10:06 am By la Macha · animals · 13 Comments
3 Sep 2009The 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?
6:47 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Bolivia| animals · 4 Comments
23 Jul 2009
I 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
6:19 pm By la Macha · animals · 4 Comments
10 Jun 2009Yes, 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.
4:11 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · US Presidential Race 2008 · Comments Off
23 Sep 2008The following video is definitly very funny. I laughed at all of it. At the same time, I was just a bit uncomfortable with the assertion that Hillary Clinton didn’t lose the election because of sexism. Which is odd, because on the whole, although I do feel that Clinton was subjected to sexism and sexism was 100% a part of the coverage of her bid, I also, for the most part, don’t feel like she *lost* because of sexism.
I think the thing that makes me uncomfortable is a man dismissing sexism. It’s offensive–men don’t get to tell women that something did or didn’t happen because of sexism, just like white folks don’t get to tell people of color that something did or didn’t happen because of racism.
But in the end, Rock’s point is really well made: why does slaughter of animals get a black man prison time and a white woman the Vice Presidential nod?
How is whiteness invested in ‘protecting’ animals even as it uses the destruction of animals to define itself?
2:24 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Celebrities| Movies · 1 Comment
1 Mar 2006
Up-and-coming Latino actor Jay Hernández loves his dog, his cat and all animals; and he’s joined animal rights group PETA for an ad campaign to discourage the use of fur for clothing:
Jay Hernandez would never wear his dog—or anyone else’s dog, for that matter—and he doesn’t think you should either. In fact, the Hostel star feels so strongly about fur that he and his canine compadre, Donner, took time out of their busy movie-star schedules to pose for the latest “If You Wouldn’t Wear Your Dog, Please Don’t Wear Any Fur …” ad.
Jay, who will next be seen on the big screen in Oliver Stone’s upcoming movie, World Trade Center, looks sexy and striking in our new anti-fur campaign.
Other famous Latino “fur foes” (celeb endorsers of PETA) include Fernanda Tavares, Vanessa Olivarez and pseudoLatino Joaquin Phoenix.
Via / furisdead.com
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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