989:
If we make veganism just about health and a cruelty-free
lifestyle we sell it short. It’s an attitude more than anything else, which can
stimulate a whole new way of thinking. It produces a new flow of energy. It broadens
our view, so that we can examine opposite views without feeling like a traitor
to the cause.
Because it feels right, being vegan, you don’t have that
immediate defensiveness when being questioned about it. Vegan principle is
broad enough to stimulate original thought, turning conventional ways of living
upside down and yet allowing people to come to their own conclusions and make
their own decisions.
It might be my aim to promote a radical change of attitude
but if I use guilt and fear to strengthen my argument, I won’t succeed. If I
seem too persuasive it’s as though I don’t have enough confidence in what I’m
saying. And if I get aggressive it will seem like an ambush; just one slightly
raised eyebrow when I say “I’m vegan” is enough to give the wrong impression,
as if I’m a little too safe, too right, too boastful. Just by feeling the
tiniest bit morally superior is as obvious to the person we’re talking to as it
might be unobvious to ourselves; I
hardly know I’m doing it - when the tone of my voice carries with it a
disapproving value-judgement.
I might have a lot to say about the wrongness of animal
exploitation or the wisdom of living a non-violent lifestyle, but before I
start to speak out, I might need to unravel a lot of my own attitude before I
can start to talk productively and effectively on this subject. Just because I think I’m right doesn’t mean my
approach is right.
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