I just moved into a vegetarian co-op on campus and it's a strange and beautiful journey already. There are a number of factors pulling and tearing at the way I frame it. This is how most people respond when I mention the co-op :
"Oh where's that again "
"I've never actually been INSIDE ..."
"What?"
"Aren't you guys all like vegans or something? Do you run around naked?"
It's this strange place so ridiculously CENTRAL on-campus but so socially removed that no one dares venture inside.
It is a square building of many bikes, of rags, of hairy bathrooms, of let-it-mellow yellow, of baked goods, of Haus Decisions, of theoretical, of cheap and good food made with love, of creation, of tension of growth, of stickers of hall posters, of beans, of lentils, of Crimethinc signs, of dirty things in clean places, of smiles and 3 am kitchen porn, of song-singing and couch-lounging, of very little academic work and so much interaction, of re-usable yoghurt containers, of eggs and things of disgust, of vegan idealism, of camaraderie, of apple scones in the morning with your name on it, of hall parties, of tensions, of growth, of change, of many things... in the last 4 days.
I'm so thrilled to be a part of it, and so thrilled to watch myself grow in it..
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Saturday, January 30, 2010
MTRBlows
Radical Mountain Top Removal Action:
http://www.climategroundzero.org/
Beautiful and simple, tree-sitting is a non-violent form of protest which aims to fight the systematic destruction of natural resources for energy and profit. Awesome.
http://www.climategroundzero.org/
Beautiful and simple, tree-sitting is a non-violent form of protest which aims to fight the systematic destruction of natural resources for energy and profit. Awesome.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Vegan Conversion Machine
Veg*ns and activists of all sorts and varieties can get so riled up, after all, and want to change the world that they lose sight of the very beauty of their own relationships... We're not vegan conversion machines.
That said, I'm not going to stop handing out flyers and tabling and getting shit done. Shifting to a plant-based diet is helpful to our society in so many ways. Not to mention that it allows us to see the connections behind all the products we have been so blindly led to consume... But to side with certain PETA-activists who argue that every possible interaction should be one that shows veganism in a certain light can be crippling. After all, aren't vegans and vegetarians animals, too? Shouldn't we provide ourselves with some due 'animal justice' in a hustling, bustling world of alienation?
Just a reminder to bring some balance into our lives. Personal revolutions are equally important.
That said, I'm not going to stop handing out flyers and tabling and getting shit done. Shifting to a plant-based diet is helpful to our society in so many ways. Not to mention that it allows us to see the connections behind all the products we have been so blindly led to consume... But to side with certain PETA-activists who argue that every possible interaction should be one that shows veganism in a certain light can be crippling. After all, aren't vegans and vegetarians animals, too? Shouldn't we provide ourselves with some due 'animal justice' in a hustling, bustling world of alienation?
Just a reminder to bring some balance into our lives. Personal revolutions are equally important.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
"Race"
L'INTRO FRANÇAIS : Je le trouve très intéressant de voir comment nous choisissons nos mots en général, et en bonnes sociologue, specifiquement autour de l'inégalite. Pour ce petit "post" j'aborderai le langage français autour de la question de "race" sur les êtres. Encore un petit mot sur l'animalité et l'inégalité entre êtres humains et animaux, mais bon, c'est un grand problème dans le monde aujourd'hui qui doit absolument pris en compte !
And now for ENGLISH:
There is Only One Human Race
In my sociological studies here in France, I have come to realize very interesting subtleties surrounding the word "race." In fact, in France, using the word race to denote an ethnicity of a human is not only rude but quite simply not said. In sociological work and study, however, if you want to specifically use the word race as it is meant in English, it is necessary to put the word in quotation marks. (A feminist author Colette Guillaumin made something of a scandal when she chose to simply capitalize 'race' rather than put it in quotes). The French explain the word choice by saying, "Il n'y a qu'une race chez nous: l'être humain !" meaning approximately "There is only race amongst us : the human being!" In spite of continual struggles of identity and somewhat worrisome discussions on the 'immigration problem' thanks to Sarkozy, I personally find this word choice to be a major success. We still have denigrating words put towards people of different ethnicities and cultures, but quite frankly, the fact that there is no "human race" is beautiful.
Animal Races
However, even amongst animals, we see the objectification and inequality launched upon animals in that in the French language, people often use the word "race" to denote "species." "A good race of cow, that makes for a delicious meat.." etc. Though I am not suggesting that there isn't a variation of species in the order Animalia outside of human beings, I'm highlighting the curiousness in using the word race is used rather than species in the French language for animals yet there is a conscious abstinence from the use of 'race' respecting human beings. Moreover, the word racisme (le racisme) exists in French to denote injustice towards individuals of other ethnicities. The weight and the violence of the word race is very evident in the French language, yet finds its way into discussions of animality. Interesting how four letters can mean so much.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Seeing
Marilyn Frye, a famous feminist author, once said the following about realizing one's oppression:
Consider a birdcage. If you look very closely at just one wire in the cage, you cannot see the other wires…It is only when you step back, stop looking at the wires one by one, microscopically, and take a macroscopic view of the whole cage, that you can see why the bird does not go anywhere.[1]
I am critical of the radical vegan activists who tie all social oppression together, who recognize the ways in which all of the following themes can create inequality: gender, sex, sexuality, poverty, race, class, age, ability. The problem is that although this is true, to use all of these rather strong radical political stances all at once dissuades the average listener from hearing. In reality, we are forced to normalize ourselves in an effort to gain coverage from the media and the average passerby. Given the massive budgets behind meat advertising, we have to make our voices be heard as much as possible.
So I am finding myself in this strange crevice, this strange space of social inequality overwhelm, where my radical feminist politics can never cross with my radical animal rights efforts, except perhaps amongst already radical folks. Where my critiques of current economic structures cannot find its way into these campaigns, for fear of overwhelming the average listener with more than one non-conventional notion at a time. Too much new and we shut down, after all.
But there's definitely something about all this that hurts. Something that hurts about only being able attack one inequality at a time, an impatience, a hunger for change, a need for change that drives me mad. I want to be able to fight against gender norms, against horrendous foreign aid programs, against AR-abusers, but I simply can't get past the fact that it's not efficient to overlap my efforts.
I see the wires of the cage,
but I can't see how they all work together.
How can I break the cage ?
There are way too many birds in here,
and time is running out.
We've gotta get out.

[1] Marilyn Frye, The Politics of Reality: essays in feminist theory. Crossing Press: Freedom, California, 1983; pps 2-7
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Cercle de Silence à Paris (Place des Innocents) par OneVoice
Circle of Silence
for Animals Exploited by the Fur Industry
for info on the action, check out OneVoice's website
For information on the egregious methods of the fur industry, please check out this brief factsheet.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Humor + AR
So in my procrastination on my french sociology work, I was bopping around looking how humor can be used for AR. The following cartoon only somewhat touches on the whole human-animality question but definitely brings to light this question of superiority which we hold to be unique to the human race.

Shamlessly snatched from the following site. I hold no rights : http://www.vegetus.org/vegtoon/ar.htm
The site in general can be found here: http://www.vegetus.org/vegtoon/vegtoon.html
Some duds but some that are pretty interesting.
The End.
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