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Car Free Day – fun in the sun and so much more

Monday, June 15th, 2009

I was tabling at the Denman Car Free Day on Sunday with Alison and Neda. Our booth was right at the Davie end of the festival, right by the beach. It was a beautiful day, and we had a great time. I can’t even remember a single negative encounter to tell you about.

Liberation BC booth on Denman Street

Liberation BC booth on Denman Street

There was one interaction that really stuck with me, though. Late in the afternoon, a group of four twenty-somethings and a baby came over to our table from the beach. Turns out they’d just been talking about going vegetarian, and–though they didn’t realize it was us–they’d already decided to stop buying Procter & Gamble products after seeing our demonstration on Robson a few weeks ago.

Neda and I talked to them for a while, and I think they took one of each leaflet we had out (and we had a LOT). The impression I got was that they wanted to go veg, but some of them were worried it would be hard to do. One guy was especially worried that it would be easy to go veg here, but hard to stay veg when they went home to Mexico. I told him that it might be hard to find veg-friendly restaurants in some places, but once you get some practice cooking veg*an meals for yourself, you can be veg anywhere. I also told him to remember that the important thing is to make the most long-term difference you can for the animals; it’s far better to reduce the amount of animal products you’re eating than to make no change at all, even if that means you’re not quite vegetarian. We talked a bit about “humane” meat too.

Here’s what stuck with me, though: at the end, as they were leaving, the woman with the baby in a stroller told us, “You’ve changed a whole family today. We’re going vegetarian, thanks to you.” Despite the fact that that’s not strictly true–it’s much more their accomplishment than ours, their honesty & courage facing up to the facts about animal agriculture–nothing’s going to top that feeling for a while. It was a good day.

We also had a table on Main Street. Here are some photos from there.

Blake, a super activist giving away stickers

Blake, a super activist giving away stickers

A thirsty dog has a drink from our courtesy bowl

A thirsty dog has a drink from our water bowl

Layne, doing some great vegan outreach, as usual

Layne, doing some great vegan outreach, as usual

Mobbed by compassionate people

Mobbed by compassionate people

Our response to the Greenest City Action Team’s preliminary report

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

A month or two ago, LBC, in conjuntion with several other groups, sent a letter to the newly formed Vancouver Greenest City Action Team, asking them to make recommendations that Vancouver residents reduce their consumption of animal products to help the environment.

The Team just released their preliminary report (PDF) which made no mention of meat reduction.

Roger, one of our directors, has posted a response to the report, asking why they would leave out what should be an important part of any greenest city plan.

The Georgia Straight was kind enough to let us post both items on their blogs. Check it out and leave a comment.

Backyard chickens – a bad idea

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Vancouver city council is considering allowing Vancouver residents to keep chickens. While I realize that some people will keep chickens and care for them properly, I fear that most will not.

Here are my reasons for opposing this motion:

There are already welfare concerns with the keeping of the animals who are currently allowed, such as dogs, cats, and rabbits. Keeping a chicken requires knowledge about poultry handling, which most residents do not have. There is too much risk that chickens will suffer more if the by-law is repealed than they do already.

Introducing chickens into Vancouver’s unique urban environment will draw predators into the city, putting the chickens at risk from coyotes and raccoons. There is already a delicate balance which will likely be thrown off – meaning that chicken-keeping residents will end up asking the city to “deal with” the predators, likely lethally.

I also fear that some people will likely be keeping chickens for meat and butchering in their backyards.

It is important to keep in mind that most people will not be keeping chickens as pets, but rather as a food source – and animals kept as food sources are very often ill-treated. Will they be covered by the same laws that cover dogs and cats and rabbits, or will they be exempt from many humane laws as farm animals are?

The local SPCA does not have the resources to police the keeping of chickens, and I doubt the city has money in the budget to deal with checking on chicken-keeping households to make sure that animal welfare laws are being followed.

All of this means that most chickens will be kept in terrible conditions, possibly caged, with inadequate shelter and care, at risk from predators that they have not evolved to deal with.

Ouch! Inukshuk clubbing a seal – Peta’s new seal hunt campaign

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

logoI just got back from Peta’s press conference outside of Vancouver city hall unveiling the logo for their new campaign against Canada’s seal hunt.

I am not always a supporter and I sometimes cringe at Peta’s stunts, but this time I think they are dead on. Co-opting the Olympic logo, which itself is co-opted from the Inuit who will see no benefit from the games, seems appropriate and right.

The seal hunt is a shameful stain on Canada and it’s about time it was stopped. The amount of money and resources that get dumped into maintaining the hunt could be used for more constructive purposes, and we could save all the innocent animals’ lives. Canada deserves to be in the spotlight for this horrendous abuse of animals and nature.

Watching the footage of seals getting clubbed is horrific. As a child I saw animals get shot, and those images have stayed with me my whole life. I wonder, what are the psychological effects of committing those violent acts? Does violence begat more violence?

For more information on the seal hunt, check out our page.

Peta really impresses me with their ability to get media out and consistently get coverage for their stories. They recognize media opportunities and plan and execute their events really well all the time. And, with the prominent place that media takes in our everyday lives, getting messages into the media is hugely important.

Here are a few photos from the event:

Lindsey speaking to the media

Lindsay speaking to the media

So many cameras!

So many cameras!

Gotta get a good shot...

Gotta get a good shot...

Hanging out after.

Hanging out after.

Bocuse d’Or – Who gets the prize? Not the animals.

Monday, January 12th, 2009

picture-3Later this month, David Wong, an instructor at Vancouver’s Dubrulle Culinary Arts at the Art Institute of Vancouver will be headed off to France to compete in the Bocuse d’Or. I’ve read that it’s like the Olympics of food. Cooking food, not eating it.

While I’m all proud that Vancouver has a shot at sending a winner to the competition, it bothers me how this is yet another opportunity for the world to celebrate the dismemberment of sentient beings. And for what? A prize?

These thoughts are prompted by this article in the Vancouver Sun which ran over the weekend.

Here’s a description of a couple of the dishes Chef Wong is preparing:

In the dying light of 2008, Chef Wong worked out his chops for a group of Vancouver media at Moxie’s Classic Grill on Davie Street, serving an appetizer of Atlantic lobster with foie gras and passion fruit vinaigrette followed by a main course of pork loin wrapped with bacon and vegetable ratatouille.

Sounds delicious, doesn’t it?

Poor lobster, though, trapped when he was just out looking for food. After being hauled out of the ocean he got dumped into a tank and flown 3,000 miles to Vancouver. Remember, the Atlantic Ocean is 3,000 miles from Vancouver, which means that a whole lot of fuel had to be used to get that lobster across the continent. That’s a big carbon footprint for a little lobster.

Photo by Grump (from flickr)

Then, to top it all off, he gets killed. Not thwacked over the head or anything “humane” like that. No, he either got tossed into boiling water alive, or he had his body slit down the middle, also while still alive. Chefs like their lobsters to be fresh. That’s why they keep them alive until the very last minute.

Whole Foods Market no longer sells live lobster because of the cruelty involved in keeping them in tanks and boiling them alive.

The foie gras probably came from a duck in Quebec. That’s where almost all of our foie gras comes from. Otherwise it was flown in from France. Talk about a carbon footprint!

The duck who was the original owner of the liver that became the foie gras spent a few months packed in a barn with 2,000 of his closest friends, much like chickens raised to be meat. Packed and fattened.

Then he got hauled into another shed, where he was given his very own little cage, and a nice person came and stuck a pipe down his throat and filled him full of food a couple of times each day for the next two weeks. What could be better than never having to look for food?

Ducks, though, have instincts that tell them to look for food. Under normal conditions, they spend pretty much the whole day wandering around looking for food. They especially like to dabble around the edges of ponds where they can find the best insects and plants to eat. This food searching fills some basic needs for activity.

Oh yeah, they also never get to swim. Ducks who don’t get to swim? There’s something just plain wrong about that alone.

Photo from Farm Sanctuary

The duck stuck in the shed – he can’t go around looking for food or anything else for that matter. He can’t even turn around. I wonder what he does all the time? What TV? I wonder what would happen to my mind if I was caged like that?

The force-feeding goes on for a couple of weeks, until his liver is taking up most of the space inside his body. When they remove it there is a massive cavity and his other organs are packed to the sides.

Whole Foods Market has also stopped selling foie gras. Charlie Trotter and Wolfgang Puck have both decided they don’t want any part of it. Here in Vancouver Pino Posteraro and John Bishop have both stopped serving foie gras, because, well, it’s just plain wrong.

Photo from Farm Sanctuary

The pig whose name got changed to “pork” was raised to get really big, really fast. Because of the way they’ve been bred, they often have joint problems as they get older. Pigs can live to be 15-20 years, at least. This pig was about 6 months old when he got strung up. No point in letting them experience life if they’re just going to end up as food, right? Younger meat is always more tender, anyway.

So, that’s the story of the unwilling participants in this meal. Do I hope it wins? Of course not. I hope that David Wong loses to the surprise vegan chef who wows the French judges with his amazing cruelty-free dishes. Wouldn’t that be fantastic?

Sorry, I don’t think there will be a happy ending. Some chef will get a lot of praise for “creativity” or even “genius” but a whole lot of innocent animals are going to have to suffer and die so these “artists” can prance about and display their “expertise.”

What a shame.

Fur industry in trouble

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

I just saw this article that appeared in the Vancouver Sun a couple of days ago. It’s unfortunately really only about the wild fur market, but it is good news for opponents of this cruel industry:

http://www.vancouversun.com/industry+fears+bear+market+pelts/1127696/story.html

Now if only the market for fur-farm fur were in the same trouble…

For more information on the fur industry, see our fur page:

http://liberationbc.org/issues/fur

Foie gras proponents avoid the facts

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

When we are out protesting a restaurant that serves foie gras or out collecting petition signatures people occasionally come along who don’t agree with us. Sometimes they are even willing to stop and exchange a few words with us. What is odd, however, is that so often they are unwilling to deal with the actual facts of these ducks who are confined in cages and force-fed until their livers get 10 times the size they should be.

This avoidance of the central argument against foie gras is also pretty common when people write about our campaign. They are very willing to take shots at us personally or detour into discussions of our ultimate objectives or talk about other issues we should be dealing with. Almost never, however, does anyone speak directly to the cruelty of force-feeding ducks until they are nearly dead.

I wonder why this is?

For some more information about foie gras, visit our info page:

http://liberationbc.org/issues/foie_gras

Also of interest might be this page, which I just re-discovered a couple of days ago:

http://liberationbc.org/campaigns/foie_gras/fuel_facts

The BC SPCA has also come out in oppostion to the practice of force-feeding:

http://www.spca.bc.ca/foiegras/default.asp

Foie gras and the French

Monday, December 29th, 2008

petitioningA couple of us went out on Monday and Tuesday to collect signatures for Liberation BC’s campaign to ban foie gras in Vancouver. It was cold but many people stopped to sign.

One guy walked by and took a leaflet, then came back to hand me the leaflet. He said he was French, so there wasn’t any point in giving him the leaflet. But he was very nice and we talked for a bit. He agreed that it was bad for the animals but that the taste was very good. We’ve never argued that, so I pointed out to him that our issue with foie gras is the force-feeding, which is detrimental to the birds’ health and welfare. He ended up agreeing that it was bad, but that he couldn’t agree with us to ban it because he was French. He did, however take the leaflet with him and promised to read through it instead of giving it back to me.

I think it’s actually come out about 50/50, that French people either agree or disagree with us. One time a French veterinarian stopped to talk to us and signed the petition. He was very proud of having managed to get a foie gras farm in France closed because of the way they were keeping their animals.

It’s interesting, this idea of tradition trumping everything else. I read recently of the chef at Arpege restaurant deciding to stop serving meat in his restaurant (back in 2001 – I think he has since started again). Almost all of the criticisms were based on the issue of tradition.

How can tradition be the justification for allowing animals to suffer for a delicacy? Slavery was a tradition. Women’s suffrage went totally against tradition. Blind adherence to tradition is simply ignorance and fear of change.