TEXT B In the US, poll after poll
has shown a majority in favour of animal experimentation, even without
statements about its value. Why is opinion in Britain so different I think that
there are two reasons. The first is the success of
antivivisection campaigners in lampooning animal research as outdated,
intentionally cruel, "bad" science, which achieves nothing. All drugs and
procedures developed with the help of animal tests are said to be dangerous. The
occasional failure of animal testing to identify a dangerous drug is developed
as an argument for abandoning safety tests involving animals altogether--with no
mention of the terrible human suffering that this would cause. They say that
"alternative" methods already exist for all animal experiments, but the fact is
that the law specifically forbids animal use if there is any
alternative. The second reason is that scientists and doctors
have failed to oppose such misrepresentation. In the early 1990s, animal rights
campaigning in the US was met with much more forthright defense, not only by the
major scientific societies, funding agencies and medical organizations, but also
by the US government. To be positive, there are many encouraging
features of the New Scientist poll. Interestingly, the public seems to employ
the same kind of utilitarian philosophy that underpins the law in
Britain--weighing potential benefits against the species involved (thus, monkeys
are more "valuable" than mice) and the likelihood of suffering.
Clearly, people in Britain do not recognize the essential link between
animal research and testing and the medical treatments that they receive. Only
18 percent of those who had taken ( or had a close family member who had taken a
drug prescribed for a serious illness realized that the drug had been tested on
animals, as all drugs are. Obviously, a large majority of those surveyed believe
that they can happily benefit from medical treatment without taking advantage of
animal research. No wonder so many people oppose it when asked the straight
yes/no question. The views of the public must be respected. But
this poll tells us that, while they are open to persuasion, their reaction is
based on misunderstanding. The responsibility for providing honest evidence for
the public lies not just with those who use animals in their research, but with
other scientists who depend on that work. It lies with the doctors who benefit
from animal research, with the pharmaceuticals and biotech industries, and the
medical charities and funding age, les whose work would be crippled without it.
But most of all, responsibility rests with government, which should cultivate
serious and transparent debate between those of different opinion, and provide
the public--especially young people--with the honest evidence they need and
deserve. The passage is mainly concerned with ______.
A.supporting a position B.refuting some arguments C.describing a case D.presenting a new perspective