Through Her Own Eyes

The Grumpy Vegan has long thought that a particularly tragic side to human nature is our ability to cause suffering in others after we’ve been the target of similar misery. This cycle of violence is difficult to stop. But it is possible to do so with appropriate, professional assessment and treatment programs.

It is increasingly recognized that companion animals are also at risk in domestic violence. Abusive partners threaten or actually harm and kill family dogs and cats to demonstrate power and control over their spouses, children and other family animals.

Sue Coe is an artist whose creative eye shines a compassionate spotlight on those who are at risk. Her new series, “Through Her Own Eyes,” looks at the lives of six women in the Texas prison system who are HIV positive.

One of these women, Victoria, describes how her partner “shot my dog Ziggy for barking too much.” “I knew he would go after my son next,” she adds. Imprisoned for murdering her partner, Victoria could rarely recall a time when he was not waving a gun in her face.

Whether it’s her studies of animal abuse, HIV patients, war, racial discrimination or the effects of capitalism, Sue’s “artistic activism” illustrates the commonality of oppression when we exert power and control over others.

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Free Speech for Some

I want my right to free speech!
In the United States free speech is a right. It’s also a right in most of the European Union. But not in the United Kingdom.

Animal Defenders International (ADI) wanted to buy TV ads for its campaign
“My Mate’s a Primate,” which seeks to educate the public about the bush meat trade, the use of nonhuman primates in entertainment and advertising as well as in research, testing and education. The ads were refused because they were “political.” So, ADI sued the British Government over the Communications Act 2003. The Act bans radio and TV advertising by political organizations whose main aim is to “influence public opinion on a matter of controversy.”

“BP are permitted to advertise their green credentials on TV but environmental organizations are not permitted to criticize the oil industry for its role in climate change in the same media,” said ADI’s attorney Tamsin Allen in The Guardian. Nonprofits are lending their support to ADI, including Amnesty International and the RSCPA.

In a bizarre twisting of the situation that’s not uncommon to some Guardian columnists, Nick Cohen took ADI to task. If ADI wins it would “give right-wing politicians and moneyed interests a huge advantage in the process.”

The Grumpy Vegan tried to understand the logic in his argument but couldn’t. It seems that we’re damned because we don’t have the right to advertise. And we’re damned if we do because we’ll pave the way for fascism.

Anyway, the British High Court has reserved judgment until September.

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Working in a Chicken Processing Plant

My ambition was to become a chef and to learn how to run hotels and restaurants. My first introduction to veganism was during what was then called Domestic Science classes that I took at my secondary school. The teacher described vegans as people who were strict vegetarians, eschewing all dairy products. They were frequently nudists, she said — an assertion that I have not cared to explore. This introduction to veganism made no impression on me. I continued to cook and eat meat and dairy products.

In 1971 I began attending a three-year course in French cuisine and hotel and restaurant management at Westminster College in Vincent Square, London.

During the summer vacations I was expected to work in the profession. The lecturers helped the students to get jobs through their contacts. In the 1972 summer, I worked in the pastry kitchen at Le Caprice, an haute cuisine French restaurant that is near the Cafe Royal on Regent Street in central London.

One of my most disturbing memories from this experience was watching a chef cook Rainbow Trout. He grabbed a live fish from a nearby tank, whacked her against the side of the stove and threw the stunned fish into a hot frying pan. The name, Rainbow Trout, comes from the distinctive colors the fish became as she was seared alive in hot butter. Another unsettling image I recall from Le Caprice is of the pastry chef, who at the beginning of his shift took off his underpants, washed them in the pastry sink and hung them on the oven rail to dry. Unencumbered under his chef’s uniform, he created delicious pastries which were served upstairs to rich and important people in the ornate restaurant. Drunk by the end of the day, he would put on his clean underpants and go home. My experience at Le Caprice — a glamorous restaurant upstairs which was contrasted with the squalor below stairs — fueled my anger about the inequalities inherent in such a class-based society as Britain’s. Interestingly, 32-years later, I happened across a copy of The Guardian during a trip to London which reported on the discovery of a porter found dead two floors below the grand entrance to the Cafe Royal. He secretly lived behind the dumpsters in the bowels of the building. It is sadly true: The more things change, the more they remain the same. (Alphonse Karr 1808-1890, “Plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose.”)

When it came to making a decision about how to spend the summer of 1973, I decided against working in another restaurant or hotel. I assumed that this is what I would be doing for the rest of my life. Friends, who were at other colleges and universities, took summer jobs at a nearby chicken processing plant. It paid well. It would be only for 10 weeks. And I wanted to buy my first used car. So, why not work where chickens are slaughtered? I cooked and ate them without thinking about it.

The plant was in Aldershot, Hampshire, and, I believe, has subsequently closed down. A sign on entering Aldershot, which is a 30-minute drive from Camberley, proudly declares itself to be “Home of the British Army.” I recall from an early age, when my parents would occasionally take me and Wendy shopping at Aldershot’s open-air market, that such boasting of military nationalism sickened me.

I worked on the post-slaughter part of the production line. The workers at the front end had to start work one half-hour earlier than the rest of us because it took that amount of time to hang a live chicken on the conveyor belt, kill her, complete the evisceration and run the body through the scalding tank to remove the feathers and “sanitize” the carcass. I stood on the production line with dead chickens approaching me every minute. The birds were neatly folded in preparation for the freezing process. Someone up the line placed a weight label on her breast. My job, for eight hours a day, was to place the carcass in a plastic bag (keeping the weight label in position) while squeezing out the air and twisting the bag and sealing it by running it through a sticky tape machine. Thus, the chicken was ready for freezing as I placed it on a large cart that was wheeled into a walk-in freezer. The smell of thousands of live birds, fresh from the factory farm and their death hung like a pall over the plant and its surrounding area.

Every now and then, we made bags of giblets. Do you really think the chicken neck in your frozen chicken was from the very same bird you ate? There is something bizarre and macabre about a giblet bag production line where the workers are stationed with trays of chicken necks, kidneys, livers and bags of bile to the side. Countless bags of giblets are assembled like cars and so many things that we now use. This mindless labor soon turns to mischievousness when the supervisor’s back is turned. Two necks in one plastic bag. Why not? No neck for this chicken? Who cares! Lots of liver. Lovely. Giblet bags become Christmas crackers as they are pulled apart and explode over us. War is declared. We squeeze bags of bile aiming the juices at each other. Green stains mar our white overalls. The air turns rancid. All good clean fun!

Even though I spent 10 weeks in the summer of 1973 working on the post-slaughter section of the production line, I could never bring myself to watch the birds as they were killed. I also could not buy the oven-ready chickens who were offered for sale at a reduced rate as an employee benefit every Friday afternoon. But I continued to eat chicken bought elsewhere and took vicarious and naive comfort in doing so believing that I was not responsible for their death. Clearly, I was uncomfortable with working at the chicken processing plant. Otherwise I would have willingly bought the staff discounted chickens and taken them home to eat. When I was honest with myself I knew I was responsible for something that I did not approve. My thoughts and feelings were confused and contradictory.

There was now no turning back on a journey of discovery into the disturbing side to human nature and what we do to animals. If, when I was young boy watching Kate Ward pushing her wooden cart full of dogs with even more dogs in tow awakened a feeling of compassion for animals, my experience of working in a chicken processing plant when I was 18 exposed me to the shocking truth of institutional animal exploitation. I began to ask myself how was it possible that people like Kate Ward devoted her life to rescuing dogs but I was willing to work on a production line transforming live chickens into food? I prided myself on my progressive political views, including opposition to war and violence. But how could I justify my willingness to spend one summer working in a chicken processing plant where violence was the norm? My nascent confused, concern for animals started to clash with my choice of a career that included cooking chickens. What’s more, I was scared to confront the reality about myself.

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Conger Cuddling Banned!

The Grumpy Vegan continues to be amazed by our ingenuity in the ways in which we use, exploit and degrade animals.

Today’s Guardian reports on the Royal National Lifeboat Institute’s annual fundraiser “conger cuddling.” Apparently, for more than three decades the RNLI held this annual fundraiser in Lyme Regis, Dorset. It involves people standing on six-inch-high wooden blocks while another team swing a 5-feet-long dead conger eel attached to a piece of rope. Did anyone say human skittles?

Anyway, this nonsense has been stopped because an animal rights activist complained to the RNLI. A rubber mooring buoy will now be used instead.

Of course, there’s been much huffing and puffing. Much what-is-the-world-coming-too? And “Damn those animal rights activists”!

The RNLI does a wonderful job rescuing people off Britain’s shoreline. But, really, it’s time for this pathetic human behavior to stop.

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USDA–Get Your Priorities Right!

CNN has even reported on Ern's cats!
The Grumpy Vegan isn’t a fan of Ernest Hemingway. His macho animal-killing practices don’t appeal. Consequently, I’ve never picked up any of his books.

But when it comes to Ernie’s pack of six-toed cats at his Key West home, well, that’s another story.

You see, the USDA is attempting to force the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum to be licensed because more than 50 descendants of the old boy’s cats continue to live there.

I don’t think a pack of old Ern’s much-loved moggies should be a USDA priority. Someone needs to sort out the USDA’s priorities. Our taxes pay your salaries, matey!

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Soyatoo!’s Soy Whip!

What joy this brings to the Grumpy Vegan's kitchen!
The Grumpy Vegan recognizes that “Go Vegan!” is a too-frequently used, all-purpose battle cry to cure the world’s ills.

World hunger? Go Vegan! Animal cruelty? Go Vegan! Teenage pimples? Go Vegan! Need an alternative to gasoline? Go Vegan! Constipated? Go Vegan! Flatulent? Mmmm. We’ll get back to you on that one.

Joking aside, there are excellent reasons for the nonviolent, cruelty-free vegan lifestyle. But now there’s absolutely no excuse not to Go Vegan!

Food — and other fantasies — can now be realized with the first completely vegetarian whipped cream!

Soyatoo!’s Soy Whip spray cream behaves and tastes just like dairy whipped cream, but it contains no milk or any other animal ingredients.

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