June, 2010

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Vote for vegan TV on Oprah!

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Colleen Patrick-Goudreaux, founder of Compassionate Cooks, is asking you to vote so she can have her own vegan TV show on Oprah’s new network.  Can you imagine what it would be like to have a vegan show on one of the most watched mainstream channels in America?  Why, we might have a vegan world in no time!

Colleen is the author of several vegan cookbooks and a popular vegan podcast.  Colleen’s power to turn people to veganism is uncanny.  Just listen to her podcast, you’ll know what I mean.  So please, help Colleen get her own show on Oprah!

You can vote as many times as you’d like.  So do it now, do it for veganism and most of all, do it for the animals! And please, spread the word!  Voting closes on July 3rd and she needs LOTS of votes.

Click on the link below to view the video and vote.

Colleen Patrick Goudreaux audition

Let Live 2010: creativity, passion, and so much love

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Listening and learning

I’m back at home now after Let Live, an inspiring weekend of talks, conversation, and some really good food.

Let Live is an amazing animal rights conference. I love it because it focuses on the grassroots – people who are dedicating their spare time to making change for animals.

There are a lot of really great talks, and I was very impressed how the sessions were organized to provide ample opportunity for conversation and interaction. It felt less like there were experts and audience, and more like we were in a room full of activists, each with one with valuable perspectives and ideas.

I’ve already written about the first day of the conference.

One Sunday, I was part of 2 separate panels. I was on the first one, “Creative Outreach,” with Andrew Stepanian and Gary Lowenthal. Andrew is one of the SHAC-7 and is really smart and experienced. His latest project is Sparrow Media, created to provide publicity services to organizations and activists working for good causes. Gary Lowenthal is the mastermind behind the Worldwide Vegan Bake Sale.

I felt a little outclassed by my far more experienced co-panelists, but the discussion was great, and I learned a lot from the audience and my fellow panelists.

Just a few of the ideas and resources we tossed around during the conversation (some are new, some are things people are already doing):

  • When leafleting or tabling, have a big sign that says “free vegan information” or “free vegan recipes” or “Do you care about animals” as a way to attract attention
  • give people incentives to take information (this is the basic idea behind Pay-per-view)
  • Veg 101 classes (great idea from NorthwestVeg)
  • Prepare a list of references and resources to have available to people (organized by topic)
  • donate books and dvds to libraries

There were many more ideas shared. One of the points that was made was that creativity doesn’t need to mean brilliant and original ideas. Instead, creativity can be adapting existing ideas, modifying or adjusting to fit a new or novel situation.

Another point was to choose your tactics based on your audience and situation. And try to be smart about using resources efficiently. In other words, don’t spend a bunch of money on an ad that won’t be seen by the audience you hope to reach.

A little later in the day I was on another panel, “Making the most of your situation.” This time I shared the front of the room with lauren ornelas (Director of the Food Empowerment Project) and Christopher Greenslate (co-author of On a Dollar a Day). The panel was moderated by Jasmin Singer.

Me, Lauren Ornelas, and Christopher Greenslate

Once again, I learned a lot from the audience and my co-panelists. I can only hope that I’m able to have even a fraction of their insight at some point in my life. We each had a slightly difference perspective on how we’ve made the most of our situation in our activism.

I made a couple of points in my talk:

  • We are almost always free to change or modify our situation. In other words, the situation in which we find ourselves does not have to stay that way.
  • If you want people to do something, you have to become those people. By this I mean, there’s no point in saying “someone should do this” – instead, say “I will do this.”
  • Don’t be afraid to learn how to do new things, if it helps to make you more effective and helps to get things done.

Christopher and lauren were both completely brilliant during this session. It was a humbling experience to sit next to them – humbling but also energizing.

I guess that was my theme for the whole weekend: being humbled and energized. I’ve seldom felt so much like we have a real chance at success. There are so many smart, talented, and dedicated people working for animals that it really feels like our victory is inevitable. Inevitable through our hard, hard work, but still inevitable.

Now I’m ready more so than ever to plan and act as strategically as I can to end the exploitation of animals. Events like Let Live serve to build connections, a network, a web of activists and organizations that WILL change the world.

Now we’ve just got to get to work and make it happen!

Josh Hooten and Willow

Michelle and Nicole

Jasmin Singer doing her opening talk

[Thanks to Michelle Lee and Nicole Reid for the photos]

A report from Let Live Portland

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

I’m in Portland at the Let Live Conference, an annual animal rights conference put on by the Let Live Foundation in conjunction with the Student Animal Liberation Coalition at Portland State University. The theme this year is “creativity.”

For those of you not here, some of the sessions are being streamed live.

We haven’t yet started day 2 of the conference yet. Already, though, it feels as if I’ve gotten as much out of the one day as anyone could reasonably expect to get out of a whole 2-day conference. It’s just been packed with presenting, talking to some really amazing people, and hearing lots of great ideas. The creative ideas here are running deep and thick.

The event actually began on Friday night with an inspiring and hope-filled talk by Andrew Stepanian, one of the convicted SHAC 7. He recently got off probation after a 3-year prison term for his role in the Stop Huntingdon LIfe Sciences campaign. I hope the video makes it up soon. I’d highly recommend watching it when it gets posted.

Jasmin Singer‘s talk yesterday morning, though (the official opening talk of the first day) was even more inspiring and more moving. Jasmin is just friggin’ awesome, and her (and her partner Mariann’s) website/blog/podcast/etc Our Hen House, is becoming one of the most valuable out there. Her talk was funny and inspiring and had me re-committing to doing the best work I can to help animals. I hope her talk makes it up onto Vimeo soon so you all can see it. In the meantime, though, be sure to check out her website. Rumor has it an interview with me and Joanne may appear in the not-too-distant future.

Jasmin and I did a session called Creative Online Activism, which covered a whole lot of information in not too much time. We gave some tips on blogging, podcasting, podcasting, twitter, and facebook. Really, we just scratched the surface of what is available. We also learned about some very cool organizations and projects, including Plants & Animals Denver (a vegan collective in Denver, CO) (pssst, they’re also on Twitter), The New Leaf Vegan Society (from Virginia!), and the Free Tilly Now campaign (a campaign to free Tilikum, an orca in captivity at Sea World).

In the afternoon I was on a panel, Creative Campaign Spotlight, where I presented about the Cow Ribbon Campaign. The panel also included, Isa Moskowitz (creator of the Post Punk Kitchen and so much more), Gary Loewenthal (Director of Compassion for Animals), and Danielle Thompson (Director of the Galapagos Preservation Society). It was a bit intimidating to be on a panel with all of these people, since they are doing so much amazing work.

I showed slides of the Cow Ribbon campaign and talked about it a bit. After we all presented our campaigns there was a bit of discussion around creative campaigns. Being creative in what we do is important. Creativity doesn’t have to mean flashy and out there, it can often just mean finding a new way of using something that already exists. I hope that anyone in the Vancouver area who is interested in being creative and finding new ideas for outreach comes to our next community dialogue event on July 11, which is focused on using fun and entertainment for outreach.

I also presented a session about our Animal Advocacy Camp. I was nervous about it at the beginning because I was planning to do a different sort of presentation. Instead of just talking at people for 45 minutes, we did a mini advocacy camp, with an agenda setting and one 10 minute session. Then we had a good discussion about how it felt, what worked and what didn’t. It was total experiment to try to present the idea of an open space event by doing open space, but I think it worked. Even if it didn’t work as well as it could have, I know that I really enjoyed the conversation with some very lovely people.

In the evening we went to Portobello, an aven-more-than-amazing vegan restaurant for dinner and a Let Live party/benefit.

Being here and seeing all of the dedicated grassroots animal rights activists who’ve come from near and far to be together and learn together – it’s just really inspiring. I’m so happy to be doing this work for animals.

Another Death at the Vancouver Aquarium

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

If you live in Vancouver, you’re probably aware that Nala, the baby beluga born last year at the Aquarium, has died.  Every time this sort of thing happens, it reopens the debate about keeping such intelligent, complicated animals in captivity–as it surely should.  Cetaceans don’t do well in captivity.  They never have.  According to Lifeforce, this is the 36th such death at the Aquarium since it opened in 1964.  That’s a pretty condemning track record.

Nala died because two rocks and a penny got stuck in her airway.  She was less than a  year old.  Our own Glenn Gaetz wrote an article about this latest tragedy at the Examiner.com.  Be sure to check it out and leave a comment!

From the Province:

The aquarium’s marine mammal curator, Brian Sheehan, said there are signs warning against throwing objects into aquarium pools. But none were obvious around the beluga pool when The Province did a quick search on Tuesday.

Yep.

Way to go, Wipeout!

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Okay, so last night I was feeling particularly weighed down by responsibility and I ended up watching Wipeout.  If you don’t know what it is…

Wipeout is an American game show series in which contestants compete in what is billed as the “world’s largest obstacle course”.

Thanks, Wikipedia!  Anyway, Wipeout is always an entertaining waste of time, but it doesn’t usually tackle anything more serious than…er…big balls.

Big Rubber Balls

Told you so.

So the show does brief, funny interviews with a lot of the contestants, and believe me, if they can find some way to mock one, they will.  On last night’s episode they introduced a woman who was planning to donate her winnings to animal protection causes.  Awesome!  Here’s the interview, which I scribbled down afterwards.  (I think I did a lousy job on the verbatim part, but the basic jist is there.):

Interviewer Jill Wagner: So, you’re a vegetarian?

(Awkward pause.)

Contestant Jonelle Tierney: Well, kinda…I eat fish…and chicken.

Wagner: Oh okay, so you’re against animal cruelty–except for chickens and fish!

Tierney: (laughs nervously) Well, yeah.  We had chickens.  We had chickens on our farm.

Wagner: Your farm?  So you’ve killed chickens?

Tierney: No…turkeys.

Wagner: (laughs) Okay, so you’re against animal cruelty except for chickens and fish and turkeys and…anything else?

Tierney: …cows…

Wagner laughed about how the contestant sounded like she was more in favour of animal cruelty than against it, and later on, the announcers joked about her only being concerned about the cute animals, like puppies and kittens.  And until she was eliminated mid-episode, her nickname was “Killer Animal Lover” or some variety of that!  It was pretty fantastic.  So a big thanks to Wipeout for acknowledging one of the most striking examples of cognitive dissonance in the world today and for managing to be hilarious at the same time.

I wouldn’t worry too much about Jonelle, though–most people (including some of the best animal activists in the world!) started out loving some animals and eating others, so maybe she’ll figure things out eventually.

The myth of rural ethics

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

I just posted a comment in response to a blog post on the Iowa Farm Bureau blog. I doubt that the comment will get approved, so I thought I’d post it here as well.

Here’s the paragraph that caught my eye:

Not only are too many suburban-dwelling kids like my daughter removed from the character-building value of the sweaty, dirty, heavy-lifting jobs which are a part of farm life, they’re uneducated on modern food production. How can we be surprised when they are seduced or recruited by animal activists who claim food today comes from cruel practices or polluters? Many kids have never been on a farm to gain the experience to discern the truth themselves.

Here’s my comment:

I grew up on a small homestead farm in rural Vermont. I watched cows and goats give birth. I saw pigs and cows killed and then butchered. I helped with the smoking of their meat. I helped in the garden weeding and picking vegetables that we ate and canned and pickled.
All of that experience led me to realize that there was no justification for killing these animals. I experienced looking into their eyes in that moment of death. I saw how they wanted to live and how they cared for their young. We were getting enough food from the vegetables we were growing, why did we need to raise these animals like this and then kill them?
I think if people allow themselves to openly and honestly experience the lives of the animals they are “raising” they will gain an greater appreciation of those lives. And a greater respect – a real respect, one that enables us to take the great and noble step of letting them live their own lives.
I’ve also spent time on farm animal sanctuaries, where I have been able to be with animals who are not destined to be loaded on a slaughter truck or get shot in the head. The experience is far different, and I remember those days with happiness. The sadness of killing an animal to eat is not necessary, and can be completely and easily avoided through responsible choices. How can any suffering we inflict be justified when we are doing it unnecessarily?

Help Animals Affected by Oil Spill pt. 2

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Just a quick link: Gene Baur of Farm Sanctuary has published a great blog post about the impact our eating decisions have upon the environment, including our overconsumption of oil.

http://farmsanctuary.typepad.com/making_hay/2010/06/the-power-on-your-plate.html

I wrote about the oil spill about a month ago, when it had just happened.  Of course, the oil is still flowing today.  Sigh.

EPIC Vancouver recap

Friday, June 4th, 2010

This post is a bit late, but I just wanted to give a quick recap of our weekend at the EPIC Sustainable Living Expo last weekend.

Jason and Thai answering questions

First off, it was great. Out of the many people who passed by our booth, we only had one negative encounter.

We were all amazed at how many new vegans there were.

We spoke to a woman whose whole family had gone vegan after watching the episode of Oprah with Michael Pollan and Alicia Silverstone. Funny thing is, she credited the switch to Michael Pollan!

Many of the non-vegans were looking to transition more towards veganism too. Even the carnivores I spoke to were cutting way back on meat consumption.

Joanne and our new t-shirts

We sold a few of our brand new t-shirts. They’re printed locally on Canadian-made bamboo t-shirts (70% bamboo/30% cotton). We’ll have them available through our website soon, but you can get them at our tables at events throughout the summer.

It was also great to see so many vegan-friendly businesses represented. OrganicLives was there, along with New World Natural Foods (makes of Bliss Balls), Arbonne cosmetics, Clif Bar, and more. It was nice to see Salt Spring Coffee giving away samples of their coffee – with no cream or milk!

Look for us this summer at some of the Farmers Markets, Justice Rocks, Main Street Car Free Day, and Under the Volcano.

UVic lies about bunny cull

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

The University of Victoria has unleashed a mass cull of the campus rabbits.  They say the rabbits are digging up holes and causing athletes to trip and injure themselves.

Last week, I went to UVic and found…well, lots of rabbits but no holes on the ground.  I walked all over the campus in various parts and failed to trip on any rabbit holes.  In fact, the rabbits live mainly under bushes and big trees where they can hide. Any burrowing they do would be right underneath the trees.  If athletes are walking into bushes, maybe they have bigger problems to worry about.

I checked out two athletic fields.  Both were so well fenced off that not a single rabbit was seen in the fields.  In fact, the only part of the campus free of rabbits are the two fields.  And one of them is an artificial turf.

At another part of the campus, I saw a couple of young teenage girls feeding the rabbits.  I asked why they were feeding them.  One of the girls said “they are going to kill all the bunnies and I just want to do something for them before they die”.  I also spoke with some Chinese students who were admiring the rabbits and obviously not aware of the situation and didn’t speak much English. They were shocked and saddened when I explained to them in Mandarin what UVic is doing.

The university knows that people love the rabbits.  They use them as a selling point to attract foreign students and sell rabbit themed souvenirs.  As per the Director of Facilities Management, Tom Smith, “The rabbits will always have a presence on campus.”  Tom Smith is the man “managing” the cull.

It’s not surprising that the Director of Facilities Management is not an expert on rabbit breeding.  He can’t even answer any questions about it.  I’ve tried to call him 5-6 times to get his knowledge on rabbits.  But so far he has refused to respond.  Tom believes he can just cull some of them and leave the rest for decoration.  But unfortunately, rabbits are not ornaments, they are breeders.  With a gestation period of 28 days, they will breed faster than the exterminator can trap and kill them.  There’s no way to manage the population unless there’s a permanent program to keep culling the rabbits forever.   The partial cull is either going to make no dent in the population or encourage a population explosion.  The only survival mechanism these delicate, bottom of the food chain creatures have is breeding.  So what do you think is going to happen when the UVic succeeds in killing a large number of rabbits? I’m thinking there will be a bunny baby boom.

Remember what happened when the sorcerer's apprentice started hacking up the broom because he had no idea what he was doing?

The rabbit cull at UVic is not just cruel, it is a perfect recipe for a disaster. But the university has made the decision based on pure ignorance of the animals they are trying to manage. If UVic really wants a long term solution to the rabbit population problem, then the best thing to do is to sit down with people who understand rabbits.

I strongly encourage everyone to contact Tom Smith (250-721-7592) and ask him about his long term rabbit population management plan.  If he won’t speak to you, please leave him a message.  He needs to know that people do not approve of these thoughtless actions.

Hippy-dippy, soft-brained butchery

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

This is what respect and honour really look like(photo by Farm Sanctuary)

Apparently we can get around feeling any remorse for killing and eating a baby animal by appealing to “honour” and “respect.” I just read through a post on the Foodists blog about the happy times of dismembering a baby sheep.

Here’s an exemplary paragraph of wishy-washiness:

We all felt honoured to be a part of an event this special, and it was a sober moment as we laid out the carcass of Angus II, a beautiful, organic-raised lamb that lived a wonderful life running freely and dining on the wild grasses at Cutter Ranch Lamb. About 125lbs at slaughter, Angus II was about 65lbs with head and hooves on as she lay on our cutting table, with a bag containing the majority of its internal organs, or offal, such as lungs, heart, kidneys, liver, etc. Very little of this beast was going to be wasted.

I’ll get to the whole “honour” and “respect” bit in a minute. First off, though, notice how the author speaks of this dead lamb (a lamb is a baby sheep, by the way) as having “lived a wonderful life.” No matter that her life was less than one single year long. Can anyone’s life really be “wonderful” if it’s cut that short? She never even got to be an adult. If she were a human child, her death would be a tragedy, no matter how lovely a meadow she got to run around in. And what about the lamb’s mother? Does she not matter in anyone’s consideration? Who explains to her that her baby is being honoured by this wonderful event?

Also, why does the author refer to the lamb as “she” one single time, but “it” for the rest of the article? Does she really know the gender of the lamb? Or was the gendered pronoun just a slip – maybe for one second she recognized the corpse in front of her as an individual with characteristics, rather than an object? Probably just poor proofreading. And who in the world names a female sheep “Angus II”? My guess is that the lamb was named after she was killed and packed away.

Now, on to honour and respect. Notice that the author writes about feeling “honoured to be a part of an event this special.” But then she writes:

Many of the group had never butchered a whole animal before and were excited to learn new culinary techniques and processes, but some were pleasantly surprised by how the lead up to the event was less about techniques and more of the respect and honour to, not only our lamb, but to all ingredients being sourced from preparation to final plating.

So this butchering is about showing “respect and honour.” I think this is completely bizarre. I mean, who in their right mind talks about feeling honoured to be at an event, but then equates cutting up a dead animal to honouring that animal? Would she feel as “honoured” if someone were chasing her with a knife? How come she has two entirely different definitions of honour?

And how about respect? How does slitting a lamb’s throat and cutting her up into little bits and eating her show her any respect at all? When I respect someone I don’t reach for my butcher’s knife. Trying to call butchery “respectful” is an odd warping of the meaning of the word respect. Unless, of course, you really do consider animals as objects to be used.

Which is why this seems so soft-brained to me. On the one hand these butchers talk a lot about respecting the animals and humane care and treatment, as if the animals’ lives mean something – beyond our own purposes for them. But then they talk about respecting an animal as one would talk about respecting a car.

This weird and wacky tone is exemplified here:

Prior to the arrival, Foodists’ chef Anthony Nicalo sent a preparatory message to all would be butchers:

“Respect the animal. Show up on time and be prepared to work. You will eat some great food and take some with you to enjoy in the weeks and months to come, but the focus during butchery and prep is work—including cleaning. Take pleasure in the process of cooking and the responsibilities that come with the opportunity to cook—respect the animal and the farmer who raised it.”

Is he for real? Respecting the animal means that we should “Show up on time and be prepared to work”? That’s the most meaningless thing I have ever heard. That lamb doesn’t care one bit about whether or not you arrive on time or do a good job. All of your playacting about respect is for your own benefit.

All of this is really just a way for people who chop dead animals apart to feel good about themselves. What option do they have? If they were to actually consider the animal’s life from the animal’s perspective, how could they pick up their knife? In order to keep going, they need to tell themselves these lies about honour and respect. It’s really a tragedy that their fun and games has to lead to so many lives cut short, so many deaths, so much pain and suffering.

Trailer for Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home from Tribe of Heart on Vimeo.