flesh is flesh, isn't it? so why are carnists so upset at finding meat in their
meat? horsemeat to be precise, in their cowmeat!? flesh masquerading as flesh!! tell me, what’s the difference between one species and another? why is the
slaughter and consumption of one more acceptable than another?
if you eat flesh, why the outrage? why the shock and revulsion at the mere thought of eating horse rather than cow, or sheep, or pig…?
if you're here in australia perhaps you're not even concerned - maybe you think australia is somehow immune from the 'dilemma', immune from the 'horsemeat scandal' sweeping europe, immune from even thinking about the horse slaughter industry - hey, we love our horses, we're a horse loving nation, we wouldn't slaughter them, we certainly wouldn't eat them! according to a recent article in the courier mail...
hmmm, 'knackeries' and abattoirs legally slaughtering horses, here... maybe it's time to think again... if horses are 'processed' here, it's only logical to assume some of them end up as food here... do you really believe you haven't 'inadvertently' eaten horse, or kangaroo, or camel, or some other 'unacceptable' flesh at some time in your life? i was told many years ago by a 'friend of a friend', a butcher, how commonplace substitution was, that horse and kangaroo were often 'hidden in mince' - how flour was a wonderful lightener of colour, a perfect mask...“SEVEN hundred horses a month - many young fillies and colts bred for racing - are slaughtered at two Australian abattoirs and shipped overseas for human consumption, including to Europe, the centre of the horsemeat scandal.The majority are slaughtered in Queensland at Caboolture's Meramist Abattoir, where 500 horses are processed each month.A further 200 a month are killed at a South Australian abattoir, Samex Peterborough (formerly Metro Velda).Thousands more are processed at 33 knackeries across Australia for petmeat and hides each year, with industry reports indicating the annual cull totals around 40,000.”
if that shocks or horrifies you, then i have to ask again, why is the flesh of cows, sheep, pigs, chickens, turkeys,
etc. etc. acceptable – why do you eat some, and not others? why are you not outraged at the slaughter of all?
according to melanie joy, author of ‘why we love dogs, eat
pigs, and wear cows…'
"... in meat-eating cultures around the world, even though the type of species consumed changes, people tend to have only a small handful of animals they have learned to classify as edible. All the rest they classify as inedible and thus disgusting and often offensive to consume.So when it comes to eating animals, what is striking is not the presence of disgust -- disgust is the norm, the rule, rather than the exception. What is striking is the absence of disgust. The question we would do well to ask ourselves is why are we not disgusted by the select few species we have been taught to think of as edible. And why don't we ever ask why? When the stakes are so high -- our food choices are truly a matter of life and death, particularly for the 10 billion sentient individuals in the U.S. every year who are no less sensitive and conscious than those we consider friends and family yet who subsist in abject misery, as their bodies are unnecessarily turned into units of production. Why do we leave our choices so unexamined? Why don't we consider that so-called edible animals have lives that matter to them, just as horses and dogs and cats do?” read more in “Why Horsemeat Is Delicious and Disgusting”
2 comments:
The problem of dissonance is obvious for those of us what have done the necessary thinking... I worry though - Often I see comments from people who half-lit light-bulb seems to have another POV that not only isn't there anything wrong with eating cows, pigs and chickens --- But horses as well. :/
I don't think it's the majority of people - But they are out there. That's what disturbs me especially abut horse-slaughter for human consumption in the U.S. There will be those groups of people that protest that "good meat" is being shipped elsewhere. And we are right in continuing to say that there is no difference... Trouble is - Some see this as a license to eat everyone. It's Pandora's box balanced on a slippery slope. :(
your analogy – pandora’s box balanced on a slippery slope - is so very apt bea… we have to hope that there are more raging floodlights just waiting to be switched on rather than half-lit light-bulbs… if only people would question… outrage comes with knowledge, compassion and empathy – outrage is what’s needed to end the war wrought on our earthling kin…
i understand your concern with the usda ready to approve a horse slaughtering plant in new mexico, and the ag-gag bills that have been enacted in an attempt to hide what goes on behind slaughterhouse walls…
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