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I'm not sure I understand: on one side, we have a stronger obligation to those close to us, but on another side, it is good to help strangers that are thousands of kilometers away? I'm also not sure why you draw the line at animals.
I personally think that it is good to help strangers thousands of kilometers away - and it is good that you do so (congrats, by the way!). I also understand that helping our family or friends is important - which is why I help them too.
The argument often put forward is not that you shouldn't help people in your country, but that it's much more tractable to help people in poor countries. You can help more people for the same amount of resources. The same goes for animals.
I also read sections of your link and skimmed through the rest, but I don't see any justification that relates to the idea that helping animals is misguided.
It says that moral values can regress/progress, and this depends on the physical and cultural context (which is true). The conclusion is that we shouldn't just expect moral values to change automatically - but that just means that we should devote our efforts to actions that don't rely on this assumption. For instance, supporting alternative proteins that are cheaper and tastier can reduce the cost of acting morally.