VeganStreet.com
September 2018
How does one pull back the curtains on cruelties hidden from public view without activating someone else’s coping mechanism of numbing out, anger at the messenger, or, even worse, feelings of hopelessness and despair.
I believe that it’s a shirking of responsibility to not share with the public the suffering and cruelty that are so often obscured from view but, as social change agents, I think we have an equal responsibility to not add to the collective despair in a careless or reckless way.
There is a certain kind of social media share I'm thinking about.
It’s often a blurry picture of people in hair nets and blood splattered
clothing. Or maybe it’s an image of an animal hanging from a pole, tree, or
kill line, people standing around him menacingly or indifferently. Animals
in wire cages, panting and desperately pacing, or lethargic. Buckets of
blood; steam rising from a grisly kill floor. If it’s a video, it will be
traumatizing. If it’s an article, it’ll be demoralizing. Sometimes, it’ll
just be an image, not shared with much—or any—text or context. And of
these particular kinds of social media shares, the overarching takeaway is
that humanity is the absolute worst.
We’re living in stressful and difficult times, to put it mildly. With so
much happening in the world, from the dizzying and cruel chaos of the Trump
administration to the steady drip of anxiety about the future of the planet,
every day we’re exposed to fresh trauma, be it a threat to us or those we
care about, or sympathetic traumas, the kind we experience because we’re
sensitive beings. All of this chips away at our resilience and works to
erode our spirit. This content is not isolated to violence against other
animals: every day on social media, we are exposed to starving or scared
children; bloody, broken limbs crushed under rubble; devastated,
tear-streaked faces facing unfathomable loss. It’s not that there’s more
suffering in the world now; it’s that our exposure to it is ramped way up
now.
This leads to a conundrum I’ve tried to grapple with since I first became an
activist, way before social media. How does one pull back the curtains on
cruelties hidden from public view without activating someone else’s coping
mechanism of numbing out, anger at the messenger, or, even worse, feelings
of hopelessness and despair. How do we walk that fine line of opening eyes
without closing hearts? I don’t know if there are definitive answers on this
but I will say that we face this with Vegan Street, where part of our
mission is to shine a light on what happens behind closed doors. We also
spend a lot of time focusing on really positive and inspiring stories, but
there is no doubt that there is a lot of fodder for disheartenment, too. So
what do we do?
I believe that it’s a shirking of responsibility to not share with the
public the suffering and cruelty that are so often obscured from view but,
as social change agents, I think we have an equal responsibility to not add
to the collective despair in a careless or reckless way. Many people who
will see the content you share are already hanging on to their sense of hope
and willingness to engage by the skin of their teeth. Should our point be
that humanity sucks? Or should our point be to try to get people to care
enough to do something about reducing suffering and increasing compassion in
the world? I think it’s the latter. Towards this end, I have three ideas.
I’d recommend that before you share disturbing content, you ask yourself what your goal is. Is it to shame or to educate, to indict or to illuminate? Do you want to add to the collective despair or do you want to empower to take compassionate action? Of course, you are not responsible for how someone reacts to the content you share - I have certainly had people interpret things in a different way than I intended - but if you share your posts with the overarching goal of wanting to build a more kind and just world, my guess is they will be better received and create the most positive influence for the animals.
Return to: Animal Rights/Vegan Activist Strategies