This Mother’s Day, let’s remember the millions of animal mothers whose babies are stolen and killed to be eaten and used, and let’s reflect on the ongoing trafficking and sexual abuse of men, women, and children in our culture, and discuss these connections with our friends and family. Slavery begets more slavery.
Veal calves in solitary confinement...
A disturbing trend over the past couple of decades is the ongoing
proliferation of human trafficking and slavery. It’s well known that de
facto slavery conditions exist in a number of industries, such as for
children on cocoa plantations in Africa, and carpet, clothing, and
electronics factories in India and elsewhere, men on fishing boats in
southeast Asia, and millions of women and children in the sex slave trade
internationally, including in the U.S. and Europe.
Researchers studying the problem report that there are vast sex trafficking
rings throughout the U.S. that prey especially on children, and that the
problem is under-reported and difficult to stop due to corruption and
profiteering in law enforcement and the courts, as well as in governmental
agencies that deal with children.
According to a recent study reported in USA Today, youth and child sex
slaves are forced to have sex on average over five times daily and there are
hundreds of thousands of adults who are buying sex with children, and who
are rarely brought to trial. In a recent case, a man who was arrested was
asked about his conscience, and if he felt any remorse for the terrible
damage that he was causing children by buying and having sex with them. His
response was telling: “I don’t want to know how the sausage is made.”
Years ago, I wrote an article titled “The Most Pervasive Form of Child
Abuse” published in the June 2001 issue of VegNews before it was a magazine,
contending that being compelled as children to eat the flesh and secretions
of animals not only harms us physically, but psychologically and morally as
well. With every meal, we’re consuming a narrative of materialism,
reductionism, and exploitation of the weak by the strong. The subtext is,
“Don’t make the connection.” “Stay shallow and don’t see deeply, feel
deeply, or care deeply. It’s just an object: a burger, an egg, a breast, a
wing, a piece of cheese.”
We are all profoundly wounded by being born and raised in a culture
organized around animal agriculture, which is, at its core, a relentless and
ritualized sexual attack on the sacred feminine dimension of life,
specifically on females, mothers, and offspring. The core practice of animal
agriculture is forcibly impregnating females and sexually abusing and
killing the beings who are the result of raping them. This is happening
millions of times daily; it’s the hidden dark side of our culture. We are
compelled from infancy to not only participate and pay for this, and thus
cause this ongoing tsunami of sexual violence, but also to then actually eat
it and routinely feed it to our unsuspecting children. This injects them
with the same toxins and wounds that have been perverting us and hijacking
our awareness for generations now, driving ten thousand years of war and
patriarchal oppression.
The wisdom at the heart of world’s spiritual traditions is basically
unanimous: whatever we sow, we will reap. How can we ever expect that we as
human beings are worthy of a culture that is free of slavery and the sexual
trafficking and abuse of women and children when we are enslaving billions
of nonhuman animals and sexually abusing the females and their offspring?
It’s well understood that all the female cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys,
ducks, geese, sheep, goats, and other animals who are imprisoned for food
and other products are forced into pregnancy on what the industry terms the
“rape rack” when they are mere children in human terms. Cutting costs in
every way possible, the industry minimizes feed costs by manipulating young
females into early pregnancy through drugs, hormones, and selective
breeding.
Our efforts to curb and stop human trafficking are merely ironic in the face of the massive industrialized and invisibilized trafficking of animals that pervades and defines our culture.
Going vegan and understanding the deep connections between animal abuse and human abuse is a significant contribution to the healing and resolution of the human slavery and trafficking problem that causes untold misery and suffering in our world. Until we publicly proclaim and explain these connections and they become part of our social conversation, we will never make meaningful progress in our quest for justice and respect in our human world. Eating and buying animal foods and products always requires trafficking and sexual abuse of animals, on both small backyard operations as well as on large-scale factory farms. This injustice permeates every cell of animal flesh, cheese, wool, leather, and egg, and screams for our attention, to wake us up from the cultural trance into which we’ve been indoctrinated, and to heal the traumatic wounds that have been inflicted on us by animal agriculture. The vulnerable—animals and children—always bear the brunt of the full fury of our desensitization and delusion.
There is only one way forward. Human liberation is impossible without animal liberation. There will never be any human justice without justice for animals.
The fact that in the thousands of pages of writing about human
trafficking and sexual abuse of women and children, there is virtually no
mention of the propelling force—the massive trafficking and sexual abuse of
animals—demonstrates how deluded, indoctrinated, and blinded we are by our
culture’s food rituals. It’s long past time to speak up and embody the truth
of compassion and justice for all living beings, and for all mothers and all
the children of all species, so that we are finally worthy as a species to
live in greater harmony on this beautiful and beleaguered Earth.
This Mother’s Day, let’s remember the millions of animal mothers whose
babies are stolen and killed to be eaten and used, and let’s reflect on the
ongoing trafficking and sexual abuse of men, women, and children in our
culture, and discuss these connections with our friends and family. Slavery
begets more slavery. Freedom requires us to question the indoctrinated
narratives justifying our exploitation of animals, and to do our best to
embody kindness and respect for all. We can all contribute our voices and
actions and help build the positive future for all beings that is beckoning.
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
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0 camels / camelids