Monday, September 12, 2011

Why Vegan?




I realized the other day that at the beginning of this experiment, I talked about my guidelines for no packaged food, but what I didn't do was talk about the vegan side of this blog. I've been vegan long enough that I haven't really thought much about defining it. It is true that living in the mid-west I was constantly explaining that being vegan means that I don't eat animal products. Most people didn't get that it also includes no clothing like leather and silk. No products that have been tested on animals. No supplements that contain or are contained by animal products (or tested on animals). No products that are owned by companies that also treat animals as property to be abused, tortured, or eaten.

It can become a difficult, tedious, and heartbreaking research; however, it is much easier than it use to be. I can watch for the vegan symbols, I read up on the brands I know I can trust. I talk to other vegans, and I don't find the need to really consume many products in general anyway.

In the interest of full disclosure. I do eat some honey, and here is why. I use to not eat any honey... super strict vegan, but I have returned to honey for a number of reasons, and I am super strict on where I get my honey from. I only get honey from farmers that do not treat the bees poorly in anyway what so ever, including feeding them sugar water after they rob the bees of all their food or treating them with drugs. I recognize that the labor of bees is exploited to get the produce pollinated; however, as a culture, we have left the majority of our pollinators in a horribly bad way.

So many other sweeteners out there actually hurt more people and animals than does honey. Sugar from canes have tortured and enslaved so many people and resources its not funny. White sugar is ground with bones to make it more white. Agave is so overly processed and the cactus takes so long to grow, and well there is just a great deal wrong with it to me that I try to avoid it. Stevia is ok, but to me it tastes like fake chemical sweeteners. I don't mind it in its natural plant state, but the processed powders and liquids are way too sweet for me. There have emerged so many different types of sweeteners that it makes my head spin... for real. Sometimes people come in and ask for things that sound like something from a science fiction book.... like Xylitol. What the heck is this stuff that raw food folks are going crazy for?

And the big reason that honey remains my exception is that we need people who truly care for and love these pollinators. We need people who are not going to make bees travel all the way across the country so that the California almond crops can get pollinated.... one of the many things leading to colony collapse of the majority of bees in this world.

I also recognize sugar is one of the first drugs we consume and therefor, I try to sweeten things as little as possible. Besides, so many foods are already naturally sweet, like most fruits (including myself he he), carrots, beets, ginger... you get the picture.

In the past I have been gentle with my animal eating friends, and I wish to remain so, but here I want to make it clear: I am for the complete abolition of animals. I don't think that there is truly an human meat, egg, or milk. Less cruel is still cruel. Eggs that come from "free-range" or "cage free" poultry farms are still in cages, still owned (bought and sold) by people. Male chickens in these facilities still have no use and are therefor "disposed" of in some way. They are still treated as property.

Milk and milk products (cheese, yogurt, kifier, butter, etc), whether from cows or goats, grass fed or not, are still enslaved. Again the males have little value and are gotten rid of some way including the horrendous life veal. The females continue to be forced to breed so that they stay pregnant and therefor continue to produce milk. More cattle enslaved into the industry. More calves ripped away from their mothers shortly after birth. If you don't believe that the mama and baby cows don't have feelings, I dare you to watch it happen. It is so very painful. They feel, and they suffer.

What it comes down to is that there is no other justification for the suffering, torture, and death of 53 billion animals every year, other than we like the taste of them, and we need them to feed that habit. For more information on this I deeply suggest this little pamphlet: abolitionist approach. If that gets you going, then try out the book  Vegan Freak. There is so  much more literature out there now than when I first became vegan, and more of it that every-day-folks can follow and relate to.

So what led me to wanting to dive deeper into this side of my blog this week, is that how we identify has been coming up a great deal around me lately. First, was a really funny video about who is more queer. Though I laughed out loud and could recognize people and conversations, it pushed me further in realizing that I really am over identity politics. I see how it got me to where I am currently at. It helps in my awareness that I still have a great deal of work to do in many areas of social justice work. But really, right now, its not helping me grow more open or more compassionate.

These thoughts really took root while I was in a workshop thing, where the facilitator asked us to go around and list the groups that we identify with. I mentioned vegan and queer, but the queer less and less. Not because I see my self as not queer, but the queer movement is not one I can get behind. Gay marriage is not something I am going to go to the streets for. I don't see it making the world safer for the LGBT... people. I see it as another commodification of the queer community. Another way we are suppose to match the dominate culture and act "normal". Fuck that and the rainbow flag. More than happy to talk about this with anyone who wants to later.

Upon further reflection and really thinking about this more and more, what I would have listed is vegan and feminist. Both identities are about giving everyone the same respect and consideration (yes, I do consider animals as someONE, not someTHING). We are all sentient beings that suffer, and should be treated as such. We are all equal in our inherent value. An example of our hypocrisy in our arguments for it being natural and ok for us to eat other animals is then, why do we get so angry when a bear attacks us? Its only natural for the animal to protect it's self, family, food, or be hungry; especially when we are taking up all its space and land for our own over-consumption.

Yet another reason for me to go vegan, and to claim it is a super core value when considering my daily choices, is it is a super fantastic form of self empowerment. Every single time I decide to put a food or beverage in my mouth, or some kind of product on my body, I am reinforcing who I am and what I stand for. That I will not consume anything that causes the suffering of others. I know that this can not be totally 100%, but I know I am making the best choice possible. No animal died for my food. As far as I can know (and I do ask a lot of questions), I am not eating food dependent on the enslavement of people, or forcing them into some really horrible situation because I want to eat as much coconut and bananas that I can ingest. My cloths are not from a sweat shop in China or California.

I'm not claiming some kind of moral superiority. I'm not saying I have all the answers, or even all the questions. But I feel that I can say that I feel good about most of the choices I manage to make every day.

By having fewer identities to label myself with, I feel that I know myself even more. I know what I stand for. I don't need an organization to tell me what I believe, who represents me, who I need to give money to, what I should pray for/to/with. I can let down the boundaries and open up to the possibilities. I don't believe that we have more in common, so that we need to ignore our differences. I believe in each of us knowing who we are and everyone having the space to express their uniqueness. And that includes the animals.

I'll end with a favorite quote: "If you don't stick to your values when they are tested, they're not values, they are hobbies." Jon Stewart.

1 comment:

Taillta said...

I have been deeply exploring this notion of "identity" lately, and feeling a shedding taking place. I so resonate with what you wrote about the fewer identities you have the clearer you are about yourself. Being Vegan is a cornerstone value in my life, and I am so grateful to see my son take to it as he has...and so from the heart. Bless your journey, Old Friend...