717:
Family-friendly farms got me thinking just
how we indoctrinate children about animals. These farms look like fun places,
for animals and children alike. Kids will believe anything if enough adults are
telling them the same thing. After all, they’ve spent their entire lives being
taught by adults how to do things, how to survive, how to enter the world of
the grown-up.
It’s
important that Mum and Dad, who provide the food for their children, get them
to eat what they believe will make them healthy and strong. And these same
adults have grown up believing that their parents fed them the sorts of foods
which made them what they are today, and which will be good for their own
children. It’s a self-perpetuating cycle, teaching the rights and wrongs of
life to kids, so that they can pass the same thing on, when the time comes.
However,
we are not only born with parents and teachers to advise us, but instincts too.
And for many of us those instincts are strong enough to make us question our
educators. We might see the cruelty shown to animals and decide to take up a
vegetarian diet, to avoid the worst of the animal cruelty. Some become vegans
to boycott every aspect of that same cruelty, and at the same time re-examine
the value of certain foods in order to avoid illness and the eventual poisoning
of the body.
But
desensitisation of instinct takes place on other levels too. Children are led
to believe that instincts are unreliable or misguided. So if we see fear or
madness on the face of an animal (or a human) it might not warrant pity but
instead give rise to contempt. The child is taken to the circus and sees bears
dressed in frilly skirts or lions leaping through rings of fire. The animals
are seen as subservient or ridiculous, without any semblance of dignity. It’s
as if they are too stupid to protest or too cowardly to refuse to cooperate
with the friendly-looking humans, who appear to love them. Such is the
deception played out on gullible, innocent children. The child is taken to the
zoo, for much the same reasons, to desensitize them and make them doubt the
validity of their instinctive sense of compassion. They are told that these
animals are happy, when patently they are not.
How could a child question
the adult about such things when they have no basis for questioning, except
their own innate instinct. It would be a brave child who stood against such a
barrage of the sort of persuasion which is put up by teachers, parents, uncles,
aunts, and seemingly the whole of their society. As children grow up, if they
have come to accept the rightness of zoos or the rightness of eating meat, they
will be indoctrinated. Their attitudes will have been fixed, since they will
have taken part in so many questionable activities, for so long, that any
tendency to protest will have been drummed out of them long ago.
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