Industrial agriculture is a hotbed for disease and antibiotic resistance, an environmental catastrophe, a health hazard, and manufacturer of unmitigated violence. Perhaps it is the fruit of this rotten tree that should be prevented from using bucolic scenes and smiling animals in its marketing. Perhaps it belongs in grey-green wrappers, plastered with blood-splattered aprons, sludge-soaked rivers, and the fearful eyes of pigs.
In the developed world it took a good deal of sticking each other
with bayonets and battling hordes of concerned mothers to reach a
place where censorship feels like a relic. Despite this, new forms
of censorship have emerged, some of which are arguably justified.
For example, cigarette boxes and tobacco pouches cannot be covered
in branding in the UK. Instead, they are universally the grey-green
of a threatening puddle, carrying anti-smoking slogans and pictures
of defective lungs or open surgery. This is to dispel illusions
amongst the young and impressionable that cigarettes are cool,
associated with exotic miscellany like camels and coats of arms.
Some argue that cigarette companies are not the only firms trying to
confuse people. In several instances in Europe and America,
legislators have argued that plant-based foods are being marketed
deceptively. In May, a piece of legislation called Amendment 171
failed to make it through the European Parliament. On the basis of
helping confused consumers, this proposed law would have made it
illegal to “exploit the reputation” of the dairy industry. It would
have banned the use of words like ‘buttery’ or ‘creamy’ to described
plant-based products as well as climate comparisons between
plant-based and animal products. It even prevented plant-based
products from using similar packaging to their animal counterparts.
I talked to Lara Pappers, the head of communications at ProVeg
International, who pioneered the campaign against Amendment 171,
about this tendency towards label regulation in the EU. The
amendment’s failure left her feeling “very relieved, it felt like we
stopped a disaster from developing.” She claimed the nature of this
disaster would be twofold. The first was the amendment’s hobbling of
freedom of speech, an issue she thinks everyone can get behind. “No
one is in favor of censorship,” said Pappers. “Why are we censoring
an entire industry? That’s an actual injustice, regardless of the
argumentation of what is better and what isn’t. It’s just wrong.”
The other part of the disaster is environmental. The EU has vowed to
become carbon-neutral by 2050. Pappers claimed this revealed the
EU’s contradictory approach. By legislating against plant-based
products, when adopting a plant-based diet is the single biggest
impact an individual can have in fighting climate change and is
endorsed by the EU’s own Sustainable Food Policy, they appear to be
riding two horses in opposite directions. “We aren’t censoring the
renewable energy sector, so why are we doing it to our food system,”
he asked. “Think about the time we have all had to spend to stop
this ridiculous legislation that could have actually been spent
introducing ideas or data or whatever is needed to move towards more
environmentally friendly policies.” According to Pappers, consumer
and corporate demand for plant-based foods is erupting, only to be
smothered by legislative initiatives from a conservative wing of the
animal industry. “The knowledge is there, the money is there, the
will is there, but policy is a bottleneck,” she said. But her
insight into the rising popularity of plant-based foods is accurate:
consumption of these products rose by 49 percent in Europe over the
last two years alone.
The same is true of the United States, where plant-based products
increased sales by 27 percent in 2020. There, similar struggles are
emerging. Legislators in Texas recently tried to pass Bill 316 which
would have banned plant-based products from using words like ‘beef’,
‘pork’, or ‘chicken’ even if preceded or followed by the words
‘plant-based’ or ‘vegan’. Similar laws have been tried in states as
diverse as Kansas, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Maryland, and Colorado.
“It’s unfortunate that our elected officials are spending time on
the imaginary crisis of people confusing veggie burgers for
hamburgers,” quipped Scott Weathers, a Senior Policy Specialist at
the Good Food Institute. Weathers opposes this type of legislation
for his job and possesses a diverse arsenal of arguments against it.
His assertion that this is an imaginary crisis is backed by
evidence, including a Cornell University study that showed omitting
words traditionally associated with animal products from plant-based
labels was in fact more confusing to consumers. Weathers presented
these legislative actions as strong-arming from a threatened meat
industry, particularly from cattlemen’s associations and other
producers who lack the resources to rebrand as ‘protein companies’,
as the biggest meat businesses have. Weathers believes these
attempts to legislate are “unconstitutional and condescending to
consumers… they want to kneecap their competing industry.” His
arguments have won over libertarians and liberals alike, and his
vision of the future is optimistic. “We think [the plant-based
foods] industry can have tremendous benefits in terms of jobs, in
terms of food security, and in terms of leading the world,” he said.
If the phenomenon of label censorship is as Pappers and Weathers
have described it, then it is pure cynicism; petty, infuriating,
conceited. However, after reviewing the comments of Texas Bill 316,
I got in touch with Judith McGeary. Judith runs the Farm and Ranch
Freedom Alliance (FARFA) in central Texas, a national organization
defending small farmers and ranchers and promoting regenerative
agriculture. She believes that it is plausible that consumers could
be confused by certain plant-based labels, citing the pictures of
chickens on packages of fake meat. “Many consumers are in a rush,
they do not look closely, they look for some key word,” said
McGeary. “Anyone in a hurry or, by the way, doesn’t speak English
well.” Cell-cultured meat she is suspicious of and skeptical of its
nutritional value. “Were the choice between lab-based meat or CAFOs
I’d be struggling,” she said. “Am I in the eighth circle of hell or
the ninth circle?”
Despite her opposition to CAFOs and industrial agricultural, who she
freely admits are involved in legislative efforts like Bill 316, she
maintained the existence of a labeling problem. “The reason you use
those terms [chicken, beef, pork] is to invoke the emotion, to evoke
the sensation… it’s inherently misleading,” she said. When I flip
the question and ask her if factory-farmed meat should be labeled as
such, she agrees that they should be. McGeary claims the intensive
farmers and bigger firms have Machiavellian reasons for pursuing
censorship laws, but that there is a whole other group who are
routinely excluded from this conversation. These are the small
ranchers and farmers who feel “under attack from extremists” and
that “there is an agenda to destroy us, to destroy you, the small
calf operator.” These people feel maligned, fearful of a new food
sector animated by an ideology that has no room for them, which
wants them abolished, wants their history and traditions to sink
beneath the Texas sand.
McGeary has a point. Many people, myself included, consider raising
animals for meat to be unethical in itself. That said, many animal
rights activists have great respect and compassion for farmers,
whose expertise is invaluable. It is not in our interest to alienate
farmers but to facilitate their transition into a plant-based
paradigm.
There is common ground between the plant-based movement and smaller
farmers. They both share a disdain for the monstrous factories that
have taken over global agriculture, which keep animals in a pit of
suffering and gobble up small independent farms. McGeary is open to
a coalition: “There absolutely is common ground for people with all
sorts of diets,” she said. It would appear the anti-factory farm
movement has been hitherto divided and conquered, with plant-based
companies battling smaller producers whilst behemoths like Unilever
or Tyson nab everyone’s market share and waddle cheerfully to the
bank.
If there must be new labeling laws to help consumer decisions, there
is little doubt in which direction they should travel. Industrial
agriculture is a hotbed for disease and antibiotic resistance, an
environmental catastrophe, a health hazard, and manufacturer of
unmitigated violence. Perhaps it is the fruit of this rotten tree
that should be prevented from using bucolic scenes and smiling
animals in its marketing. Perhaps it belongs in grey-green wrappers,
plastered with blood-splattered aprons, sludge-soaked rivers, and
the fearful eyes of pigs.