we are not extreme, but the rhetoric is

July 22, 2010 by admin · 4 Comments
Filed under: aeta, animal rights 

(from guest blogger Vegina – musings from a feminist vegan rabble rouser…)

Check out this power point from the US State Department’s Overseas Security Advisory Board. (FYI, I covered the faces of all activists since they did not give their consent to be in this slideshow; otherwise it is in the original). This presentation is geared toward corporations that rely on or support animal exploitation.

This power point was first released publicly on GreenIsTheNewRed.com http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/state-department-powerpoint-corporations/560/.  Will Potter does an excellent job of covering the important political issues surrounding this issue, so check it out.

The logic and rhetoric demonstrated here is absurd. Be sure to download the slide show and read the “notes” section for the full “WTF” effect.  Some of the most ridiculous parts of this slideshow include a fallacious link between SHAC and the ALF and highlighting the mainstream U.S. Animal Rights conference as a place where “extremists” gather.

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Liberation in Celebration of the 4th of July

July 4, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: animal rights 

(from guest blogger Vegina – musings from a feminist vegan rabble rouser…)

The 4th of July is here! Today is the day when we come together to commemorate our liberation from oppression. We celebrate by hanging out with the people we love, eating a lot of food and watching the sky explode with fireworks. But while we celebrate there are billions in this country who are not free.

Many are imprisoned physically and often unjustly. The prison industrial complex is big business and it is a growing business that leaves countless victims trapped without their freedom.

Since 1991 the rate of violent crime in the United States has fallen by about 20 percent, while the number of people in prison or jail has risen by 50 percent…[This increase is largely] because of imprisonment of people who have committed nonviolent offenses. Instead of community service, fines, or drug treatment [nonviolent offenders are sentenced] to a prison term, by far the most expensive form of punishment.

Adapted from Eric Schlosser

Others are imprisoned by a sense of fear because our society is sexist and homophobic; in 2008 the FBI recorded over 1,600 hate crimes against people based on their sexual orientation (likely a gross underestimate) and transgender individuals are so discriminated against that the Southern Poverty Law Center suspects that they have highest rates of being murdered compared with other hate crime targets.

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