Sunday, May 9, 2010
Gettin' Friskies
I suppose I could just show this commercial and be like "lol this is what cats actually believe," but since this is a blog about veganism I feel I should analyze a little. What a weird dynamic we have where pets are a billion dollar industry and companies must market to the owners since they can't market to the cat. Again, we have the separation from reality, where the fish and turkeys and other animals in this video are happy and also appear to be tripping balls just like the cat. What I really dislike about this is the abuse of these other animals being fed to our feline friends through the capitalistic assembly line. It should not be cat vs. fish/turkey/chicken/etc., but an alliance of sorts for animal rights--the fight against ownership and the fight against abusive conditions. This is in the same disgusting vein as Soylent Green if you will.
Monday, April 5, 2010
Saturday, March 6, 2010
what the flip
when future civilizations look back to our time i think they will be disgusted by our brutality and war mongering. how can this commercial recognize that you wouldn't like to be a sandwich but advertise for the same sandwich!!
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Vegans in the Media
So there's a show called The Goode Family airing on Wednesday, May 27 at 9pm on ABC. The whole premise is that they're liberal vegan acivist do-gooders. I'm never too optimistic about how vegans are portrayed in the media, but since this show has no other plot line to focus on than "here is a vegan family," maybe they will come out as multidimensional characters, rather than a stereotype? Or maybe my hopes are too high...
According to Wikipedia, "The family dog, Che, is also vegan: he craves meat and often tries to eat neighborhood animals and pets." This part doesn't look so promising. If a dog had been raised without meat, then why would he crave it? Additionally, dogs are omnivores and can therefore live a vegetarian lifestyle. This aspect of the show worries me as it makes this vegan family appear to torture a companion animal.
According to Wikipedia, "The family dog, Che, is also vegan: he craves meat and often tries to eat neighborhood animals and pets." This part doesn't look so promising. If a dog had been raised without meat, then why would he crave it? Additionally, dogs are omnivores and can therefore live a vegetarian lifestyle. This aspect of the show worries me as it makes this vegan family appear to torture a companion animal.
Friday, May 15, 2009
An Argument for Veganism
I was thinking that this might be a logical thought processes to get people thinking about veganism:
Meat is actually more natural for us to eat than dairy, eggs, and other harvested animal products. We were hunter gatherers before we were sedentary agriculturalists. Humans have had a longer history of gathering plant matter and occasionally hunting for meat than they have of cultivating honey in bees, milk in cows, and eggs in chickens. The Skinny Bitch authors target dairy specifically for being unnatural:
"When we have babies, we breastfeed them, and then at a certain point, we stop. We don’t breastfeed our grown children, or our husbands or friends, for that matter. It is exactly the same for cows and every other mammal on the planet. They produce milk when they give birth, they feed their young, and then they stop. We are the only species on the planet that drinks the milk of another species. We are the only species on the planet that drinks milk as adults. Why? Because the multi-million dollar dairy industry has convinced us that we need milk for healthy bones. That without cows’ milk, we will shrivel up or shatter. However, Yale researchers found that countries with the highest dairy and meat intakes also suffer the highest osteoporosis rates.
The truth is, we can get adequate calcium from leafy greens, vegetables, raw nuts and seeds, and beans."
I would argue much the same for other animal products. While there are some species that eat the eggs of other animals, human can't eat them without cooking them first like these other species can, and we can't get many other animal products, like wool and honey, without farming, which, again, is a more recent phenomenon than hunter gatherer lifestyles.
Once you point out that, in fact, all animal products except maybe meat are nonsensical (I mean, meat is nonsensical since we can't eat that raw either and what other species has to cook its food?? it clearly demonstrates our bodies weren't equipped to eat meat. but just for the sake of winning the argument...), you could mention something about "maybe there should be a diet that is vegan plus meat"? But then you can discuss that even if humans historically have eaten meat and are meant to eat meat (which I guess some might consider debatable), meat ruins the environment so badly that there is no ethical justification for it (since some people might also be able to argue against the ethics of eating meat, but the environmental damage is a cold hard fact).
Anyways, I was just brainstorming about attacking dairy and eggs before going in for themeat kill.
Meat is actually more natural for us to eat than dairy, eggs, and other harvested animal products. We were hunter gatherers before we were sedentary agriculturalists. Humans have had a longer history of gathering plant matter and occasionally hunting for meat than they have of cultivating honey in bees, milk in cows, and eggs in chickens. The Skinny Bitch authors target dairy specifically for being unnatural:
"When we have babies, we breastfeed them, and then at a certain point, we stop. We don’t breastfeed our grown children, or our husbands or friends, for that matter. It is exactly the same for cows and every other mammal on the planet. They produce milk when they give birth, they feed their young, and then they stop. We are the only species on the planet that drinks the milk of another species. We are the only species on the planet that drinks milk as adults. Why? Because the multi-million dollar dairy industry has convinced us that we need milk for healthy bones. That without cows’ milk, we will shrivel up or shatter. However, Yale researchers found that countries with the highest dairy and meat intakes also suffer the highest osteoporosis rates.
The truth is, we can get adequate calcium from leafy greens, vegetables, raw nuts and seeds, and beans."
I would argue much the same for other animal products. While there are some species that eat the eggs of other animals, human can't eat them without cooking them first like these other species can, and we can't get many other animal products, like wool and honey, without farming, which, again, is a more recent phenomenon than hunter gatherer lifestyles.
Once you point out that, in fact, all animal products except maybe meat are nonsensical (I mean, meat is nonsensical since we can't eat that raw either and what other species has to cook its food?? it clearly demonstrates our bodies weren't equipped to eat meat. but just for the sake of winning the argument...), you could mention something about "maybe there should be a diet that is vegan plus meat"? But then you can discuss that even if humans historically have eaten meat and are meant to eat meat (which I guess some might consider debatable), meat ruins the environment so badly that there is no ethical justification for it (since some people might also be able to argue against the ethics of eating meat, but the environmental damage is a cold hard fact).
Anyways, I was just brainstorming about attacking dairy and eggs before going in for the
Labels:
agriculture,
bees,
chickens,
cows,
dairy,
eggs,
honey,
hunter gatherer,
meat
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Yes, PETA kills.
By now everyone has seen the website put out by the Center of Consumer Freedom concerning the "high" number of companion animals members of PETA euthanized every year.
Very rarely will you see Ingrid's response. CCF considers this response lame, than again they also represent big alcohol, tobacco, meat, and dairy, and have even apposed MADD. I wonder what their response would be to the countless humans that die every year due to the very industries they support.
Ingrid's reply:
http://blog.peta.org/archives/2009/03/why_we_euthaniz.php?c=pfbm
Very rarely will you see Ingrid's response. CCF considers this response lame, than again they also represent big alcohol, tobacco, meat, and dairy, and have even apposed MADD. I wonder what their response would be to the countless humans that die every year due to the very industries they support.
Ingrid's reply:
http://blog.peta.org/archives/2009/03/why_we_euthaniz.php?c=pfbm
Monday, March 30, 2009
Crabs 'feel and remember pain', suggests new study
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/03/27/crabs.memorypain/index.html
This is from the same guy (PhD!) who published a study suggesting prawns feel pain:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2007/nov/08/animalrights.sciencenews
As a young lady of science, I feel much more uplifted to know that people like Dr. Elwood are out there...but how ironic is it that he conducts animal experiments?
This is from the same guy (PhD!) who published a study suggesting prawns feel pain:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2007/nov/08/animalrights.sciencenews
As a young lady of science, I feel much more uplifted to know that people like Dr. Elwood are out there...but how ironic is it that he conducts animal experiments?
Thursday, March 26, 2009
I'm sorry.
Every day I say "I'm sorry" in a prayer to non-human animals everywhere being used for humans. You could call it my "moment of zen". I try to imagine their pain, fear, anxiety, and sadness, it really helps put anything I'm going through in perspective.
I drove down to Charlottesville, VA from Pittsburgh last weekend. For 5 hours I passed fields full of cattle, lamas, goats, and horses. In the fields of cattle, babies suckled, they ate grass, many simply laid there basking in the sun. As serene as this was, it made my heart heavy and my eyes fill with tears. I said "I'm sorry" to each and every field we passed. To the field we passed with a barn that had "Eat Dairy" spray painted in large letters, I gave it the finger. How many omnivores pass theses fields and think "These are the cows I'm eating, their lives are gentle, and their death is humane"? Sometimes the fight for animal rights seems incredibly big and out of reach.
There are multiple images that have branded themselves in my brain since starting this journey. I added another one Saturday morning while passing a truck full of cattle. One large cow was turned looking out of the steel wall, I looked into his large brown eyes, he seemed worried but at the same time indifferent. Like he had excepted his fate, and knew it would be over soon. I said, "I'm sorry".
I drove down to Charlottesville, VA from Pittsburgh last weekend. For 5 hours I passed fields full of cattle, lamas, goats, and horses. In the fields of cattle, babies suckled, they ate grass, many simply laid there basking in the sun. As serene as this was, it made my heart heavy and my eyes fill with tears. I said "I'm sorry" to each and every field we passed. To the field we passed with a barn that had "Eat Dairy" spray painted in large letters, I gave it the finger. How many omnivores pass theses fields and think "These are the cows I'm eating, their lives are gentle, and their death is humane"? Sometimes the fight for animal rights seems incredibly big and out of reach.
There are multiple images that have branded themselves in my brain since starting this journey. I added another one Saturday morning while passing a truck full of cattle. One large cow was turned looking out of the steel wall, I looked into his large brown eyes, he seemed worried but at the same time indifferent. Like he had excepted his fate, and knew it would be over soon. I said, "I'm sorry".
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Fur real?
I'm not sure what it is like in other cities but here in the 'burgh full length fur coats are all the rage, and so is my temper. Maybe I expect a bit to much out of this city, although considering that most of the population roots for an ever failing baseball team, thinks "yinz" and "n'at" are proper English, and considers sauerkraut and kielbasa a delicacy I'm not sure why, but seriously. Floor length fur coats at the movie theater?
I hope I'm not the only person that makes wide detours around these pudgy, middle aged low lives as they waddle seemingly unaware of the torture barely sheathing their bulging waist lines. Or glares relentlessly at the skinny debutante who is seated beside you at a restaurant stroking her mink wrap, muttering under my breath what I'd like to do with her skin. Yes, aside from ill prepared tofu, nothing makes me quite as irate as fur clothing. They say ignorance is bliss, and in the case of fur I might have to agree. After seeing videos of anal electrocution, dogs being skinned alive, and the naked bodies of these tiny creatures tossed in shallow graves I can't not be angry. It's hard to explain to the ignorant how just passing a fur store, or a person wearing fur makes me want to cry, vomit, and hit something. That's why I'll be protesting this Saturday in 27 degree weather, because to get through this season I need those honks, cheers, and raised fists. To know that I'm not alone.
Thanks for adding me to the group Popey!
I hope I'm not the only person that makes wide detours around these pudgy, middle aged low lives as they waddle seemingly unaware of the torture barely sheathing their bulging waist lines. Or glares relentlessly at the skinny debutante who is seated beside you at a restaurant stroking her mink wrap, muttering under my breath what I'd like to do with her skin. Yes, aside from ill prepared tofu, nothing makes me quite as irate as fur clothing. They say ignorance is bliss, and in the case of fur I might have to agree. After seeing videos of anal electrocution, dogs being skinned alive, and the naked bodies of these tiny creatures tossed in shallow graves I can't not be angry. It's hard to explain to the ignorant how just passing a fur store, or a person wearing fur makes me want to cry, vomit, and hit something. That's why I'll be protesting this Saturday in 27 degree weather, because to get through this season I need those honks, cheers, and raised fists. To know that I'm not alone.
Thanks for adding me to the group Popey!
Monday, December 29, 2008
Diets that (don't) work
So I was reading the CNN main page headlines, which I like to do so I can at least pretend I am keeping up with world news. And since CNN mixes fun stuff in there, it's also hilarious. So today I saw this link to "The top 10 healthiest diets in America", and naturally I get excited thinking that they could possibly talk about raw veganism or something equally awesome.
Well, here's the list:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/12/29/healthiest.diets/index.html
They pick 10 weird diets, whatever, Weight Watchers is the only one I've heard of, and they list the various fallbacks of the 10 diets. The amazing part? No kind of vegan diet made the cut, and the only vegetarian diet on the list is described as "just too hard to sustain".
REALLY?
Vegetarian diets, which are credited with lowering the risk of colon and prostate cancer, heart attacks, high cholesterol and blood pressure, and stroke, are well worth any difficulty. And at least in my case, the difficulty that one might have in maintaining it only serves to boost my self-esteem, give me another reason to change the world, and add some deeper meaning to my daily routine.
I'm coming out of the vegan closet: it's easy, and I feel great in every way. Take THAT, top 10 american diets.
Well, here's the list:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/12/29/healthiest.diets/index.html
They pick 10 weird diets, whatever, Weight Watchers is the only one I've heard of, and they list the various fallbacks of the 10 diets. The amazing part? No kind of vegan diet made the cut, and the only vegetarian diet on the list is described as "just too hard to sustain".
REALLY?
Vegetarian diets, which are credited with lowering the risk of colon and prostate cancer, heart attacks, high cholesterol and blood pressure, and stroke, are well worth any difficulty. And at least in my case, the difficulty that one might have in maintaining it only serves to boost my self-esteem, give me another reason to change the world, and add some deeper meaning to my daily routine.
I'm coming out of the vegan closet: it's easy, and I feel great in every way. Take THAT, top 10 american diets.
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Animal Rights
Humans rights abuses are pimples on the face of society, showing time and again that people are easily able to forget their own humanity. But what about animal rights abuses? People have a hard time remembering their human relatives, let alone that they are also animals. Animal rights is a pimple on the face of society too, but it is one that lies deep under the surface, causing much pain and redness, but not yet emerging to heal. It's one of those you know is simply filled with sebum, waiting to explode, but you can't pop it or do anything to heal it until moves to the surface.
What I'm trying to say is, I feel like animal rights is an issue that has been recognized by some, but definitely not taken seriously by others, and, therefore, has not even begun its biggest fight. I am often tempted to add in the question of, "was that person vegetarian?" when evaluating moral character, but as soon as that idea is brought into the topic, people seem to take away my legitimacy and refuse to hear what I have to say. It is crazy enough for me to mention women's rights or immigration law reform... god forbid I mention animal rights! But these issues are interrelated as all injustices are. We must fight "the man" in unison.
Which led me to thinking about how the animal rights movement might play out in the future. Will it be like other movements that have continued to marginalize groups within the larger group? Will pigs' rights come before cows' rights? Will we fight vivisection before we eliminate factory farms? Will we forget how other injustices are related to the cause? How environmental injustice is directly related to farm animal injustice, for example?
I am wondering how this will play out.
I am hoping we remember the necessity for inclusion.
What I'm trying to say is, I feel like animal rights is an issue that has been recognized by some, but definitely not taken seriously by others, and, therefore, has not even begun its biggest fight. I am often tempted to add in the question of, "was that person vegetarian?" when evaluating moral character, but as soon as that idea is brought into the topic, people seem to take away my legitimacy and refuse to hear what I have to say. It is crazy enough for me to mention women's rights or immigration law reform... god forbid I mention animal rights! But these issues are interrelated as all injustices are. We must fight "the man" in unison.
Which led me to thinking about how the animal rights movement might play out in the future. Will it be like other movements that have continued to marginalize groups within the larger group? Will pigs' rights come before cows' rights? Will we fight vivisection before we eliminate factory farms? Will we forget how other injustices are related to the cause? How environmental injustice is directly related to farm animal injustice, for example?
I am wondering how this will play out.
I am hoping we remember the necessity for inclusion.
Labels:
animal rights,
compassion,
intersectionality
Monday, December 1, 2008
I'm going to eat 3 year old children
This is equivalent to eating pigs.
Species don't exist. Get over yourselves. That ugly kid you see is just a rearrangement of the same molecules that make up a pig.
So go on and feast upon the flesh of intelligent beings! Just be fair in your judgment of food. Hypocrites aren't allowed into heaven.
Species don't exist. Get over yourselves. That ugly kid you see is just a rearrangement of the same molecules that make up a pig.
So go on and feast upon the flesh of intelligent beings! Just be fair in your judgment of food. Hypocrites aren't allowed into heaven.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Vegan Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is a difficult holiday for vegans. It is a holiday based on the murder of members of other species, particularly turkeys. I could not help but be offended at the utter disregard for life at the latest presidential turkey pardon. The whole issue is treated as a joke. Bush says of the two pardoned turkeys: "They will not be trotting to their finish," which of course is met with laughter from the audience. They recognize that many other turkeys are perishing, which is acceptable to them, and saving a turkey is somehow humorous. For now my strategy for surviving Thanksgiving is to surround myself with other vegans and vegan food and when eating with my family at the table I will proudly display my separate tofurkey, non-dairy mashed potatoes, and vegetable broth stuffing.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
lol wut
“Vegetarians, and their Hezbollah-like splinter faction, the vegans, are a persistent irritant to any chef worth a damn. To me, life without veal stock, pork fat, sausage, organ meat, demi-glace, or even stinky cheese is a life not worth living. Vegetarians are the enemy of everything good and decent in the human spirit, and an affront to all I stand for, the pure enjoyment of food.”
- Anthony Bourdain, host of No Reservations, “Kitchen Confidential,” p. 70
- Anthony Bourdain, host of No Reservations, “Kitchen Confidential,” p. 70
Friday, September 19, 2008
Animal Abuse?
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/09/18/actor.cat.cruelty.ap/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
So I was reading this article and I almost cried because it is super sad and the cat looked super sweet, plus thinking about how like, people who abuse animals also abuse people (please note the way he chose to wake his girlfriend), but then I got more upset thinking about the way farm animals are treated in this country, tormented and killed in the millions for basically no better reason than this guy had, and yet he is facing criminal charges while people who facilitate the beating to death of cows and pigs make the big bucks. I don't get it. This is one of the top reasons I won't date a meat-eater. Anyone who thinks it's ok to kill, thinks it's ok to kill YOU. Maybe.
So I was reading this article and I almost cried because it is super sad and the cat looked super sweet, plus thinking about how like, people who abuse animals also abuse people (please note the way he chose to wake his girlfriend), but then I got more upset thinking about the way farm animals are treated in this country, tormented and killed in the millions for basically no better reason than this guy had, and yet he is facing criminal charges while people who facilitate the beating to death of cows and pigs make the big bucks. I don't get it. This is one of the top reasons I won't date a meat-eater. Anyone who thinks it's ok to kill, thinks it's ok to kill YOU. Maybe.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Saturday, July 26, 2008
I wrote this song a real long time ago, a real real long time ago
Even while on vacation, I was thinking and observing for you. Here are the gems of wisdom I came up with (and am now posting a month later, whoops):
Have you ever noticed how carnivores, when they realize there is more than one veghead in a room, have to find and loudly congratulate each other? As though they are maybe upholding justice as the last stronghold of animal-eaters? What is the deal?
Also, when people see me eating veggieburgers, they act like they have caught me in some act of treason, and accuse me of secretly craving meat, and assert that if I want it so bad, I should just eat meat and get over it. All rational arguments aside, I came up with a mildly witty retort: “No, you just crave the flavorful succulence of vegetables and are trying to re-create it by cooking and seasoning that bland flesh just right, but give it up already. Vegetables are soooo much easier.”
From OBX, with love
P.S. I read some pages from the book Skinny Bitch, which advises women on how to become a skinny bitch (bitch in the sense that other women are overwhelmed with jealousy of how good you look). The book advocates veganism and is also hilarious. When I read it, I will submit a full report.
Have you ever noticed how carnivores, when they realize there is more than one veghead in a room, have to find and loudly congratulate each other? As though they are maybe upholding justice as the last stronghold of animal-eaters? What is the deal?
Also, when people see me eating veggieburgers, they act like they have caught me in some act of treason, and accuse me of secretly craving meat, and assert that if I want it so bad, I should just eat meat and get over it. All rational arguments aside, I came up with a mildly witty retort: “No, you just crave the flavorful succulence of vegetables and are trying to re-create it by cooking and seasoning that bland flesh just right, but give it up already. Vegetables are soooo much easier.”
From OBX, with love
P.S. I read some pages from the book Skinny Bitch, which advises women on how to become a skinny bitch (bitch in the sense that other women are overwhelmed with jealousy of how good you look). The book advocates veganism and is also hilarious. When I read it, I will submit a full report.
Friday, June 27, 2008
Vindication
I received this wall post recently from my delicious vegan friend. Enjoy.
"THIS GOES OUT TO ANYONE THAT HAS EVER GIVEN ME SHIT ABOUT BEING VEGAN...AND ALSO TO THOSE WHO HAVENT.....I recently had to give blood for my job since I work with toxic metals... Come to find out... my protein levels are 8.1 on a scale that is 6.0-8.0 and my iron count is 149 on a scale from 50-160. And my calcium was 9.8 on a scale of 8.5-10.5...Healthy as a horse."
"THIS GOES OUT TO ANYONE THAT HAS EVER GIVEN ME SHIT ABOUT BEING VEGAN...AND ALSO TO THOSE WHO HAVENT.....I recently had to give blood for my job since I work with toxic metals... Come to find out... my protein levels are 8.1 on a scale that is 6.0-8.0 and my iron count is 149 on a scale from 50-160. And my calcium was 9.8 on a scale of 8.5-10.5...Healthy as a horse."
Sunday, June 22, 2008
BEES BEES BEES
People often get most hostile over honey. They just can't fathom why anyone would give up honey. What amazes me is that, out of all the other animal products, it seems to be the least pervasive in our food. So you'd think it'd be the last thing on their minds. Instead, it tends to be the last straw for them on the list of things I don't eat. It also tends to be the most difficult for me explain. So I found this following excerpt on a PETA site to explain for me:
From a former beekeeper: "[T]ypically, beekeepers are gloved and netted to avoid stings (nearly every bee who stings will die due to her entrails being pulled from her body attached to her stinger.) Then the hives are opened as quickly as possible and the bees are 'smoked.' Smoke from a smoldering fire carried in a 'smoker' is pumped into the hive and the bees are 'calmed.' In spite of this, the combs are pulled quickly and many bees are crushed in the process. When a bee is hurt, she releases a chemical message that alerts and activates the hive members who proceed to attack the intruder—giving their lives in the process."
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