This is the link to the story:
 
http://www.consumerfreedom.com/news_detail.cfm/headline/3807 
 
Exposed: The Secret Animal Rights Agenda Of America’s Next Regulatory Czar

January 15, 2009

 
Barack Obama’s pick for “regulatory czar,” Harvard Law School Professor Cass 
Sunstein, may be the incoming president’s most popular appointment so far. 
Judging from his resume -- best-selling author, “pre-eminent legal scholar of 
our time,” and an endorsement from The Wall Street Journal -- we can almost 
understand why. Almost. Because as we’re telling the media today, there’s one 
troubling portion of the new Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs 
(OIRA) Administrator’s C.V. that has seems to have flown under everyone’s 
radar: Cass Sunstein is a radical animal rights activist.

Don’t believe us? Sunstein has made no secret of his devotion to the cause of 
establishing legal “rights” for livestock, wildlife, and pets. “[T]here should 
be extensive regulation of the use of animals in entertainment, scientific 
experiments, and agriculture,” Sunstein wrote in a 2002 working paper while at 
the University of Chicago Law school. 

“Extensive regulation of the use of animals.” That's PETA-speak for using 
government to get everything PETA and the Humane Society of the United States 
can't get through gentle pressure or not-so-gentle coercion. Not exactly the 
kind of thing American ranchers, restaurateurs, hunters, and biomedical 
researchers (to say nothing of ordinary consumers) would like to hear from 
their next “regulatory czar.”

A version of the same paper also appeared as the introduction to Animal Rights: 
Current Debates and New Directions, a 2004 book that Sunstein co-edited with 
then-girlfriend Martha Nussbaum. In that book, Sunstein set out an ambitious 
plan to give animals the legal “right” to file lawsuits. We're not joking: 

“[A]nimals should be permitted to bring suit, with human beings as their 
representatives, to prevent violations of current law … Any animals that are 
entitled to bring suit would be represented by (human) counsel, who would owe 
guardian like obligations and make decisions, subject to those obligations, on 
their clients’ behalf.” 
It doesn't end there. Sunstein delivered a keynote speech at Harvard 
University’s 2007 “Facing Animals” conference. (Click here to watch the video; 
his speech starts around 39:00.) Keep in mind that as OIRA Administrator, 
Sunstein will have the political authority to implement a massive federal 
government overhaul. Consider this tidbit: 

“We ought to ban hunting, I suggest, if there isn’t a purpose other than sport 
and fun. That should be against the law. It’s time now.” 
Sunstein also argued in favor of “eliminating current practices such as 
greyhound racing, cosmetic testing, and meat eating, most controversially.”

He concluded his Harvard speech by expressing his “more ambitious animating 
concern” that the current treatment of livestock and other animals should be 
considered “a form of unconscionable barbarity not the same as, but in many 
ways morally akin to, slavery and mass extermination of human beings.” Sound 
familiar?

As the individual about to assume “the most important position that Americans 
know nothing about,” Sunstein owes the public an honest appraisal of his animal 
rights goals before taking office. Will the next four years be a 
dream-come-true for anti-meat, anti-hunting, and anti-everything-else radicals? 
Time will tell. For now, meat lovers might want to stock their freezers. 

URL: http://www.consumerfreedom.com/news_detail.cfm/headline/3807 


      
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