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Archive for the ‘animals’ Category

PETA has never been known for their tact, or class, or sense and I ain’t talking about their ads featuring naked women. I’m talking about how they have used immigrants and now mothers to promote their own work and some disgusting politics as well.

From amiga elle, phd:

Elle writes to PETA in an open letter posted on her site:

You have a bit of everything going on here. I mean, obviously this ad can appeal to a variety of people, most notably people:

Who liken poor mothers to animals.

Who are proponents of negative eugenics and forced sterilization.

Who believe poor mothers and their children are burdens on “taxpayers.”

Who believe only certain women should have children, and who see the birth of children to some mothers as an “epidemic,” or a “problem” or any of those other negative terms.

You know, the old sympathetic me might have been tempted to believe maybe, since you keep producing such horrible ads, you don’t know the background of some of this stuff you invoke. Then I remembered some wise words from Sarah M.:

[They know] they are operating within potent historical narratives—without a history of the objectification/subjugation of women, or slavery and racism, their imagery wouldn’t be nearly as powerful.

I suspect you’re reaching people whom you might not envision as your target audience, but really, we can’t tell.

So what do people think? Has PETA taken it too far again?

Please note that comments calling women animals, crazy, etc will be subject to my censorship moderation.

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The latest horrifying video of animal cruelty in the factory farm system has just been released by the animal rights group, Mercy for Animals. The video is below–but for those of you who can’t watch–a description is as follows:

An undercover video shot by an animal rights group at an Iowa egg hatchery shows workers discarding unwanted chicks by sending them alive into a grinder, and other chicks falling through a sorting machine to die on the factory floor.

Chicago-based Mercy for Animals said it shot the video at Hy-Line North America’s hatchery in Spencer, Iowa, over a two-week period in May and June. The video was obtained Monday by The Associated Press.

I support this groups recommended action against this practice: 1. Go vegan, and 2. Require the egg industry to include labels on their eggs that say, “Warning: Male chicks are ground-up alive by the egg industry,” even though I don’t see either action inspiring mass action in the “average” citizen. I just know too many people who look at animal rights groups and see them as a group of people that are not connected to reality. In other words, animal rights groups are not meeting communities where they are at. So I support their call for action, but wish that they would start with something less radical (in the minds of “average citizen”), like leading investigations then protests against the system of factory farming in the U.S.

Or…they could do something even simpler, like talking to the workers. As somebody who has several family and community members who have or do work in the chicken industry–I would listen immediately if one (or all!!!) of them came to me and said, listen, it’s time to boycott this place.

Workers and animals are connected together in some really violent and complicated ways. Workers are literally killing animals. And speaking from experience with friends and family–the conditions animals live under often literally make workers physically and mentally ill. Workers may need to kill animals so that they can bring a paycheck home–but almost every worker I ever came across hates their jobs, hates killing animals, and can’t be anywhere around the animals that they’re working to kill once they’re off the clock. The stories I’ve heard about egg collecting in particular–Chicana academic Gloria Anzaldua has written about how the sight of eggs made her physically ill after she worked at an egg factory.

There is violence for animals at these factories–and trauma for the workers. And it seems to me that rather than ignoring workers and heading straight to the consumer in these campaigns to protect animals, animal rights advocates would do better and get more productive results by going to the workers first and working with workers to be leaders in a movement away from factory farming violence and toward a more just and sustainable food structure.

So the question becomes, why haven’t they?
Is it because they would have to learn Spanish first?

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Bolivia Bans Circus Animals

6:47 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · animals|Bolivia · 4 Comments

23 Jul 2009

Circus600I admit to being a happy meat eater and even have taken my older daughter to a circus before I knew better. When I say knew better, I mean about the torture and suffering that animals are made to endure for human entertainment.

Some animal rights organizations, especially inside the U.S., has some issues they need to work out when it comes to dealing with communities of color, pero at least one country in Latin America is trying to reconceptualize what entertainment is in the context of “circus” by banning wild and domestic animals in traveling circuses.

Bolivian President Evo Morales has signed the world’s first law prohibiting the use of both wild and domestic animals in traveling circuses…The new law bans the use of wild and domestic animals in circuses in the Bolivia, as their conditions and confinement are considered acts of cruelty.

The circuses will be allowed one year to adapt their shows to a humans-only program and during this time, the government will issue regulations on confiscation and monetary sanctions for any breaches of the law.

Via / Vegans of Color
Image Via/ NYT

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Yes, yes, yes, little Ms. Radical Macha loves the shit out of radical activists–including those that may or may not plaster photos of Gloria Anzaldua all over public property (ahem). So, my respect for Jessica I-may-or-may-not-like-being-Mexican-I’m-not-sure-yet Alba went up considerably when I read that she had done some vandalizing in the name of animal rights.

But then I read that I-believe-in-animal-rights-but-I-do-so-love-to-get-my-picture-taken Alba, well, was photographed doing her vandalizing–and that she even posed for the camera as well….and I was not quite so impressed any more.

Jessica Alba left many citizens of Oklahoma City seeing red white last week, when she blanketed the downtown area guerrilla-style with posters of great white sharks as part of an underground effort to draw attention to the predators’ dwindling population.

Unfortunately, the actress’ secret mission was outed yesterday, when photos of her plastering the posters around the city—and posing victoriously in front of a defaced United Way billboard—wound up online.

Ai, Jessica…I do so want to love you and hold you in my bosom. But you make it so difficult in so many ways. I must say though, I do like your hat.

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Mindless fun Friday

12:20 pm By la Macha · animals · Comments Off

29 May 2009

Yeah, it’s hard for me to concentrate on Friday, how about you? As such, in the name of beginning an early weekend of no concentrating and lots of fun, I leave you with this. PLAY ME OFF KEYBOARD CAT!

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Meaningless cuteness

12:36 pm By la Macha · animals · Comments Off

4 May 2009

In the olden days, aka the days of Dick Cheney and guns and random shooting of old men, ducks avoided the White House like the Plague.

These days, mami’s feel perfectly fine herding up the brood and heading in for a visit.

Yes, change has truly come

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Speaking of factory farming

11:56 am By la Macha · animals|Health|Media|media justice · Comments Off

29 Apr 2009

777886a33bc34790a47060b569069ab7Amy Goodman has a great interview about how swine flu intersects with factory farming and how factory farming intersects with NAFTA and poor/third world countries.

An excerpt:

But the problem is, is that puts the onus on the swine as being the cause for why this kind of influenza has come about, and it’s just that is simply not the case. The swine are not in the driver’s seat. They are not in a position to organize themselves into what are now cities of pigs that stretch around the world.

We really have to go back to the livestock revolution. Before World War II, poultry and pigs were basically farmed in backyard operations across this country. So we’re talking about poultry flocks of the size of seventy chickens. After the World War II, all those independent farming operations were—many of them were basically put under one roof and increasingly put under the control of particular corporations—Holly Farms, Tyson, Perdue. And the geography of the poultry and pork change. So, while previously pork and poultry were grown across the country, it was now grown, or they’re now raised within only a few southeastern states here in the United States. After the livestock revolution, poultry and pigs were now being grown and raised in much larger populations, so we go from seventy poultry now up to populations of 30,000 at a time. So we have cities of pigs and poultry.

That model was subsequently spread around the world. So, starting in the 1970s, the livestock revolution was brought to East Asia. You have the CP Group, which is now the fourth—world’s fourth-largest poultry company, in Thailand. That company subsequently brought the livestock revolution into China once China opened up its doors in 1980. So we have cities of poultry and pork developing around the world.

And this phenomenon goes hand in hand with the very structural adjustment programs that the IMF and the World Bank helped institute during this time. So if you’re a poor country, you’re having financial difficulties, in order to get some money to bail you out, you had to go to the International Monetary Fund for a loan. And in return, the IMF would make demands on you to change your economy in such a way that would allow you—will force you to open up your economy to outside corporations, including agricultural companies. And, of course, that would have a detrimental effect on domestic agriculture. So, small companies within poor countries could not out-compete large agribusinesses from the North that are subsidized by the industrial governments. So they’re not able to compete with them, so there’s—they either must contract their labor and land to the companies, foreign companies that are coming into their country, or they basically retire out of the business and sell their land to the large companies that are coming in. So, in other words, the spread of the cities of pork and poultry go hand in hand with this structural adjustment program.

This is information that we could all actually use–information on how to stop things like this from happening again or happening in the future. Instead we’re being bombarded with the latest count of who got sick and where they’re sick at.

Call me cynical, but I think there’s something really wrong with our media.

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childwswinefluI’m not really sure why CNN feels the need to run the story about where swine flu started. According CNN, this little boy is “ground zero” of the swine flu–which means what? That this little boy is the original site of destruction and violence? And wouldn’t you figure it, this original site of destruction and violence is a Mexican that is eating ice cream while the rest of us scream frantically and crawl on our hands and knees through the street.

Damn Mexicans.

I don’t know, though. I found this part of the article to be much more beneficial in understanding the whole scope of things:

Edgar has managed to bounce back from his symptoms and playfully credits ice cream for helping him feel better.

His mother blamed the virus on a huge pig farm in the neighborhood. Officials have conducted tests at the farm owned by U.S. company Smithfield Foods, and those tests came back negative.

Meanwhile, Mexican health officials suspect the swine flu outbreak has caused more than 159 deaths and roughly 2,500 illnesses.

That little section made me remember that factory pig farms are some of the worst polluters in the world.

“North Carolina’s ten million hogs produce twice as much feces and urine as the populations of the cities of Los Angeles, New York and Chicago combined. Industrial farms, most with thousands of hogs each, store the waste in open-air pits, called lagoons. They spray the waste, untreated, as manure on adjacent fields.”

So those dear little piggies may be as healthy as can be, but anybody breathing in their shit being sprayed on adjacent fields is probably going to have some problems.

But who wants to talk about the ethics and problems of factory farming practices when we can demonize ice cream eating little boys?

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cid_005201c76b51df01ab200abd6018joeJennifer wrote up about the swine flu outbreak that has emptied Mexican streets and has hit close to home, with a confirmed case of the illness right here in my own home borough of Queens, NYC. Thankfully swine flu isn’t something you can get from eating pork, porque everytime I hear the words “swine flu” I want some chuletas or pernil.

And now swine flu is the new racial profiling:

Secretary Janet Napolitano also said border agents have been directed to begin passive surveillance of travelers from affected countries, with instructions to isolate anyone who appears actively ill with suspected influenza.

In other words don’t stand close to a coughing Mexican? Or if you see a Mexican sneeze call ICE?

Read more…

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Slightly random: Disney actress Selena Gomez wants you to know about the stray dog situation in Puerto Rico:

And that “it’s pretty neat to be Mexican”. Take that, Jessica Alba.

Via / YouTube

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