More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Ingrid Newkirk

Ingrid Newkirk

Posted: August 23, 2010 05:37 PM

New Mexico's Governor Richardson met with National Institutes of Health (NIH) officials this week in a last-ditch effort to stop NIH from moving 202 "retired" chimpanzees out of Holloman Air Force base and back into invasive experiments. NIH is moving swiftly to transfer the chimpanzees into facilities so substandard that caging conditions within them violate not only everything that we have come to know about what chimpanzees require but also federal law itself. Some of the animals are 60 years old -- some are left over from the space program. Gov. Richardson's visit came on the heels of petitions and pleas by everyone from physicians, veterinarians and primatologists to actors such as Gene Hackman, all of which have been ignored.

It was only a week earlier that Time magazine's cover story asked the question, "What's on animals' minds?" Fifteen years before, as Dr. Jane Goodall mulled over the complex relationships within chimpanzee families, Time had asked, "Do animals think?" Now the question is "What do animals think?" In the case of chimpanzees, who have been taught to use sign boards and even American Sign Language to communicate with their human captors, they think a lot.

The more pressing question is now "What is NIH thinking?" And the answer isn't befitting our nation's level of awareness about animals and its commitment to their protection.

In 2001, the U.S. Congress recognized that chimpanzees should be retired from experimentation. "Retirement" has not meant a beachfront condo or a return to the Gombe. Charities have managed to wrest away some chimpanzees, rehabilitate them from a life that, in some cases, consisted of 34 years on a concrete bench in a tiny cell or two decades in a steel cage barely any bigger than the animal's body, and put them in group care.

In many cases, "retirement" has meant a continuation of solitary confinement but no more invasive and painful procedures. Imbued with active, intelligent minds, naturally inclined to complex social relationships, as capable of falling in love and carefully raising their children as we are, they sit and wait, alone, with not even a blanket or an orange to keep them company. It is cruel and unusual punishment for a thinking being, but it is still far better than also being cut apart and sewn back up every so often, which is the fate that now awaits them again if NIH does not stop this wretched plan.

NIH has already moved 15 of the "retired" chimpanzees to the Southwest Foundation, a Texas facility that has failed to meet federal minimum standards for the care of animals. Federal minimum standards for chimpanzees, by the way, require no more than enough room in which to stand, sit and turn around ― for life. Charles River Laboratories, which operates the Alamogordo Primate Facility, another dungeon-like laboratory complex as notoriously inhumane as Devil's Island, plans to start experimenting on these and the other chimpanzees soon.

Carl Sagan once wondered if those who experiment on nonhuman primates would fare as well as their subjects if the tables were turned. At first, he thought they would. But in one experiment, in which monkeys were only permitted to eat if they pulled a lever that administered an electric shock to another monkey, the monkeys chose to abstain from food for up to 14 days, even if they didn't know the monkey being shocked. Sagan had to wonder how many human beings in the same situation would be so selfless.

If this administration is to be seen as remotely humane, President Obama must act quickly to stop the NIH officials who have chosen to ignore all that we have learned over the years about how indistinguishable chimpanzees are from us in any important way, such as the ability to feel pain and fear, love and joy, and the desire to live with others of one's own kind. The chimpanzees being moved out of Holloman are not a testament to our society's quest for understanding and compassion but rather a testament to its ability to betray, for a few bucks, those who depend on us for mercy.

Ingrid E. Newkirk is the president and founder of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA 23510; www.PETA.org. Her latest book is The PETA Practical Guide to Animal Rights.


 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 22
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:46 PM on 08/29/2010
Chimpanzees should have the same legal right to physical security and freedom from imprisonment and assault that humans do.
03:16 PM on 08/28/2010
Why does mankind assume they have the right to 'own', or in any dispose of, another species whose only crime is to be unfortunate to share the planet with us?

Of course we are not the only species who can think, feel, or love. Of course we should treat other species with this in mind.

Mankind's shame is that we have to be constantly reminded of this.
11:39 PM on 08/25/2010
President Obama should ensure that the Alamogordo chimpanzees are permanantly retired to a sanctuary. These sentient animals deserve to live out the remainder of their lives free from pain and suffering inflicted upon them by humans.
05:06 PM on 08/25/2010
It is amazing to me that there is such discussion about stem cell research "killing" yet horrendous conditions and experiments on monkeys, living monkeys, draws next to no comment. Why isn't this info on page one of our newspapers. Write to Obama and tell him you don't want these chimps sent anywhere but a comfortable sanctuary. The chimps deserve so much more than a cement jail!
12:36 PM on 08/25/2010
Great apes and other animals should never be used in any type of experiments, This just goes to show how that the NIH, NASA, and other animal experimenters are stuck in the dark ages. They need to take some progressive, compassionate steps and retire the chimpanzees once and for all.
05:20 PM on 08/24/2010
When I read of all the ways in which the human heart and mind can disconnect emotionally from our fellow beings when it is deemed necessary to cause them suffering for human gain, I grieve terribly for all that these innocent creatures must endure at our hands. However, I grieve even more for what this disconnection does to the human heart. There was a reason that great ones such as Christ, Ghandi and Mother Teresa taught the importance of love and the Golden Rule, and loving the unloveable, even your enemies. It's because the human heart does not compartmentalize. When you make the decision not to care about any living being, you've made the decision to exponentially decrease your caring for any other living being, as well. You've put a lid on your potentially infinite capacity for love and consequentially have damaged and squandered your capacity for true lasting joy. Who is the true victim here?
05:06 PM on 08/24/2010
Excellent article! I hope it makes a difference for the chimps.
02:36 PM on 08/24/2010
please contact Kathleen Sebelius who oversees NIH:

https://secure.humanesociety.org/site/Advocacy?pagename=homepage&cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=4660
08:51 PM on 08/24/2010
done. thanks for sharing that.
01:07 PM on 08/24/2010
No animal deserves to be locked up, poked, prodded, poisoned, burned, and deprived of every comfort and joy. Throwing these chimpanzees--who have already endured more abuse than anyone should in a lifetime--back into experiments is appalling and beyond cruel.
10:01 AM on 08/24/2010
Heartbreaking. Testing on these complex and sensitive animals is unconscionable.
09:20 AM on 08/24/2010
Sadly, I have the personal experience of having done experiments on primates, in psych labs, and will regret for the rest of my life what I did.
I wish that I had had back then the insights and compassion that I have now; and I also wish that I had now what I had back then: viz. the keys to the laboratories.
The NASA experiments are horrid reminders that our government is truly running amok in spending our tax dollars on torturing animals instead of helping people. I applaud Ms. Newkirk for her thoughtful editorial on why NASA must be stopped from doing yet more gruesome/ archaic animal experiments.
02:28 PM on 08/24/2010
this article references NIH not NASA.
12:36 AM on 08/24/2010
I totally agree, these chimps (as well as all animals) deserve better. That was really interesting to learn about the monkey experiments where they refused food to avoid inflicting pain on another of their species. Humans could learn something from that.
08:20 PM on 08/23/2010
It is time for the president to step up!! Do the right thing and retire these chimps, including the fifteen that have already been transferred, immediately! The time is now to be humane!! Please don't let this transfer take place!!!!
07:53 PM on 08/23/2010
I am not sure how these experimenters live with themselves. There is no experiment that is more important than an animal's life. These chimps have suffered enough and President Obama must do the right thing and release these chimps to a sanctuary where they can live out their last days in peace. I am hopeful he will do the right thing. He must do the right thing.
07:31 PM on 08/23/2010
Please have mercy on these innocent chimpanzees. They feel the same pain as humans and have the same right to live a free life. We have already taken so much away from these chimps - forcing them to endure an unnatural, fearful, agonizing life - the very least we can do is let them retire with an ounce of peace and some relief from future suffering.
Animals are not our property to do with as we please. We need to shift our values away from commerce, greed, power and control to things that genuinely matter like compassion, freedom, respect for all individual life and the appreciation of what it truly means to be alive. Not only are the chimpanzees at stake here but so are the moral fibers of humanity. Please choose to protect them both.