JoAnn Far as posted on
UPC United Poultry Concerns
July 2018
“I am not THAT kind of vegan.” This is a statement I have heard a few times recently.... We NEED people willing to speak out about injustice. When vegans say to others, “I am not THAT kind of vegan,” it is a clear expression of judgment against people speaking out.
Meme from VeganStreet.com
As veganism has become more popular, it has triggered pushback. When I
began doing vegan activism in the 1990s, vegans weren’t seen as a threat to
animal agriculture or to people’s coveted family or religious traditions.
Grocery stores, hospitals, and local TV news welcomed me and repeatedly
provided venues for me to criticize animal exploitation while encouraging
people to give veganism a try. Some were inspired or motivated to change as
a result of this. Those who didn’t “get” my message or disagreed, ignored me
and moved on. Since vegans were so rare, this message was a curiosity not a
threat.
But now, almost everyone in America knows there are millions of vegans.
Veganism is a viable lifestyle AND growing in popularity! Vegans are setting
athletic records, running successful companies, and birthing and raising
healthy vegan families. This changes everything. Conscious of it or not,
those who are not yet vegan live with the continuous discomfort that they
are participating in unnecessary violence
against other beings. Unlike the 1990s, now simply saying, “I am vegan”
reminds non-vegans that they are not living consistent with one of their own
values – in fact a widely held value. Most of us agree: It is
wrong to unnecessarily harm animals. Just BEING vegan around
some people feels to them like they are being attacked, because it’s
reminding them of this painful fact.
But those who DO embrace veganism struggle with a different discord –
feeling like an outcast from their tribe, family, or social group. Any
choice that sets us apart from our group can expose us to “change back.”
Pressure.
In order to help you understand why saying “I am not that kind of vegan” is
problematic, I will share with you what happened to me as a child.
I grew up next door to the best grade school in one of the top rated school
districts in the entire country. Most all of us who went to that school had
parents who grew up poor during the depression. The combination of
affordable higher education along with an expanding job market is what
allowed my parents and other parents in their neighborhood to do so well
economically that they seemed rich when compared to how they grew up.
The children in my neighborhood wore the trendiest clothes and enjoyed the
latest, greatest toys and gadgets provided in mind-numbing abundance at
least twice each year. Their pantries were stocked with an array of
seductive junk food.
But that was not how it was at my house.
My parents were frugal, and didn’t even try to keep up with the neighbors.
That made fitting in hard for me. But I had an even bigger obstacle
socially: I was one of the only two fat kids in my entire grade. Though my
parents weren’t really status conscious, they were fat-phobic and tried hard
to make me lose weight. Sugary treats were kept under lock and key at my
house, though I had access to cheese wheels, meat and eggs. I remember being
ecstatic when I learned to fry hamburgers in butter on the stove, and make
omelets that oozed with melted cheese.
Grade school was hell for me. I was taunted for being fat and for not
dressing fashionably. Everyone knew I was part of a small group of outcasts.
We were the “untouchables” of our grade. Included with me was the other
heavy girl, a thin shy girl with terrible acne, a white-haired, poorly
coordinated boy, and a scary boy who hit and never followed directions. Just
above us in the hierarchy were a handful of students who although not as
openly shunned were still avoided. The hierarchy was made visible and
reinforced through the act of picking teammates or partners for activities.
You might think those lower down in this hierarchy, experiencing this
injustice would be the first to challenge it or at least not do the very
same thing to others. But in fact the opposite happened. The more oppressed
one of us felt, the more intensely we distanced ourselves from anyone with
low status. We feared more oppression if associated with any of the other
victims.
My observations are consistent with what’s been documented in other cases of
oppressed groups. Time and again, those concerned with their own inclusion
contribute to the victimization of others – be it the class system of India,
oppressed US minorities trying to better their own lot (and being called
“uppity” by others likewise oppressed), or some women struggling for
position in male dominated arenas.
One common way this pressure can be managed is to distance ourselves from
those the dominant group find most problematic. Supporting the oppressor’s
perspective – even just in a tiny way, can ease some of the pressure by
aligning us, at least in part, with those who hold the power. In other
words, some vegans join the oppressive class and throw vegan activists under
the bus, to help insulate themselves from the “change back” pressure of the
dominant paradigm.
This is what is happening when you hear someone say, “I’m not THAT kind of
vegan.” Though this may make it easier for the person expressing this
sentiment to comfortably mingle with and feel more accepted by those who are
still enabling the oppression, it works against our cause. We NEED people
willing to speak out about injustice. When vegans say to others, “I am not
THAT kind of vegan,” it is a clear expression of judgment against people
speaking out. It isolates activists. It makes other vegans contemplating
speaking up feel shamed into silence. It supports and empowers the
oppressive mindset. If our people – that is, those choosing to abstain from
intentional violence against other beings – think we are wrong for daring to
raise awareness of violence against animals, that plays right into and
reinforces the oppressive paradigm. It also provides additional
justification for non-vegans to disregard veganism altogether.
Can you think of a single example of progress made on any social justice
issue that was NOT the result of someone trying to push their values? That
is why I continue to speak out and raise awareness however I can.
I will not apologize for speaking up when I see injustice, and the more
people who join me in this, the better I believe our world will be.s
JoAnn Farb is a former microbiologist, national speaker, and publisher of the FEAST Lawrence Newsletter. She uses big picture holistic thinking to connect social justice with environmental sustainability and health. She and her husband live in Kansas and have two grown lifelong vegan daughters. JoAnn will be speaking at our 7th annual Conscious Eating Conference in Berkeley, California, Saturday March 2, 2019. Details will appear in full in the next issue of Poultry Press!
This article appeared in the Fall 2018 issue of UPC's Poultry Press.
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