘What are people (and what is each person) actually able to do and to be?’ The [CA] asks, and answers, that very practical question” (84, 86). Again, CA recognizes significant striving, in this case, the fact that we humans, each of us, are “active beings seeking a flourishing life that they themselves create” (87).

Each human being needs certain things, certain entitlements or rights, in order to flourish. The 10 central capabilities are listed below (see 89 for a full explanation of each). “One way of thinking about what all the items on the list have in common is that they all seem to be inherent in the intuitive idea we form of a life that is worthy of human dignity” (91):

  • Life
  • Bodily Health
  • Bodily Integrity
  • Senses, Imagination, Thought
  • Emotions
  • Practical Reason
  • Affiliation
  • Other Species
  • Play
  • Control Over One’s Environment

We don’t all need or want all of the above capabilities (at least not every aspect of what each entails); we, each of us, are free to choose among them to create the lives we want for ourselves. Yet, if any one of the capabilities were subtracted, we would rightly feel like human life is being treated as a means and not as an end.

The role of government, of law and policy, is to secure “the capabilities for all.” The capabilities list “is a list of fundamental tasks of government” (92). Critically, “[t]his doesn’t mean that people always should rely on government to solve their problems. . . . But it does mean that the whole matter of justice depends on getting a stable political structure that is able, enough of the time, to deliver the capabilities to the people who chose and empowered it” (92).

Both Nussbaum and Korsgaard go beyond the Kantian focus on human dignity, taking into their theories an insight from Utilitarian John Mill: “all sentient animals have a dignity of their own, which deserves respect” (92). Human dignity is, of course, different from the dignity of a dolphin, and the dolphin’s dignity is different from the elephant’s. But dignity is there, made manifest in each animal’s “pursuit of valued goals” (96).

What follows from this insight is an emphasis on the idea of “characteristic form of life.” “Each form of life is different. . . . Being more like a human would not be good or pertinent for a magpie. We humans are similar to magpies, dolphins, and elephants in groping for survival and flourishing in a mostly hostile world; we differ in the specific nature of the goods we seek” (97).

If we concede that our human “strivings should not be thwarted,” why would we allow the thwarting of the particular strivings of other animals? While humans make laws, why must we make laws only for humans? Animals cannot speak in Congress, but they do “speak” to us about their situation. Why should animals not have collaborators in Congress and in the courts, experts who carefully observe them and describe their situations to us? We do something similar when we hire an attorney to speak for us, to make our case, before a judge in a court of law.

There are many, intricate issues Nussbaum clarifies in this chapter, but I focus on only a few here. First, Nussbaum emphasizes individual dignity. Species level thinking is helpful, and each species requires its own capabilities list (though Nussbaum’s list can act as a general guide for, say, what might be important capabilities for octopuses), but the individual, and their freedom to choose which capabilities are important to their own form of life, is privileged.

Individual freedom within an entitlement structure is what is in view here. So, any one list may need to be modified to make room for unforeseen capabilities. Focus on the species takes on importance to the degree that, say, opportunities for affiliation is what individual members of a species need to flourish (e.g., for some octopuses, hanging out with their own species is not a big part of what they seek, although it is necessary for reproduction. However, many do seem to value community with different kinds of octopuses and with different species, with fish like groupers and with humans).

But are “rights” the right way to think about animal (in)justice? It’s difficult, for many reasons, to think animal rights, rights that can actually be reasonably guaranteed or supported. One reason is animals do not live neatly within local or even national borders. Nussbaum, following Kant, argues, “At the base of our rights is a very simple idea: every human being has a right to be where he or she is. . . to having a share of control over what happens in the world” (114).

Extending rights to animals is a consequence of their dignity. They, too, have a right to be where they are, and so to have, like us, “a say” in what happens. Animals rights are “‘imperfect rights’ . . . rights not against any definite person or animal, but, rather, against all human beings, against humanity imagined as capable of collective action” (113). Some animals, like dogs and cats, may be assigned specific responsibilities/duties to other animals (e.g., not to attack humans, other dogs, or birds), but animal rights are largely what human animals owe to all other sentient animals.

V.

In his elegant and moving book, Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy, Republican Matthew Scully gets at why, in Nussbaum words, we need a “working boundary,” like sentience, when thinking animal rights.

Scully cites animal rights skeptic, his friend and conservative, Joseph Sobran:

This would put us, the human race, in the position of policing the entire animal kingdom, making sure they don’t violate each other’s rights . . . . We would reduce our workload by allowing each species to police itself . . . even (if we mean business) the fly against the spider. . . (136).

Sobran’s intention is to mock animal rights, or, in Scully words, to mock “any notion of moral status for animals,” by showing that it “ends in absurdity” (136). The concept of sentience serves as “a working boundary” in Nussbaum’s approach to animal rights, and it is a critical idea, that is, if we want to avoid the absurdity of “policing” in the relationship between flies and spiders.

The subjects of (in)justice are sentient animals. Sentient animals are entitled to rights because they are animals capable of significant striving. But what does sentience mean more exactly?

Sentience means that the world looks like something to you. It relates to subjective experience, a way of feeling about the world and what is possible for you in the world. It means that you do not simply avoid pain and move toward pleasure; it means you pursue things that are good to you, and you avoid thing that you discern are bad for you.

Sentience is, as Nussbaum observes, often reduced to the ability to feel pain (and pain is very bad for sentient creatures). But it also means that you have an opinion of yourself; you see yourself in a certain way, and you see others in your group, and other objects in the world, in a certain way. And you move accordingly, in a way that aligns with your sense of yourself and your sense of how the objects in your world conform to your understanding of what is good and bad for you. That is sentience.

“What I am saying,” Nussbaum writes, “is that my core notion of injustice can apply only to creatures who are capable of significant striving, and that involves [sentience]” (119). And most animals are, we know from scientific studies, sentient, “including all mammals, all birds, and teleost (hard-boned) fish . . . ” (119).

Nussbaum goes on to lay out the reasoning, the evidence grounding the identification of sentient creatures, including humans. Nussbaum concludes, “Significant striving, then, includes subjective perception of things that are helpful and harmful (the world looks like this to the animal), plus a variety of subjective attitudes, such as pain and pleasure, and, in addition, numerous other subjective states that motivate behavior: desires and emotions. The sentient animals we are describing have all of these abilities” (140).

There are serious reasons to doubt that insects are sentient (however, bees may be sentient). So, we likely need not worry about rights for flies or spiders (although, flies and spiders [and trees and plants and sharks] merit other kinds of ethical concern). What we know with certainty is that the most ambiguous cases need not keep us from identifying the subjects of justice: animals that are, just as clearly as we are, sentient and so capable of significant striving.

VI.

We know that pain is harmful to the significant striving of sentient creatures. So, we might think that killing animals humanely, that is, in such a way that they experience little to no pain, and for “legitimate” human purposes (e.g., to eat), is acceptable. While one may take such a view, and it is far better than those who believe animals may be killed however and for any reason, that view does not live up to the demands of Kant’s Categorical Imperative. Killing animals humanely and for legitimate human purposes is to treat them merely as means and not as ends.

Nussbaum draws our attention to the fact that animals also kill one another, a topic she takes up in chapter 10. At the moment, the subject is the “fringe” case of humans killing animals that are reasonably healthy (killing a companion animal because their cancer is incurable, for example, is a different matter [see 156]) and who have lived reasonably long and good lives. Animals killed by factory farming are not killed painlessly, and so their deaths are not the topic of this chapter.

The main philosophical source of this chapter is Epicurus. He argued that death is no harm because when I die, there is no “I” to which to attach harm. The argument is compelling, but there is a problem: it does not take into account how our human lives actually unfold.

Nussbaum expands on what she calls the “interruption argument.” “[D]eath [not only “premature death”] interrupts activities that unfold over time,” activities like love and friendship, reading a long novel, planting a garden and so forth (160). “Death. . . cuts short the pleasant flow of life’s many projects. . . . Epicurus, then, builds on an impoverished picture of human life and value . . . many or most deaths are bad for the person who dies . . . in a perfectly straightforward way: they change the life that was lived, and for the worse” (160, 161).

The goal of this argument is to make a descriptive distinction (not a new ladder of worth) between those animals who undertake projects and those who do not undertake projects. “When a life contains a temporal unfolding of which the subject is aware and which the subject values, death can harm it. However, not all [sentient] creatures are like that. . . and therefore the argument does not establish that death is a harm to all creatures” (161). To underscore an important point: MANY creatures, almost all the creatures we kill and eat, are like that: aware of a temporal unfolding that they value.

The issue is especially complex in the case of many bony fish, sentient creatures who seem to live in the moment, moment by moment. Thus, a painless death is no harm to them, as such a death does not interrupt their lives. And much else follows from this, for example: “Even if it [painlessly killing and eating fish] doesn’t actually harm the being, it is still a kind of domination over that other life,” the very thing rights-based approaches are meant to stop (171). The possibility then arises that while we are not harming fish when we painlessly kill and eat them, we may be doing them an injustice. Humility and vigilance are required of us: “With our specific life-form comes responsibility” (171).

VII.

We are now prepared to grasp the sense of the argument that our responsibility extends to animal predation, that animal predation is a problem that requires a smart human response. The following ideas are in the background as we work through Nussbaum’s thinking on animal predation in chapter 10:

  1. (In)Justice: Justice is bound up with the enablement of a creature’s significant striving, while injustice is the wrongful thwarting (actively or passively) of the same.
  2. The Subjects of (In)Justice: Sentient creatures, those who significantly strive in characteristic life-form ways, are the subjects of justice and so are to be treated as ends and not merely as means. Most animals are sentient.
  3. Harm, Injustice, and Death: Death is, generally, a harm to sentient creatures, as it interrupts their significant projects. While it may not constitute a harm to all sentient creatures, especially creatures incapable of significant projects, death may well constitute an injustice when it is a form of domination of one species over another.

The question framing chapter 10 has to do with what role humans are to play in “the wild,” if any. What role should we play in treating wild animal illnesses? Should we address starvation in the wild? What of zoos as a form of intervention? Should we fashion “a cooperative multispecies society, where wild animals are concerned?” (223-224) And, our question, what should humans do about animals killing other animals, if anything?

Concepts like “the wild” and “nature” are, Nussbaum points out, wildly Romantic. “The Romantic idea of ‘the wild’ is born of human anxieties, particularly about urban and industrial life. Nature, in this conception, is supposed to do something for us; the idea has little do with what we are supposed to do for Nature and other animals” (225). “Other animals” includes rural humans; romanticism idealizes rural poverty.

As both Scully and Nussbaum point out, “the wild” is a great deal more “benign” than factory farming, but, as Mill thought, “Nature is cruel and thoughtless” (228). Moreover, ecological thought has taught us that there is no such thing as the “balance of nature.” There is no such thing as “the wild,” either. Humans control everything: land, sea, air. And so when we make a case for “the wild,” what we are saying is that we do not want to take responsibility for the world that our species in every way dominates.

And “it is not clear that we can ethically be standoffish, even instances where have not caused the problem. If we are looking on, in control and monitoring animal habitats, it seems like callous stewardship indeed if we permit . . . . thoroughly ‘natural’ types of pain and torment” (230). Human stewardship and animal autonomy are not incompatible, as “Nature is not a glorious site of freedom” (231).

The contours of (in)justice are starting to form: humans, in ways both deliberate and neglectful, thwart animal thriving. We either smash the nest or we stand idly by while it is smashed by another animal. So, just stewardship of “the wild” must not be avoided; rather, it must be ethically principled (see 232) and attuned to the kinds of animal capabilities we are responsible for recognizing and protecting (233-237).

It is a common practice (and widely accepted) for humans to intervene in “the wild” when there is starvation, drought, and so forth. We are likely to blame for all of that anyway. But something seems different about predation, about the act of animals killing other animals.

We are cautioned against interfering in predation for several reasons. First, instincts. Predators are not doing anything wrong when they attack and kill other animals. That is true. What they are doing is expressing something characteristic of their life-form. Our interference may, in fact, degrade their dignity, wrongfully interfering with their significant striving, frustrating important to them instincts. And, and Nussbaum does not make this exact point, it is equally possible that our interference in predation would frustrate an important to, say, the gazelle instinct to recognize and to evade danger(s). Instincts, however, can be (re)directed in many different ways. . . ways that do not entail the unspeakable suffering of another creature or the death of a thrilling existence of constant vigilance and escape.

We are cautioned against interfering in predation for another reason: we have no idea what impact such interference would have on animal populations. Yet, predation and hunting are not the only ways of managing animal populations. They are certainly not the most painless ways of managing animal populations.

And even if we think there are good reasons for not interfering in animal predation generally, we may think it unsavory for humans to enjoy it or to become predators in “the wild” themselves. Therefore, we will oppose sado-tourism, the practice of humans taking great enjoyment in scenes (and paying a lot to see them) of vulnerable creatures being torn to bits by, for example, wild dogs. We must also outlaw big game hunting, the practice of humans killing, for example, elephants with weapons of war.

Additionally, we may think there are good reasons for not interfering in animal predation generally, but we may also identify some special circumstances where we think intervention is necessary. For example, we may seek to protect animals that have not evolved to recognize and evade the dangers posed by non-indigenous threats (think of the kakapo).

Speaking of the kakapo, predation may even be encouraged in certain circumstances. The CA allows for self-defense, so rats may be acceptable objects of predation, becoming a food source for creatures, like cats, also managed out of eating the kakapo. There may be other “nuisance animals” that fall into this category.3

Animal predation is not a simple phenomenon, one that requires little to no thought or concern on our part. Nussbaum’s approach to it is nuanced and cautious, and, even so, we identified instances of acceptable and reasonable human interventions in “the wild,” and in animal predation specifically.

We are now well situated to understand why most instances of animal predation constitute a serious ethical problem, one that requires a smart human response:

To start, animal predation is not, not straightforwardly, an injustice. The lion, for example, is not somehow in the wrong for killing and eating a warthog. Yet, both the unspeakable suffering the warthog experiences as it becomes the lion’s food and the threats to life and limb the lion risks to kill it should at the very least alert us to the possibility that predation is, nonetheless, a form of wrongful thwarting of significant striving. Lions are not in a postion to recognize that, and warthogs aren’t, either. But we are in a postion to recognize injustice, and we can do something about it.

It is also highly questionable that respecting the dignity of both lions and, say, gazelles requires predation as a capability, namely the capability to hunt and the capability to escape being eaten. Must lions kill other animals to be (happy) lions? We have no reason to believe that is so. Moreover, we may grant that all creatures are, indeed, food (or are edible), but is that want sentient creatures, like the gazelle, want, at least while they have a say in the matter, while they are still living? We have no reason to believe that is so.

Finally, death does harm to both the lion and to the gazelle, to each of their respective projects. And, as we saw in the case of fish, death may become an injustice when it represents a tool of domination of one species over another. Predation seems to me to qualify as a form of domination. While the lion cannot recognize their eating of the gazelle as unjust, and while the gazelle, even if it could recognize the injustice of predation, is powerless to do anything about it, we can both recognize predation as a problem and do something about it.

There are serious ecological and philosophical objections, and I have alluded to some of them above, to human interference in animal predation, objections that go well beyond a straightforward concern for what we do not know (e.g., how such interference will impact animal populations) and the possibility of making alternatives to “wild” behaviors available in ways that respect the dignity of animal lives. One is right to ask: Are human interventions in animal predation a form of domination, a means of humanizing the entire animal world?

Nussbaum’s argument, namely that animal predation is, in most cases, an ethical problem that requires smart human intervention, stands up well against serious objections to it. Or so I will argue in a forthcoming post, “What Do Sentient Creatures Want?”

Endnotes:

  1. For more on anger, see Nussbaum, Anger and Forgiveness: Resentment, Generosity, Justice (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016). ↩︎
  2. While Ibram X. Kendi links the scala naturae to Aristotle, Stamped from the Beginning shows how the idea plays out in terms of the history of race and racism in Western thought. See Stamped, e.g., 15-21. See also Nussbaum, in the present context, on page 32. ↩︎
  3. Although, if we take lessons from Trash Animals: How We Live With Nature’s Filthy, Feral, Invasive, and Unwanted Species, we will approach the management of such “nuisance” animals with great care. Even in the case of rats, Nussbaum does suggest birth control efforts as a strategy of population control. ↩︎