Wordless Wednesday: QT Kitties
Current Mood:
Playful

Current Mood:
Angry
Hi there, I’m vegan. That means that I don’t eat meat or any animal products. I am vegan for my health. Low fat, zero cholesterol, high energy. And flavor. I never really started eating good stuff until I started cooking vegan food.
When I tell people that I am vegan, I will often see a bit of a cringe, as though I am going to start preaching at them. Did I preach at them before? No. Am I going to start protesting in front of your fridge? Nope. If you ask me about it, I’ll be glad to talk to you, but I’m not going to preach at you. It’s a sad state, however, that people automatically expect me to preach at them about killing the cute little animals just because I’m vegan; I’m more likely to preach at you about the health concerns. I don’t dig the poor treatment of animals. I get the activism. I’m in your corner, activist folks, animals should be treated humanely. Wearing fur sucks. But I’m not an activist.
I agree that more people need to know where food comes from. More people need to know what Big Ag does to produce the massive amounts of food. More people need to learn about the health risks of eating a diet high in meat and animal products. However, they are more likely to laugh at the activists that complain about irrelevant things, thus minimizing the big picture of the poor treatment of livestock, then eat another hamburger. People like that produce things like this. They think that all vegans are whiny activists that only want to complain. Oh wait, I’m complaining, now aren’t I?
I recently started talking on Twitter to a teenage girl that’s learning about farming, and has some farm animals, via 4H. She likes to talk about her 4H experiences, but is repeatedly attacked by activists about factory farming. She’s not factory farming, you morons. Not every farmer stuffs their cows into tiny little stalls where they will live until they collapse and die. Some farmers actually put their cows out to pasture, feed them good stuff, and take great care of them without shooting them up with rBGH. Yes, her critters get antibiotics, it’s called responsible animal ownership. Would you deny you children antibiotics if they were ill? Honestly people, not every farmer is a “factory farmer.” You know the stories of back in the olden days when people had fields of crops and pigs rolling in the mud and chickens pecking at worms in the coop? Those farmers still exist. And they are some of the hardest working people in the world. But when I tell them that I am vegan, it’s like I’ve told them that I am a vampire and they want to hold up the sign of the cross to me.
I totally respect farmers. That’s where our food comes from! If you, as an activist, don’t like Big Ag, go after Big Ag. Don’t go after mom and pop farmers who are just trying to make some money digging in the dirt and raising animals like people have been doing for thousands of years.
Yes, factory farms exist, and they suck. Big Ag is an unspeakable evil with their horrid, inhumane treatment. However, not every farmer is Big Ag. Not every farmer grows giant fields of GM corn and soy. Not every farmer shoves as many animals as they can into a tiny space where they will live until they die. And hey farmers, not every vegan is an activist.
“Oh my goodness, it’s naked people!”
*eye roll*
Current Mood:
Angry
“Contact your congressman!” “Write your senator!” These phrases have been used for many years for people to take action and to influence congressional votes and such. But… what if your elected officials responded by harassing you? That’s exactly what’s happened in Missouri.
Current bill: Deeming horse meat legal to slaughter for human consumption. Guh-ross. Okay, I’m vegan, so I’m sure the heck not going to eat a horse. And leave it to backwoods Missouri to want to allow this. But I’m not an activist, so I’m not going to go beyond stating my view that I feel that eating these graceful animals is totally barbaric. If I were a meat eater, I wouldn’t eat a horse any more than I would eat a dog. Ick. However, there are other people who are activists. And these are the people that say, “Contact your congressman!” and “Write your senator!” and that’s exactly what Brenda Shoss did. Brenda Shoss is the leader of an animal activist organization, Kinship Circle. So she rallied her people to contact Missouri lawmakers to vote against the disgusting bill. Instead of influencing the vote, the lawmakers (you know, the people that taxpayers pay to deal with these issues, to be in contact with the people, etc) thought it would be funny to harass Ms. Shoss by forwarding calls and emails to her. Yes, the people you put into office, ladies and gents. The story from Kinship Circle here. The story from the St. Louis Post Dispatch here.
Apparently the people that you elect have forgotten that you, the people, elect them, thus you, the people, have every right to contact them. There were (semi-truthful) responses of “Oh, well these people that were contacting me weren’t even from Missouri!” Well you know what? If this vote is passed in Missouri, other states will follow suit. Thus they wish to stop it before it starts. And then there’s a demographic that just might not be looking up the Missouri board of tourism for a visit. I currently live in Illinois, so I am unable to rightfully contact. And perhaps if I did contact as a Missourian, I would be met with hatred.
And the best part of the whole thing? Some of these stuffed shirts are talking about voting for the bill when they were previously against it, merely out of spite. Seriously?! “Well I don’t like what you did so I’m going to just go and do the opposite of what you want.” What kind of childish BS is that?
The people that you voted into office need to be held accountable for their actions. I thought that we elected real men and women into office, not a bunch of jerks that won’t listen. 