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Eigentlich war es für CSU-Parteichef Markus Söder schon ausgemachte Sache: Der Präsident des bayerischen Bauernverbands, Günther Felßner, sollte Landwirtschaftsminister werden. Angekündigt hatte er das bereits im November 2024 - Monate vor der Bundestagswahl. Im April 2024 sieht alles ganz anders aus: Günther Felßner hat seinen Verzicht auf das Amt angekündigt. Wie es dazu kam, diskutierten NN-Chefredakteur Michael Husarek und Audio-Redakteur Lukas G. Schlapp in der 39. Folge von „Bratwurst mit Chili“. Haben die Aktivistinnen und Aktivisten von „Animal Rebellion“ mit ihrer Demo vor und auf dem Hof der Familie Felßner den Bogen komplett überspannt? Was haben die Mängel im Stall - festgestellt durch das Veterinäramt - damit zu tun? Abseits dieser Diskussion sprechen Husarek und Schlapp auch darüber, wie es um ihr handwerkliches Geschick steht.
The National Animal Rights Association and Animal Rebellion Ireland released their second undercover investigation last week, this time covering four pig farms in Cavan.
Hi Royal Community, Well, whilst we take a break from weekly uploading, we have listened and decided to release those archived episodes that you have been asking for. So, over the coming weeks, we will be re-releasing these episodes to keep you entertained. We hope you enjoy! But....with re-released episodes comes caveats.... *Remember our opinions, beliefs and feelings may have changed on the subject since this originally aired. **The information could have been updated, social handles and/or Royal titles changed, and our dearly beloved Queen Elizabeth II may possibly still have been alive when this was recorded so please note the time difference. ***Episode 26 was recorded on the 1st September 2021 and first uploaded on the 3rd September 2021. As always please leave us a comment, email us or head to Instagram and get involved there. *We are back! Subscribe to our YouTube channel, 'Keeping Up With The Windsors' to watch us live each week talking about the British Royal Family. M+R Xoxo ........................................... Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 2:50 Charles's letter to Haiti's Prime Minister 4:15 Charles & Camilla open Ballater Community hub & Camilla shares her recipe for a Victoria sponge cake 5:52 William & Catherine cheer on team GB at the Tokyo Paralympics via their socials 7:11 The Queen's medal for music 9:50 Prince Philip has a lifeboat named after him 10:44 Harry gives a speech at the GQ awards 14:00 Animal Rebellion protestors at Buckingham Palace 15:52 The Spencer trailer drops 18:46 Royal community questions: What is our favorite tiara? 22:40 Which royal palace would we live in? ...........................................
Grandpa Bill will explore Napoleon's relationship with Squealer, and between Napoleon and Stalin in more detail. Animal Farm: A Satirical Allegory Animal Farm is a classic novella by George Orwell, published in 1945. It's a satirical allegory that uses animal characters to critique the Russian Revolution and the rise of Stalinism. The Story The novel follows a group of farm animals who rebel against their human farmer, Mr. Jones, and establish a society where animals govern themselves. Initially, they dream of a utopian world based on equality and freedom. However, the power gradually concentrates in the hands of a group of pigs, led by Napoleon, who manipulate the other animals and establish a totalitarian regime. Corruption of Power: The novel exposes how power can corrupt even the best intentions. The pigs, initially seen as leaders of the revolution, eventually become as oppressive as the humans they replaced.Propaganda and Manipulation: Orwell highlights the use of propaganda to control the masses. Squealer, a skilled orator, manipulates the animals' understanding of events to justify the pigs' actions.Inequality: Despite the slogan "All animals are equal," the novel reveals how inequality persists, with the pigs enjoying privileges denied to the other animals.Totalitarianism: Animal Farm offers a scathing critique of totalitarian regimes, where individual freedom is suppressed, and dissent is punished.
Tom is an internationally acclaimed artist, published author, and social justice activist. He is an expert and consultant on animal liberation history and strategy, and the global animal rights movement. His first book, Your Neighbour Kills Puppies was released in March 2024. The book is the previously untold story of one of the world's most powerful social justice campaigns, Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC). Tom became involved in the animal liberation movement at the age of fifteen when he attended his first hunt sab. Over the years that followed he devoted his life to helping animals and co-founded one of the UK`s most successful regional animal rights organizations, SARC (The Southern Animal Rights Coalition). Tom is a regular contributor to Forca Vegan magazine, and other periodicals. Under the professional name ‘Tattoo Tom‘, Tom has also achieved a highly successful and acclaimed career as an artist. In Sentientist Conversations we talk about the two most important questions: “what's real?” & “who matters?” Sentientism is "evidence, reason & compassion for all sentient beings." The video of our conversation is here on YouTube. 00:00 Clips! 00:49 Welcome - Nicola Harris and Anita Krajnc episode @PlantBasedTreaty 03:18 Tom's Intro - 20 years in the #animalliberation movement - Founding the Southern Animal Rights Coalition - Closing a military research facility, a puppy farm, several chicken units - Getting fur and foie gras out of shops - #SHAC (Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty) co-ordinators "the largest and most dynamic grass-roots animal liberation campaign" - "The model we came up with was so effective... that the American and British governments were both really terrified... while I don't think any of us necessarily set out to create a blueprint that could end capitalism... I think we probably came dangerously close" - "The government in the UK essentially framed us and set us up on bogus blackmail charges... I received a 5 year prison sentence for... a lawful campaign... I served 2 years." - 3 years on bail before-hand and 2.5 years on license afterwards with a tag "which was probably the toughest bit... I wasn't allowed to talk to my brother... a constant threat that they were going to send me back to prison." - Since release, finding a very different animal liberation world - Lord Sainsbury's intention "to eliminate the anti-vivisection movement... he succeeded for a good decade" - "The movement I knew didn't exist... new groups like the Save Movement, Animal Rebellion, DxE... started forming" - Taking up tattoo artistry because "I was essentially banned from talking to any other activist... any other vegan... all of my friends I wasn't allowed to talk to them" - "Stabbing people for money" :) 10:10 What's Real? - "I actually dropped out of a philosophy degree to do more animal rights activism" - Growing up in a non-religious family, probably atheists - Christian grandparents "it was good for them... I saw the positives" - Cartographer dad, psychologist mum, quite analytical / logical focus - "I didn't learn when to stop following that logical path" - "I was raised to be kind to animals and respect nature... to value life" 26:13 What and Who Matters? 01:04:53 A Better Future? 01:45:00 Follow Tom TomHarris.meShacjustice.com@Tattoo_tom ...and much more. Full show notes at Sentientism.info. Sentientism is “Evidence, reason & compassion for all sentient beings.” More at Sentientism.info. Join our "I'm a Sentientist" wall via this simple form. Everyone, Sentientist or not, is welcome in our groups. The biggest so far is here on FaceBook. Come join us there! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sentientism/message
We don't have a democracy, we have a kleptocracy that elevates to positions of power those amongst us who are most comfortable with leaning into their inner Dark Triad of Psychopathy, Narcissism and basic low cunning. Then, when they get there, we're surprised that they go on to wreak havoc with all that we believe to be good and right and beautiful. Doing the same thing time after time is the very definition of insanity - clearly we need a new way of connecting, of communicating, of articulating our needs and wants that give us a sense of connection, agency and sufficiency, that bring out the best of us, not our own inner dark triads. We need a new means of governance that works from the ground up and works for a thriving future for the human and more-than human world. This week's guest is absolutely immersed in the questions of how we transform our governance. More than this, he is immersed in actually making it happen. Alex Lockwood was a Senior Lecturer in Professional and Creative Writing at Sunderland University and he practiced what he taught - because he's also the author of a novel, The Chernobyl Privileges and a non-fiction memoir, The Pig in Thin Air. More recently, he was actively involved in Animal Rebellion, a kindred organisation to Extinction Rebellion and then that evolved into becoming a founder member of The Humanity Project, an astonishing, life-affirming, inspiring collective movement for change. At the times when the news about climactic tipping points and the loss of sulphur particles and the impact of el Nino combines with the horrors of political destruction around the world, it's really good to remember there are highly motivated, highly intelligent people getting together to create visions for change that will work and to which we will all look forward. This podcast rekindled my belief in a future that can work. I hope it does the same for you.Humanity Project https://humanityproject.uk/Hard Art Festival in Manchester "The Fête of Britain" https://hardart.metalabel.com/ha002/Global Assembly https://globalassembly.org/Lee Jasper https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_JasperClare Farrell https://www.dazeddigital.com/life-culture/article/61534/1/extinction-rebellion-xr-co-founder-clare-farrell-prison-hsbc-windows-smashAlex on Twitter https://twitter.com/alexlockwoodAlex on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/alex-lockwood-narrative-leadership/
Rose Patterson is part of Animal Rising, which used to be called Animal Rebellion, that is until April. And since April, which is only a few months ago, they've exploded - they are everywhere. They have disrupted horse races and greyhound races, they've broken into labs, they've stolen beagles, they've stolen King Charles's lambs. And they've received a huge amount of press because of their actions. Much of that press has been TV time, which means that conversations about how we treat animals, not just in the ways mentioned above but in our food system, are taking place all over the media in the UK. Animal Rising is changing the game for what activism looks like. Rose and I met a couple of weeks ago in London, where she lives. She and another Animal Rising acticist had just tried and failed to go on a trip to the US.
Nick is joined by broadcaster Cornelius Lysaght to look ahead to three fabulous days at Aintree and to reflect on the latest news from around the racing world. They dissect the latest in the John Dance case with rumours swirling of multiple repossessions in Middleham and the enforced withdrawal of Bravemansgame from the Bowl today. They also discuss the Animal Rebellion threat and the BHA's response plus consider why this is a huge day for Brian Hughes. Guests today include Nico de Boinville, Keith Donoghue, Eddie O'Leary, Sam Thomas and Sandy Thompson.
Nick is joined by broadcaster Cornelius Lysaght to look ahead to three fabulous days at Aintree and to reflect on the latest news from around the racing world. They dissect the latest in the John Dance case with rumours swirling of multiple repossessions in Middleham and the enforced withdrawal of Bravemansgame from the Bowl today. They also discuss the Animal Rebellion threat and the BHA's response plus consider why this is a huge day for Brian Hughes. Guests today include Nico de Boinville, Keith Donoghue, Eddie O'Leary, Sam Thomas and Sandy Thompson.
Nick is joined by writer and broadcaster Lydia Hislop to discuss the latest news and events from around the racing world. They begin by discussing yesterday's 'Dashel Drasher' appeal hearing, and are joined by the Racing Post's senior reporter Chris Cook for further insight. Nick and Lydia also consider the threat to the sport posed by Animal Rebellion as the ripple effect is felt from the Mail on Sunday expose, and touch on the latest developments from a gambling call for evidence in Australia and the associated parallels. Also 'Down Under', William Haggas looks forward to the Dubai Honour/Anamoe clash and nominates an unraced horse that might be top of his Derby pecking order. Meanwhile, Chelmsford's Neil Graham outlines the rollout of new CCTV following the John Butler case, while Grand National entry Fortescue is given the green light by Henry Daly.
Nick is joined by writer and broadcaster Lydia Hislop to discuss the latest news and events from around the racing world. They begin by discussing yesterday's 'Dashel Drasher' appeal hearing, and are joined by the Racing Post's senior reporter Chris Cook for further insight. Nick and Lydia also consider the threat to the sport posed by Animal Rebellion as the ripple effect is felt from the Mail on Sunday expose, and touch on the latest developments from a gambling call for evidence in Australia and the associated parallels. Also 'Down Under', William Haggas looks forward to the Dubai Honour/Anamoe clash and nominates an unraced horse that might be top of his Derby pecking order. Meanwhile, Chelmsford's Neil Graham outlines the rollout of new CCTV following the John Butler case, while Grand National entry Fortescue is given the green light by Henry Daly.
Ep280 Sunday Sermon - Animal Rebellion Nil & Amo GO BRAZIL by The Barstewards
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Tensions between different approaches to doing good, published by James Özden on March 19, 2023 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Link-posted from my blog here. TLDR: I get the impression that EAs don't always understand where certain critics are coming from e.g. what do people actually mean when they say EAs aren't pursuing "system change" enough? or that we're focusing on the wrong things? I feel like I hear these critiques a lot, so I attempted to steelman them and put them into more EA-friendly jargon. It's almost certainly not a perfect representation of these views, nor exhaustive, but might be interesting anyway. Enjoy! I feel lucky that I have fairly diverse groups of friends. On one hand, some of my closest friends are people I know through grassroots climate and animal rights activism, from my days in Extinction Rebellion and Animal Rebellion. On the other hand, I also spend a lot of time with people who have a very different approach to improving the world, such as friends I met through the Charity Entrepreneurship Incubation Program or via effective altruism. Both of these somewhat vague and undefined groups, “radical” grassroots activists and empirics-focused charity folks, often critique the other group with various concerns about their methods of doing good. Almost always, I end up defending the group under attack, saying they have some reasonable points and we would do better if we could integrate the best parts of both worldviews. To highlight how these conversations usually go (and clarify my own thinking), I thought I would write up the common points into a dialogue between two versions of myself. One version, labelled Quantify Everything James (or QEJ), discusses the importance of supporting highly evidence-based and quantitatively-backed ways of doing good. This is broadly similar to what most effective altruists advocate for. The other part of myself, presented under the label Complexity-inclined James (CIJ), discusses the limitations of this empirical approach, and how else we should consider doing the most good. With this character, I'm trying to capture the objections that my activist friends often have. As it might be apparent, I'm sympathetic to both of these different approaches and I think they both provide some valuable insights. In this piece, I focus more on describing the common critiques of effective altruist-esque ways of doing good, as this seems to be something that isn't particularly well understood (in my opinion). Without further ado: Quantify Everything James (QEJ): We should do the most good by finding charities that are very cost-effective, with a strong evidence base, and support them financially! For example, organisations like The Humane League, Clean Air Task Force and Against Malaria Foundation all seem like they provide demonstrably significant benefits on reducing animal suffering, mitigating climate change and saving human lives. For example, external evaluators estimate the Against Malaria Foundation can save a human life for around $5000 and that organisations like The Humane League affect 41 years of chicken life per dollar spent on corporate welfare campaigns. It's crucial we support highly evidence-based organisations such as these, as most well-intentioned charities probably don't do that much good for their beneficiaries. Additionally, the best charities are likely to be 10-100x more effective than even the average charity! Using an example from this very relevant paper by Toby Ord: If you care about helping people with blindness, one option is to pay $40,000 for someone in the United States to have access to a guide dog (the costs of training the dog & the person). However, you could also pay for surgeries to treat trachoma, a bacterial infection that is the top cause of blindness worldwide. At around $20 per ...
Animal Rebellion spokesman Joel Scott-Halkes says David Attenborough has made things worse for climate change in his years as a legendary broadcaster and has not 'been helpful at all' in promoting the climate crisis. Animal Rebellion sat down with Archie Manners to discuss their methods; whether spilling good milk in Harrods, spray painting buildings and disrupting the rail and road network for working people helps in anyway to bring the public with them and further their cause. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/talktv/support
On episode 284 Nick is joined by Harley to investigate Extinction Rebellion's claim that once 3.5% of the population of a state is mobilised in sustained protest, success is guaranteed. We also discuss the implications for the environmental movement and animal activists. Harley was active with the group Animal Rebellion in the UK over the last few years and this group is also guided by this 3.5% rule. This show is replayed from Freedom of Species on 3CR Community Radio: https://www.3cr.org.au/freedomofspecies/episode/investigating-extinction-rebellion%E2%80%99s-35-rule For more on the 3.5% rule, you can read Harley's article ‘Reflections on Rebellion – How People Power can Take the World By Storm': https://animalrebellion.org/how-change-happens/ You can also read the academic article ‘Social movements and (mis)use of research: Extinction Rebellion and the 3.5% rule' by Kyle Matthews: https://www.interfacejournal.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Interface-12-1-Matthews.pdf You can follow Nick's I Think You Should Leave meme account @BozoDidTheTweet on Twitter and you can listen live to the Summer Specials on identity politics that we will be doing on the 8 and 15 Jan on 3CR Community Radio, 1-2pm Melbourne time, via 3cr.org.au Clips: I Think You Should Leave (Netflix) Series 1 Episode 4, Animal liberation by Los Fastidios, The Greenhouse Gas Emissions Breakdown by Oli Frost, Capture The Flag by War On Women, I Think You Should Leave (Netflix) Series 2 Episode 2, Cold by Stella Donnelly. For more in-depth show notes, including additional links, go to: https://progressivepodcastaustralia.com/2022/12/29/284/ If you enjoy the music we play on our show, check out our Spotify playlist ‘Progressive Podcast Australia Music and Comedy'! https://open.spotify.com/user/bronzecat83/playlist/6DK5AzWfrxSDcpHWlLsWi6
Having witnessed some of his clients 'Silly Season' lunches be disrupted by protests by 'Animal Rebellion' this week, Archie has had enough and has decided to take on the leader of these left-wing protests once and for all. Hence we're joined by Orla Coghlan, fresh from her interview with Piers Morgan (which has already garnered over 3 million views) who is the lead spokesperson for both Animal Rebellion and Just Stop Oil - where Archie and her battle out issues such as; Veganism, Protesting, Christmas Parties, Ruining Harrods With Milk, Moving Migrants Up North, Rock Climbing, Linkedin, Dubai and much more....... ----------------- SORT OUT YOUR BUSH & BALLS IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS WITH MANSCAPED - BECAUSE WE'RE GIVING YOU 20% OFF WITH THE CODE - RIGBIZ20 https://www.manscaped.com/ Right now, it's time to reclaim your health and arm your immune system with convenient, daily nutrition! It's just one scoop in a cup of water every day. To make it easy, Athletic Greens are going to give you a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D AND 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase. All you have to do is visit athleticgreens.com/rigbiz to take ownership over your health and pick up the ultimate daily nutritional insurance!
Laila is a founder and director of Animal Think Tank, a grassroots organisation using ‘momentum driven organising' to build a mass movement for Animal Freedom in the UK. She is co-editor of the book ‘Rethinking Food and Agriculture: New Ways Forward' which envisions a truly just and sustainable food system. She is also a co-founder of the Veterinary Vegan Network and Ethical Globe. Laila has been involved in social change for most of her career having previously worked in the international development sector for 15 years, working with NGOs, foundations, government ministries and international research institutions. Her work focused on conducting research on poverty and food security for rural development projects in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Laila has a PhD in Development Economics (SOAS), an MSc in Development Management (LSE) and a BSc in Economics and Politics (Bristol).You can find out more about Animal Think Tank at https://animalthinktank.org.uk/You can find out more about Animal Rebellion at https://animalrebellion.org/You can find out more about the book ‘Rethinking Food and Agriculture: New Ways Forward' at https://inclusiveresponsibility.earth/If you would like to support the show please subscribe & leave a 5 star review at your podcast provider of choice. Alternatively, if you are an Apple Podcast listener you can subscribe to support the show for just 99p per month. Thank you for listening! Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers dives deeper into Megflix ahead of Harry and Meghan being awarded a Human Rights award and their new Netflix documentary with Imarn Ayton and Ant Middleton. Piers speaks to vegan activist Nathan McGovern after Animal Rebellion storms upmarket steak restaurants. Piers asks Miss Croatia Ivana Knoll if she's disrespecting local Qatari culture following her controversial outfits.Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
PIERS MORGAN UNCENSORED [02/12]: Royal race row continues to rock Buckingham Palace, Labor attacks Prime Minister over private school education. Plus, a member of Animal Rebellion joins the show to discuss lab-grown meat.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Steve Bone was one of the animal rebellion activists responsible for pouring milk on to the floors of retailers, Fortnum & Mason & Selfridges.In the episode I hear from Steve his motivation for undertaking this action & I put to him some of the challenges posed to this type of action, to give him the opportunity to help us understand the purpose, methodology & efficacy of this type of protest.You can find out more about Animal Rebellion's milk pouring action here at https://instagram.com/animal_rebellion?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ravi and Rikki start by asking what makes a good protest, in light of the much-derided demonstrations from groups like Just Stop Oil and Animal Rebellion recently. Then the hosts turn to a question many treat as settled: is the Supreme Court partisan? And if so, is it more partisan than it used to be? Finally, Ravi and Rikki discuss whether political debates can be saved, as more and more candidates up and down the ballot try to dodge the debate stage. [2:32] Just Stop Oil Protests [14:56] Is the Supreme Court Partisan? [32:07] Debating Debates Check out our show notes: https://lostdebate.com/2022/10/21/ep-88/ Subscribe to our channel: https://bit.ly/3Gs5YTF Subscribe to our Substack: https://thelostdebate.substack.com/ Sticher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-lost-debate iheart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-the-lost-debate-88330217/ Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.co.uk/podcasts/752ca262-2801-466d-9654-2024de72bd1f/the-lost-debate LOST DEBATE ON SOCIAL: Follow Lost Debate Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lostdebate/ Follow Lost Debate on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@lostdebate Follow Lost Debate on Twitter: https://twitter.com/thelostdebate
In this week's episode, Joshi and Darryl discuss the violent incident at the Chinese consulate and the political fallout. We also discuss why Greater Manchester is falling so far behind its carbon targets, and whether Animal Rebellion was right to pour milk all over the Marks & Spencers on Market Street. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this week's episode, Joshi and Darryl discuss the violent incident at the Chinese consulate and the political fallout. We also discuss why Greater Manchester is falling so far behind its carbon targets, and whether Animal Rebellion were right to pour milk all over the Marks & Spencers on Market Street. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Teens are dumping milk on store floors to protest the ‘destructive' dairy industry The latest environmentalist trend is here: pouring out milk in grocery stores. All across the United Kingdom, teenagers concerned about the environment are doing “milk pours.” The new trend involves going into grocery stores, picking up cartons of cow-produced milk, and pouring out their contents, according to the animal rights group Animal Rebellion. Videos that have popped up on social media show teens pouring milk onto the floor, over sales counters, and elsewhere in the store. https://nypost.com/2022/10/16/teens-are-dumping-milk-on-store-floors-to-protest-the-destructive-dairy-industry/ Vegan activists charged after wasting milk in department stores Two... View Article
Animal rights activism is at the heart of Esther's work and life. In this podcast, Esther shares her thinking on the entanglements between the way we treat animals and how we live in consumer capitalist cultures. Esther discusses the economic structures behind our mistreatment of animals and the ways in which they are commodified and treated as resources that mirror slavery. She then also offers ideas about what a future world could look like; where animals and human beings have a healthy relationship with one another Simon and Esther discuss what facing animal rights issues bring up in others, often disassociation and guilt. To live with the awareness of how we treat animals is to live with a burden. We all like to protect the idea of our ‘good-self'; therefore, to acknowledge the animal suffering we collude with is a direct challenge to our 'good-selves', hence our defensiveness. Esther and Simon discuss whether animals are 'individuals', and what rights they have in relation to individual humans. Esther discusses broader social movements, direct action and mass mobilisations in this fascinating podcast. Bio Esther delved into full-time Animal Justice work early in life. She dedicates her time towards understanding and building people-powered organisations capable of creating transformative change. She helped to kick-start Animal Rebellion as a full-time member in 2019 and supported it through its first wave of resistance. Esther is the co-founder and Strategic Lead of Animal Think Tank, where she works to promote nonviolence, mass direct action, civil resistance and grassroots activism. Follow Esther Websites: https://animalthinktank.org.uk https://www.plantbasedfuture.animalrebellion.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/esther-salomon-0a89a11b9/
Direct action against dairies, animal cruelty, and the climate crisis. Animal Rebellion protestors have blockaded dairies, making the case for a “plant-based future”. They say the dairy industry is a key contributor to the climate crisis and is based on cruelty and exploitation. Online, opponents say they want to choose what they eat and that the direct action is counter-productive. Are the claims made by protesters true? And why is milk such a touchy subject in this country? Presenter: Adam Fleming Producers: Simon Maybin & Lucy Proctor Researchers: Ellie House & Octavia Woodward Production co-ordinator: Jacqui Johnson Music: Oskar Jones Editor: Emma Rippon
Vom 23. bis 27. September finden die Aktionstage des Bündnisses „Gemeinsam gegen die Tierindustrie“ im Oldenburger Land statt. Animal Rebellion Deutschland beteiligt sich als Kooperationspartner am Aktionscamp in Quakenbrück. Im Vordergrund steht Vernetzung und verschiedene Aktionen sowie Demonstrationen – geplant sind außerdem Vorträge, Workshops und Kulturprogramme rund um die Themen Tierwirtschaft, Klimagerechtigkeit und Arbeitsbedingungen in der Tierindustrie. Wir haben mit Jakob Waidner von Animal Rebellion über diese Aktion gesprochen.
In part one of this week's episode, Holly and Molly discuss the recent activism by Animal Rebellion aimed at raising awareness about the impact of the dairy industry. Does activism work? Should we go to such extremes? Find out what we think.We also discuss the lack of vegan food in schools and how much education there is surrounding climate change for school age children.In part two, this week's interview is with Maddie Grinham from B-Corp Mr Organic. It's Organic September, so we delve into the debate surrounding organic fruit and veg – is it really healthier for us, and can we really afford to buy organic food during a cost of living crisis? Maddie has all the answers and some great suggestions for cutting costs. This episode is sponsored by Beer52 - head to beer52.com/veganfood to claim your free vegan craft beers (all you need to do is cover postage!). Sign up to our podcast newsletter to stay up to date with the latest episodes and try an issue of Vegan Food & Living for just 99p! Music by Purple Planet
A group of vegan activists last week targeted supermarkets in four UK cities in an attempt to block customers' access to cow's milk in the dairy aisles. Demonstrators from the activist group Animal Rebellion sat in protest as shoppers attempted to buy a pint of milk, holding up ‘Plant-Based Future' signs. One of those protesters was Robert Gordan and he joined Sean on the show...
A group of vegan activists last week targeted supermarkets in four UK cities in an attempt to block customers' access to cow's milk in the dairy aisles. Demonstrators from the activist group Animal Rebellion sat in protest as shoppers attempted to buy a pint of milk, holding up ‘Plant-Based Future' signs. One of those protesters was Robert Gordan and he joined Sean on the show...
Animal Rebellion, an off-shoot of Extinction Rebellion, plans to blockade diaries across the UK to stop MILK being distributed to shops as they demand we stop drinking that and embrace non-diary milks. Why do we tolerate these lunatics? I suggest because the Government is quietly supportive of their aims. Please help support our work and Buy Me A Coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/DavidVanceV or support us via https://donorbox.org/let-free-speech-prevail David Vance SHOP Premium Podcast https://www.podbean.com/premium-podcast/davidvancepremium Be part of the Community with David https://thedavidvance.locals.com Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/davidvance BrandNewTube: https://brandnewtube.com/@TheDavidVanceChannel Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/DavidVancePodcast Telegram: @davidvance1 A Tangled Web: https://www.atangledweb.org Also try my second channel with ilana Mercer Hard Truth Podcast: https://HardTruthWithDavidVanceAndIlanaMercer.Podbean.com
Harley reflects on her activism in the UK with Animal Rebellion over the last few years, focusing on tensions between trying to build a mass movement for animals while also being concerned about police repression and security culture. She also discusses the loss of momentum for activists during the pandemic and ways to overcome this. Links: You can find out more about Animal Rebellion at: https://animalrebellion.org/ Music: Animal liberation by Los Fastidios: https://www.losfastidios.net/ Dear England by Lowkey ft Mai Khalil: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LL0Y4MZ45bo Incompatible by Colour Me Wednesday: https://colourmewednesday.bandcamp.com/album/spoonboy-colour-me-wednesday-split Farewell To My City by Frank Turner: https://frank-turner.com/discography/fthc/ Make sure you tune in live to our animal liberation trivia show on Sunday 19th June, 1-2pm Melbourne time! You can listen in via 855AM from Melbourne or on the 3CR website (3cr.org.au) from anywhere. You can text in your answers to the questions on 0488 809 855. This show is our annual Radiothon fundraising show to keep our show and 3CR going for another year. You don't have to wait until this show to donate though, you can donate right now at the links below. We appreciate your support! Online: https://www.givenow.com.au/cr/freedomofspecies2022 Other options – don't forget to nominate our show! https://www.3cr.org.au/donate
Queen Elizabeth II stepped gingerly onto the Buckingham Palace balcony Thursday, drawing wild cheers from the tens of thousands who came to join her at the start of four days of celebrations of her 70 years on the throne.Her fans sported Union Jack flags, party hats or plastic tiaras. Some had camped overnight in hopes of glimpsing the 96-year-old queen, whose appearances are becoming rare, and a chance to watch the Trooping the Color — a military parade that has marked each sovereign's official birthday since 1760.It was an explosion of joy in the massive crowd, one of the first big gatherings in the U.K. since the COVID-19 pandemic began.“Everybody has got the same mission,” said Hillary Mathews, 70, who had come from Hertfordshire, outside London. “All the horrors that's been going on in the world and in England at the moment are put behind us for a day, and we can just enjoy really celebrating the queen.”Elizabeth, who became queen at 25, is Britain's longest-reigning monarch and the first to reach the milestone of seven decades on the throne.Yet after a lifetime of good health, age has begun to catch up with her. Buckingham Palace announced late Thursday that the queen would not attend a thanksgiving church service Friday after experiencing “some discomfort” at events on Thursday. The palace said with “great reluctance” the monarch has decided to skip the service at St. Paul's Cathedral.The queen has had trouble moving around in recent months, and has pulled out of many public events.But Elizabeth took part Thursday night in lighting a chain of ceremonial beacons at Windsor Castle as planned.The Jubilee celebrations go on for a long weekend, and it was not immediately known how the news would affect Jubilee events on Saturday and Sunday.The palace says “the queen greatly enjoyed" Thursday's events — and it showed.She basked in her moment. Smiling, she chatted with her great-grandson Prince Louis, 4, who occasionally covered his ears as 70 military aircraft old and new swooped low over the palace to salute the queen. The six-minute display included a formation of Typhoon fighter jets flying in the shape of the number 70.The queen, wearing a dusky dove blue dress designed by Angela Kelly, was joined on the balcony by more than a dozen royals — though not Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, who gave up front-line royal duties two years ago. The couple traveled to London from their home in California with their two young children to take a low-key part in the celebrations, and watched Thursday's Trooping the Color with other members of the family.They did not appear on the palace balcony, because the monarch decided that only working members of the royal family should have that honor. The decision also, handily, excluded Prince Andrew, who stepped away from public duties amid controversy over his links with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Andrew will also miss Friday's service of thanksgiving after testing positive for COVID-19.The jubilee is being commemorated with a four-day holiday extravaganza and events including a concert at Buckingham Palace on Saturday and a pageant staged by thousands of performers drawn from schools and community groups around the country on Sunday. Thousands of street parties are planned nationwide, repeating a tradition that began with the queen's coronation in 1953.Not everyone in Britain is celebrating. Many people have taken advantage of the long weekend to go on vacation. And 12 protesters were arrested Thursday after getting past barriers and onto the parade route. The group Animal Rebellion claimed responsibility, saying the protesters were “demanding that royal land is reclaimed.”Yet the jubilee is giving many people — even those indifferent to the monarchy — a chance to reflect on the state of the nation and the huge changes that have taken place during Elizabeth's reign.Former Prime Minister John Major, one of the 14 prime ministers during the queen's rei...
Alex (@alexlockwood & alexlockwood.co.uk) is a fiction & non-fiction writer. He is Senior Lecturer in the Centre for Research in Media & Cultural Studies at Uni of Sunderland. He has a PhD in Creative Writing from Newcastle University & has published stories, essays & journalism in a wide range of magazines, journals & newspapers. He has a particular fascination with how we write about our engagements and relations with the nonhuman world. Alex's debut non-fiction work, The Pig in Thin Air, was published with Lantern Books in March 2016. Alex was one of the founding team of Animal Rebellion, a director of The Save Movement & a member of the Vegan Society‘s Research Advisory Committee. His “Planting Value” report for @The Vegan Society lays out plans for a transition towards a vegan UK plantingvalueinfood.org. In Sentientist Conversations we talk about the two most important questions: “what's real?” & “what matters?” Sentientism is "evidence, reason & compassion for all sentient beings." The video of our conversation is here on YouTube. We discuss: 00:00 Welcome 01:11 Alex's Intro A writer-academic-activist The challenge of focus! Private & public writing (e.g. COP26), being part of a network 05:10 What's Real? Last week's shamanic journeying ayahuasca retreat: “Asking deep questions about what it means to be a human being on this planet” Animist ontologies & methodologies Advocating for the non-human “Who is a person?… can we co-create this planet [in a way] that recognises the birthright of all beings” Growing up in working class, inner-city, South London council estates Catholic upbringing, but with some atheist family “School of hard knocks… spiritual & religious questions weren't very real” Confirmed as Catholic, school run by monks & church every weekend… “Realising it was a symbolic story… it wasn't taught as a fundamentalist truth” “Didn't sit right with me that my very very kind & generous atheist grandfather (& his cats!) wasn't going to go to heaven.” Experiences of connecting with our planet, the broader universal spirit… that have always been quite real to me ... ...and much more. Full show notes at Sentientism.info and on YouTube. Sentientism is “Evidence, reason & compassion for all sentient beings.” More at Sentientism.info. Join our "I'm a Sentientist" wall via this simple form. Everyone, Sentientist or not, is welcome in our groups. The biggest so far is here on FaceBook. Come join us there! Thanks Graham.
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is A case for the effectiveness of protest, published by James Ozden. What I want this post to achieve: My main goal with this post is to start a discussion about the effectiveness of different forms of political advocacy. Specifically, whether, and how, social movement concepts such as nonviolent protest should be used for EA causes. Disclaimer and epistemic certainty: This is a somewhat speculative post and I'm not fully confident on some of the numbers used for the cost-effectiveness estimates. I've been working for Extinction Rebellion and Animal Rebellion for the past two years, as well as studying social movement theory, so I will naturally bring in some degree of bias and motivated reasoning. I also think it's important to note that due to concerns around The Sunrise Movement expressed here, I have significantly weakened my belief in the effectiveness of certain social movements. Reading time: 30-60+ minutes. You can also read it in a Google Doc. Summary Social movements are broad alliances of people who are connected through their shared interest in social change. This research focuses on social movements that use civil resistance as a theory of change, as I believe this is under-represented within Effective Altruism (EA). Civil resistance can be defined as political action that relies on the use of nonviolent resistance by civil groups to challenge a particular power, force, policy or regime. In practice, this looks like nonviolent protests and direct action. Extinction Rebellion (XR) has highlighted the potential for social movements using nonviolent protest to create positive societal change. However, there has been little quantitative analysis of the exact impact that XR or other social movements have had on shifting public opinion, creating policy change or, in this case, reducing carbon emissions. In this research project, I attempted to quantify the cost-effectiveness that XR's protests, and other activities, has had on reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and influencing government spending on climate-related activities. These findings suggest that XR has abated 16 tonnes of GHGs per pound spent on advocacy, using the median estimates for cost-effectiveness. Relative to the top Effective Altruist (EA) recommended climate change charity, Clean Air Task Force (CATF), this is more effective by a factor of 12x. If true, this indicates that nonviolent protests can be highly effective in achieving positive outcomes and social movement objectives. This leads to the conclusion that social movement theory should be a focus area for impact-focused researchers, advocates and philanthropists, to determine when these opportunities might arise and how to best utilise them. Throughout this research, I argue for the following claims, which I believe to be strong: Nonviolent protest is an effective tool to influence public opinion and policy around a certain issue. Public opinion plays a significant factor in policy change To date, Effective Altruists have devoted too little consideration to social movements and civil resistance. I'm also arguing for the following claims, but I believe them to be weaker: The most impactful Social Movement Organisations (SMOs) using nonviolent protest can be more cost-effective than existing EA-funded interventions. My cost-effectiveness analysis of Extinction Rebellion indicates that they were more cost-effective, by a factor of 0.4 - 32x, than current EA recommendations for tackling climate change, using a variety of metrics. A two-person year research project studying the use of social movements and civil resistance for certain cause areas could discover more cost-effective interventions than those that already exist. I estimate there's a 30% likelihood of this happening. We should allocate a greater proportion of funds towards early...
In this week's episode of The Bloody Vegans Podcast we take a look back at September's Reading Vegan Festival & listen to a talk given by Dora Hargitai, a rebel working with organisations such as Animal Rebellion & Extinction Rebellion. In light of the undoubtable impact & resonance of the new film 'Don't Look Up', bringing this talk to you seemed worthwhile. In this talk Dora discusses climate breakdown and the actions we can take by working collectively. Dora Hargitai is an activist, leader & orator who is working tirelessly with Animal Rebellion in the name of challenging the very foundations upon which our current system is built. Dora's work aims to bring people together to open dialogue, organise & ideate all in the name of securing the very existence of all of Earth's many & varied inhabitants as we stare down the greatest existential emergency in human history. In this episode we discover her work & all of our responsibility. You can join the rebellion via this link. Discover & support The Bloody Vegans Podcast here This is a Bloody Vegans Production.
Past interviewee & marine biologist Ruth Leeney, has made herself quite busy since speaking to her last in June 2020. Have a listen to that episode, 32, here! Now we're here to chat about her upcoming book campaigns, bottom trawling and some of the animals she is working so hard to conserve. You can follow her on Instagram @ruleeney.[05:30] An intro to Ruth & what she's been up to this past year.[08:55] Dugongs & the book she's written about them.[14:25] Her sawfish book she's currently crowdfunding for, & all about sawfish.[20:15] How their populations are doing now.[23:50] What's threatening them.[30:15] What we can do to help.[37:35] Seaspiracy reaction.[41:00] Random Questions!Before you go, have a look at the links below as some calls to action might tickle your fancy!Support her kickstarter here.Check out the new coalition that is Transform Bottom Trawling that Ruth is a part of. They have some really useful info and graphics that you can download and it's available in several languages.Find the pre-existing book about Dugongs here.For people interested in learning about sawfishes, they can check out the Sawfish Conservation Society.This is the summary of a report Ruth worked on regarding bottom trawling and climate change, or if you have the brain power for the full report, you can find that here!Here's a petition requesting the EU to ban bottom trawling.Sea Change Ireland, The Irish Wildlife Trust, Sea Shepherd, Extinction Rebellion & Animal Rebellion were all mentioned as groups working to end bottom trawling practices & increase Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). Seal Rescue Ireland is another great charity to support and you can also listen to them in a previous Book of Leaves episode, here! Get bonus content on PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/bookofleaves. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On Farage, we speak to Animal Rebellion activists about what they REALLY want us all to be doing - do they expect us all to turn vegan?And on Talking Pints, Fleet Street legend Kelvin MacKenzie talks about his illustrious career, workplace culture and whether we can turn the tide on wokeness in Britain.And as always, Nigel answers your questions on Barrage the Farage. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
1. 烏干達自殺炸彈襲擊者襲擊了坎帕拉附近的一輛長途巴士 2. 俄羅斯在週二的每天新冠病毒死亡人數再創新高 3. 伊朗提供燃料補貼的政府系統週二失靈全國油站營運中斷 4. 中國外長王毅週一訪問卡塔爾時會見了塔利班代表 5. 環保組織Animal Rebellion的抗議者爬上倫敦西敏寺政府大樓
We discuss Animal Rebellion, Camp Beagle and independent hunt sabs. We recommend some podcasts and grassroots projects. Closing track: Peter Tosh - Get Up, Stand Up Links: https://animalrebellion.org https://www.facebook.com/campbeagleofficial/ https://www.huntsabs.org.uk https://www.radicalcompanionship.com https://caringveg.org https://seedthecommons.org/about-us/
Researcher Ben Hunt and Animal Rebellion activist Harley McDonald-Eckersall discuss the role of theatre and performance in animal activism. Ben Hunt is a researcher at De Montford University focusing on Animal Rights and Performance. You can find out more about his work here: https://performinganimalrights.tumblr.com/about You can find out more about Animal Rebellion here: https://animalrebellion.org/ Music: Art is Hard by Cursive: https://cursive.bandcamp.com/track/art-is-hard-2 Can't Handle This (Kanye Rant) by Bo Burnham, from the Netflix special ‘Make Happy': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYy0o-J0x20 Freedom of Species t-shirts are now available via the 3CR website, in a range of colours and both tighter fit and looser fit styles! https://3cr-shop.myshopify.com/collections/frontpage/products/freedom-of-species-semi-fitted-tshirt?fbclid=IwAR0lXtTukvk2EvefI7zwNfwky8848pzh8bjUcJpHAEPoUh6RMCSaJnnGM2o https://3cr-shop.myshopify.com/collections/tshirts/products/freedom-of-species-loose-fitted-tshirt?fbclid=IwAR2EQqTFmQQMLHbMgcz53L3hQ-H_i63cx2gfTU2LV1FX6EtD7AfkP5M3MQw
‘Shortcasts' are short standalone audio comments and statements from conservationists, campaigners, charities, authors and members of our audience. If it needs to be said – say it here!A shortcast from 'Summer', a full-time climate and animal rights activist with Animal Rebellion the mass movement that uses nonviolent civil disobedience to bring about a transition to a just and sustainable plant-based food system. If you recognise Summer's name you may have heard her recent shortcast on her work with StopHS2 - if not, the link is just below...Animal Rebellion website (animalrebellion.org/)Animal Rebellion Twitter feed and Facebook pageShortcast #35 'Summer' | StopHS2Shortcast #16 Alex Lockwood | 'Planting Value' Report
News and reviews: Holly and Molly chat about the upcoming Animal Rebellion march in London and their feelings about activism, and the news that a pro cyclist improved his iron levels by 77% when trialling a plant-based diet. They also review vegan burgers and sausages from Beyond Meat and a new plant-based meat range from Dopsu for those late summer BBQs. They round off by discussing difficulties with non-vegan kids and share tips for feeling full for longer on a plant-based diet. The interview: Despina Marselou is a dietitian and nutritionist who specialises in clinical nutrition and immunology. She cured her own chronic illness with a whole food plant-based diet and now spends her life helping others do the same. She talks about the importance of gut health, shares tips for switching slowly and discusses how a plant-based diet can help autoimmune disease, long Covid, IBS and many other chronic illnesses. Music by Purple Planet
Harley McDonald-Eckersall from Animal Rebellion discusses their campaign demanding McDonald's goes totally plant-based by 2025. This campaign has included a blockade of a McDonald's burger factory and distribution centres. Links: Find out more about Animal Rebellion here: https://animalrebellion.org/ For more information on the McLibel case mentioned during the show, you can check out the documentary ‘McLibel' and the following website: https://www.mcspotlight.org/case/ Music played: Frenzal Rhomb ‘Not So Tough Now': https://open.spotify.com/track/3GekUIPmZj1MxOcZRdStcr?si=bb4fbe72cb914e0c Jonathan Mann ft. Ivory King ‘Vegan Myths Debunked': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tc8TrchWeO0 Anti-Flag ‘Underground Network': https://anti-flag.bandcamp.com/track/underground-network Please donate to 3CR and specify that your donation is for Freedom of Species – we appreciate any support! https://www.3cr.org.au/donate
Rants, raves and reviews: Holly and Molly discuss Animal Rebellion's campaign against McDonald's along with the results of a new study on why men feel they need to eat meat. They also review the new vegan creme egg at ASDA and answer listener questions on language that 'normalises' meat and dairy, and why some drinks aren't vegan-friendly. The interview: Actor Danny Hatchard chats to Holly about life on Eastenders and Our Girl, including his struggles with on-set catering. He also shares his vegan pet hates, explains why he's not afraid to speak the truth, and why he thinks Vladamir Putin should give up meat.Music by Purple Planet
This show features the talk 'Anti-speciesism and the Fight for Global Climate Justice' by Harley and Jam from Animal Rebellion. The talk covers speciesism (discrimination based on species) and connections to other issues such as capitalism, colonisation and racism. Links: Check out the video of the full talk on Animal Rebellion's Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMBWOUnuicQ&ab_channel=AnimalRebellion Find out more about Animal Rebellion here: https://animalrebellion.org/ Music: Every Last Life by RESIST AND EXIST: https://resistandexist.bandcamp.com/track/every-last-life Ancient Dreams in a Modern Land by MARINA: https://www.marinaofficial.co.uk/ Black Magic by Baker Boy and Dallas Woods: https://www.bakerboyofficial.com/
Animal Rebellion Blockades McDonalds Distribution https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/may/22/animal-rights-protesters-blockade-four-mcdonalds-distribution-centres-in-uk?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other #peoplearerevolting twitter.com/peoplerevolting Peoplearerevolting.com movingtrainradio.com
Puntata numero 87 (591): conduce Camilla Lattanzi: * In Inghilterra quattro grandi centri logistici della multinazionale del fast food “Mc Donald” sono stati bloccati per quasi due giorni da attiviste e attivisti dell'associazione Animal Rebellion: un'azione di disobbedienza civile rivolta a Mc Donald per chiedergli di cessare il suo impatto devastante sulle foreste proponendo menù senza carne, 100% cruelty-free; * In maggio sono state celebrate le giornate mondiali dedicate alle api e alle tartarughe: questi animali sono in enorme difficoltà per l'inquinamento dell'aria e del mare, causati principalmente dall'agricoltura industriale tossica e dalle plastiche ormai pervasive disperse in mare; * Gli scienziati del Global Health summit e l'attivista per il clima Greta Thunberg ci ammoniscono: per ridurre il rischio di future pandemie e prevenire nuovi salti di specie dobbiamo riconoscere i legami tra la salute degli umani e quella degli altri animali; * La ricetta cruelty-free del tosco vegan chef Gabriele Palloni è dedicata alle api; * L'ottimo sound design è curato da Gianluca Masala.
This show features Harley McDonald-Eckersall from Animal Rebellion on the role of individual veganism and system change within the animal movement. Links for the show: Find out more about Animal Rebellion here: https://animalrebellion.org/ This show builds on the themes covered on our previous episode: 1 in 3 People Support Plant-Based Diets – Progress for the Vegan Movement! https://www.3cr.org.au/freedomofspecies/episode-202104041300/1-3-people-support-plant-based-diets-%E2%80%93-progress-vegan-movement Please fill out our survey for Freedom of Species listeners! https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeRAIRBPZ7ptOfuhJ8Nd_9JGBrBijPXMoAvsOSfBOZGqRryKA/viewform The phrase carbon footprint received “its biggest boost in 2005 through an enormous BP media campaign on the carbon footprint” – from William Safire in The New York Times magazine: https://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/17/magazine/17wwln-safire-t.html The world’s top five meat and dairy corporations are already responsible for more emissions than ExxonMobil, Shell or BP – from Josh Gabbatiss in the Independent: https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/meat-dairy-industry-greenhouse-gas-emissions-fossil-fuels-oil-pollution-iatp-grain-a8451871.html Music/clips: Adam Ruins Everything – Going Green: 'The Corporate Conspiracy to Blame You for Their Trash': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koqNm_TgOZk Shoreline and Nervus ‘Meat Free Youth’: https://shorelineband.com/meat-free-youth/ MARINA ‘Purge the Poison’: https://marina.lnk.to/PurgeThePoisonID
Heute haben wir ein sehr inspirierendes Gespräch mit Tierrechtsaktivistin Yasemin Tulay für euch. Yasemin spricht über ihren Weg zum Veganismus, wie dieser sie zur Tierrechtsaktivistin gemacht hat und warum sie jetzt an vielen freien Wochenenden an Schlachthäusern steht und die grausame Realität, die dort vor sich geht, mit ihren Follower:innen teilt. Yasemin spricht außerdem über den Veganismus als Social Justice Movement, die 5 Phasen einer moralischen Revolution und ob eine vegane Welt überhaupt möglich ist. Wir gehen sehr inspiriert aus dieser Folge und hoffen, dass es euch genauso geht. ** ERWÄHNT Instagram Yasemin: @yaseminvollmond - Earthling Ed, Land of Hope and Glory - Leonardo di Caprio & National Geographics, Before the Flood - Dr. Schnitzer und die legendäre Akne Seite, http://www.dr-schnitzer.de/akne.html - Earthling Ed, 30days 30 excuses EBook, Youtube Videos - Gary L. Francione, Tierrechts Philosoph, Eat like you Care - Animal Save DACH , https://www.facebook.com/animalsavegerman - Anonymous for the Voiceless, https://www.anonymousforthevoiceless.org/join - DXE (Direct Action Everywhere), https://www.facebook.com/directactioneverywhere - Difusión V, https://www.facebook.com/difusionvhuancayo - Animal Rebellion, https://www.facebook.com/animalrebellionDE - Yasemins Tipps für vegane und faire brands, https://www.notion.so/yaseminvollmond/Slow-vegan-fair-brands-8ae8294064704ddfb8bb8a060dd4507e ** Werbung 10% Rabatt Code InnoNature: Plantly10 *** GET IN TOUCH Ihr habt Fragen oder Anregungen? Meldet euch gerne: - per Instagram unter @theplantlycompassion - per Mail unter theplantlycompassion@gmail.com Wir freuen uns sehr über jede Nachricht die uns erreicht. Sehr helfen würde uns auch eine Bewertung auf Apple Podcast - wenn euch der Podcast gefällt lasst doch gerne ein paar Worte da. * Music by: DJ Quads - My everything
Exploring: What's in a name? Where does the Animal ‘Welfare' Party stand on Animal Rights? The concept of kinship, the importance of being a citizen of the earth, and the impact of taking the ‘no-flight pledge'. The current political landscape for our fellow animals, and why Jane will be marching on Parliament with Animal Rebellion. How Jane has turned regretful childhood experiences into inspiration to write an anti-speciesist children's book. The importance of standing in our truth, appreciating and learning from all our experiences and knowing that nothing is wasted. Passing through tales of hedgehogs highways, roads for toads, a badger brigade and respectful rodent relocation.
Social movements often seek to shift public opinion and mobilize supporters on a large scale. But which tactics achieve these goals most effectively? And how have social movements achieved this in the past?Dr Laila Kassam is a co-founder of Animal Think Tank and the co-editor of the forthcoming book, Rethinking Food and Agriculture: New Ways Forward.Topics discussed in the episode:“The social movement ecology” and the theoretical framework that Animal Think Tank uses (3:10)The importance of public opinion for social change, and the pros and cons of actions that polarize public opinion (16:35)The evidence base the Animal Think Tank and This Is An Uprising use, and the weaknesses of using social movement evidence to glean strategic knowledge for the farmed animal movement (20:55)Extinction Rebellion and Animal Rebellion — what they're doing, why, and Animal Think Tank's lessons from the first actions (25:48)Sacrifice, demandingness, and mass arrests as potential motivators and demotivators for activists (33:07)Creative actions, stunts, gimmicks and the effects that these have on perceptions of social movements (42:07)The value of confrontational tactics like Direct Action Everywhere's disruption of Bernie Sanders' rally (49:30)Whether veganism or “active and sustained participation” in the movement is more tractable (55:38)Animal Think Tank's current research priorities (1:02:22)Other resources that Animal Think Tank recommends reading (1:09:12)Rethinking Food and Agriculture — Laila's co-edited book and the value of expertise in “sustainable agriculture” for the farmed animal movement (1:17:17)Laila's experience with international development work and her concerns with this field (1:25:15)The importance of funding constraints for Animal Rebellion and other organisations focusing on building a mass protest movement (1:33:08)Resources discussed in the episode are available at https://www.sentienceinstitute.org/podcastSupport the show (https://www.sentienceinstitute.org/donate)
Yokoluş İsyanı (Extinction Rebellion) Türkiye'den Işıl Su Gürgöze ile iklim eylemlerini, Animal Rebellion hareketini ve 3 Nisan Cuma günü Fridays for Future liderliğinde gerçekleşecek olan küresel ve dijital iklim grevini konuştuk.
Talking: Rose's Earthlings experiences, having big lady balls, and being rude to an Oscar winning actor! Is it really a war between vegans and farmers and how do we shift this relationship to have a positive impact for animals? Why animal welfare is dangerous to animal rights. Her role with Animal Rebellion, their mission for system change and the importance of taking imperfect steps. Avoiding burnout, and finding balance. Finding appreciation for our journey, including our failures, and realising that nothing is wasted. Roses new entrepreneurial vegan venture!