Popular Posts

Monday, February 27, 2012

INNOVATIVE NON VIOLENT VEGAN EDUCATION - Part 2

Sadly, most people or organizations don t have enough money for advertising veganism on billboards, but Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary (www.peacefulprairie.org) managed to get a billboard up with a clear vegan message. Billboards are a great way to get the vegan message out!















Eric Prescott, the filmmaker of I m Vegan ; a series of short documentary profiles that feature vegans from all walks of life. The project is being produced to address preconceptions about vegans. The profiles-or vignettes -will be distributed for free over the web. The project was well done - just real people...real vegans being interviewed. Prior to producing and directing I m Vegan, Eric co-founded the Boston Vegan Association, which advocates veganism as the only consistent way to commit to the belief that it is wrong to cause unnecessary harm to animals. He met his film crew, Matthew Goodwin &; Spencer Campo through the Boston Vegan Association. www.bostonvegan.org






The film crew on the streets interviewing vegans of all walks of life, across the United States.







Eric, Mathew & others also created a vegan pizza parlor called Peace o pie...


While on their journey across America to interview vegans, they made it to the vegan mini mall in Portland, Oregon. In this photo is Eric Prescott and Spencer. Working left to right is Sweet Pea bakery, Herbivore Clothing store, Food Fight grocery store and Scape-Goat; a vegan tattoo parlor.

Matt Bear created a short and beautifully presented video called A Life Connectedö85For the Planetö85For the Peopleö85for the Animals (I would have put animals first). The video encourages conscious consumption and reminds everyone of our interconnection. Its motto is Live your values; change the world .
Video:  http://nonviolenceunited.org/veganvideo.html

He also created a  vegan t-shirt that everyone is wearing in this photo. Matt is second from right side.  http://veganshirt.com





INNOVATIVE NON VIOLENT VEGAN EDUCATION - Part 2
Devamını Oku >>

INNOVATIVE NON VIOLENT VEGAN EDUCATION - Part 3

The group; Animal Equality demonstrated for veganism at London Leicester Square in July 2010. They educated people on the injustice of speciesism and the solution; veganism. Animal Equality is an international non-profit organization dedicated to achieving equal consideration and respect for animals. Founded in Madrid, Spain in January 2006, they are currently working in Spain, Colombia, Italy, Peru, Poland, the United Kingdom and Venezuela. -  www.animalequality.net


They held placards, video screens showing videos, distributed leaflets and talked to the public from 6:00 to 8:30 pm.  Impressively, they did this right outside McDonald s.



Their presentation was uncommonly some of the best signs and materials I ve seen used.












When Elizabeth Collins of NZ Vegan Podcast (nzveganpodcast.blogspot.com) is not doing online activism, she takes herself to the people on the streets of Auckland city. She sets up an information kiosk with vegan literature and posts signs on a big wall for passer-bye s to peruse, while she makes herself available to the public for questioning. Elizabeth brings the AbolitionistApproach.com to New Zealand.
INNOVATIVE NON VIOLENT VEGAN EDUCATION - Part 3
Devamını Oku >>

INNOVATIVE NON VIOLENT VEGAN EDUCATION - Part 4

I ve hosted vegan sharing circles in Florida. I usually have had to turn people away and stop at 55 people. Each individual has the floor for 5 minutes to introduce themselves and say something related to the subject of veganism. The experienced vegans were often inspiring for the aspiring vegans who came to learn. Everyone receives (abolitionist) vegan literature. We had a huge banquet of vegan food. Delicious vegan food speaks a thousand words. The first one made it to the front page of the Food section of their major newspaper. They came and took photos and interviewed us. The Vegan Sharing Circles have become so popular, we had to find a venue other than my parent s home; where this photo was taken.

Free Vegan Food Fairs

This is a great way to help the public learn that vegan food is diverse, delicious and healthy for people and the planet, but most importantly it is the ethically right thing to do. Here are some photos from Midland Vegan Campaigns food fairs:
                                            Who wouldn't want to come to a FREE Vegan Food Fair?INNOVATIVE NON VIOLENT VEGAN EDUCATION - Part 4
Devamını Oku >>

Rescuing Domesticated Animals

Kisses, my canine companion, came to me from the forest that surrounds us. Someone dropped her off in the bush, and I found her. It was 2 days before Christmas. (People abandon their unwanted animals and get new ones as Christmas presents). I had just moved to New Zealand from the U.S. and have always cherished living with vegan dogs, so I was wishing for a  rent-a-dog , since I don't stay put all year round. But what I got was a keeper  (no one wanted her as she was neurotic from her abusive beginnings). We ve been together for 12 years.

I could have left her there when I first saw her (though that never occurred to me in that moment). She had flowing clean water, bird s eggs, remains that she could scavenge, and small animals she could kill that she could have survived on. I m told that some vegans don t believe in having  pets nor even 'rescued animals', which other vegans find confusing.

I reflect and contemplate that if I left Kisses in the woods, she may or may not still be alive and she would have undoubtedly taken the lives of other smaller animals. Being with me, she never has to worry about predators, lives freely in a country setting, and receives tummy rubs and some one to warmly sleep with at night. She is fed vegan food; so no other sentient animals had to suffer and die to feed her. She had the privilege of being in love with a human and I had the honor to be in love with a canine. She evolved with her human friend, so much so, that she does not kill and she has been thriving off a plant-based diet for over 11 years. She s 12.

One of my greatest joys has been the interspecies relationships I ve experienced. Other animals feel our veganism. Vegans that think we should not rescue other animals and live with them are missing out on the gratification of saving a life. I ve seen my friends rescue an animal from a snake s mouth, from the grip of a hawk, and from the heartlessness of humans. One scene I ll never forget was on a Florida highway; a friend of mine had both hands on a large turtle at the same time a woman had her hands on the other end of the turtle; they were both tugging back and forth. She wanted 'turtle soup' and didn t believe that he wanted to save the turtle and set him free. We set the turtle free!

I personally have a philosophical problem with rescuing an animal, to then feed it other animals; whether they have already been killed by someone else, were farmed by humans, or were living free in the natural environment. I don t want to be complicit in the murder of other sentient beings. However, when I was faced with a cat about to be euthanized right before my eyes, I saved him. I ve always loved the feeling of saving animals since I was a young girl. I don t own them (even literally). I will not purchase a nonhuman animal as if they were a commodity, inanimate object, or a slave. Other animals (definitely not the human ones) seem to be drawn to me. I ve had the great pleasure of living with various species of rescued animals including many dogs, a crippled goat, a friendly pig with a neurological disorder that made him spin in circles, many rabbits, doves and other birds, horses, a pony, roosters, (and felines briefly until I can find them a more suitable home). I ve also lived in a forest where I befriended wild animals and fed them from my hand and petted them; including deer, ground squirrels, chipmunks, and ducks. They were all fed vegan.

I avoid living with non-vegans of any species as it conflicts with my life's philosophy. However, if a particular non-human animal (such as a cat) must have animal products to survive, they must be given that (but not by me!). I want to live in a gentle world without any participation in violence and killing. I want my own little world to be a vegan world. I believe we should all evolve to the vegan ideal; and that includes nonhumans that live with us. Whether they have evolved as carnivores, I believe, they can evolve further, with our help, to thriving without killing other sentient beings. Three decades ago, vegan dogs were unheard of, and now many people have successfully fed dogs a plant diet.

We had birds that lived in our screened in patio, and we opened the door to let them fly freely in the sky - they always returned to us. I know if given the choice, Kisses would stick with me. She could easily run away and live freely in the neighboring forest. She chooses to live with me. What a gift to be close friends with another species.


Rescuing Domesticated Animals
Devamını Oku >>

TRUTHISM; My Religion; where Veganism is Mandatory

None of the world s religions state that all its adherents must be vegan. Because no religion mandates that its adherents be vegan (not just dietary vegans), I had to turn to Truthism. It s a simple religion endash the precepts are easy enough for anyone to comprehend. Treat others with the basic respect that all beings deserve , and in Truthism, which is not human-centric, others means ALL others; especially all other animals. Truthists also endeavor not to harm insects, pick flowers, cut down trees, destroy our natural environment, or harm humans.

In Truthism, you don t have to fund anyone. No donations, no alms-giving, no tithing; however it is forbidden to fund human or nonhuman slavery, exploitation, and oppression. Not only do products of slavery have no place in Truthism, but also products that come from unsustainable agricultural practices. One of the philosophies of Truthism is seeing the need to put an end to purpose-bred domestication of nonhuman animals, as well as leaving the free-living animals live their portion of life without human interference, unless it is to offer help or friendship.

In Truthism, you don t have to study books, Bibles, Torahs, or Korans. Nor a set of commandments that one can misinterpret, like altering Thou Shall Not Kill to Thou Shall not Kill other humans -- but nonhumans is perfectly fine . No, you just have to show basic respect to others. There s no promise of rewards in an afterlife. The only rewards you get are in this life: the reward of knowing that you are doing the morally right thing to do, and the reward of less risk of life-threatening diseases, and the reward of wonderful interspecies friendships.

In Truthism, you don t have to pray to God in public and be hidden away from God s World by four concrete walls. Instead, you can go to God s World, find a cathedral of trees, lie down, look up, and rejoice. There are no priests, rabbis, or monks. The God of Truthism has endowed each human being with a conscience to serve as our leader, on a daily basis. Truthism tells us to engage the conscience within, to befriend her; to obey her over the crowds. Truthism is a religion that once you join, it kind of possesses your life and you can never turn away from its magnetism. It becomes a way of life, from the practical to the philosophical. Being vegan is just the first step; it s not the only tenet of the religion, but it is an inescapable, unavoidable, first step.

Want to join this religion? It s free, no paperwork to convert, you didn t have to be born into it ö85you just have to see that it s the right religion for you. If other religions just aren t up to snuff for you anymore, come follow Truthism. Anyone; of any color, race, ethnicity, sex or sexual preference, or age is welcomed. Followers of Truthism are non-racist, non-sexist, non-speciesist, and non-ageist. A Truthist can be intimate with whomever they like, so long as it is consenting and loving. In Truthism, one would have to consider birth control and think deeply if it is in Truth to bring more children to this ailing and over-populated planet. As a Truthist, I voluntarily ceased to bring more humans to Earth-as-it-is.

Truthism does not want people to live their lives as mere wage slaves. Truthism beckons us to really live life, to work to right the injustices, especially our own, to live in and to care for the natural environment, and to learn how to Love. Truthism sees Love as a verb; something you do, and also as a noun; an exalted state we strive to be one with. The Truthist would not set limitations on love based on irrelevant details such as color of skin, age, a certain look, common interests, but rather would be open to anyone willing to rise in love . A devotee feels a oneness with God when embraced in Nirvana with a dog friend, when hugging a thousand year old tree, when caressing a bunny, in the state of in Love with another human being, when watching sunsets, and other such ways of knowing the God of Truthism.

In Truthism, it s not about being better than the next guy, but about tomorrow, being better than you are today. Truthists seek to know their higher nature. The Truthist learns to follow that voice within that knows right from wrong, regardless of societal indoctrination; where everything is deciphered through our own reasoning mind and our compassionate heart to arrive at the Truth. This is the essence of Truthism. Being vegan is merely the first step for the Truthist. No one can commune with the God of Truthism while participating in the torture and killing of other conscious beings.TRUTHISM; My Religion; where Veganism is Mandatory
Devamını Oku >>

New and Improved Vegan Conversation


My mother, a cat lover, was pretty much vegan for about 20 years. She had read Diet for A New America when it first came out years ago. That and her two children being vegan, was what set her on her vegan path. The kitchen became a vegan kitchen, she stopped buying leather, etc. In the last five years, she has let it all go. She also has been diagnosed with a disease similar to Alzheimer and Parkinson s. She has been steadily regressing in all ways; to the point of she hardly ever speaks. She has withdrawn. She doesn t want to die. But she doesn t want to live. She cares about basically nothing. Her cats are her greatest treasure at this point endash her source of love and affection. She has always loved cats.

Last week, after a multitude of attempts to get her back on the vegan bandwagon to no avail, she seemed to really grasp this conversation we were having. I will call it New and Improved Vegan Conversation - Part 1. In this talk, I showed her that there was no relevant difference between her cat and a cow or a pig or a duck or a turkey, when it comes to the capacity to suffer, or when it comes to the basic right not to be exploited. And I shared with her all our similarities with the animals that society kills. She was able to see it a bit clearer that way; using her cats as a reference. My brother, who cares for my parents and keeps the kitchen vegan, had been working with her on this issue too. He said Ma - if you want meat, we will cook Tiger (her cat). That might have helped too. Also, I told her that one of the things I had always admired in her was the joy she got from animals.

This morning, I had Part 2 of the New and Improved Vegan Conversation with her. She is Jewish and raised me with knowing about the Holocaust endash lest we never forget. I told her that if I was living during Nazi Germany and knew what was going on to the Jews in the concentration camps, I would not be one to be silent. Even if everyone around me pretended that it was not happening, I would be one to speak up. Using that analogy helped the point to penetrate. There is an art-form to finding just what will encourage each person to awaken. This morning she says to me I am being more consciousö85I couldn t order duck because I remember the ducks we fed. I am trying to be more vegan again. For most people, you wouldn t get all that excited about such baby steps. But my mother has a disease that is causing her to regress. She is fighting that disease in her desire to be more conscious. She even sounded better; it was quite amazing. It was the most meaningful birthday gift she could possibly give me.

New and Improved Vegan Conversation
Devamını Oku >>

BECOMING VEGAN PAMPHLET - PDF TO PRINT FROM


BECOMING VEGAN PAMPHLET

We can personalize this pamphlet with your organization / website / logo. Send me an email.

BECOMING VEGAN PAMPHLET - PDF TO PRINT FROM
Devamını Oku >>

WHAT VEGANS WANT VEGANS TO KNOW


Daniel Thomas Williams - I love you all, and I am proud to be on this journey with you.
Katie Ann Rad - I want all vegans to know that I am so inspired by your commitment to the truth, and that every time I meet another vegan, I feel an instant connection with them, even if we have nothing else in common. What an amazing thing to be able to connect with strangers over such an important topic.
Rita Wing - that veganism is an ETHICAL position, not a health fad, or a diet, or a temporizing of exploitation!
Luis Tovar - Spread veganism.
William Paul - We must reject speciesism. That is the core part of our veganism. Let's abolish animal use together.
Valorie Collante - That a clear conscious is priceless!
Gregory Gaynor - There are only two types of people; Vegans and pre-vegans. Some vegans can be like Gandhi, peaceful and nonviolent. Some are like the freedom fighter who ended the Holocaust. We all have our place.
Amanda Benham - Every day, talk to people (politely) about veganism and take your B12. (Amanda is a nutritionist.)
Gary Lowenthal endash That their outreach efforts have an impact.
John Braumann endash The Vegan lifestyle is an advanced existence. It is much more than a diet. It is - The Vegan Evolution.
Quincy Kirsh endash Not to pre-judge. I have the most unlikely people get it , people I never thought would care and others enlightened, educated, environmentalist, animal (companion) lovers that will not see the forest for the trees. Some people just need to be shown the truth to unleash their compassion, don t pass them by.
Robert D. Shepherd endash That we share the world with trillions of other sentient beings, that sentience is sufficient to confer moral standing, and that with moral standing comes the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (of well-being and one s own potential, according to one s own natural inclinations).
Melissa Viau - "Every non-vegan is a potential vegan! Reach out to everyone! Don't give up!""
Susan Gallagher Cassidy-Ray endash What I d like to say to other vegans? First of all I wish I could meet, in person, each and every one of my Facebook friends! I m inspired every day by the commitment and dedication each one has to all animals. Second, I think teaching without judgment is more effective than preaching with anger.
Will Schmidt endash I have three messages I d like to share with vegans:  Firstly, simply being vegan is a powerful form of activism and you are reaching out and planting seeds. Congratulations!  Secondly, it is so important to give yourself a break, and to prioritise your own health and well-being for many reasons endash and not just because it improves the image of veganism for others. Positive change cannot come from a place of anger, sickness, or burn-out endash plus, being cruel to yourself is positively unvegan, given that you are an animal too. Thirdly, DON T give in to misanthropy or reverse-speciesism! Humans are the only solution we ve got, and there is potential for good in everyone. Lack of compassion for human animals often precludes genuine compassion for nonhuman animals. As I ve said a few times, there is no such thing as a misanthropic animal-lover!
Grace Lorraine - I want all vegans to know... there is MUCH gratitude for your veganism! Please don't give up. Find your voice; you have some gift or talent to contribute to help other people be vegans. It is vital you use it--you know veganism is important because you have been so kind, disciplined, honest, loving and brave to personally adopt it! So please love a little more and help others go vegan, also. And Thank-you.
Erica Smith endash That we really can change the worldö85and we are with everything we do and don t do, everything we do and don t say. And that I feel obligated to keep educated and well versed on the information so that I can relay intelligent answers to common questions from inquiring non-vegan minds so that they may feel unafraid to try to make changes in their lives for their own good and for the good of the planet.
Ann Hawks endash I want all vegans to know how much I love them, whether I now them or not. They are kindred spirits and together we can make the world a better, more peaceful place to live and love and learn to grow.  Susan Davis endash I would say be a good example because a good example goes further than harsh words. My good friend Sandra Cummings is one of the best examples I can think of, yes she happens to be very attractive but besides that, her approach is one of gentle but firm conviction, she stays calm and delivers the message in a believable way. Above all else, she walks the walk. Yes, I would say be a good example.
Elaine Replogle endash admit your mistakes.
Nonhuman Emancipation endash To all other vegans endash if you haven t already, then please make it a priority to read Joan Dunayer s books. She has more of the answers than anyone else. Thank-you. Vegantispeciesist Greetings. (Vegan-Anti-Speciesist Greetings).
Sue Henderson endash I want to say You re not alone.
Alexa Reed endash I want Vegans to know that no matter what obstacle they face, another Vegan has faced it and possibly overcome it. There are networks (online and in person) to help them through whatever the problem may be. And that Veganism is worth overcoming those obstacles. Also - I wish that Vegans (actually, everyone) would understand that Veganism is its own reward. It may help you lose weight, get healthier, or more spiritual. It may not do any of those things. It does not matter. The reward comes from knowing that animals, Earth, and other humans are better off because of something you choose to do.
Jennifer Wood-Manago - "I want vegans to know that if you feel like your small contribution isn't making a difference just remember that you make a difference to animals everyday. Every vegan meal that you eat saves an animal from a life of misery. Every time you buy synthetic shoes, you decreased the demand for leather. Every time you eat a vegan meal in a restaurant you send a message that vegan foods are in demand. Every time you answer the question "What's a Vegan?" you spark an interest in someone's mind and you make it seem more mainstream."
Tony Bishop-Weston endash Let them eat vegan chocolate cake!
Dave Warwak - I want vegans to not just know, but act with the knowledge that children are the key to a vegan world and it is up to us vegans---who know things many have been prevented from knowing---to make sure the children are not indoctrinated the way we all have been. Until then, not much will change. And I want vegans to know, I am your brother and I love you.
Nick Dalzell - I support indoctrinization to veganism. Hey - if it worked for the meat industries why wouldn't it work for us?
Mack Freeman - I didn't become vegetarian {and later vegan} until my son was 18 and on his own. But 16 years later he became a fish-only near veggie, so don't give up on family members eventually seeing the light all the way to veganism.
Carol E. McCormick - I want all vegans to know that Dave Warwak doesn't represent us all.
Tamsin Parkin - that B12 deficiency is more likely to occur in meat eaters according to what I have read lately on the subject, this is because the body is more able to absorb B12 from food if it is on a vegan diet which does not damage to digestive process.
M. Butterflies Katz endash to get some sunshine every dayö85vegans get their vitamin D from the sun. If you can t get in the sun, supplement with D2 (plant-source, but the sun is better and it brightens our thoughts).
Anna Sityar - I want vegans to know that you won't even know sometimes that there are people in each of our lives that DO get the message even if they seem to resist it. You'll just be surprised that more and more of them get to realize that what we've been spreading all makes sense. So be grateful to everyone for being in their lives while yours is changing and maybe they'd want to become a stronger part of it and join our journeys too!
Sheri Lucas - Simon, who is 6, says: "It's a glory to be vegan."
Malang Por - I would like for my fellow Vegans to know that our choices and our actions bring healing and peace for us all: For the animals, for the human specie and for planet earth. We are facing up against the greediest and careless group which hide all truths from society and overload us all with incorrect information to feed their thirst of "more". We must continue to fight for this most important cause of our time and our voices are being heard - our message is getting louder and stronger! Keep in mind - at one point most of us were just as misinformed and try to remember what opened you and use it to open others.  We are by FAR not alone! And I wish I can meet you all in person.
Laura Moran - I want vegans to know and remember that all fights against slavery and ignorance were hard and long and yet they were still won. So don't lose hope or give in, every non-vegan that you expose to the truth is a difference made, even if the difference isn't apparent immediately.
Stormy Pagan - I want vegans to know that they rock xxx
Valorie Collante - I want all vegans to know how much I respect and appreciate their journey, their enlightenment, their kindness to the animals, but most of all their patience with the rest of the world while we wait for them to wake up.
David Starsoul - There are many reasons for being vegan, but in my mind the most important is LOVE! We are LOVE! LOVE--is the 'way, truth, and life'....
Don Robertson - Veganism is a powerful, powerful way to love this planet and all those who share it. A way of loving ourselves enough to really care about our health and our time left on earth; way of loving and respecting animals enough to allow them their own place in nature, regardless of what they can do for me; and a way of loving this planet enough to allow it's beauty, its resources, and it's magical healing properties to be here for generations yet to come...
Jarek VeganSpirit - I'm sending my Love to all of You...there is no races, no species, no real separation...We Are All Oneö85together we are strong and fearless...thanks for being here...hope to meet all of you in real, not only virtually.
David Richardson - Then I want all Vegans to know that they do make a difference to people who aren't Vegans...Look at me, 51 years old and becoming Vegan because of what I have found on facebook...What you say and how you visualize to others makes a big difference...Thank you all very much. I have become what I was meant to become.
Anthony Antich - I wish I could say something positive and uplifting here, but unless there's a worldwide massive explosion of higher consciousness soon, the earth and all its inhabitants, including the human race, which has caused this mess, are in for a very bad timeö85.
Tim Gier - Unshackling yourself from the long chains of exploitation by living as a vegan has liberated you and that is a good thing. Try, as well, to find ways in your daily life to ease the conditions that other living beings find themselves in. Volunteer at a shelter, rescue or sanctuary, or adopt an at-risk individual if you can. Deliver some measure of liberation to others.
Elizabeth DeCoux - I would say to all vegans: Some people try to be compassionate but stop short of veganism because they do not have all the information. I hope that when we encounter such people we can encourage their compassionate instincts while also explaining to them that nothing short of veganism will help end the suffering and death.
Christine Scalfo-Glover - Others are watching you and paying attention to whether or not you are true to your values. They will watch for you to "slip up", to show that you're not "perfect" and that a vegan diet is unattainable. Don't let them do this to you. You know better. Walk your talk!
Foti Zorbas - We will need to organize a massive FB World Meet-Up at a centralized location. Maybe DC?? We can break up into organized units and schedule some protests and march through the streets in military style. We will be a fricken Demo Army!!! We should demo individual targets with mass intensity and make a great final combined march onto the White House!! We will make history...LETS DO IT!!!!!!
Kim Frost - Veganism is love. Love for all beings. It is the ultimate way of being - the result of evolving on all levels. Fellow vegans are a constant source of inspiration and provide comfort to me on a daily basis. Thank you all for being you. We have to make sure that we make the most of each opportunity we have to positively influence non-vegans and open their eyes to the answer to most, if not all, of the problems facing humankind, all other beings and our beautiful home; Mother Earth.
Mary Beth H - I knew at age six to be a vegan. I wonder how many others knew this young? I have been asked so many times how I knew. I simply knew in my heart. I wonder if more children had the choice if they too would feel this way.
Debra Buria - I want Vegans to keep true to what they represent when non-vegan friends make fun of what you are and get defensive. I personally am experiencing their acceptance and curiosity now that I am talking more and more on the benefits. This is the way the seed is planted and it will stick in their heads and they discover how awesome vegans really are.
James Idol - Veganism is not just the destination, but the journey as well. If you stumble, just get back up again and keep on going!
Katie Saxby - that bringing your children up vegan is a wonderful gift for children. Don't feel that they would 'miss out', if my son is offered a non-vegan sweet he gets two vegan sweets in return (or another gift!), there are vegan versions of non-vegan food so they can feel more comfortable to bring to parties etc.....Saying that they would miss out on something i.e. non-vegan kids have that they would miss out: 25 %- 50% more chance of getting various cancers if non-vegan massively higher risk of having high cholesterol, heart disease, dying from high disease, diabetes, gallstones, and numerous other diseases..... they would 'miss out' on having a conscience knowing that they've been part of killing and torturing animals, taking babies away from their parents and vice versa etc.....well, you get the idea So more likely to be healthier, plus they can be happier that they've saved thousands of animals over their lifetime, that they're diet is so much better for the environment etc etc etc...Like an above comment says, kids are wise, yes they may have to deal
with non-vegan propaganda (unless living in a vegan community etc), but kids are strong, especially equipped with the correct info. Like I said, a great gift.

Feelgoodagain Bath Bristol London - There is absolutely no nutritional requirement for humans to consume animal products in their diet. There has NEVER been a single recorded case of 'protein deficiency' in the world, by anyone consuming a suitably calorific diet.
Susan Willard - Veganism is freedom and justice for all.
Danny Nichols - If I ever have trouble sleeping, I just close my eyes, think of all the animals that are still alive simply because of the life I now lead. I think of all the animals I will save the next day and day after that and...And I sleep like a bay in knowing that the next day I can continue to save the world one life at a time alongside all my vegan family members. I want everyone to picture in their minds whenever they get discouraged, some of the many animals they have saved. You have saved them from a living hell. Imagine them speaking in human language and think of how they might thank you. :)
Joseph T. Espinosa - Even mild activism, like leafleting, tabling with video footage or doing a feed-in for a few hours just once a month will likely spare more animals from suffering and death than our decision to avoid animal products for the rest of our lives. So take a few hours each month to do this.
Richard Kahn - If in the advanced capitalist nations or wealthy global cities, veganism is a baseline, we should avoid the desire to universalize it as an endline metaphysic beyond our own situation. But this is not to say that veganism is or should be a local movement and not global, because its primary target is a global industrial capitalist complex. Still, it is enough at this time to begin to critically reflect and oppose how this complex manifests and structures our own individual and community lives. In saying this, I would remind people that if veganism is about evolving moral response in the world, it is not a metaphysical morality absent of a demonstrated political nature. That is, veganism is a politics -- and like all politics it reflects the needs of the historical moment...so, again, veganism is not an end point, and the proof of its very success in realizing its truth will be the realization on the part of vegan activists of the need to move beyond veganism. such beyond veganism is not a-veganism, but sur-veganism. and this is already happening in the advanced capitalist countries where the limitations of a co-opted commercial consumer veganism are being revealed as harmful to both self and others.
Moses Seenarine - Go vegan, for life!
Bridget Holland Dale endash If it wasn t for my two children I don t think I would have made the move from vegetarian to vegan. It s because of my experience raising them that I have become more committed and involved. On the most practical level, raising a vegetarian child, I encountered quite a bit of opposition, and so became increasingly involved in the vegetarian community, which led to greater awareness of reasons for veganism. Without the opposition to vegetarianism by child carers so immersed in the meat-eating philosophy, which led to my seeking greater support from the vegetarian community, I would not have progressed to veganism.
Srilata Thirunagari - I would like to say to Vegans: You are true heroes for the planet and the animals!
Terry Harvey - Stay in love, proud of what we are.
Krista Williams - I want all vegans to know that I wish I had been surrounded by people like you my entire life. I am so thankful to know you and share information from around the planet. Together, we will bring a positive and necessary change to our world.
Leigh Christina Bunro - Be kind to each other. We are not many in number, so can we try to all get along so we can join together to promote veganism.


Flavia Bellu - "I want all vegans to know that we all find our way to veganism differently, and that every non-vegan we approach has their own way of hearing us, and their own way of considering a change, and making a change to veganism. I want all vegans to know that I know, feel, and share your frustration, your sorrow, your rage, your bewilderment; and I also share your tenacity, committment, strength, and love, and that I feel connected to all of you as my brothers and sisters, no matter the physical miles between us."

(All responses came in from Facebook; where the question was posed.)
WHAT VEGANS WANT VEGANS TO KNOW
Devamını Oku >>

Why am I Vegan?

Why am I Vegan?
Devamını Oku >>

10 Arguments Against A Vegan Lifestyle by Keegan K.

Keegan is a blogger for Care2 where this piece was published. (Photo: Wanda Embar)

ARGUMENT #1:  If we didn't eat animals, they would quickly overpopulate the planet and most likely starve to death."

The population of domesticated farm animals in the USA in 2008 is estimated roughly at around 20 billion. This figure is quite small since the actual number of animals slaughtered for food for the US was10,270,019,000 (that's: ten billion, two hundred seventy million, nineteen thousand animals). What this means is farm animals outnumber human beings by a 65 to 1 ratio in the USA. As it may appear from these statistics, non-human animal populations seem to already be vastly out of control. You might think that to kill these animals would be the best solution since they are already consuming 80% of our corn grown in this country and 60 billion pounds of our soy each year, but unfortunately no matter how many animals Americans kill and eat each year, there continues to be more of them.The reason for this is quite simple. Animal farmers have intensive breeding operations where they artificially inseminate as many female animals as possible to create even more offspring than the year before. Without giant egg hatcheries and other artificial forms of breeding, animals would never have any hope of reaching, let alone sustaining, current populations. As far as animals suffering from starvation due to over population goes, the amount of grains and other crops consumed by US livestock is enough to feed 800 million human (animals) who are currently starving to death worldwide. The argument against a vegan lifestyle stated above could also be reworded to read as "But if we didn't slit the throats of animals and eat their flesh, they might die horrible deaths."

ARGUMENT #2:  If we didn't milk cows, their udders would explode and they would die."

It is true that if a dairy cow is not relieved of the milk her udders are producing, they can be become so painfully distended and swollen with milk that she may be incapable of walking to reach water or food and, therefore, die. The reason this is remarkably rare in nature is that bovine animals, like virtually all mammals, only lactate after giving birth or when they have nursing young. Because farmers want to take milk from a cow who is producing it, they steal her newborn calf from her and instead hook her up to milking machines that roughly simulate the nursing of calves. If a farmer forgets or neglects to milk cows who have had their babies taken from them, the cows will moo their distress from the incredible discomfort. If farmers didn't take calves from their mothers, they would suckle naturally every 20 minutes or so and the mother cow would never experience the discomfort and potentially lethal result of underutilized milk.

ARGUMENT #3:  Humans are meant to eat meat."

Human beings have the ability to consume other animals' flesh and display the predator characteristics of forward pointing eyes and four sharper teeth called "canines." Unfortunately this is where the basis for this reasoning ends. Human beings' bodies, by virtually every measure, are intended to eat plants, not flesh. We have flat grinding teeth with jaws that can move from side to side. Virtually no other meat-eating animal has jaws that move side to side, because for animals that eat flesh the possibility of injury is too high in jaws with lateral flexibility, in addition to the fact that meat-eating animals don't chew their food, but instead tear pieces from carcasses and swallow them whole, and thus don't need flat teeth. The canine teeth we possess are dubiously small for any sort of the stabbing all other species use their canine teeth for. It you compare our canine teeth to those of our distant relative gorillas, which are completely vegetarian, you will see that even those gentle giants have canines that outmeasure our own greatly. Humans have long folding intestines that allow for food to move slowly through our digestive system, which allows our bodies to absorb as many nutrients as possible before the food is passed. Animals who eat meat regularly have incredibly short intestines because meat may contain harmful pathogens and will putrefy in their guts if not processed quickly. We lack the proper PH in our stomach acid to digest meat properly without thorough cooking. An animal who eats meat has the stomach PH of less than or equal to 1, whereas plant-eating animals have a PH of 4-5, which is what human beings have. This argument can also be stated as "If we weren't supposed to eat animals, why are they made out of meat?

ARGUMENT #4:  Humans are more intelligent than other animals and so we have the right to do what we want with them.

Human intelligence has long been cited as justification for any number of actions. It is true that humans display an amazing ability to manifest abstract thought into physical forms, but because measuring intelligence is not an exact science and due to cultural -- or in this case species -- differences, quantifying intelligence remains subjective. Major problems exist with the theory that higher or greater intelligence grants us the right to dominate and consume others though because it provides us with the argument that it is all right to eat human babies and people with mental disabilities because they potentially lack the same intelligence we possess. The argument of perceived higher intelligence has been used widely throughout history to justify unspeakable atrocities. It allowed for slave masters to dominate their slaves, for pioneers to murder American Indians, for denying woman the same rights as men, for the rape of Nanking and the Holocaust. This higher intelligence argument is also linked to the argument of humans having larger brains than other species. Unfortunately, this again has a history of justifying extreme racism and sexism. This argument can also be stated as: "Animals are stupid and deserve to be eaten."

ARGUMENT #5:  If it's wrong to kill animals, should tigers and other predators stop eating other animals too?

Humans have the ability to kill and consume other animals, somewhat like other predators such as tigers, lions and wolves. The obvious difference between humans and true predators is that we lack the ability to kill most animals without the use of a tool of some kind. Without a gun, trap, knife, club or large rock, humans have a tremendously difficult time killing and eating other animals. Unlike a tiger, which kills with her claws and teeth and can immediately begin eating, humans must fashion a killing and butchering tool first. Even for animals who we can kill with our bare hands such as rodents and birds, we would struggle eating their bodies without a cutting utensil. The other obvious difference is that carnivorous animals have no choice but to eat other animals. Humans have the ability to live remarkably well without eating the flesh of other creatures. There are of course human communities who have little or no other choice but to kill and eat animals to survive, but this tends to be limited to indigenous communities living a traditional way of life.

ARGUMENT #6:  Living a Vegan Lifestyle is Too Expensive.

It is true that if you buy pre-prepared and convenience foods, you can spend a large amount of money each month on food. But this is certainly not limited to a vegan lifestyle. If you compare the price of meat and other animal products against the price of vegetables and grains, you will find that vegetables and grains will routinely be more affordable. I personally have yet to visit a place where vegetables and grains are more expensive than meat. Having spent time in over 23 countries with very little money and most of my friends being world travelers, I still have not found a place where it was more expensive to be vegan. Luxury foods such as soy meats, cheeses, and spreads are usually more expensive than their counterparts, but these foods again are luxuries, not necessities. If you compare the price of vegan cheese or meats to organic non-vegan cheeses and meats they are usually comparable. It is estimated if it weren't for federal subsidies to the meat and dairy industries, a pound of beef would cost $815 in the US.

ARGUMENT #7:  Animals don't have feelings.

It is true that we cannot be absolutely sure that what we perceive to be happiness, sadness, love and pain in other species is the same as it is for our own. But any person who has ever spent even a very short period of time with a dog can attest to their ability to feel emotions. Denying that other animals have emotions much like ours is a great justification for allowing the most unspeakable violence to be committed against them. Professor Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson said in an article about research done for his book, The Pig Who Sang To The Moon., "A pig could be as devoted, as affectionate, as good a companion, as a dog, given half a chance. Chickens, like many birds, could form close bonds with a human who took the time to get to know these fascinating animals. Sheep, who had been dismissed as stupid animals, turned out to have remarkable discriminating powers, allowing them to recognize, know and have feelings about two hundred other sheep. Goats were as individualistic and as mysterious and complex as cats, and when permitted could live in delightful harmony with humans."

ARGUMENT #8:  If everyone became vegan, all those farmers would be out of business.

It is true that if humanity was suddenly overcome with compassion and respect for all other animals in such a strong way that everyone would forgo killing other creatures needlessly, a tremendous amount of people would be out of work. Unfortunately for the billions of animals slaughtered each year, the possibility of a sudden and mass shift to a vegan lifestyle is remote, although still possible. As more and more people transition towards a vegan lifestyle, the demand for animal flesh and other products will diminish and exploitative industries will either adapt to the new market, or will downsize gradually. The main issue with this argument is that it can, and was, used to justify human slavery. "What will happen to all those poor plantation owners if we outlaw slavery?" It was true that slave masters on plantations suffered heavy profit losses when they no longer had a free labor force. Does this mean we should have continued to allow human slavery so that an elite few could go about business as usual?

ARGUMENT #9:  A vegan diet isn't healthy.

One of the most common arguments against a vegan lifestyle is the fact that vegans are perceived to be deficient in a number of nutrients and vitamins. Protein, calcium, and vitamin B12 are the nutrients cited as being lacking for those who do not eat animal products. Pinto beans, which are easily accessible in virtually all of the US, have only slightly less protein than meat, but with no saturated fat or cholesterol. Pinto beans are just one of many legumes and other plants that are high in protein. Many soy products are fortified with added calcium and B12, which are also readily available. For those who have dealt with less than ideal health while on a vegan diet, this is usually due to the lack of a balanced diet without enough iron. The fact that the leading cause of death in the US is heart disease -- caused almost exclusively from the consumption of animals -- is usually ignored by those who argue the health aspects of a vegan diet. Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is a nonprofit group made up primarily of doctors who promote the ethics and health benefits of a vegan lifestyle.

ARGUMENT #10:  If we didn't test on animals a lot of people would die from unsafe drugs.

Non-human animals have been used for over a century to test experimental medical treatments and procedures for humans. The reasons to justify the use of animals in testing that will not benefit their own species are many, most of which are touched on in the arguments listed above. The truth is that every single effective medical treatment that has ever come about did not necessitate the use of other animals. Because doctors and scientists are searching for cures to human diseases, to test on another species that does not share 100% of our genes seems to be a flawed science. Unfortunately, millions of people suffer from diseases that still lack effective treatment, but many of them are more than willing to allow themselves to be used as test subjects to experiment on for cures. Effective medical treatments are held up for years, or completely abandoned, due to the use of animal test subjects who react differently to drugs and treatments. For effective and ethical treatments, the use of animals as test subjects should be abandoned. In conclusion, there are many arguments as to why you shouldn't care about animals and instead should continue to support industries that exploit and kill them -- unfortunately most of those arguments are not logical.

Keegan K. Co-Founder and Outreach Director of the farm animal rescue organization RESCUED (rescuedanimals.org), writer and musician for the Animal Liberation music project xTrue Naturex (myspace.com/xtruenaturexmuisc)

10 Arguments Against A Vegan Lifestyle by Keegan K.
Devamını Oku >>

Letter From A Vegan World by Joanna Lucas: Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary


Dear friends and fellow activists,

At a time when most animal rights organizations are actively promoting, advocating and rewarding "humane" animal products and farming methods, I am writing to you on behalf of three of the recipients of that mercy. To the industry, they are known as production units #6, #35, and #67,595. To the "compassionate" consumer, they are known as feel-good labels: "organic dairy", "rose veal", "free-range eggs". To welfare advocates, they are known as "humane alternatives". To each other, they are known as mother, son, sister, friend. To themselves, they are simply what you and I are to ourselves: a self-aware, self-contained world of subjective experiences, feelings, fears, memories endash someone with the absolute certainty that his or her life is worth living.

#6, is a first time mother. She is frantic. Her baby is missing. She is pacing desperately up and down the paddock, bellowing and crying, and calling for her lost boy, fearing the worst, having her fears confirmed. She is one of the thousands of defenseless females born into a quaint, verdant, organic dairy farm. She will spend her entire short life grieving the loss of baby after baby. She will be milked relentlessly through repeated cycles of pregnancies and bereavements. Her only experience of motherhood will be that of a mother's worst loss. In the prime of her life, her body will give, her spirit will break, her milk "production" will decline, and she will be sent to a horrifying slaughter, along with other grieving, defeated, "spent" mothers like herself.

She is the face of organic milk.

#35 is a two-days old baby, his umbilical chord is still attached, his coat is still slick with birth fluids, his eyes are unfocused, his legs, wobbly. He is crying pitifully for his mother. No one answers. He will live his entire short life an orphan, his only experience of mother love will be one of yearning for it, his only experience of emotional connection, one of absence. Soon, the memory of his mother, her face, her voice, her scent, will fade, but the painful, irrepressible longing for her warmth will still be there. At four months old, he and other orphans like himself will be corralled into trucks and hauled to slaughter. As he will be dragged onto the killing floor, he will still be looking for his mother, still desperately needing her nurturing presence, especially at that dark time when he will be frightened and needing her more than ever in the midst of the terrible sights, and sounds, and scents of death all around him and, in his despair, in his want for a shred of consolation and protection, he, like most baby calves, will try to suckle the fingers of his killers.

He is the face of the "rose" veal we are encouraging "responsible restaurant leaders" to use.

#67,595 is one of the 80,000 birds in a family-owned "free-range" egg facility. She has never seen the sun, or felt the grass under her feet, she has never met her mother. Her eyes are burning with the sting of ammonia fumes, her featherless body is covered with bruises and abrasions, her bones are brittle from the constant drain of egg production, her severed beak is throbbing in pain. She is exhausted, depleted and defeated. After a lifetime of social, psychological, emotional, physical deprivation, she copes by pecking neurotically at phantom targets for hours on end. She is two years old and her life is over. Her egg production has declined, and she will be disposed of by the cheapest means possible endash she will be gassed along with the other 80,000 birds in her community. It will take three full work days to finish the job. For two long days, she will hear the sounds and breathe the smells of her sisters being killed in the gas drums outside her shed. On the third day, it will be her turn. She will be grabbed by the legs and taken outdoors for the first time in her life and, like every single one of the 80,000 "spent" hens, like every single one of the 50 billion annual victims of our appetite, she will fight to go on living, and she will accept no explanation and no justification for being robbed of her pathetic only life.

She is the face of the "free-range" eggs we are encouraging college campuses, businesses and consumers to use.

These are the "beneficiaries" of the "humane farming practices" that we, the animals' defenders, are developing, promoting, and publicly rewarding by encouraging "compassionate" consumers to buy the products of what we know to be nothing but misery. "Humane" practices that, if any of us were forced to endure, none of us would experience as humane.

We, the activists, know that there is no such thing as compassionate, responsible or ethical farming on any scale. We know that the only humane and ethical alternative is vegan living. Why are so few of us telling the truth? Why are we describing "free-range" products as "humane" when we know the horror such practices inflict on their victims? Why are we lying to the public, and ourselves, that "compassionate" animal farming is anything but a myth, a marketing scheme, a deceptive label? Why are so many of us offering up the lives of animals by encouraging the consumption of their flesh, eggs and milk, when our only duty is to fight for their lives as if they were our own? Why are we promoting the practice of consuming animals when we know it to be brutal, inexcusable, unconscionable and completely unnecessary? Why are we rewarding consumers for demanding more of the the very thing we are struggling to eliminate? Why are we strengthening and rewarding the worlds' entrenched speciesist assumptions, when our job, our only job, as vegan educators and activists, is to challenge and change those assumptions by offering a new model of thinking about nonhuman animals, a new model of interacting with them, a new practice of living, a new way of being in the world?

Many of us justify our endorsement of "humane" animal products and our pursuit of welfare reforms by saying that the world is not ready to change, that it may never go vegan, that the most we can hope to accomplish in the meantime is to reduce the suffering of today's doomed animals. But this is not true. This is not a fact. It is a fear endash a fear of action, a failure of will, a self- defeating attitude and, ultimately, a self-fulfilling prophesy. The truth is, the world can change. Indeed, the world haschanged many times before, and it has changed in ways that seemed impossible at the time. The truth is, the world willchange, but only if we work towards creating that change. It will stay the same if we, the self-proclaimed agents of change, encourage it to stay the same. It will change if all of us tell the whole truth that there is no such thing as humane animal farming, or animal use of any kind, the truth that the only humane alternative is vegan living, the truth that animal farming on any scale is an ethical and environmental disaster, the truth that animals are persons like you and me who happen to be nonhuman and who have the same inherent right to life and liberty as you and I. The truth that vegan living is not a "lifestyle choice", but a moral imperative.

We can do better. Indeed, we have an obligation to do better. I invite you to see for yourselves how much can be accomplished when a small group of dedicated activists commits all of its time and resources to vegan education that is consistent with, not undermining of, our ultimate goal endash Animal Liberation endash and when the Go Vegan message is central to every single one of its communications, from online resources, to printed literature, to ads, demos, and billboards, to outreach events, to the in-depth exploration of farmed animal personhood detailed in the individual portraits published on the Prairie Blog.

On a shoestring budget, with an all-volunteer core of vegan educators who are determined to tell the whole truth about meat, dairy and egg production, a small, grassroots organization like Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary has built something that large, wealthy organizations have not only failed to bring forth, but have consistently undermined through years of anti-vegan advocacy: A vibrant vegan world growing in the middle of the nonvegan world, a place where the animal refugees are regarded and represented as the persons they rightly are, a place where the human residents advocate tirelessly for nothing less than total liberation, a Free State in the heart of the human-subjugated world, a place where the principles of abolition are applied in word, thought, and deed. A vegan enclave whose very presence has already changed the world's physical, political, psychological and spiritual geography. I invite you to experience it for yourselves. Join us in our struggle to expand its reach. Help us make it borderless.
Joanna Lucas,
Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary

original link: Letter From A Vegan World by Joanna Lucas: Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary
Devamını Oku >>

WE WILL BE HEARD by Angel Flinn - For World Vegan Month


I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? I will be as harsh as truth, and as uncompromising as justice. On this subject, I do not wish to think, or speak, or write, with moderationö85 Tell a man whose house is on fire to give a moderate alarm; tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the hand of the ravisher; tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe from the fire into which it has fallen;emdash but urge me not to use moderation in a cause like the present. I am in earnestemdash I will not equivocateemdash I will not excuseemdash I will not retreat a single inchemdash AND I WILL BE HEARD. ~ William Lloyd Garrison, American abolitionist (January 1, 1831)November 1st endash celebrated around the globe as World Vegan Day endash is the first day of World Vegan Month, and kicks off a whole thirty days of vegan awareness activities, to be carried out all across the planet.Some readers may wonder what makes the vegan cause worthy of an entire month dedicated to its awareness, and why it inspires such a passion in those of us who are dedicated to spreading the message.When we advocate for the widespread adoption of vegan values, we speak for the entire population of humanity s victims endash from wild animals who are hunted and exterminated to make way for the ravages of human excess, to domesticated animals who are bred, confined (whether in crates or paddocks), and ultimately killed so that people can make use of the products of their misery.These billions upon billions of sentient beings are considered, by today's civilized society, to be nothing more than chattel property, and their owners are legally entitled to subject them to many forms of barbaric cruelty in the name of profit, convenience or pleasure.How can we who see this injustice not be moved to speak out on their behalf? In the dark days when the horrific custom of enslaving our fellow human beings was accepted behavior, the abolitionists could not, in good conscience, remain silent. We too, will continue to speak on behalf of freedom, until all beings are free.The pandemic of violence in the world calls to us to reevaluate our relationship with non-human animals endash who are victims of the most extreme forms of our collective violence endash and to recognize that they are no more meant to be our possessions than African-Americans, women, children, or any other living beings. They too, are individuals, who value their lives, feel pain, fear death, and have a right to live free from oppression.

On this world vegan day, I think I speak for many vegan activists when I say that we, like the abolitionists before us, will continue to shout it from the rooftops and the hilltops, until the human race recognizes the inherent right of all sentient beings to be free from the shackles of slavery. We will continue to speak out on behalf of humanity s innocent victims until we put a stop to the breeding-exploiting-killing cycle that keeps tens of billions of animals annually in chains of oppression, from factory farms to family farms, from battery cages to backyards.

This cycle of exploitation not only burdens our planet with the weight of a population of billions bred solely to serve the desires of humans, it also prohibits us from moving forward into a more peaceful and prosperous future, the inhabitants of which reject violence and bloodshed as a matter of principle.

We know that there are people, many of them, who do not want to hear what we say, and who will continue to ridicule our position and ignore our message in favor of maintaining the status quo, and the destructive habits that go along with itö85 We know that the majority of the human population, apparently, would rather see innocent beings killed than accept minor taste sacrifices or inconveniences. And we know that most people simply are not willing to examine their own participation in the extreme misery we have been conditioned to accept without question.But there is something else we know. We know that every single person who has decided to take a stand against animal slavery has done so because of an experience of profound realization, and that for many, the epiphany occurred because of something they learned from someone else. That fact alone is sufficient to motivate us to continue to speak for those who do not speak our languages, until justice is served and freedom for all is attained.The vegan evolution is occurring one step at a time, one person at a timeö85 one realization at a time. For those of you who are on the brink of breaking through: Do It Now. Your only regret will be that you waited so long. For those of you who are not yet convinced: Perhaps, one day soon, you will join the movement of those who have experienced the joy of freeing their slaves.

Until then, don t expect us to be silenced, for we are in earnestemdash We will not equivocateemdash We will not excuseemdash We will not retreat a single inchemdash AND WE WILL BE HEARD.
Original Post - WE WILL BE HEARD by Angel Flinn - For World Vegan Month
Devamını Oku >>

A CALL TO VEGETARIANS by Angel Flinn

Quotation from Vegan Society Founder Donald Watson,
The Vegan News, November 1944: The object of our Group is to state a case for a reform that we think is moral, safe and logical. In doing so we shall, of course, say strongly why we condemn the use of dairy products and eggs. In return we shall expect to be criticized. It will be no concern of ours if we fail to convert others, but we do think it should concern them if, deep in their hearts, they know we are right. A great many people become vegetarian in response to a strong sense that animals shouldn t be mistreated on factory farms, or that they simply should not be killed for food. However, many individuals who eschew meat out of concern for animal interests continue to consume and use other animal products. Many vegetarians, in fact, upon removing flesh from their diet, actually increase their intake of eggs and dairy, two products which result from extreme animal abuse.The production of milk and eggs involves both tremendous cruelty and also the deaths of billions of animals every year. Not only are these animals killed just like those raised specifically for meat, but they are kept alive longer, and subjected to a tragic lifetime of slavery, including the horrific violations that come from the brutal exploitation of their reproductive systems.Typical dairy cows are only considered productive for two years, and are slaughtered when they are only four years old. During their short, wretched lives, they are subjected to annual cycles of artificial insemination, and suffer through several courses of mechanized milking every day. This occurs for 10 out of 12 months of the year, including 7 months of their 9-month pregnancies. When they give birth each year, their calves will be taken away within their first few days. A bovine mother s newborn has only two possible futuresö85 If born female, she will be sent into dairy production, into the same tragic life of reproductive slavery as her mother. If born male, he will be sold to farmers who will sell his flesh as veal.As with dairy products, eating eggs also contributes to both immense suffering and the violent deaths of millions of innocent animals. When chickens are bred for egg production, only the females are useful to the industry, so the male chicks are considered byproducts. Each year, millions of male chicks are gassed, crushed, or thrown into garbage bins to die from dehydration or asphyxiation.But what about organic milk, and free-range or cage-free eggs? The truth is that for any product to be mass produced (and therefore economically viable), animals must be bred in massive numbers, subjected to a lifetime of exploitation, and eventually transported to the slaughterhouse. The word humane is simply a marketing ploy by the multi-billion dollar animal exploitation industry, who are not going to just sit back and do nothing while the news of animal cruelty in their facilities reaches more and more anxious consumers.If you are an ethical vegetarian, and you have already decided that animals are individuals who should not be subjected to unnecessary suffering, consider using this year s World Vegan Awareness Month, which is celebrated each and every November, to question whether your vegetarianism is really an appropriate reflection of the values you believe in. If your conscience is no longer satisfied with your lacto-ovo status, then I have some good news: Veganism isn t difficult, as you might have been led to believeö85 There are growing numbers of happy, healthy vegans who enjoy exciting, delicious food, improved health from eliminating all animal products from their diets, and a new freedom as a result of ending their dependence on industries that cannot exist without consumers who continue to contribute money to support the slavery and abuse of our fellow beings.What makes veganism even more empowering is that it goes far beyond diet, and eliminates one s contribution to the entire animal use paradigm. Consider the words of Eva Batt, writing in 1964: In our opinion, it matters not one jot to the innocent creature whether it is to be slaughtered for human food, medicine, clothing, sport, or such luxuries as ivory ornaments, horn, bone or tortoiseshell knick-knacks, crocodile handbags, or exotic perfume. Sudden death in the prime of life, or the lingering agony of pain and starvation in a steel trap, must be as terrifying for the field-mouse, stoat or rabbit as for the hunted tiger, whale or stagö85 What the parent seal feels as she grieves over the bloody remains of her clubbed and skinned pup, is probably no different from the anguish of the domestic cow on losing her newly-born calf. Vegetarians: Don t run or hide from the truth of veganism. It is the next step in your own liberation, and it is a source of unending joy to spend your life striving to live up to its ideal.LInk: A CALL TO VEGETARIANS by Angel Flinn
Devamını Oku >>

Elişi