Thought for the Day

To all: It would be wonderful to declare a decisive VICTORY over the animal extremists one day, but that’s not likely to occur. We ARE successful, once again in pushing the extremists back, to where they belong, soundly in the minority. A copy cat ordinance targeting the elephant guide tool and chains came up quickly in Chicago last week. It went before a committee hearing Tuesday and could have been voted and gone before the full city council as early as today! In effect the circus would have been banned from Chicago! But the element of surprise did not benefit the extremists ! It was the extremists who were surprised. The council committee members had received Emails, letters, and phone calls supporting the circus and performing animals! Representatives from Feld Entertainment, and others, were joined by circus fans who testified as to the truth in regards to performing animals in general, and elephants in particular. Council members took note. They could not have responsibly voted to recommend the ordinance. The CFA Animal Welfare committee helped to organize speakers from the CFA. Bob Untereiner and Tim Gault both registered and spoke as circus fans and both had convincing testimony. Tom Albert, VP of Govm’t Relations for Feld Entertainment, and a representative of UniverSOUL Circus, were among those standing up for our rights to see performing animals. MaryLou Kelly, of Feld Entertainment commented on the efforts of circus fans in recent years “….you’re the BEST”! “This is not a Feld vs Chicago issue”, said Tim Gault of CFA, who pointed out what Chicago had to lose if the legislation was passed, including the Ringling and UniverSOUL circuses. While the official result is the formation of a sort of commission, (3 pro and 3 con representatives are to study the matter and report back) – historically, if we prevent a “railroading” of legislation, we know that as time passes, OUR facts and fresh information WIN over THEIR tired fiction. Please join me in thanking Bob and Tim for standing up for our rights as circus fans. They join the the growing number of us that will take action to STOP the insanity! I cannot name all of those fans who quickly sent Emails to the council members in support of our position….thank you one and all. Those of you who help routinely – be ready! Those who used to help – We’re winning and we need you back! Those who read about this and wonder? – What are you waiting for? Load poles to engine!

An email distributed by Gary C. Payne, Circus Fans Association of America Animal Welfare Chairman, in response to a proposed ordinance in Chicago City Council.

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The Hogarth Press

You can just make out a photograph of Vita Sackville-West in the background on the wall. The Hogarth Press also published her.
If regular visits to Sissinghurst Castle Gardens aren’t sufficient sustenance to the soul, you can also touch genius there by discovering in the back room of the exhibit area the printing press that was once used by Virginia and Leonard Woolf. The Woolfs gave to the owners of Sissinghurst, Harold Nicholson and Vita Sackville-West, the printing press and it became the first item to be delivered when they bought the estate. Virginia set the type and Leonard worked the press to produce books under their publishing house, Hogarth Press. The press was named after a house where they lived in Richmond. They published first editions by Virginia and Leonard and others such as EM Forster, Maxim Gorky, Clive Bell, TS Eliot, Roger Fry and John Maynard Keynes.

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The Allotment Looks More Like an Allotment!

Toward the end of last week and before this weekend’s weird spring/winter/spring weather, we spent a productive half-day working on the allotment. As the photograph shows, it’s looking more like an allotment every day!

We planted three rows of potatoes in the far top bed on the left. One early and two lates. It’s not easily seen but we also planted two rows of lavenders on the far and near long sides of the plot.

The bed in the middle now has a cane wigwam structure thingee so that we can plant runner beans in a week or so.

Rhubarb was planted in the far bed on the right but we won’t be able to crop it until next year. Some black plastic was put down to help kill off the weeds. It also has three Rosemary plants.

We started a new, long rectangular bed by laying out and weighing down with sods a black plastic weed barrier. In a couple of week’s time we may be able to lift the plastic and start to prepare the plot for planting.

Meanwhile, it’s off to the supermarket to buy some veg.

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Three Recent Articles on Women and Veganism

Three recent articles highlight the difference of opinion within the animal rights movement on the role of women. Before considering them, it’s important to note that the animal rights movement, historically and contemporarily, has always had a strong presence of women both as leaders or founders of national and local organizations as well as grassroots activists and volunteers whose commitment and labour were and are exemplary. That doesn’t mean to say that men did and do not play a significant role because they do. But society has yet to shake off its persistent and pernicious chains of patriarchy and in these circumstances the role of women is even more significant. Further, it cannot but be noticed that most of the commercial exploitation of animals is done by men. Generally, the Grumpy Vegan believes women more than men feel compassion toward animals and put these sentiments into action.

Taking these articles in chronological order, the first was “More girls and women take up vegan banner” by Susan Reimer and was published in the Baltimore Sun on March 26, 2008. She wrote

Get a look at the new face of veganism.

The mousy hippie chick who couldn’t imagine eating a brown-eyed baby cow any more than she could imagine eating the family pet has grown up.

She’s a sexy, sassy babe with a smart-aleck attitude about the food choices you are making.

Fashion has met food, and the work of a couple of escapees from the world of modeling has put veganism on the runway, creating a perceptible bump in the fastest-growing food trend among girls and young women.

Reimer interviews three female vegans in their mid-twenties. She writes how veganism empowered them to make choices for themselves. One of the interviewees says,

Certainly girls are thinking about moral and ethical issues and what is fair. But it also is about control. The idea that you know who you are and you are in control of things can be very seductive, especially for girls in the ‘tween’ years who are trying to control that feeling of powerlessness.

Reimer goes on to describe how

All three told of similar journeys – realizing at a young age where all that meat came from; tentative but supportive parents; some harassment from schoolmates while growing up; an unwillingness to get in somebody else’s face about what they eat; and the freedom and general ease with which they have been able to maintain a vegan diet as young adults.

The next article, “The Carrot Some Vegans Deplore” by Kara Jesella and was in The New York Times on March 27, 2008. In contrast to the first article describing how the women were empowered by veganism, this article positions veganism on equal terms with society’s patriarchal attitudes toward women in that Portland, OR has the first vegan strip club in the nation.

Two things that you can find a lot of in Portland, Ore., are vegans and strip clubs. Johnny Diablo decided to open a business to combine both. At his Casa Diablo Gentlemen’s Club, soy protein replaces beef in the tacos and chimichangas; the dancers wear pleather, not leather. Many are vegans or vegetarians themselves.

[The article later announces that Diablo has put the club up for sale.] In contrast to the first article that framed veganism as an empowerment tool for women, Jesella discusses the pro and con arguments to women and female vegans and vegetarians using their bodies either in strip clubs or in protesting against animal cruelty.

The issue of exploiting women for social justice causes is explored further by Julie Bindel in Who is this supposed to help?. She writes

Using women’s bodies to promote a good cause was popularised by the annual Miss World competition back in the 60s, and that event still revolves around bikini-clad women talking about their ambitions for world peace and their hopes of spending their winning year supporting charitable causes. Feminist campaigners once staged huge protests against Miss World – famously flour-bombing the event in 1970 – and they continue to speak up regularly against the worst examples of misogynist imagery used in charity campaigns. Nonetheless, this exploitation of women’s bodies seems to have become widely accepted. Images that would provoke a serious backlash if they were used to promote a commercial interest are seemingly legitimised through their association with charity, defended with the simple argument that women have chosen to pose for them. As a result, they have proliferated.

She goes onto castigate PETA as the “worst offender.”

In Peta’s world, it seems that it is perfectly acceptable to reduce women to the status of animals, or meat: one Peta image shows a woman being clubbed “to death” by a man; another shows a woman wrapped in cling film to resemble cuts of meat in a supermarket. Perhaps the most egregious example of Peta’s work occurred in London on Mother’s Day this year, when it staged an event that was ostensibly to raise awareness about farrowing-crate confinement, a technique used in factory farming, in which sows are squeezed into narrow metal stalls barely larger than their own bodies. A heavily pregnant member of Peta’s staff lent her body to the cause – naked except for a pair of pink underpants – by kneeling on all fours in a metal cage. Another pregnant Peta worker gave out leaflets to passersby, with the words, “Unhappy Mother’s Day for Pigs. Go Vegetarian”. The image was disturbingly reminiscent of some of the nastier pornography I have seen.

Of interest to the Grumpy Vegan is how the focus of the Baltimore Sun article was on how veganism empowered the lives of the women interviewed. Whereas the focus of the other two articles was more on how some vegan women and other women were choosing to use their bodies to raise funds for charity or protest against social injustice. Of course, it is argued that the naked protests have an empowering effect upon the women who choose to do them. Nevertheless, these protests, by their very nature, have a momentary impact at best and a been-there-seen-that effect in the long run. Clearly, there are important issues to women (and men) in how women choose to protest. And, yes, the Grumpy Vegan realizes that choice is not always a free choice. But I can’t help but think that what is going to have the greatest, long-term impact is the notion that a vegan lifestyle is empowering. It instils in one a sense of self-worth that one is trying to make a significant difference in a world in which celebrity and materialism is frequently given more credence than what is really important in the world. Call me a prude. I’m nothing but. Call me a kill-joy. I’m nothing but. Call me a snob. Ok. That’s debatable. But I can’t help but think that in the long run vegan empowerment is more important than naked vegan pride.

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Thought for the Day

Marks & Spencer claimed yesterday it would be the first high street retailer to guarantee it sold only “cruelty-free” household cleaning and beauty products, in the latest pitch for the increasingly ethically aware consumer.

The firm said it would now guarantee that 1,200 own-brand products and their ingredients would not involve animal testing during the manufacturing process. The British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV), which has given the initiative its seal of approval, said it was in contact or negotiations with other major stores and manufacturers.

An EU ban on animal-tested cosmetics means no products involving such testing can be sold from 2013. Although a government ban on testing in this country has been in force for a decade, products involving testing in other countries are still sold in the UK.

Now animal welfare campaigners are pressing for similar measures to be applied on household products such as washing-up liquid and laundry powder.

M&S said it found from consumer research that more than 80% of consumers were concerned about animal testing and almost 30% were unaware household products were tested on animals, so clearly labelling its product would “give our customers added peace of mind.”

M&S commits to ‘cruelty-free’ future, The Guardian, April 2, 2008. Congratulations to the BUAV on this important step forward.

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Stallwood Animal Rights Archive Update #10

The Grumpy Vegan has catalogued more than 1,000 books from the Stallwood Animal Rights Archive on LibraryThing. The next update will be made when he’s reached 1,100 catalogued books. Also, 75 tags are now making it possible to search the library by category (e.g. Animals and literature, Henry Salt, Wildlife). Comments on the tags given to the books are welcome.

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