from a bulletin posted on Myspace
Exposing the beast: factory farming must be called to the slaughterhouse
J.M. Coetzee
February 22, 2007
To any thinking person, it must be obvious there is something terribly wrong with relations between human beings and the animals they rely on for food. It must also be obvious that in the past 100 or 150 years, whatever is wrong has become wrong on a huge scale, as traditional animal husbandry has been turned into an industry using industrial methods of production.
There are many other ways in which our relationship with animals is wrong (to name two: the fur trade and experimentation on animals in laboratories), but the food industry, which turns living animals into what it euphemistically calls animal products and by-products, dwarfs all others in the number of individual animal lives it affects.
The vast majority of the public has an equivocal attitude to the industrial use of animals: they make use of the products of that industry, but are nevertheless a little sickened, a little queasy, when they think of what happens on factory farms and abattoirs. Therefore they arrange their lives in such a way that they need be reminded of farms and abattoirs as little as possible, and they do their best to ensure their children are kept in the dark too, because children have tender hearts and are easily moved.
The transformation of animals into production units dates back to the late 19th century, and since that time we have already had one warning on the grandest scale that there is something deeply, cosmically wrong with regarding and treating fellow beings as mere units of any kind.
This warning came so loud and clear that one would have thought it impossible to ignore. It came when, in the 20th century, a group of powerful and bloody-minded men in Germany hit on the idea of adapting the methods of the industrial stockyard, as pioneered and perfected in Chicago, to the slaughter - or what they preferred to call the processing - of human beings.
Of course we cried out in horror when we found out what they had been up to. What a terrible crime to treat human beings like cattle - if we had only known beforehand. But our cry should more accurately have been: what a terrible crime to treat human beings like units in an industrial process. And that cry should have had a postscript: what a terrible crime - come to think of it, a crime against nature - to treat any living being like a unit in an industrial process.
It would be a mistake to idealise traditional animal husbandry as the standard by which the animal products industry falls short. Traditional animal husbandry is brutal enough, just on a smaller scale. A better standard by which to judge both practices would be the simple standard of humanity: is this truly the best that humans are capable of?
The efforts of the animal rights movement - the broad movement that situates itself on the spectrum somewhere between the meliorism of the animal welfare bodies and the radicalism of animal liberation - are rightly directed at decent people who both know and don't know that there is something going on that stinks to high heaven.
These are people who will say: "Yes, it's terrible what lives brood sows live; it's terrible what lives veal calves live," but who will add, with a helpless shrug of the shoulders - "what can I do about it?"
The task of the movement is to offer such people imaginative but practical options for what to do next after they have been revolted by a glimpse of the lives factory animals live and the deaths they die. People need to see that there are alternatives to supporting the animal products industry.
These alternatives need not involve any sacrifice in health or nutrition, and there is no reason why these alternatives need be costly. Furthermore, what are commonly called sacrifices are not sacrifices at all. The only sacrifices in the whole picture, in fact, are being made by non-human animals.
In this respect, children provide the brightest hope. Children have tender hearts - that is to say children have hearts that have not yet been hardened by years of cruel and unnatural battering. Given half a chance, children see through the lies with which advertisers bombard them (the happy chooks that are transformed painlessly into succulent nuggets, the smiling moo-cow that donates to us the bounty of her milk). It takes but one glance into a slaughterhouse to turn a child into a lifelong vegetarian.
Factory farming is a new phenomenon - very new indeed in the history of animal husbandry. The good news is that after a couple of decades of what the businessmen behind it must have regarded as free and unlimited expansion, the industry has been forced onto the defensive.
The activities of animals-rights organisations have shifted the onus onto the industry to justify its practices, and because they are indefensible and unjustifiable except on the most narrow economic grounds ("Do you want to pay $1.50 more for a dozen eggs?"), the industry is battening down hatches and hoping the storm will blow itself out. Insofar as there was a public relations war, the industry has already lost that war.
A final note. The campaign of human beings for animal rights is curious in one respect: the creatures on whose behalf human beings are acting are unaware of what their benefactors are up to and, if they succeed, are unlikely to thank them. There is even a sense in which animals do not know what is wrong - they do certainly not know what is wrong in the same way that humans do.
Thus, however close the well-meaning benefactor may feel to animals, the animal rights campaign remains a human project from beginning to end.
J.M. Coetzee won the Nobel Prize for literature in 2003. This is an edited version of a speech to be given this evening to open the exhibition Voiceless: I feel therefore I am. It will be at the Sherman Galleries until March 10.
To learn more about the horrors and reality of factory farming, click here
italics, bold, and images I have added
Musings, rants, and everything else under the sun that one fussy vegan experiences in a non-vegan world
Sunday, February 25, 2007
Monday, February 12, 2007
Thursday, February 08, 2007
I have always been suspicious of certain types of so-called faux fur and now this: the Humane Society of the United States has been conducting an investigation of several big stores and determined that the faux fur used on coats is actually dog/raccon dog fur from fucking China.
An excerpt follows below:
------------snip---------------------
Dog Fur on Sale
An ongoing investigation by The HSUS has found some of the biggest names in fashion selling raccoon dog fur trim on jackets that were mislabeled, advertised as another species or not labeled at all. The investigation also turned up dog fur on sale.
The HSUS investigation has found:
Dog fur sold online as "faux" by Nordstrom's, Tommy Hilfiger and Bluefly.com. The brands involved are Tommy Hilfiger, Joie and Andrew Marc.
Raccoon dog fur on coats sold online as "raccoon" by Neiman Marcus, Dillard's and Loehmann's (via Smartbargains.com), and as "rabbit" by Bergdorf Goodman and Footlocker. The brands involved were Andrew Marc, Michael Kors, Oscar de la Renta, Bogner and Rocawear.
Misidentified or unlabeled raccoon dog fur sold on jackets by retailers and brands including DKNY, Lord and Taylor, Ross, D.E.M.O, Rocawear, Macy's, Baby Phat, J.C. Penney and Burlington Coat Factory.
----------------snip--------------------------------------
For further details, click here.
The victims
Each year over 50 million animals—including millions of dogs and cats—are killed for their fur worldwide. Although the fur industry does its best to keep the cruelty out of sight, suffering is a common ingredient in all methods of procuring fur, from fur factory farming to trapping. Many, perhaps more than half, of these animals are killed specifically for fur trim—it is not a by-product.
The following are some of the animals murdered for their fur:
Dogs and Cats: Over two million dogs and cats are victims of the fur trade—primarily killed intentionally for their fur, but also injured and killed in traps set for other animals.
Seal Pups: Canada's annual seal hunt is the largest slaughter of marine mammals on the planet. Hundreds of thousands of seals are killed for their pelts each year, with many skinned alive.
Various wild animals: including lynx, bobcats and wolves, suffer and die in traps each year. Countless dogs and cats, deer, birds and other animals—including threatened and endangered animals—are also injured and killed each year by the indiscriminate traps.
Newborn and Fetal Karakul Lambs: Newborn and fetal karakul lambs are killed to make fur labeled "karakul," "astrakhan," "Persian," "broadtail" and other names.
For more details about the vitims and/or to view video, click here
I believe that, one day, fur production will be abolished as it should be. There is absolutely no reason anyone needs to wear it today, except for vanity. Which makes it a heinous fashion choice, in my opinion.
This video shows what happens to the animal whose fur is stripped off just to make a fucking coat or piece of trim. It's barbaric.
Get free stickers at peta2.com
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
This photo, which I saw on another blog las night, is absolutely heart-breaking. And people still go about in their polluting bubbles...........
Click here to take your ecological footprint quiz. Ideally, the planet can only support 4.5 acres per person. I scored at 15 acres and it would take 3.4 planets if everyone lived like me. Sadly, the average in the US is 24 acres per person. Mine would be a lot less if I didn't use my car as much or, at least, had a car with better gas mileage. I currently drive a Honda Element.
And, I should ride my bike more often but this city I live in is not conducive to foot power or bike riding. And the public transport is a joke. If I lived in SF, this would all be a moot point as Mark and I would walk everywhere or take the bus and BART. We have agreed we'd rarely drive our car. Also, he's going to be getting a motorcycle again and I think I'll be getting a Vespa. That should reduce usage of my car.
Here is a list of ways to reduce your ecological footprint:
Transportation
Vehicles that use fossil fuels harm the environment and people's health by creating air pollution.
*Ride or walk to nearby places instead of driving.
*Organize a carpool to get to work or use public transit.
Air Travel
*Airplanes use lots of fossil fuel and contribute significantly to pollution.
*Refrain from vacations in faraway destinations. Take vacations in places nearer to home.
Waste
Throwing things away harms the environment because we use up space to store garbage and also have to produce new materials to replace the ones we threw out.
*Take your lunch to work in reusable containers.
*Separate your garbage for recycling and recycle as much as you can.
*Start composting or worm farming food scraps.
*Think about whether things can be used again for the same or another purpose before you throw them away.
*Give things you do not need to other people or to second-hand stores.
*Buy rechargeable batteries so you do not have to buy new ones.
*Use plastic grocery bags in your garbage cans.
Food
As well as tasting great and being healthy, fruits and vegetables take less space and energy to produce than junk foods, instant foods and meat.
*Try eating more fruit and vegetables instead of junk food.
*Start a vegetable garden so you can grow some of your own food.
*Go to the farmer's markets to buy fruit and vegetables.
*Try to eat meat less often.
Energy
*Turn lights off when you leave an empty room.
*Turn the computer, TV, stereo and other appliances off when you have finished using them.
*Get what you want from the fridge quickly and close the door properly.
*Dry your clothes on a clothesline instead of using the dryer.
*Consider buying electricity from a renewable energy supplier.
Water
Only about 1% of the water on earth is drinkable so it is important to conserve it and keep it clean.
*Turn off the tap when you clean your teeth.
*Take short showers instead of baths.
*Sweep the path or driveway instead of hosing it down.
*Turn taps off properly and if they keep dripping, fix them.
Paper
Paper is made from trees or by recycling old paper, so if we use less we save trees and energy.
*Borrow books from libraries or friends instead of buying them.
*Use both sides of paper for writing or drawing.
*Put a notice on your mailbox saying you do not want any junk mail.
*Reduce the amount of printing at work and save files electronically instead.
Click here to view a series of video tips to reduce your ecological impact.
Most of the sources from this blog entry came from here.
Click here to take your ecological footprint quiz. Ideally, the planet can only support 4.5 acres per person. I scored at 15 acres and it would take 3.4 planets if everyone lived like me. Sadly, the average in the US is 24 acres per person. Mine would be a lot less if I didn't use my car as much or, at least, had a car with better gas mileage. I currently drive a Honda Element.
And, I should ride my bike more often but this city I live in is not conducive to foot power or bike riding. And the public transport is a joke. If I lived in SF, this would all be a moot point as Mark and I would walk everywhere or take the bus and BART. We have agreed we'd rarely drive our car. Also, he's going to be getting a motorcycle again and I think I'll be getting a Vespa. That should reduce usage of my car.
Here is a list of ways to reduce your ecological footprint:
Transportation
Vehicles that use fossil fuels harm the environment and people's health by creating air pollution.
*Ride or walk to nearby places instead of driving.
*Organize a carpool to get to work or use public transit.
Air Travel
*Airplanes use lots of fossil fuel and contribute significantly to pollution.
*Refrain from vacations in faraway destinations. Take vacations in places nearer to home.
Waste
Throwing things away harms the environment because we use up space to store garbage and also have to produce new materials to replace the ones we threw out.
*Take your lunch to work in reusable containers.
*Separate your garbage for recycling and recycle as much as you can.
*Start composting or worm farming food scraps.
*Think about whether things can be used again for the same or another purpose before you throw them away.
*Give things you do not need to other people or to second-hand stores.
*Buy rechargeable batteries so you do not have to buy new ones.
*Use plastic grocery bags in your garbage cans.
Food
As well as tasting great and being healthy, fruits and vegetables take less space and energy to produce than junk foods, instant foods and meat.
*Try eating more fruit and vegetables instead of junk food.
*Start a vegetable garden so you can grow some of your own food.
*Go to the farmer's markets to buy fruit and vegetables.
*Try to eat meat less often.
Energy
*Turn lights off when you leave an empty room.
*Turn the computer, TV, stereo and other appliances off when you have finished using them.
*Get what you want from the fridge quickly and close the door properly.
*Dry your clothes on a clothesline instead of using the dryer.
*Consider buying electricity from a renewable energy supplier.
Water
Only about 1% of the water on earth is drinkable so it is important to conserve it and keep it clean.
*Turn off the tap when you clean your teeth.
*Take short showers instead of baths.
*Sweep the path or driveway instead of hosing it down.
*Turn taps off properly and if they keep dripping, fix them.
Paper
Paper is made from trees or by recycling old paper, so if we use less we save trees and energy.
*Borrow books from libraries or friends instead of buying them.
*Use both sides of paper for writing or drawing.
*Put a notice on your mailbox saying you do not want any junk mail.
*Reduce the amount of printing at work and save files electronically instead.
Click here to view a series of video tips to reduce your ecological impact.
Most of the sources from this blog entry came from here.
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