Militant Vegans - MEAT IS MURDER, YOU BLOODMOUTHS

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Isn't this person a troll? I've seen absolutely buggo shit on this blog before.

And in fact, I just noticed we have a thread: https://kiwifarms.net/threads/squirrrelygirly-and-her-vegan-dog-dan.4691/

Another day, another Poe.
I'm hoping she's a troll. But wouldn't doubt they believe it.
 
lHam3ij.png


I didn't realise that even in victory tofu contained so much salt.
 
lHam3ij.png


I didn't realise that even in victory tofu contained so much salt.
Naturally his physical condition has everything to do with his Veganism and fuck all to do with the army of trainers, dieticians, specialists, nutritionists that every Vegan can afford (because we all know that no vegans are poorfags because Kale costs less than steak) Also buckets of vitamin supplements and protein, those are fuckin' cheap as hell.
 
I tried going vegetarian for about six months a really long time ago. Needless to say, with how young I was at the time, I became pretty frail and sickly; just goes to show that you need to actually do your research first before making a decision like that.

(Bacon convinced me to convert back.)
You're powerleveling again.
 
Here's a HuffPost article posted yesterday that was written by Mimi Bekhechi, the director of PETA UK. It begins by introducing us to "speciesism," then compares the current plight of animals to that of black people and women, and then doesn't just stop at comparing the killing of animals to the Holocaust but actually makes it a running theme:

Abolishing Meat: An Idea Whose Time Has Come
As a society, we have fought against sexism, racism and bigotry. Today it's time for us to acknowledge another "-ism", one that's been around for a long time yet is still largely unrecognised: speciesism. Speciesism is the belief that all other animals are inferior to human beings and therefore humans are justified in exploiting them. Saturday is World Day for the Abolition of Meat, a day when we are asked to reflect on the suffering of billions of animals on farms and in slaughterhouses before their dead bodies are hacked apart and delivered, neatly packaged, to supermarkets and restaurants. As we understand more about animals and their emotional and physical needs, many of us now believe that our current treatment of them is impossible to justify.

Farmed animals are treated as industrial tools, as mere machines for producing food, and suffering is a direct result of maximising profit by minimising factory space per animal and the time to market. It's a business model that looks a lot like the Final Solution.

Cows, chickens, pigs and other animals raised for food are victims of our indifference. Because they are not as familiar to us as the dogs and cats who live in our homes, their capacity to suffer is largely but quite irrationally ignored. Yet there is no longer any question about it: they are emotional beings like us. They all experience joy and love and pain and fear, and they are all highly social beings who form strong bonds with their friends and families and mourn when they lose a loved one. Pigs are in many ways smarter than dogs, and their intelligence level certainly surpasses that of a three-year-old human child, but on today's factory farms, they are crammed by the thousands into filthy windowless sheds, often prevented from ever going outside. Although sow stalls are generally prohibited in the UK, many sows are still confined for several weeks during farrowing and nursing - unable to turn around or interact normally with or move away from their piglets. The first time they are likely to feel the sun on their backs or breathe fresh air is when they are loaded onto lorries bound for slaughter.

The Holocaust occurred because ordinary people chose to ignore the extraordinary oppression and abuse that was being inflicted on innocents. Jewish philosopher and Holocaust survivor Theodor Adorno wrote, "Auschwitz begins wherever someone looks at a slaughterhouse and thinks: they're only animals". At some point in history, "they're only" has been said about black people and women, too.

Those who defend this systematic mass slaughter of other living beings by saying that we need to kill animals for food should remember that Nazis used slave labour and made "useful products" out of their victims - lampshades, soaps, etc. It's enough to make you ill. Regardless of what 'use' we may get out of the victims of violence and oppression, we must always try to look at life through their eyes. "They're only animals", we say now. "They're only Jews", many said back then.

Author, Isaac Bashevis Singer, who fled Nazi Europe in 1935, wrote, "[A]s long as human beings will go on shedding the blood of animals, there will never be any peace. There is only one little step from killing animals to creating gas chambers à la Hitler and concentration camps à la Stalin .... There will be no justice as long as man will stand with a knife or with a gun and destroy those who are weaker than he is".

We must never forget the unthinkable acts that have been committed against innocent victims in our past. And we must now turn our attention to the unthinkable acts that are being committed today. We all have the power to stop suffering and misery - every time we sit down to eat. It is likely that one day, meat-eating will be relegated to the history books alongside other injustices. Why not get on the right side of history today?

Fun fact: when you equate the value of a farm animal's life to a Jew's, you're either a Nazi or a vegan.
 
Here's a HuffPost article posted yesterday that was written by Mimi Bekhechi, the director of PETA UK. It begins by introducing us to "speciesism," then compares the current plight of animals to that of black people and women, and then doesn't just stop at comparing the killing of animals to the Holocaust but actually makes it a running theme:

Abolishing Meat: An Idea Whose Time Has Come
As a society, we have fought against sexism, racism and bigotry. Today it's time for us to acknowledge another "-ism", one that's been around for a long time yet is still largely unrecognised: speciesism. Speciesism is the belief that all other animals are inferior to human beings and therefore humans are justified in exploiting them. Saturday is World Day for the Abolition of Meat, a day when we are asked to reflect on the suffering of billions of animals on farms and in slaughterhouses before their dead bodies are hacked apart and delivered, neatly packaged, to supermarkets and restaurants. As we understand more about animals and their emotional and physical needs, many of us now believe that our current treatment of them is impossible to justify.

Farmed animals are treated as industrial tools, as mere machines for producing food, and suffering is a direct result of maximising profit by minimising factory space per animal and the time to market. It's a business model that looks a lot like the Final Solution.

Cows, chickens, pigs and other animals raised for food are victims of our indifference. Because they are not as familiar to us as the dogs and cats who live in our homes, their capacity to suffer is largely but quite irrationally ignored. Yet there is no longer any question about it: they are emotional beings like us. They all experience joy and love and pain and fear, and they are all highly social beings who form strong bonds with their friends and families and mourn when they lose a loved one. Pigs are in many ways smarter than dogs, and their intelligence level certainly surpasses that of a three-year-old human child, but on today's factory farms, they are crammed by the thousands into filthy windowless sheds, often prevented from ever going outside. Although sow stalls are generally prohibited in the UK, many sows are still confined for several weeks during farrowing and nursing - unable to turn around or interact normally with or move away from their piglets. The first time they are likely to feel the sun on their backs or breathe fresh air is when they are loaded onto lorries bound for slaughter.

The Holocaust occurred because ordinary people chose to ignore the extraordinary oppression and abuse that was being inflicted on innocents. Jewish philosopher and Holocaust survivor Theodor Adorno wrote, "Auschwitz begins wherever someone looks at a slaughterhouse and thinks: they're only animals". At some point in history, "they're only" has been said about black people and women, too.

Those who defend this systematic mass slaughter of other living beings by saying that we need to kill animals for food should remember that Nazis used slave labour and made "useful products" out of their victims - lampshades, soaps, etc. It's enough to make you ill. Regardless of what 'use' we may get out of the victims of violence and oppression, we must always try to look at life through their eyes. "They're only animals", we say now. "They're only Jews", many said back then.

Author, Isaac Bashevis Singer, who fled Nazi Europe in 1935, wrote, "[A]s long as human beings will go on shedding the blood of animals, there will never be any peace. There is only one little step from killing animals to creating gas chambers à la Hitler and concentration camps à la Stalin .... There will be no justice as long as man will stand with a knife or with a gun and destroy those who are weaker than he is".

We must never forget the unthinkable acts that have been committed against innocent victims in our past. And we must now turn our attention to the unthinkable acts that are being committed today. We all have the power to stop suffering and misery - every time we sit down to eat. It is likely that one day, meat-eating will be relegated to the history books alongside other injustices. Why not get on the right side of history today?

Fun fact: when you equate the value of a farm animal's life to a Jew's, you're either a Nazi or a vegan.
Wow, this is a new low.
Anyway, what are their thoughts about natural predators? Apparently animals are on our level with intelligence and emotional needs, etc, according to them, so why not abolish hunting for all humans and animals?
 
Wow, this is a new low.
Anyway, what are their thoughts about natural predators? Apparently animals are on our level with intelligence and emotional needs, etc, according to them, so why not abolish hunting for all humans and animals?
That's what I love most about extremist vegans. We're not superior to animals but apparently we're also inferior, considering we don't get the same right to hunt as them.
 
That's what I love most about extremist vegans. We're not superior to animals but apparently we're also inferior, considering we don't get the same right to hunt as them.

There isn't really a "right" to hunt, it's just something animals do. We prey on those weaker than we are to take what they have because we need it.

Only humans have moral responsibilities, because only humans have the ability to comprehend the moral implications of our actions. It is a unique ability that carries a unique responsibility.
 
Here's a HuffPost article posted yesterday that was written by Mimi Bekhechi, the director of PETA UK. It begins by introducing us to "speciesism," then compares the current plight of animals to that of black people and women, and then doesn't just stop at comparing the killing of animals to the Holocaust but actually makes it a running theme:

Abolishing Meat: An Idea Whose Time Has Come
As a society, we have fought against sexism, racism and bigotry. Today it's time for us to acknowledge another "-ism", one that's been around for a long time yet is still largely unrecognised: speciesism. Speciesism is the belief that all other animals are inferior to human beings and therefore humans are justified in exploiting them. Saturday is World Day for the Abolition of Meat, a day when we are asked to reflect on the suffering of billions of animals on farms and in slaughterhouses before their dead bodies are hacked apart and delivered, neatly packaged, to supermarkets and restaurants. As we understand more about animals and their emotional and physical needs, many of us now believe that our current treatment of them is impossible to justify.

Farmed animals are treated as industrial tools, as mere machines for producing food, and suffering is a direct result of maximising profit by minimising factory space per animal and the time to market. It's a business model that looks a lot like the Final Solution.

Cows, chickens, pigs and other animals raised for food are victims of our indifference. Because they are not as familiar to us as the dogs and cats who live in our homes, their capacity to suffer is largely but quite irrationally ignored. Yet there is no longer any question about it: they are emotional beings like us. They all experience joy and love and pain and fear, and they are all highly social beings who form strong bonds with their friends and families and mourn when they lose a loved one. Pigs are in many ways smarter than dogs, and their intelligence level certainly surpasses that of a three-year-old human child, but on today's factory farms, they are crammed by the thousands into filthy windowless sheds, often prevented from ever going outside. Although sow stalls are generally prohibited in the UK, many sows are still confined for several weeks during farrowing and nursing - unable to turn around or interact normally with or move away from their piglets. The first time they are likely to feel the sun on their backs or breathe fresh air is when they are loaded onto lorries bound for slaughter.

The Holocaust occurred because ordinary people chose to ignore the extraordinary oppression and abuse that was being inflicted on innocents. Jewish philosopher and Holocaust survivor Theodor Adorno wrote, "Auschwitz begins wherever someone looks at a slaughterhouse and thinks: they're only animals". At some point in history, "they're only" has been said about black people and women, too.

Those who defend this systematic mass slaughter of other living beings by saying that we need to kill animals for food should remember that Nazis used slave labour and made "useful products" out of their victims - lampshades, soaps, etc. It's enough to make you ill. Regardless of what 'use' we may get out of the victims of violence and oppression, we must always try to look at life through their eyes. "They're only animals", we say now. "They're only Jews", many said back then.

Author, Isaac Bashevis Singer, who fled Nazi Europe in 1935, wrote, "[A]s long as human beings will go on shedding the blood of animals, there will never be any peace. There is only one little step from killing animals to creating gas chambers à la Hitler and concentration camps à la Stalin .... There will be no justice as long as man will stand with a knife or with a gun and destroy those who are weaker than he is".

We must never forget the unthinkable acts that have been committed against innocent victims in our past. And we must now turn our attention to the unthinkable acts that are being committed today. We all have the power to stop suffering and misery - every time we sit down to eat. It is likely that one day, meat-eating will be relegated to the history books alongside other injustices. Why not get on the right side of history today?

Fun fact: when you equate the value of a farm animal's life to a Jew's, you're either a Nazi or a vegan.
Fun fact: The VP of PETA, MaryBeth Sweetland, is a diabetic who while she's cool with every other diabetic on the planet dying as insulin comes from animal sources is perfectly okay with using it herself. Her reasoning is that she needs to stay alive to fight for the rights of animals everywhere. So animals need to die to give her insulin so she can fight for their lives.
 
Fun fact: The VP of PETA, MaryBeth Sweetland, is a diabetic who while she's cool with every other diabetic on the planet dying as insulin comes from animal sources is perfectly okay with using it herself. Her reasoning is that she needs to stay alive to fight for the rights of animals everywhere. So animals need to die to give her insulin so she can fight for their lives.
I thought PETA's whole thing was that animal lives are worth just as much as a humans? That's some a-grade hypocrisy there on her part
 
I thought PETA's whole thing was that animal lives are worth just as much as a humans? That's some a-grade hypocrisy there on her part
Don't worry guy, when she does it it's alright. But anyone else who dares to have diabetes is literally animal Hitler.
 
I thought PETA's whole thing was that animal lives are worth just as much as a humans? That's some a-grade hypocrisy there on her part
Of course they are.

They also euthanize pets but their side of the issue is, "these pets are really far gone and to keep them alive would just prolong their suffering so we put them gently to sleep". And that's perfectly fine. I'm all for the stopping of suffering be it human or animal but they don't mention that they also take in animals that people no longer want and if they can't find a home for them, kill them.

PETA is a bunch of fucking hypocrites. They put on a nice song and dance number but they're just as corrupt and self-serving as any other organization you may choose to mention.
 
PETA is a bunch of fucking hypocrites. They put on a nice song and dance number but they're just as corrupt and self-serving as any other organization you may choose to mention.

They're worse, actually. I'd put them on the level of shit like the KKK in terms of sheer social noxiousness and abhorrent behavior, including their genocide shelters where they kill pretty much every single animal someone entrusts to them thinking it's a real shelter.

I'd put them that low because even an organization I didn't agree with that operated honestly and in line with its own stated ideals deserves some respect at least for that. PETA says one thing and does the exact opposite. Nobody genuine and honest about their true goals would profess such deep concern for animal welfare and then literally slaughter helpless animals sent to them by people thinking they at least had a chance at being adopted.
 
This is unrelated to the thread because I have nothing to contribute other than "haha vegans are stupid", but here's some personal experiences.

I remember going to an Eastern European circus with my family as a child. There were some animal rights activists outside protesting the treatment of the circus animals and showed people proof of the abuse they receive. At the time I really didn't understand what they were doing due to my young age, but it clearly spoke to my parents who also saw the poor state the elephants and large cats were in.
Going to a circus once made my father become a vegetarian for over a year, but the food either didn't suit his eating habits, or he just ate too much of low-nutrient foods, as he became overweight and then returned to a normal diet.

The majority of people in that part of the world really don't care as much about animal welfare, especially those that grew up with Communism, where a canned processed ham was a special treat for the holidays and it was something worth waiting in line all day for.
 
Back
Top Bottom