Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Canada's Disposable Citizens

by Jordan Reichert
AAEV Candidate - Victoria  B.C.


If I said that Canada had a population of close to one billion, few if anyone would believe me.

If I told you that 99% of that population would be killed this year, I would probably get a visit from CSIS as a terrorist threat to the nation.

However, this wouldn’t be a deception or threat.It would be a factual account of the number of non-human animals killed in Canada every year; and yes, I refer to ‘animals’ as “non-human animals,” so as to recognize that we, as humans, are animals too.

To break it down, approximately 700 million animals will be raised and killed for food in Canada this year. The dairy industry exploits close to 1 million animals each year, and then there is the untold numbers of fish and marine life killed each year at nearly 1 million metric tonnes. When you take into account the 15 million companion animals, all the animals killed to feed them, and the wild animals killed by hunting, trapping, fur-farming, and beyond, my estimate of  Canada’s population being one billion begins to look a bit more reasonable. This is the 99% of Canada’s population that have been made disposal by the industries that exploit them for profit and by our government that fails to recognize them as citizens worthy of recognition and protection in our society.

If I said that Canada had a population of close to one billion, few if anyone would believe me.

If I told you that 99% of that population would be killed this year, I would probably get a visit from CSIS as a terrorist threat to the nation.

However, this wouldn’t be a deception or threat.  It would be a factual account of the number of non-human animals killed in Canada every year; and yes, I refer to ‘animals’ as “non-human animals,” so as to recognize that we, as humans, are animals too.

To break it down, approximately 700 million animals will be raised and killed for food in Canada this year. The dairy industry exploits close to 1 million animals each year, and then there is the untold numbers of fish and marine life killed each year at nearly 1 million metric tonnes. When you take into account the 15 million companion animals, all the animals killed to feed them, and the wild animals killed by hunting, trapping, fur-farming, and beyond, my estimate of  Canada’s population being one billion begins to look a bit more reasonable. This is the 99% of Canada’s population that have been made disposal by the industries that exploit them for profit and by our government that fails to recognize them as citizens worthy of recognition and protection in our society.

Let’s not forget the 35 million people who make this all happen either.

It is important to talk about the 35 million people, because right now about 23 million of them are the only ones in the upcoming federal election who may vote on which party will have power over how all 1 billion lives in Canada will be affected.  It may not seem very representative to have 23 million individuals decide the fate of 1 billion, but that is exactly why there is a need to raise awareness of the tremendous number of lives taken each year and the social cost of this indifferent, systemic, and unbaiting violence against non-human animals.

Now, someone will read this and thinking to themselves, “They want to give animals the right to vote!”  Absolutely not.  What Animal Alliance Environment Voters Party of Canada wants to do is to give these 1 billion members of Canadian society representation at the federal level.  We want those who are able to vote to be able to make an informed choice when they are deciding which party to vote for.  Right now, none of the mainstream parties are talking about animal issues in their campaign.  Why?  Because these issues are considered dangerous for political parties – protecting those who can’t vote from those who can. Yet, we know that people care about non-human animals.
There are other good reasons why we should be concerned that the mainstream parties are not talking about the lives and plight of non-human animals.

One, is the environment.  Any political party who says their priority is the environment, but does not talk about or take seriously the impact of the animal agriculture industry on climate change or the environment as a whole is pandering for votes.  I have heard every mainstream party in this election support the animal agriculture industry in one way or another and I have not had a straight response from any of them about how they will address this issue or why they are not talking about it.  It literally feels as though we are living in a cowspiracy, and that every political party is stepping around the issue whenever it is brought up.

We have to ask ourselves as citizens if these parties are representing our interests first or those of the meat, dairy, and egg lobbies that are subsidized to the tune of $6-8 Billion dollars a year by our government to keep them in business. If they aren’t putting our interests first, what other social justice, environmental, and public interests are they willing to compromise for votes and potentially financial support.

Compromising the integrity of the lives of other animals for profit and power directly compromises the integrity of our own as people. Thousands of people in Canada spend their time, energy, and money providing an essential service to the hundreds of thousands of cats and dogs, and other non-human animals that are disposed of by those responsible for their care. This places a huge burden upon civil society that do their best to treat the symptoms of the problem, with little to no support from the government to treat the root issues of this form of homelessness that constantly overwhelms shelters and rescues with lives to care for.

Furthermore, our human health is under attack by the propaganda of the meat, dairy, and egg industries that promote their products as being essential or beneficial for our health.  As a vegan for the last 5 years I can tell you that being healthy has nothing to do with eating other animals. Meat, dairy, and egg products are not only destroying the environment we depend on for clean air and fresh water, but also our bodies directly and perhaps even our health care system.  Diets high in these products have been shown to lead to increased risk of cancer, diabetes, and heart disease.  In many cases, high protein diets associated with these foods are shown to make humans four times more likely to die of cancer.  These products all have negative health consequences which in turn undermine the integrity of our health-care system to provide care for all those who become ill due to the effects of meat, eggs, and dairy.  Yet, we don’t hear the government take measures to educate people about the harmful effects of these foods and the benefits of a plant-based diet and lifestyle.  Are we that disposable to the government as well in the interest of profit?

Animal Alliance Environment Voters candidates are in a powerful position when it comes to serving the health, environment, and protections of all individuals  in our communities because we are led by our values first, not by trying to be the most popular vote. I do not see any of our citizens as disposable, because I know every individual has their own set of needs and interests that are deserving of recognition and representation. I also do not see the lives of non-human animals as disposable, which right now our current government does by inaction on the violence against them in our homes, in the wild, and in the institutions that abuse them for profit.

A truly inclusive government gives a voice, even if it is through representatives, to all those under its care and leadership.  I see my role in this election as giving a voice to the over one billion non-human animals that are silenced in the shadows of slaughterhouses and processing plants each year, live in our homes, and free in the wild.  I don’t know how any political party or representative could take the representation of their constituency more seriously than starting by protecting the most vulnerable in our society and working up.

No member of our society should be disposable for profit or for private interest.  If we do this, we set the moral standard of what is acceptable treatment for any vulnerable individual in our society at a deplorable level.

It often discomforts people to think of themselves as animals in a continuum of unique manifestations of that concept. However, I am asserting we are all equal even if we are different, which I believe is indispensable in an inclusive and compassionate society.

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

How I'd Salvage the World - in One Minute

by Elizabeth Abbott
AAEV Candidate, Toronto - Danforth

I’m running for Parliament in Canada’s October 19th election as a candidate for the Animal Alliance/Environment Voters Party – AA/EV – for the Toronto-Danforth riding. Though the AA/EV is one of Canada’s tiniest political parties, I represent billions more beings than my fellow candidates. These beings include not just the thousands of voters and residents of Toronto-Danforth but also Canada’s billions of animals: our wildlife; the dogs, cats, rabbits, ferrets, birds and other creatures we live with as companions; the unlucky members of those same species imprisoned in facilities that torment them in the name of science; and the billions of cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys, lambs, goats and fish condemned to factory farms where they endure brief, wretched lives that end in terror in slaughterhouses.
factory farmingI carry the interests of so many creatures on my shoulders!

I also advocate for the well-being of the environment whose destruction humanity – and other political parties – seem bent on permitting, by failing even to acknowledge – much less address – the biggest contributor of all, the factory farming that continues to gobble up Canadian family farms.

They do not protest against how the effluvia from factory farming pollutes neighbouring land and the waterways it seeps into. Nor, when discussing health care, do they express alarm that before slaughter, the tormented and sick animals are given antibiotics – 80% of antibiotics are used for animals, only 20% in human health care – and so everyone who eats their flesh is also exposed to antibiotics, leading to the widespread resistance to these once wondrous drugs that threatens to leave us unprotected against diseases that were once easily manageable. Nor do they cry out against the hormones given those animals to boost and hasten their growth and slaughter and that, in the humans who eat them, are linked to breast and testicular cancer, among others. Nor do they worry about the pesticides the animals ingest in their feed that is grown with many carcinogenic chemical pesticides.

silenceThat’s the tip of the iceberg of what I stand for, and doesn’t even glance at the economy, the TPP, health care, immigration, terrorism, privacy, Bill C51, democracy itself in Canada.

Yet in an upcoming television All-Candidates debate on Rogers TV, we are each allowed exactly one minute to introduce our programs. How is that possible? A one-minute speech is no more than 140 words, and I’ve taken nearly triple that already.

And then last Sunday in church, reciting the Apostle’s Creed, I had an epiphany. That creed, (King James version) which encapsulates the core of Christianity and even wraps it in a bit of narrative, is 110 words! If Christianity can be expressed so succinctly, so can the world-view that has driven me to enter the political arena.

My creed: I believe in a world where humans respect, protect and enhance the environment they depend on and share with animals and plant life, and where progress is measured not as macroeconomic units of growth but always in terms of justice, equity and sustainability. Humans are inextricably linked by biology and ecology to non-human life, and when humans harm other life forms, they harm us all, not just physically and emotionally but also ethically and spiritually.
Our best science shows that the economic course that humanity is currently pursuing will—left unchecked and unreformed—result in drastically altered ecosystems and catastrophic events far worse than we are already witnessing and enduring around the world.

I believe in Canadian sovereignty and mourn its sacrifice at the altar of globalism via the TPP and previous cross-border deals, increasingly crafted in secrecy from voters but not from special interests, including lobbyists.

TPP silence(And, if I speak as fast as the speed of light, I can also include) I believe Bill C51’s acceptable features are far outweighed by its potential to silence dissent, invade privacy and crush ethical whistle-blowers and animal advocates like myself as “terrorists.”

Amen.

It’s (barely) do-able. Perhaps, in the capable hands of the folks who produced the Book of Common Prayer version of the Apostles’ Creed, mine could be reduced to one minute, articulated without rushing. Until that happens, I’ll zip along as fluently as I can, and rely on answering questions – I’ll have 30 seconds for each! – to elaborate on my world vision.

Thank you for speed reading for the most crucial of causes: animals and the environment.

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