Monday, January 10, 2011

Rocky road

Convincing people of the link between food and the slavery of animals should be dead simple. But it isn’t. We are the ‘spoilers’, for trying to do just that. But so what? We know it might seem that way when we open our mouths, when we try to alter attitude. And we know our intentions are good - the very opposite of spoiling people’s eating pleasures.
Attitude colours everything we think about. Pleasure pushes its way to the front, so for omnivores eating comes before thinking; their insistence on pleasure delays personal development. Vegans can only clear the path ... and wait. Our insisting that a lot of what’s eaten is ethically wrong is simply removing heavy rocks from a path to make travelling on it smoother, and the bigger the rock the more useful vegans are for trying to remove it.
Learning how to lift these attitudinal rocks is part of essential training for vegans. We pick up rocks wherever we find them and ultimately that’s the best training we can get, for communicating this awkward subject.

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