Human Rights?
What is morality?
The dictionary defines morality as:
–noun, plural -ties for 4–6.
1. conformity to the rules of right conduct; moral or virtuous conduct.
2. moral quality or character.
3. virtue in sexual matters; chastity.
4. a doctrine or system of morals.
5. moral instruction; a moral lesson, precept, discourse, or utterance.
6. morality play.
Most definitions are circular, only the first is useful.
What is right?
–adjective
1. in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
(Other definitions omitted for brevity)
What is good?
–adjective
1. morally excellent; virtuous; righteous;
Again in circle, we go back to morality where we started.
What is Just?
1. guided by truth, reason, justice, and fairness
The dictionary will make us go in circles round and round. The truth is, that morality is not a factual concept. Its an "idea". And as rationalists we seek consistency in ideas and concepts.
We say Humans have "rights". But we base them on what grounds? Because humans can feel physical and emotional pain? But we fail to define any DNA boundary for Homo Sapiens as no two humans have identical DNA and also we fail to define any emotional or physical pain threshold cutoff - we don't even know how to measure them. For example, do rights end after emotional pain 5.96 and Physical pain 3.21?
What is a Human? Is human a sequence of DNA? It couldn't, because every human has a different DNA pattern. In fact, our DNA is not much different from our most close evolutionary cousins.
"...However, from a genetic perspective the gaps in genes between us and our closest animal relative is arbitrary. We just happen to be the lucky survivors in the evolutionary race. As a thought experiment, it's perfectly acceptable to imagine a world where all the genetic "gap species" were still alive. Thus, between us and the bonobo there would be a continuum of living beings, all almost identical to their genetic neighbor. In such a world, it would be impossible to draw a line between us and the bonobo ..." - Dr. Richard Dawkins
The point is, there is no set or exact sequence of DNA that we can say has “rights”. Something like a Kilogram in France. There is a platinum iridium cylinder called Kilogram in France. All other weights are measured from it. There is no sequence of DNA in any museum or lab called the "THE Human DNA Sequence".
Then what is a human? A collection of body parts? Eyes, legs, arms, teeth etc? What set of body parts can we take and say "(Humans) Rights apply to these body parts: "Eyes, legs, etc". "Those who don't have these parts, or loose them in an accident have no rights." There are no such parameters. Even if there were, how do we decide which body parts to include and which to exclude? Who should be a template and why?
Then what is a Human? A set of behavior or traits or abilities? Like writing, singing, inventing etc? Do we say, “Those Lifeforms that can produce a sound agreeable to certain other lifeforms, those lifeforms that can produce marks on a paper agreeable to some other lifeforms and those lifeforms capable of making a rocket have rights, and those who cannot don't.” Also how do we arrive upon these traits and what about the unique ones like the ability to “see” magnetism, or to "see" in the darkness, or to navigate with your head etc?
Again there are no such parameters. We give human rights to illiterates, tribals, non-singers, non-writes and non-inventors, non-ricket scientists, criminals, (but not to homosexuals), imbeciles, infants, human vegetables etc.
Then, are “Humans” a set of lifeforms capable of physical pain and suffering? Not all humans can. Humans sleeping, imbeciles, coma patients, infants, humans on anesthetic etc. No two people can feel the same emotional or physical pain - which we cannot even measure to begin with. After which emotional or physical threshold shall we say (human) rights end. An MMA fighter can have a higher physical pain threshold than others. We all react to emotional stimulus differently. Some go mad and commit suicide on the death of a loved one, some take it pretty well and still manage a functional life.
The truth is, there is no such thing called "Human". "Homo Sapiens" is a tag that has no logical footing. The is no iron clad set of genes or a set of body parts or a set of abilities or range of emotions that make a “Human”. Its a polite fiction, but a useful one nonetheless, like imaginary numbers.
According to Darwinian Evolution, all traits evolved slowly and successively over thousands of generations. In the words of Dr. Richard Dawkins, the "mount improbable" was not climbed in a single leap, but a gradual slope. The keyword is “slope”.
For example, there are many different kinds of eyes that evolved independently from one another using different evolutionary pathways. And an underdeveloped eye is still better than no eye. Just because an eye evolved independently from human eye does not mean its not an eye and cannot perceive light.
This is then only logical to conclude that the ability to feel physical and/or emotional pain also evolved in gradual steps over millions of generations and species by similar or independent mechanisms rather than in one giant and abrupt leap for mankind alone.
This shows that other animals, who are our evolutionary "cousins" and share the same one common ancestor with us have also evolved the capacity to feel emotional and/or physical pain either using similar or independent evolutionary mechanisms that served as building blocks of human pain and suffering. Similarly, underdeveloped ability of pain and suffering is “better” than no ability for pain and suffering and is of significance to those who possess it.
The ability to experience uncomfortable sensations can lead to the difference between survival or extinction since only by avoiding acute uncomfortable sensations can an animal succeed in her ability to transfer her DNA and become an ancestor herself. To this extent, All lifeforms, including plants are sentient.
If humans can have their own version of rights, it's only logical and scientific to conclude that the ability to feel pain and suffering is not an exclusive domain of humans alone and that other lifeforms may have them in equal, underdeveloped or overdeveloped form and that non-human animals have rights too.
There is a difference between: "All Life will Extinct" and "My life will extinct".
Although we say humans are no different, life has no purpose, everything is meaningless etc., the truth is that when we get wronged, we seek justice. We don't sit at home and ponder the meaning of life.
Since human rights and equality are based on emotional and not scientific, logical and factual parameters, its emotional to assume that other animals have rights too.
If we ask people if all humans are equal they'll say yes, but if we then ask them why the answers are incoherent. I think that's because people often look for some sort of factual equality. In fact we're not the same. We do differ yet we say we're equal. I think what that shows is that the principal of equality is not a principle of factual equality but a moral principal that is essentially saying all humans have interests and its irrelevant to how we should consider those interest whether that humans are male of female, black or white, Christian or Muslim or any other differences that you might have. If thats the principle that lies behind a very important idea that all humans are equal then we have to say well non-human animals have interest too and those interests should also be equally considered. That means not necessarily that animals ought to be treated equally with humans because their interest will differ. - Peter Singer
Either we should have anarchy and not have the concept of rights and justice or if we choose to have them, then what criteria can be used to cherry pick? What constitute rights and who shall have them?
If we choose to be logical and consistent, then this is one of the best things we can do: If you have power, take it. All is within bounds if you can do it. No rights, no morality. No meat is out of bounds. Survival of the fittest. Might is right.
If we choose not to have the above, then the question arises :
What is morality? What is a Human? What is Right? What is wrong? Who should have them? Who should not have them?
To this extent we strive for logical consistency as much as possible. Why do we say that a “human vegetable” has human rights? Why do we say infants have full human rights and killing a 6 month old baby, much less sentient than a hen is a punishable crime - even if we kill an abandoned poor orphan on a street out of pity? Why do we say imbeciles have rights? Why do stop people from killing themselves even if they want to die and not test on them but kill an adult chimpanzee and test on them even if they don't want to die?
Surely, "Human Rights" is a farce. Its based on non-sense, illogical and non-scientific parameters.
The only logical alternative is to have universal rights encompassing all lifeforms - bacterias, plants and animals etc.
This may sound illogical and nonsense. Why? Because it is. But this is our predicament of existence. The concept of rights will never be logical and scientific. The concept of rights should never be logical and scientific.
Then how will we live morally? Well, the other side of the "human rights coin" is as illogical and nonsense: give something call "(human) rights" to something absolutely non-existent. (Clarification: This is not to say they WE don't exist or that the label “Human” or “Homo Sapiens” do not exist. It means the association of the label “Human” with a lifeform is not based on any logical, rational or scientific parameter. Also, the reverence or divinity of this label is also questionable and can be described to be dogmatic as best.)
The feeling that members of one's own species deserve special moral consideration as compared with members of other species is old and deep. Killing people outside war is the most seriously-regarded crime ordinarily committed. The only thing more strongly forbidden by our culture is eating people (even if they are already dead). We enjoy eating members of other species, however. Many of us shrink from judicial execution of even the most horrible human criminals, while we cheerfully countenance the shooting without trial of fairly mild animal pests. Indeed we kill members of other harmless species as a means of recreation and amusement. A human foetus, with no more human feeling than an amoeba, enjoys a reverence and legal protection far in excess of those granted to an adult chimpanzee. Yet the chimp feels and thinks and, according to recent experimental evidence, may even be capable of learning a form of human language. The foetus belongs to our own species, and is instantly accorded special privileges and rights because of it. Whether the ethic of 'speciesism', can be put on a logical footing any more sound than that of 'racism', I do not know. What I do know is that it has no proper basis in evolutionary biology. - Dr. Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene
This is how we proceed if we choose to proceed logically and wish to have morality. We divide existence into need and want. If needed, we're allowed to take. Not otherwise. Not for wants. And we must innovate before we can take. Taking should be the last resort. Mosquito or a so called "Human" threatening you? We take care of it.
A word of caution: I am not proposing “Utilitarianism” here. Utilitarianism is a euphemism for immorality. It says, if you want it, take it. What I propose here is what we all do anyways, and that is, if you need it take it. They are two different ideas that are poles apart. I do not believe in utilitarianism and neither do I profess it. This is a very subtle difference to understand. I am not condoning theft either.
This can be understood as another example:
Taking some honey from bees is a most benign practice. Far less violent then ploughing a field and planting grain and legumes.
Ploughing a field and planting grain and legumes is a necessity of human survival, not a want. Everyone who wishes to live a relatively healthy and long life has to eat fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds and grains irrespective of their additional food choices. Every breath we take kills. Only the dead are free from “sin”.
Honey is not an essential nutrient and can be easily substituted by Agave, Rooh Afza, etc.
To commit one unnecessary crime only to justify it with a necessary one is to be misguided by some idea of a misplaced sense of morality. We cannot use a necessary evil to justify an unnecessary one.
Its like saying, "It's all right to commit a little fraud to make our ends meet, because we sponsor our governments to shoot humans anyways. Far more moral than murdering a human".
Our governments are suppose to shoot humans to protect the interests of the society at large. Even in a society where "human" rights are acknowledged, killing humans is a "necessity". This cannot be used as an excuse to commit any other benign act of immorality or violate someone's right unnecessarily.
In jurisprudence, its called the "principal of least harm".
In other words, "Lets be little or completely imperfect just because we cannot be completely perfect" is a sophistic argument. Like they say, “It's better to do inconsistently good than consistently bad”.
This is where we draw the line: "Principle of least harm". No doubt as long as any lifeforms exist on earth, rights will be violated. So either we should have no concept of rights, or a universal one. This is the only logical alternative for a rational mind. Anything in between will be based on an inconsistent, illogical, non-scientific and biased variables.
Studies show us that meat eating hurts the non-humans. This is science. If science is not accepted, then we should also eat fetuses and other humans (infants) who cannot defend themselves or are powerless to do so like other non-humans. We should not worry about wiping the human race since there is no universal morality. (Like we care anyways?)
If we wish not to do so then the only logical and scientific alternative we have is to say "we have rights and that these rights are based on emotions and not science and since its based on emotions other lifeforms (like insects and plants) have rights too and if needed, we take it with least harm to the best of our scientific knowledge and ability". Again, this should not be confused by utilitarianism. We know enough today to produce cruelty-free food, clothings, entertainment and medicines for all intent and purposes. Only under rare circumstances, like in self-defense, do we need to oppress. Not because we want to, because we have to.
Science show us we can do pretty well on a vegan diet and mock meat irrespective of whether we are herbivores or omnivores. This coupled with the fact that meat eating violates human rights since it deprives millions of clean water, land and food because of the massive energy loss in meat production. It also damages the environment and the rainforests. Therefore we say meat eating is "immoral" and cruel; if we believe there is something called "morality". This is again backed by science.
If we do not accept that there is something called “morality”, then the only logical, scientific and rational alternative is a free-for-all anarchy. There are two words in the dictionary: moral and immoral. There is no word called "partlymoral" or "semimoral". No one is one hundred percent immoral. Partial morality is defined as immorality. Either you are moral or immoral. The world is in shades of gray for those who are morally color blind.
The word "rights" is powerful enough to stand on its own feet. It is not a slave of prefixes. There is nothing called "human" rights or "animal" rights. Either there are rights or there are wrongs.
How do we punish non-human oppressors?
Well, if a child commits a murder, and if the child is below 18, an entire different set of laws apply to them. We don't hang criminals below 18. We rehabilitate them and they have special juvenile correctional facilities.
Non-humans are like children. I hate to compare them, as no non-human has to live up to the expectations of humanity, but just for the sake or argument I'll do it anyways.
Hens have an IQ of 1 year old humans, Pigs 3, some fish 5 and so on. Apart from this, they have many senses that humans don't, like "seeing" magnetic north, super-smell, night visions etc. But most importantly, they have all been shown scientifically to feel at least physical pain through mechanisms similar or different from humans.
Because they are like human children, the subset of human rights that apply to children should also apply to them.
Just like we don't let our children vote, we need not extend this to non-humans. Just like if a 6 year old shoots a classmate we don't hang him, we treat the non-humans the same way.
Further Reading:
I used to think that the brain was the most wonderful organ in my body. Then I realized who was telling me this. - Emo Phillips
The Case for Animal Rights
http://www.amazon.com/Case-Animal-Rights-Tom-Regan/dp/0520243862/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1280219049&sr=8-1
Growing Up in the Universe
http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/lectures-and-presentations/item/302-growing-up-in-the-universe.html
Time Out Magzine Interview
http://www.kranti.org/connect/blog/manuj-chandra/item/310-time-out-magzine-interview.html
Time Out Magzine Interview
When did this group start and how did it come about?
Does it make sense to be a vegan today? How so?
The Worldwatch institute calculated that the meat and the diary industry combined are one of the most potent contributors of greenhouse gases.[2] In fact, the livestock industry has also been shown to damage the ozone. [3]
Water footprint network found that a mere 3% of total world water is freshwater. It requires ridiculous amounts of water to produce meat and other non-vegan food products. For example, it takes 208 Liters of water to produce just one cup of cow's milk. It requires 200 liters of water to produce one egg. 13,700 liters of water is required to produce just one kilogram of beef! One kilogram of chicken requires 3500+ liters of water to produce. And the above are just global average conservative figures. Now lets compare this with the most water intensive crops - rice and soy. One kilogram of rice requires 3500 liters of water to grow whereas one kilogram of soy requires approximately 1600 liters of water to produce. Compare this to wheat that requires merely 1000 liters of water to produce per kilogram. [4]
Apart from water, on an average, it requires 12 kilograms of grain to produce one kilogram of meat.[5] In fact, 70% of the total food we grow is fed to the animals to get significantly lower quantities of meat.[6] If this food is fed to the hungry, it can solve the world hunger problem 14 times over! [7] 1.4 Billion people can be fed if just the United States of America goes vegan![8] Funneling our precious water and food supply through the poor animals who are artificially brought into this world to meet the demand for our taste for meat in a world where billions are starving and have no access to clean drinking water is irresponsible on many fronts.
Apart from that, the livestock industry is also a major contributor to land pollution. On an average, the same amount of land can feed approximately 20 people on a vegan diet and only 2 people on a meat based diet.[8] Because of this, precious rainforests around the world are being destroyed at an alarming rate to meet the sky-rocketing demand for meat and diary around the world. Worldwatch Institute calculated that in order to make just one fast-food hamburger from rain-forest beef, members of 20-30 different plant species, 100 different insect species, and dozens of bird, mammal and reptile species are destroyed – for just ONE hamburger.[9]
We slaughter a hundred billion land and sea animals every year. That's a number the human mind cannot even grasp and comprehend. The oceans are dying because of overfishing and it has been estimated that since 13 of the major 17 world fisheries are dead already, there may be no seafood by 2048. An ocean devoid of fish also absorbs less CO2 thereby worsening global warming. [10][11]
When land animals are kept in an unnatural and unhygienic environment, crammed so that they cannot even move; they physically and mentally break down. This lowers their immunity and they become a breeding ground for pandemic influenza. Its noteworthy that this does not happen for animals in the wild. Before the domestication of horses, there was no common cold! The domestication of cows turned into measles. In the last 150 years measles have killed 250 million people. The domestication of camels turned into small pox. The domestication of pigs turned into whooping cough. The domestication of chickens gave us typhoid. The domestication of ducks gave us influenza. [12] Animal use has costed mankind more lives than all the accidents, natural disasters and wars combined. And it continues to kill people in the form of cancers, auto immune diseases and heart diseases.
Numerous peer-reviewed studies by some of the most prestigious health and scientific bodies around the world have independently linked the consumption of animal protein with various types of cancers and auto-immune diseases and animal fat with heart problems and obesity. In fact, the National Academy of Science concluded that the ideal amount of trans-fat that are only found in animal products and hydrogenated oils humans should consume is zero![13][14][15] The most ambitious health study to date, the China Study, hailed as the "Grand Prix of epidemiology” and the “most comprehensive large study ever undertaken of the relationship between diet and the risk of developing disease.”, and has been peer-reviewed multiple times reached the same conclusion. A vegan diet is the most natural diet for humans. [16]
Here is what the American Dietetic Association concluded in their position paper, "It is the position of the American Dietetic Association that appropriately planned vegetarian diets, including total vegetarian or vegan diets, are healthful, nutritionally adequate, and may provide health benefits in the prevention and treatment of certain diseases. Well-planned vegetarian diets are appropriate for individuals during all stages of the lifecycle, including pregnancy, lactation, infancy, childhood, and adolescence, and for athletes." Volume 109, Issue 7, Pages 1266-1282 (July 2009) [17]
Evidence is now emerging that a vegan diet can reverse diabetes, certain cancers and heart diseases thereby providing a cheap, drug-free and healthy alternative to millions searching for hope.[13][14][15][16][17]
Another simple way to understand the benefits of a vagan diet for the planet is to imagine you are a car. According to Foodwatch, a vegan would consume the petrol equivalent of driving for 630 Kms per year. Contrast this with 2400 Kms for lacto-vegetarians and 4700 kms for non-vegetarians. [18]
There is no other one single thing we can do today to have such a significant impact on human rights, human health, the planet and most importantly the animals than to adopt a vegan diet.
From a fitness angle how beneficial is veganism?
Do you recommend this for loosing weight?
Great: Omega 3: Found in Flax Seeds, Pumpkin seeds, Sunflower seeds etc,
Good: Mono Unsaturated : Found in Avocados, Almonds etc.
Bad: Saturated Fats : Found in Meat and Diary
Killer: Trans-fats : Found only in two places; Animal Products (Meat/Diary) and Hydrogenated Vegetable Oils
It's true that you can occasionally come across an overweight vegan (due to the consumption of hydrogenated vegetable oils), or a lean non-vegan, but on an average, vegan are significantly more leaner than their non-vegan counterparts. A subset of vegan diet, called the RAVE diet can do the trick for people struggling with weight problems. RAVE is an acronym for no Refined foods, no Animal products, no Vegetable oils and no Exceptions.
So yes, a RAVE diet can definitely cut out all the bad and killer fat out of your life and you will notice wonderful results in no time without resorting to any fad crash diets and other unhealthy practices. [20]
What are the health reasons to stay or become vegan?
Animal protein found in meat and diary have been linked with various cancers and auto immune diseases like multiple sclerosis.[13][14][15][16][17] Even autistic patients can benefit from a vegan diet free of wheat gluten.[23] High amounts of aluminum artificially added to cheese has also been linked with Alzheimer's.
Animal fat can give atherosclerotic plaques to humans since we are herbivores and not omnivores and they can cause heart diseases.[24][25] It's worth noting that cholesterol is not an essential nutrient, meaning we need not externally supplement it. Our livers produce all the cholesterol we need. Cholesterol is only present in animal products and no plant has ever been shown to contain cholesterol. A healthy vegan diet gives you zero cholesterol thereby eliminating any chance for us to get a heart attacks due to atherosclerotic plaques.
Its true that cancers, auto-immune diseases and obesity can have genetic causes. But genes alone cannot induce these diseases. They need a trigger in the form of animal protein and fats as was found by the China-Oxford-Cornell Diet and Health Project.[26] The chances of these disease occurring in nature due to genetic causes are statistically insignificant.
Your body will thank you in the long run for adopting a vegan diet. You will feel better, lighter and more upbeat. And of course, stay away from tobacco, alcohol and oily foods.
So what are the alternative foods you use?
Other than that, no substitutes are required, just a whole food, plant based diet, preferably seasonal, organic and non-genetically modified.
What do you do for the intake of calcium?
So where do vegans get their calcium? From where any other herbivores do: plants. The green leafy vegetables such as spinach, brusseles sprouts, mustard greens, broccoli, kale etc have more absorbable calcium than cow's milk.[8][29] A well balanced vegan diet can furnish not just calcium and protein but all the other essential nutrients for a healthy human body.[13][14][15][16][17]
Do you feel this way of life limits the array of things you can eat?
Are restaurants and super markets vegan friendly?
What are the challenges you face?
That said, as veganism is gaining grounds and as more people adopt a vegan lifestyle, its getting easier by the day to be accepted as one.
Is it hard to be vegan? Do you get tempted to eat non-vegan food?
But habits can be broken and addictions can be overcome. The only thing that can change our lives is a decision. Once you have made the decision to lead a cruelty-free, environment-friendly and humane diet, the key is not to change in one day and not to shoot for perfection. It's easy to fall in the all-or-nothing psychological ploy – since I cannot be perfect, so let me be completely imperfect. First you should cut out meat from the meal and then give your body some time to realize its not getting it anymore. Burn the bridge. Once the body has accepted this, it'll stop craving. Next, add one diary free day to your life per week. Understand that one mistake or occasional indulgences in diary does not do a diet ruin. Once you have 5 diary free days under your belt, then you will find it easy to make the complete transition. Veganism is not about perfection, it's about progress. Take your time and let the cravings die naturally. After you are vegan for 3 months, you will “forget” what meat and diary tastes like.[35] This is because taste has to be continually reinforced to be remembered. If you fail in your first attempt, do not feel guilty or defeated. After a week, try again. Try as many times as it takes to become a vegan. Take support from your local vegan chapter or from the internet. Also, experiment with new dishes at home. [30]
Of course, people who go vegan for Animals drop animal products in virtually one day.
How has being a vegan helped you and how has it changed your life?
Apart from an emotional and spiritual upliftment, its an enlightening experience to see religion, politics, economics and the world in general through the paradigm of veganism.
It can be strange to see how people profess their dedication to reverse climate change and yet continue to eat meat and consume diary. It can be very fascinating to see doctors recommending diary and meat to diabetic, cancer and heart patients. It can be surprising to see human rights activist eat meat and support human rights violation. It touches and changes each and every facet of your perception.
In the words of Dr. Richard Dawkins, "The feeling that members of one's own species deserve special moral consideration as compared with members of other species is old and deep. Killing people outside war is the most seriously-regarded crime ordinarily committed. The only thing more strongly forbidden by our culture is eating people (even if they are already dead). We enjoy eating members of other species, however. Many of us shrink from judicial execution of even the most horrible human criminals, while we cheerfully countenance the shooting without trial of fairly mild animal pests. Indeed we kill members of other harmless species as a means of recreation and amusement. A human foetus, with no more human feeling than an amoeba, enjoys a reverence and legal protection far in excess of those granted to an adult chimpanzee. Yet the chimp feels and thinks and, according to recent experimental evidence, may even be capable of learning a form of human language. The foetus belongs to our own species, and is instantly accorded special privileges and rights because of it. Whether the ethic of 'speciesism', can be put on a logical footing any more sound than that of 'racism', I do not know. What I do know is that it has no proper basis in evolutionary biology."
Sexism, racism, "speciesism"...are all prejudices in different cloaks. There is a sense of completion, satisfaction and achievement in living your values free of prejudices. Like they say, you don't know what feeling healthy truly means unless you are really healthy. The same holds true for veganism too. It's many things rolled into one. It can be a political statement, a lifestyle or a spiritual pursuit or maybe all of them. But most importantly, it's liberating. After all, might is right is a morally bankrupt idea.
A brief introduction of yourself. Full name and occupation.
REFERENCES
[1] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/lectures-and-presentations/item/267-flu-factories-tracing-the-origins-of-the-swine-flu-epidemic.html
[2] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/library/fact-files/environmentalism/73-livestock-and-climate-change-world-watch.html
[3] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/articles/research-papers/item/275-meat-contributes-to-ozone-production.html
[4] http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/embedded-water/
[5] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/documentaries/item/245-diet-for-a-new-america.html
[6] http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/multimedia/videos/Genetic-engineering-The-worlds-greatest-scam/
[7] http://www.kranti.org/damage/environment.html
[8] http://www.amazon.com/Food-Revolution-Your-Diet-World/dp/1573247022/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1277177039&sr=8-2
[9] http://www.worldwatch.org/node/791
[10] http://endoftheline.com
[11] http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/11/061102-seafood-threat.html
[12] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/lectures-and-presentations/item/268-pandemic-prevention-bird-flu-and-other-emerging-infectious-diseases.html
[13] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/lectures-and-presentations/item/270-latest-in-clinical-nutrition-volume-1.html
[14] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/lectures-and-presentations/item/271-latest-in-clinical-nutrition-volume-2.html
[15] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/lectures-and-presentations/item/279-latest-in-clinical-nutrition-volume-3.html
[16] http://webarchive.human.cornell.edu/chinaproject/index.html?CFID=109192707&CFTOKEN=22455666&jsessionid=c430570497735e256119
[17] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/articles/research-papers/item/142-advantages-of-a-vegetarian-diet.html
[18] http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=5041951&l=88ae3b3790&id=670975394
[19] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegan_athletes#Athletes
[20] http://www.amazon.com/Turn-Off-Fat-Genes-Revolutionary/dp/0609809040/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1277177883&sr=8-1
[21] http://www.cancerproject.org/survival/cancer_facts/prostate_dairy.php
[22] http://www.pcrm.org/health/clinres/diabetes.html
[23] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8869369
[24] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1312295/
[25] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2220599
[26] http://www.amazon.com/China-Study-Comprehensive-Nutrition-Implications/dp/1932100660/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1277178391&sr=8-1
[27] http://www.journeytoforever.org/farm_library/price/price5.html
[28] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/articles/research-papers/item/151-60-of-adults-can%5C%27t-digest-milk.html
[29] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/library/fact-files/brochures/88-official-kranti-brochure.html
[30] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/library/books/vegetarianism/78-vegetarian-starter-kit.html
[31] http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article7052580.ece
[32] http://edition.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/03/28/fatty.foods.brain/
[33] http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0010847
[34] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/articles/health-and-nutrition/item/293-vegetarians-are-more-upbeat-study.html
[35] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/articles/research-papers/item/153-meat-eaters-live-a-lie.html
[36] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/library/fact-files/vegetarianism/52-health-concerns-about-dairy-products.html
Growing Up in the Universe
Oxford professor Richard Dawkins presents a series of lectures on life, the universe, and our place in it. With brilliance and clarity, Dawkins unravels an educational gem that will mesmerize young and old alike. Illuminating demonstrations, wildlife, virtual reality, and special guests (including Douglas Adams) all combine to make this collection a timeless classic.
The Royal Institution Christmas Lectures for Children were founded by Michael Faraday in 1825, with himself as the inaugural lecturer. The 1991 lecturer was Richard Dawkins whose five one-hour lectures, originally televised by the BBC, are now available for the first, courtesy of RDF.
Click "Read More" to watch remaining four parts
Animal Rights: The Last 10 Years by Gary Francione
Click "Read More" to watch remaining parts...
Telegraph Interview
The reason why we naively regard humans as a superior species is because we believe humans have faculties that other animals don't. Recent breakthrough in science has led us to believe that a paradigm shift is in order.[1] Today, thanks to science we know that birds and cows can detect magnetic north[2], fish feel pain like humans[3] and that many animals, especially the ones raised for food, fiber and entertainment have faculties humans lost or never attained. It has been shown that Pigs can play video games, can trick a computer system to give them more food[4], can regulate air-conditioning based upon their comfort level and can outsmart dogs in IQ tests. Similarly, fishes and hens can navigate complex mazes and can outsmart human children in problem solving[5]. Sometimes, these non-human animals display an almost supernatural abilities. Since we now believe that all humans including blacks and women have rights, its time to identify the rights of non-human animals and extend it to them. For this purpose, Kranti was floated 9 months ago by a group of like-minded individuals. Everyone associated with Kranti strongly believes in equality for all species and we attempt to dispel speciesism which is an attitude of prejudice towards non-human animals. When they are capable of suffering as much as we do, why should they not have rights?
We have a multifaceted agenda. Our mission statement is provided below:
http://www.kranti.org/about/mission.html
Kranti's main focus is to research speciesism and educate people about Animal Rights but we also educate people about the environment[6], health[7] and human rights[8] violations by the livestock industry as an aside. We educate people that equality for all species does not mean that we should give a chicken the right to vote. It means that we should recognize the fact that a chicken has the same intelligence as that of a one year old human child[9] and just like we do not allow children to vote we should not extend it to chickens as well. It also means that we should provide all the rights given to a human child to a chicken.
We believe in promoting the science behind equality even if its inconvenient to many. The treatment rendered to highly sensitive and intelligent beings such as cows and hens in the slaughterhouses will land people in jail in some places if extended to dogs or cats[24]. Yet, scientifically, these animals suffer pain just as much. To come to a realization that man is in no way special than other animals exploited for milk, meat, fashion or entertainment, like Darwin wrote in the Descent of Man, requires a paradigm shift no less than that of a spherical earth. It requires a revolution of human consciousness, hence the name Kranti.
In this respect, we hold public protests and other events in colleges to champion the cause of total abolition of animal abuse. You can access some recent event pictures below:
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=212989&id=670975394&l=1f3bc441ab
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=200801&id=670975394&l=2aa1459aa0
2. How does Kranti promote a vegan lifestyle among Indians? When did the group begin work on promoting veganism in India? Was this one of your core agenda?
Ironically, when we started Kranti, our aim was not to convert people to a cruelty-free lifestyle, but to provide support to the already existing vegetarians in India who just account for 20% of the population and are taking up meat-eating due to peer-pressure and corporate propaganda.[10][11] But thankfully, many people are responding to logic[12] and making the right lifestyle choices. Kranti furthers its agenda through public demonstration and the internet. We also conduct seminars in colleges to educate the youth, who at this age are looking for an identity and a philosophy to adhere to. The group has been promoting the message of equality as individuals even before the incorporation of Kranti . Veganism is always at the core of all our activities.
3. How many members does the group have? What is the general profile of your members? How many new members join you every year?
We have 5 core members, all vegans, who plan the strategies plus one moderator. On our facebook group, we have 44 volunteers plus some more in real world that we can call upon. Our website has received more than 30,000 hits from all over India and the world in the last 9 months and the response is phenomenal. Our supporters are very slowly but gradually increasing.
Our members come from all walks of life, from housewives to programmers and doctors. All of the vegans I personally know have chosen a cruelty-free lifestyle because of non-human animal rights reasons.
4. How many Vegans are part of Kranti’s member group? Has there numbers grown in the last five years? If yes, by how much?
All 5 core members of Kranti and all of our volunteers are vegans.
India produces 3 times more milk than China, even though the population is almost identical. This leads to the slaughtering of cows since the cows who cannot produce (more) milk end up in someone's plate, waist or shoe.[13] So, consumption of seemingly innocent products such as milk and honey[14] cannot be termed ethical. Therefore, it's mandatory for all members of Kranti to be vegan.
In the past, we have definitely seen an uprise of vegans in India.
5. Do you have figures on roughly how many Vegans there are in India today? Have the numbers increased in the last five years? If yes, by how much?
There are many people in India who are unknowingly following a near-vegan lifestyle, since they already do not consume meat and leather and cannot digest milk (60% of adults cannot digest milk from other species since its not meant for human consumption)[15]. This coupled with the fact that we don't legally recognize veganism as a food choice in India like we do with vegetarianism, its hard to get any concrete figures. We know around 300 vegans through social networking and I have been told that according to PeTA estimates there are approximately 20,000 vegans in India. Whatever the actual figures are, I believe its optimistic.
6. Why do you think that an increasing number of urban Indians are adopting a vegan lifestyle? Is it because Indians are becoming aware of animals rights, are globally-traveled, any other reasons?
The core essence of veganism - reverence for all life - is not something new to India. Its interwoven in the fabric of Indian religions and philosophy. Most people are already lacto-vegetarians. Many people get exposed to veganism through the work done by mainstream organizations like PeTA and Humane Society of the United States in India and around the world. They learn about it through celebrities like Pamela Anderson, Maneka Gandhi, John Abraham and Shaid Kapoor.
Another two channels that introduce people to veganism are climate and health. People are getting educated by the media about the livestock-climate connection and the fact that the livestock industry is one of the topmost contributors to Global Warming[16][17]. Also, studies are pouring in linking milk and meat with heart diseases, diabetes and cancer[18].
Also, more and more people are learning about the human rights violations by the meat industry. 70% of the world grain goes to feed the livestock that is later brutally slaughtered and consumed. This grain can feed billions of starving humans. For eg; It takes 12 Kg of grain and 13,000+ liters of water to produce just 1 Kg of beef.[19] Meat compresses food and water thereby aggravating world hunger. Also, it requires tremendous amount of fossil fuel to refrigerate and transport animal products because they decay very fast.
All the above mentioned factors and them some kindles their curiosity and they do more research online. There they get introduced to the inner workings of the meat and diary industry through undercover investigation videos and documentaries like Earthlings[20]. Since humans are anatomically herbivores[21] and are naturally compassionate to animals they decide not to support this injustice. People start their journey on veganism to support humans, the planet, their health or the animals. But when the dust settles, they all end up supporting life.
7. How easy or difficult is it to be a Vegan in India? Is it easier now to be a Vegan in India today than it was five years ago? If yes, how?
India is one of the best place for vegans. Much of our cuisines are naturally vegan or can be easily veganised upon request. That said, the most difficult aspect of being a vegan is not leaving animal products, but to live with non-vegans. Most people feel judged in the presence of a vegan even if she does nothing to promote it. This leads to some social inconveniences since for many Indians consuming dairy is like breathing and they cannot imagine its even possible to live without cow's milk.
That said, as veganism is gaining grounds and as more people adopt a vegan lifestyle, its getting easier by the day to be accepted as one.
8. What are the vegan options available in India in terms of restaurants, cosmetics etc? Is there an increase in such options being made to Vegans in India? If yes, can you give examples?
If you are astute, you can always find a vegan substitute everywhere. For example, there are vegan societies in almost all major cities in the world. In Bangalore, there is a restaurant called
Let me know if you need any further clarification. It would be great if you can mail the final article to any one of us for technical accuracy.
Regards,
Manuj Chandra.
References:
[1] http://www.amazon.com/Second-Nature-Inner-Animals-MacSci/dp/0230613624/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1271928708&sr=8-1
[2] http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/2623809/Cows-point-north-thanks-to-in-built-compasses.html
[3] http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2009/04/29/UPI-NewsTrack-Health-and-Science-News/UPI-83361241041440/
[4] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ImZmDYme_s
[5] http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16796139/
[6] http://www.kranti.org/damage/environment.html
[7] http://www.kranti.org/damage/health.html
[8] http://www.kranti.org/damage/humanity.html
[9] http://www.fowlplaymovie.com/display_video.php?id=4
[10] http://www.kranti.org/connect/forum/9-revolutionary-support/379-should-we-have-a-target-audience-or-go-secular.html#379
[11] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjFH6yZ8LIA
[12] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6180753.stm
[13] http://www.kranti.org/whats-wrong-with/milk.html
[14] http://www.kranti.org/whats-wrong-with/honey.html
[15] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/articles/research-papers/item/151-60-of-adults-can%5C%27t-digest-milk.html
[16] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/library/fact-files/environmentalism/73-livestock-and-climate-change-world-watch.html
[17] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/library/fact-files/environmentalism/53-copenhagen-climate-conference-2009.html
[18] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8629358.stm
[19] http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/embedded-water/
[20] http://www.kranti.org/knowledge-base/media/documentaries/item/149-earthlings.html
[21] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1312295/
[22] http://www.ournativevillage.com/contact_us.htm
[24] http://blog.peta.org/archives/2010/02/peta_agrees_wit.php
Animal Rights Vs Animal Welfare
Before I was an Animal Rights advocate, I use to believe that Animal Rights and Animal Welfare are synonymous with one another. As I have learned from experience and have come to believe, they are very much different. But this difference is so sublime that it often deceives even the veterans in the field. Jan L.A. van de Snepscheut once said, "In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in practice, there is."
Lets take up an analogy to understand the differences between Animal Rights and Animal Welfare. Casualties are a by-product of war. Whenever there will be a war, someone will get hurt. This is the nature of war and for this very purpose it's waged. So war is a two dimensional concept as far as our analogy is concerned. On one hand we have the war itself, and on the other hand we have by-products of war - casualties.
The same can be said about using non-human Animals and Animal Welfare. Using non-human Animals is an IDEA (or an attitude of apathy) that wages an unfair war on billions of helpless non-human animals every year in one form or another. This generates casualties that needs to be addressed.
During the World War Two, 17 attempts were made to assassinate Hitler in an attempt to bring the war to an end. Also, many organizations were involved in treating the victims of the war. In our analogy the former is an IDEA of bringing the war to an end and the latter is the IDEA of tending the ones affected by the war.
The concept behind Animal Rights is to dismantle the idea of using non-human Animals. One of the ideas behind Animal Welfare is to tend to animals in distress - which is important too.
The Animal Rights movement is at war with the idea of speciesism and the attitude that non-human animals are property and can be exploited for human needs. And this in turn is a two phase process and may not necessarily be non-violent. On one hand we have a demand for animal products that is fueled by numerous factors. On the other hand we have a supply to meet that demand. If the supply is destroyed and the demand still exists, new supplies will emerge - legal or illegal - to meet the demand. A more effective way, which is also the more difficult one, is to dismantle the demand; which is easier said than done. With no demand, supply will perish. For example, most places do not sell fragrance (Dog Meat) because the demand does not exist. When the demand will exist, supply will materialize.
The term speciesism relates to a moral superiority that puts human interests above some or all nonhuman animals or the assigning of a hierarchy to animals in relation to their value.
Speciesism is an ideology-a belief system-that legitimates and inspires animal oppression by fusing moral significance with
(a) membership in the human species and
(b) human cognition.
Speciesism is used to exclude non-humans from the moral community because they do not belong to the species Homo sapiens and because (most of them) do not possess our peculiar form of cognition. This ideology thus creates a hierarchy of moral worth, with human animals at the apex, followed by all other animals, who are measured in terms of their cognitive nearness to or distance from humans.
Prior to our understanding of the physiological similarities and common evolutionary origins between species, the devaluing of animal interests could easily be supported by reference to common sense about superficial differences (such as inability to “speak” to humans), to religious texts, or to intellectual ideas made popular for their usefulness (such as those of Descartes, who saw animals as machines that did not feel pain).
Today there exists a pervasive cultural socialisation that ensures that many take our oppressive relationship to other species as “natural”. It is this, combined with vested corporate and state interests, that maintains exploitation on an unimaginable scale.
These barriers to equality remain to the detriment of all life on Earth. For the abuse of power through hierarchical order manifests in many interacting problems. Just as unequal power relations between nations, genders, races, ethnicities, classes, and sexualities have resulted in the historical oppression of certain groups, so unequal power relations (as a result of different evolutionary adaptations) have resulted in the historical oppression of all other species by one.
Whenever you see a bird in a cage, fish in a tank, or nonhuman mammal on a chain, you're seeing speciesism. If you believe that a bee or frog has less right to life and liberty than a chimpanzee or human, or you consider humans superior to other animals, you subscribe to speciesism. If you visit aquaprisons and zoos, attend circuses that include "animal acts," wear nonhuman skin or hair, or eat flesh, eggs, or cow-milk products, you practice speciesism. If you campaign for more-"humane" slaughter of chickens or less-cruel confinement of pigs, you perpetuate speciesism. - Speciesism by Joan Dunayer
They say its very difficult to defeat an opponent who has an outpost in your head. The battle of Animal Rights will be fought between the ears.
Many people, when they examine their beliefs about animals will find, I think, that they hold radically contradictory views, allowing for benevolence one moment and disregard the next. And the reality is that we have a choice of one or the other. As a practical matter we are free, of course, to do more or less what we please absent further changes in the law. As a matter of conscience, however, we must each ask ourselves which outlook is truer, which is closer to our heart, which attitude leaves us feeling better and worthier when we act upon it, and then follow that conviction where it leads. And when we fail to act consistently with our own moral principles, when we profess one thing and do another, we must be willing to call that error by its name. It is hypocrisy. - Matthew Scully
The practice of Animal Welfare can be sub-divided into 6 categories
- Improving the lives of animals used for food, fiber, entertainment or service
- Conservationists
- Sanctuary Operators
- Animal (dog/cat) lovers
- Public service
- Hobbyists
Improving the lives of animals used for food, fiber, entertainment or service
This category of Animal Welfare activists are mostly Animal Rights activists who are trying to ensure that some basic needs of non-human Animals are met. Cows are often branded with third degree burns, their tails are "docked" - blood supply restricted till the tail dies, hens and turkeys are routinely kicked, raped and beaten. Non-human Animals are not allowed to move for more than two inches for their entire lives; hens are forced to live their entire lives on the size of an A4 paper and so on. These activists fight for some basic common-sense treatment of the animals. Animals are treated worse than vegetables in the factory farms. These welfare activists are mostly vegans and try to ensure that some basic decency is observed. People who fight for non-human Animals like horses, donkeys and oxes etc. who provide some service to man also come under this category.
A subset of this category are slaughterhouse veterinarian. Their job is to ensure that the animals raised for meat and profit are meaty and profitable at the time of slaughtering. These people also identify themselves with Animal Welfare. They are almost always meat-eaters.
Conservationists
These Animal Welfare activists are involved in the preservation of one or more than one species, for example - elephants, whales, sharks, tigers etc. Usually, they do so out of selfish motives such as protection of the ecosystem so they or their species (humans) can comfortably live in it. Sometimes they do some really heart-wrenching work that must be commended.
They usually don't care about individual animals. They are more concerned about a species getting wiped out from the face of the earth.
The problem occurs when these people contribute to the abuse of other animals like hens and cows and help condemn them to a life worse than hell by being non-vegan. On top of that they accuse Animal Rights activists for being idealists and "lazy" for not getting their hands dirty.
Sanctuary Operators
Sanctuaries are places where non-human animals are given a safe haven. These animals are usually rescued from the government, science labs or slaughterhouses. People who run such sanctuaries are usually Animal Rights activists and are Vegans.
Animal (dog/cat) lovers
Now let's try to understand this type of Animal Welfare by using an analogy too. Suppose you were to find an injured human on the road, where will you take him? To the court or to the hospital? Animal Rights is about advocacy and action.
Suppose you were deeply and genuinely concerned about the welfare and rights of Whites and do not believe that colored people like blacks are humans. This does not make you a humanitarian. There was a time when even biologists and doctors had black slaves. They say the opposite of love is not hatred, its apathy. Similarly, just because you care about a few species it does not make you an Animal lover. Scientifically, hens and bees are animals too and are capable of suffering. You can be sincere, and you can be sincerely wrong. Organizations who work for specific animals should not call themselves "Animal Welfare Organizations". They should call themselves "Dog Welfare Organization" or whatever animals they are dealing with.
Mostly, these people are meat-eaters and only care about Dogs and/or Cats. By being vegan they can save hundreds of animals every year.
Public service
Certain non-human Animals are perceived as public nuisance like stray dogs. The governments usually take the cheapest and easiest way out to get rid of the problem - electrocution or battering.
These Animal Welfare activists work to control the population of these animals by neutering them (and sometimes making a good fortune in the process too, which is all right since this is just a business).
Also, I believe that an organization should not mix Animal Rights and Animal Welfare as a matter of strategy. Just like a lawyer does not conduct the business of a Doctor, an Animal Rights organization should not do the work for this kind of Animal Welfare. This is because all organizations are prone to making mistakes and if you accidentally kill a non-human Animals or euthanize un-adoptable dogs so the government does not brutally electrocutes them then you are open to criticism from meat-eating dog-lovers. This hurts the movement in the long run.
There are many individuals who are sympathetic towards certain species of animals such as the carnivorous ones - Dogs and Cats. This is because mostly they are adorable and humans are naturally attracted towards them. These individuals may also use and eat other animals such as sheep and goats that they are apathetic towards. They may also consume milk and leather. All this is done under the banner of Animal Welfare which is highly deceiving.
Apart from that, the so-called Animal Welfare Organizations must ask themselves, how can serving a particular species bring an end to the demand of animal products? Technically, you cannot have Welfare without Rights. If a human is denied basic welfare, then his rights are automatically violated. The war will go on and the casualties will keep occurring.
Hobbyists
Add to this fan-boys and hobbyists. People who enjoy capturing and/or otherwise "using" a non-human Animal for personal entertainment or utility may also call themselves Animal Welfare Organizations too that further confuses and complicates the equation.
They like to collect and trap non-human Animals such as birds and insects for their sensory pleasure. Some breeders in India also call themselves Animal Welfare organizations.
Another important point to grasp is that Animal Rights does not automatically leads to Animal Welfare. Animals like humans should have the right to live their lives naturally. This involves risking welfare. For eg. Animal Welfare is often employed as a tool by hobbyists such as horse-lovers to violate Animal Rights. They love to ride a horse for no apparent reason at all and in the process confines, isolates and tortures a horse by inserting painful apparatus up their noses or mouths. They often say, "They are safe with us and live longer. In the jungle they would have died by now". Well, that's "rights". I can die crossing a road. But I want to take that risk. I don't want to be a slave and live to be a hundred. I would rather have my freedom and die at 50.
To consume meat and dairy products and pretend to be an environmentalist, rationalist or a humanist is like driving with one foot on the accelerator and another foot on the brakes. - Manuj Chandra, co-founder, Kranti
To conclude, Animal Rights is a very well defined ideology whereas the definition of Animal Welfare is nebulous and can mean different things to different people. Theoretically and practically Animal Rights and Animal Welfare are poles apart and they require two very different kind of mindsets. Animal Rights is about applied practice and advocacy to dismantle the demand for animal products and services whereas Animal Welfare may be about conservation of a few animals or the pursuit of a hobby for some reason or another etc.
There is nothing wrong in being either an Animal Rights or Welfare Activist as long as you are a Vegan and do not enslave or use non-human Animals that leads to their suffering. Being a non-vegan Animal Welfare, environmental or human rights activist is like trying to mop the floor while its raining.
Also, the above analysis is not meant to generalize any area or work or individuals. Its merely a personal attempt of an individual to understand and catalog the differences. There are and will always be gray areas.
Vandana Shiva in Totnes: GM, Climate Change and Transition
Part 1
Part 2
Why Compassion Should Be Taught In Schools
The multitude of books is making us ignorant. - Voltaire
The task of the modern educator is not to cut down jungles, but to irrigate deserts. - C.S. Lewis
Today we live in a highly competitive environment. Adjectives such as "cut-throat" and "professionalism" are used to describe this artificially created phenomenon that mankind has never witnessed before at this magnitude or scale. This begs the question as to what are we trying to achieve with our lives and what are we essentially competing for? What is it that requires us to be competitive to the level that we have to metamorphically slit the throats of our own peers and colleagues as professionals?
"Our" earth produces food for 8.5 billion people yet hundreds die of hunger and chronic malnutrition every day. There is enough food to feed our current population of 6.5 billion people and then some. Where is all our food and water going? What are we competing for and why? What is our true motive and purpose?
Thankfully science and spirituality sheds some light on these questions. As humans, we all want to be happy. No one can deny this stark fact. We want to be happy. We get up in the morning and pray to our God or wish that today and the remaining days of our lives be full of happiness and satisfaction. No one desires to meet an accident or an incurable chronic illness. When people fail to become happy and there is no hope for happiness in the near future, they often resort to suicide.
There are many roads to Rome. We are all trying to pursue happiness in variegated manners - and we should. This is the fundamental motive of all beings and all other purposes stem from it. We want to be happy, satisfied and contended. Its an undeniable fact of human existence.
Our craving for happiness is so strong that some try to seek it for eternity. The reason why people want to get rich or seek an eternal afterlife is because we believe this will buy us security and in return, life-long or eternal happiness. Our pursuit of social recognition, wealth, fame or name are just disguises for our congenital evolutionary instinct of a better life and for some - afterlife.
When it is our fundamental instinct to be happy, why are we so adamant in denying this basic fact pertaining to our fabric of existence? Why are anti-depressant sales skyrocketing and why are our youths more unhappy and depressed than any other time in recorded history? Why is it that we all want to be happy but we're not? And why is it than in order to solve our problem of unhappiness we are in-turn creating more dangerous problems?
Today we are facing real and grave issues threatening our very existence. Man-made climate change, food, water and land shortages, rise of new and old illnesses and an epidemic of lifestyle diseases such as cancer, obesity, heart diseases and diabetes are not something you can attribute to a rational being like humans. These man made shortages will also fule wars and famine.
If we are indeed rational creatures - beings created in the image of God himself then we alone have the power and know-how to avert the catastrophe of our own creation and all other species we have destroyed in the pursuit of our psudo-motives. Will Durant once said, "Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance." And in the words of G. K. Chesterton, "It is not bigotry to be certain we are right; but it is bigotry to be unable to imagine how we might possibly have gone wrong." Where have we lapsed?
As young, we all went through some system of education. This education system was designed by supposedly wise men and women to equip our future generations with skills and tools that should allow them to pursue what matters to us most - happiness. But today we stand on the threshold of catastrophic man-made unnatural disasters. Where has our education failed us?
If one contemplates astutely, there are some very basic human needs that all must meet irrespective of gender, creed, race, religion or origin. Hypothetically, its possible to live without a house, clothes, sex, religion etc, but no one can live without food, water and air. It doesn't matter what your belief systems are, where you come from or where you are going, you cannot live without healthy food, clean water and pure air. Yet mankind has suffered a debacle in the preservation of our basic survival needs, a folly so fundamental that all other stems from it.
We have been taught and equipped with skills to read and write, but not what to read and write. We have been taught to accumulate wealth, which may be important, but not how to accumulate positive experiences that will really make us happy. C.S. Lewis once observed that education without values, as useful as it is, seems rather to make man a more clever devil.
Today, people employ sophisticated calculations in choosing which car or camera to buy, which house to live in and which mutual fund to invest into, but most people don't even know where the stomach or prostrate is in the human body and never think twice about the repercussions of their food choices. Most people don't know that papaya is a richer source of vitamin C as compared to lemons and whether humans are herbivores or omnivores. Alfred E. Newman very rightfully observed when he said that, "We are living in a world today where lemonade is made from artificial flavors and furniture polish is made from real lemons." This half baked knowledge about our environment, our nature and ourselves is the source of our illusion of education and knowledge. In the words of Daniel J. Boorstin, "The greatest obstacle to knowledge is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge." We don't know what to put in our mouths, we don't know how to breathe and exercise and we don't know how to protect our harvestable water bodies and other perishable natural resources. Studies have shown that our children know more about imaginary video-game characters like Pokemon but cannot even identify five species of plants. We live in a society exquisitely dependent on plants and animals, in which hardly anyone knows anything about plants and animals. We have our priorities reversed.
Our forefathers, who laid the foundation of our country made it our business to ensure that Armageddon wouldn't materialize into reality. Chapter IV-A. Article 51A(g) of The Constitution of India stated that, "it shall be the fundamental duty of every citizen of India to protect and improve the Natural Environment including forests, lakes, rivers and wildlife, and to have compassion for all living creatures." We have failed our God, we have failed our country, we have failed the creatures who so humbly came to us for sanctuary and most importantly we have failed ourselves. We as a species have failed the test of natural selection. We are failures.
Hope springs eternal. Its never too late to change. And the solution lies within us. Humans are a predominantly moral animals. We use this skill in one capacity or another to sustain the human society. We erect laws to force compliance. We have house of laws to enforce that we don't astray from our natural instincts. Some may find this hard to believe and thats natural because our current education system has done little to develop this area of our brain called the right temporo-parietal junction (RTPJ) which deals with moral judgment. Like any other part of the brain it needs support to be nourished and developed. This can be confirmed by a thought experiment.
Suppose our mother dies. The "dead" body is lying on the floor. The reason why its called a "dead" body is because its incapable of any physical or emotional sensations whatsoever. Its more non-responsive than a plant. Its a collection of minerals, metals, cells and atoms. Yet we treat this dead piece of blob with much more reverence and respect as if it were alive. Most will find it absolutely abhorrent to disrespect this dead piece of meat in any fashion, be it consumption, spitting or indulgence in a sexual activity with this piece of protein. This shows that humans by their very nature are ethical, compassionate and moral creatures.
Yet, because of our underdeveloped moral judgment thanks to the failure of our education system we have turned into something we are not. We treat members of other species like hen and pigs as if they are worse than our dead. Lack of complete education leads to ignorance and ignorance leads to what psychologists refer to as "arguments by ignorance". In the name of "profit" and "less-awareness", we confine and mutilate them in horrific and unimaginable fashion. We show no respect towards our perishable natural resources just to pursue a motive that will lead us to a few moments of temporary satisfaction - the shadow of happiness. This disease is called "superiority complex".
Although it may sound harsh, but its time to face ourselves in the mirror. Its time to get a reality check as to why we have become a race of apathetic, sick and cruel hypocrites? Why for a few moments of temporary gratification we are condemning other earthlings to hell? Why for a few moments of joy we are living a non-sustainable and cruel lifestyle?
Its time for a change. One simple philosophy and one simple practice can solve all our problems. Its compassion. Like any other skill taught in schools and colleges like mathematics and language, we need to learn and develop compassion. And there is no better way to apply compassion in our day-to-day lives than by living a cruelty-free life and letting children learn by imitation. By teaching our minds to be more diligent and compassionate we can make a significant impact to our consciousness and the planet and all its earthlings who are here with us in this democracy of life. There is still time to do justice to our innate natural motives, to our country, to our life and afterlife, to our God, to the planet and all its co-inhabitants and last but not the least - to the human race.
One must not forget that whatever motives we may pursue, we need our health and the planet for it to materialize. If we will not choose now, the decision will be made for us. Say yes to a whole food plant based diet. Say no to animal products, edible or otherwise. This will solve half the problems mankind faces today. If this is accepted and acted upon motivated by universal compassion and a reverence for all plants, animals and the planet - that will solve the other half.
And that is the purpose of life - a life of purpose.
I Am A Village Idiot
Very little of the nutrition information that makes it to the public consciousness is soundly based in science, and we pay a grave price. One day olive oil is terrible, the next it is heart healthy. One day eggs will clog your arteries, the next they are a good source of protein. One day potatoes and rice are great, the next they are the gravest threats to your weight you will ever face. - Dr. T. Colin Campbell, The China Study
Science can be divided into two branches: Theoretical Science and Applied science.
Although it can be quite fascinating to know how the universe began and how big it is and how many dimensions are there to strings and whether evolution is right or wrong etc, I personally prefer first to know how can I not go blind by diabetes and have my limbs amputated. How can I not fall prey to prostrate cancer and how can I not become a heart arrest statistic. I what to know whether eating GM food will cause suffering to me in the long run...
When our knowledge was limited, we were interested in these things. Now we have powerful telescopes - and grass is always greener on the other side. Now we want to know what lies at the edge of the universe and not what lies at the end of the century.
We live in a capitalist society. The word capital comes from the word capita which in Latin means Head as in Head of Cattle - Cow. We live in a cow based society. And when you say cow want comes to mind? Cash!
Applied science is a cash cow. Just because now we know that animal protein can cause cancer, the powerful capitalist lobbies behind them have their own school of science. They exist in a parallel universe just to create controversy. They have their own doctors and their own reality. Controversy creates cash.
Oliver Wendell Holmes once said, "Controversy equalizes fools and wise men - and the fools know it." It has been said that if at all there exists a "cure" for cancer, it will never be found. (Cancer needs a prevention, not a cure.) Too many people are working on the problem and there exists an economy around it. A lot of money is involved and the worst part is, science-illiterate CEOs are calling the shots. A handful of Directors sitting in Monsanto or Tyson decide what the world will eat and how. Is this democracy? Is this freedom?
Applied science can not be trusted anymore. We have to go by our instinct and anecdotes and all the other dirty words we are not allowed to use in the presence of a meat-eating, environmant-concious, humanitarian rationalist. Because that would make you a village idiot. I'll take that. Village idiots are the healthiest.
