This is a difficult question to answer. Both human rights and animal rights are very important to have in society. If you have to choose between one of them, however, it can be argued that human rights are more important than animal rights, simply because humans are on a higher ethical and intellectual level than animals, and as such humans are more aware of injustice and can therefore suffer more from injustice than animals. However, if you look at it from a moral point of view, you have to say both are equally important because if we as humans have to live in a society where there are only human rights and animals suffer and have no rights, we have lost our humanity and thus, are not human anymore and as a result our human rights become worthless.
Unfortunately, though, any discussion of rights tends to invoke the legal system of whatever nation you're in. The US court system does not recognize animal rights as usually defined due to the fact that animals cannot reasonably be expected to carry out any duties, and are accordingly denied rights. Animals are afforded protection against abuse, though the protection varies from state to state.
One suggestion would be : "Being a More Humane Human." Another would be : "Animal Welfare - It's the Human Thing To Do"
It is a difficult question to wrestle with but, yes, it can be.
cheaper for them, more animals available for wider spread of reactions. no human rights to worry about
human rights there is no point of them
Human rights are classified into generations because it gives us a way to look at how essential and attainable those rights are for a nation. This helps determine how egregious a human rights violation is in a more nuanced way.
It's a sign of freedom.
An animal. Human mouths are much dirtier and contain more bacteria than most animal's.
In general, the animal rights movement is a social reform movement aimed as having animals viewed as equal to humans. Animal rights advocates generally believe that animals should not be used by humans in any way (even as pets), though there are "animal rights" advocates who do not hold quite that drastic a belief. Some animal rights groups actually believe more in animal welfare than animal rights.
I think that the dog was the more important animal.. :O
Human Rights is a vary large topic and therefore does not have a defined strict agenda of rules and rights. There are countless "Rights" which are created just from Human expectation of them exisiting. For full indepth reading on Rights, Human and Non-Human ranging from Social, Economical, Cultural, Civil and Political Human Rights and more red the entire Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rights) article section on it which includes many pages about full Human Rights information.
Yes, they mean the same thing. Animal rights is the ideology behind the animal liberation movement. Animal liberation is the ultimate goal of the movement, and the latter term is used more often because I think animal liberation sounds more radical and unsettling.
you have more peace