Vegan lifestyle articles that discuss ways of living in peace with humans, animals, and the environment.
Emus are primarily farmed for their dead flesh, their skin, feathers, and in particular, an oil made from the fat of slaughtered individuals... Another example of the needless brutality of a species that claims to 'love animals'. Living in line with the values we ALL claim to hold means living vegan. There's no other way. Be vegan.
This series of short blogs hopes to shine a spotlight onto ways that
humans exploit other creatures for financial gain, ways about which the
majority of consumers are unaware. This is not intended to shock; it's
intended to illustrate and provoke thought. All the atrocities we commit,
are what inevitably happens once a regime of oppression has been universally
accepted to the point where it is not even not even perceived as oppression,
and passes unchallenged by the majority.
Speciesism
This is what has occurred with speciesism, and that deeply entrenched
prejudice lurks in the terrible shadows at the heart of every single one of
the uses of our fellow creatures that we make, demand and pay for.
Just as a reminder, speciesism results in the practice of according or
withholding the rights that belong to others by virtue of their birth, based
solely upon their species. It is a prejudice with which we are indoctrinated
from childhood, that leads to our unfounded assumption that we may harm and
kill members of all other species for whatever trivial reasons we devise,
without conscience and without any moral justification whatsoever. Most of
us reach adulthood completely unaware that the prejudice even exists,
despite the fact that it dictates almost every choice we make in our
nonvegan lives as we needlessly butcher, flay and pluck, mutilate and
torment our way through our lives. Against all logic and all common sense,
while committing atrocities so vile that we choose not to know the details,
we cling firmly to the illusion that we actually care about those whose
planet we share.
Emus
So today the spotlight will shine on emus. Did you know that the farming of
emus is once again increasing in popularity due to consumer demand for 'emu
oil'. I decided to look into this new horror that I was previously unaware
of and here's a brief summary.
A soft-feathered, brown, flightless bird that can reach up to 1.9 metres in
height, the emu is native to, and farmed in, Australia but also in North
America, Peru, China, India and elsewhere.
Emus are primarily farmed for their dead flesh, their skin, feathers, and in
particular, an oil made from the fat of slaughtered individuals. Native to a
frequently challenging environment, emus have fat stores on their back for
survival. If food is scarce, they can tap into this and can go weeks without
eating if they have enough in their reserves.
Following a lull in demand in the early 2000s, demand is currently
increasing for emu oil which is sold as an anti-inflammatory although claims
about the efficacy of this appear to be highly suspect and unproven.
Emu feathers are used for fishing lures, hair extensions, flower
arrangements, hats and numerous decorative arts and crafts. As is also
inflicted upon geese, ducks and some other species, feathers are sometimes
plucked from living birds, where the excruciating process can be repeated
when they grow back. This causes agony for the bird who is often blindfolded
while this occurs to prevent them their attempts to defend themselves.
Because each feather is held firmly in a follicle where there are nerves
receptive to pain, the victims are covered in blood by the end of the
plucking process.
With a natural lifespan of about 60, they're slaughtered before reaching the
age of 2. Like the majority of our needless victims, emus are gentle
individuals who resist every step of the way to the slaughterhouse as they
are captured, terrorised, shoved onto trucks, deprived of food and water
then taken to their deaths.
Upon arrival, they are herded off the trucks to the kill floor. They are
then shot with a captive bolt or electrically stunned then hung upside-down
before their throats are cut, still alive as their blood begins to drain
which is the norm for the slaughter process as applied to all our land-based
victims. Like the vast majority of the victims of nonvegan consumer demand,
the terrified individuals die a lingering and painful death.
'Leather' made from the flayed skin of deceased birds has a distinctive
patterned surface, due to a raised area around the feather follicles in the
skin and is used in such items as wallets, handbags, shoes and clothes
So there we have it. Yet another example of the needless brutality of a
species that claims to ‘love animals'. Living in line with the values we ALL
claim to hold means living vegan. There's no other way. Be vegan.
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