people are understandably angry and offended by a recent PETA billboard in jacksonville, florida that compared overweight women to whales and demanded that they ”lose the blubber” by going vegetarian. the billboard has since been removed (albeit replaced with a snarky, equally fat-shaming one that leads me to believe that PETA’s staff feels they’ve done nothing wrong and won’t have me waiting by the phone for an apology) but the hurt remains — and the ridiculousness continues. PETA president ingrid newkirk sounded off to the huffington post, essentially rolling her eyes at all the “prudes” and “reactionaries” who rightfully pointed out that this billboard is hateful and hurtful and has no place in animal activism.

newkirk’s article is a gem. she makes comments such as, “the majority of fat people need to have some discipline” and “being fat means being a bad role model to our children.” i wish i was making this up, but i’m not sure i could even come up with something so cruel. i’ve blogged before about how i find it so important to respect the identities and backgrounds of our fellow activists and indeed our fellow humans, and it’s so interesting to me that newkirk continues to defend this campaign despite how incredibly problematic it is. it appears that she — an incredibly privileged, able-bodied, thin, white, heterosexual woman — is unable to acknowledge and respect the lives of people who don’t fall into those privileged categories. that people still call her an ally to animals is problematic. that she is [still] considered a “leader” of the animal rights movement is unfortunate. that she can sleep at night after having made statements like the ones she made to the huffpo is unforgivable.

ida at the vegan ideal has a really thorough analysis of this whole fiasco, but my favorite part is this:

Usually, no matter how oppressive PETA’s campaigns get, nearly everyone I talk to who still supports PETA will at some point always recite a version of the phrase: “But PETA does some good.” This is the “get out of jail free” card most commonly used by PETA supporters to dismiss harsh criticism and seek concurrence and unanimity. But the reality is there is no amount of ostensible “good” that can justify perpetuating oppression.

veganism is a stand against exploitation, oppression, and subjugation of living beings, including humans. we can’t liberate one group at the expense of another. we can’t throw people under the bus to abstractly “save animals.” there are so many compelling reasons to adopt a vegan diet and live a vegan life that don’t involve degrading other people for the way they look or whom they love or what they believe or where they live. as my friend andrea wrote, “[Go vegan] to improve your health and the planet’s. Do it to improve and save animals’ lives. Don’t do it because PETA bullied you into it.”

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