Harmony Garden

May 25

i need feminism because…

whoneedsfeminism:

when my partner says he supports womens rights he gets applauded. when i say i support womens rights i get asked if i’m on my period. 

(via vegetivorous)

May 22

How can we make feminism more accessible?

May 20

liberateanimals:

The developed world exports grains to developing countries and imports meat with it. If this trend continues, the developing world will not be able to produce enough food to feed itself as farmers are abandoning traditional crops in favour of raising animals to sell meat-eaters in the first world e.g. 80% of starving children live in countries that actually have food surpluses but farmers use the surplus grain to feed animals instead of people.
In some of the world’s poorest nations, grain and land that could be used to feed the hungry are instead being fed to animals whom end up on the dinner plates of the rich e.g. famine in Ethiopia during the 1980s did not occur because there was no food but on the contrary, European nations imported grain from the impoverished country to feed chickens, pigs and cows… during the crisis tens of thousands of people died but if the grain had been used to feed the Ethiopians who grew it, the famine could have been averted.
2/3 of the grain exports to other countries is used to feed farm animals instead of people, as Dr Waldo Bello, the executive director of the Institute for Food and Development Policy, states, “there is enough food in the world for everyone. But tragically, much of the world’s food and land resources are tied up in producing beef and other livestock—food for the well-of—while millions of children and adults suffer from malnutrition and starvation. In Central America, staple crop production has been replaced by cattle ranching”.
American companies are moving into South American countries and buying up land and grain so that they ca raise animals to sell to meat-eaters in the States. These companies use the resources that should be used to feed the local people, so millions of people in South America and around the world are going hungry while animals raised for food consume their grain and destroy their environment e.g. in Guatemala, 75% of children under the age of 5 are malnourished and yet the nation continues to produce and export around 40 million pounds of meat to the U.S. every year.
In 2010 Human Rights Watch began a campaign to end immigrant child labour in U.S. agriculture. They found child labourers (who are often as young as seven or eight) working on these industrial farms can expect to work 14-16 hours a day, seven days a week.
An inquiry in 2010 into the treatment of agency and migrant staff at meat and poultry-processing firms showed widespread evidence of abuse and exploitation. Additionally, there was a lack of health and safety protection and workers did not know their rights. The inquiry on 260 workers found workers were being pushed, kicked, verbally abused, refused permission to go to the toilet, and pregnant workers were mistreated and suffered instant dismissal.
Supermarkets have driven down the costs so you can buy your meat/dairy/eggs cheaper which has also driven down the costs of the supply chain with tens of thousands of workers paying the price, suffering discrimination and unfair treatment i.e. a two-tier market in which there are migrant agency workers that are exploited on poor conditions which undercuts employed workers on better conditions.
Americans pay a fantastically low percentage of our income on food—less than in any other developed country. But cheap food comes at the cost of a child who works 30 hours a week and earns $1000 a year according to the USDA.
Australia’s meat industry has been at the forefront for exploiting foreign workers to overcome a chronic labour shortage. The Immigration Minister Senator Amanda Vanstone says she is aware that the system may have been abused, and today, officials from her department met their State colleagues to tackle the problem.
“Often, the greater our ignorance about something, the greater our resistance to change.” Marc Beckoff

liberateanimals:

“Often, the greater our ignorance about something, the greater our resistance to change.” Marc Beckoff

May 18

(Source: ribbonsandhyssop, via thedreadfaerie)

(Source: princessxserenity)

May 16

My socially awkward life

May 12

[video]

fuck yeah sex education: Three articles on Rape Culture you need to read -

anxiouslee:

“Have I ever had ‘ANY unwanted/undesired physical or sexual contact’?” - Author Molly talks about the normalization of unwanted contact that doesn’t quite fit the definition of sexual assult, but is nevertheless indicate that “Your body is not for you. Your body is for men’s…

May 10

Walking Is Still Honest: ihaveabsolutelynoidea: things that are not inherently awful or... -

ihaveabsolutelynoidea:

things that are not inherently awful or something you should feel ashamed of:

things that suck and you should…

May 09

[video]