1067:
Every day I work in other people’s homes and often put my
lunch and water bottle in their fridge. And
while I’m there I will probably have a squiz inside, to see if I’ve inadvertently
stumbled on a vegan fridge. In thirty
years of fridge-squizzing I’ve only ever seen dead animals and other evidence
of animal death. So far, no luck. How disappointing is that?
There they lie, the same old bits of dead flesh in nice
white trays or there’s some smelly cheese or a carton of politically correct
free range eggs.
My clients are usually lovely people but they’re not at the
forefront of social change, let alone leading the transformation of the human
species. Many are well educated, intelligent and kind hearted and yet few of
them would realise how closely involved they are in ‘systemic violence’, by
eating what they eat. Nor would they realise that their leather shoes have
anything to do with the killing of animals – even vegetarians consider leather
as a ‘ left-over’ of the meat trade, which is isn’t. Leather is a co-product
rather than a by-product, and in countries like India, they’re skin is often of
greater value than their flesh.
Because animal-based foods and leather are so popular, the habit
of violence against animals is endemic the world over. That we don’t care if
our food comes to us at the expense of animals show the hard side of us. It
shows that we accept that we have a violent side to our nature. The soft side,
on the other hand, is the side vegans are trying to nurture. We buy
cruelty-free foods and keep ‘violence-free’ fridges.
Vegans are making a start. We are beginning to adopt an
attitude-of-non-violence, and that example will hopefully inspire people to
follow our lead.
1 comment:
I have been following your blog for a number of years Vegan Wise. I wholeheartedly agree with you. I especially loved your 30th May posting. I love you and what hyou stand for, I hope the other 'vegan' closeted get onto their computers and SHOUT the same msgs.
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