The Great Indian Property Scam.

World Vegan Day

 

So on this World vegan Day lets learn about a most sickening truth,

We’ve legally relegated all non-humans to the status of a household appliance.

Think about it, the beloved cow & buffalo is legally classified the same way as your cracked ceiling fan, a thing with economic value, but zero moral value. In a nation that preaches spiritual depth at every single traffic jam, our legal system operates with the cold, brutal logic of a colonial corporation.

We’ve normalized animal slavery, and the one, honest justification we manage to blurt out is, "Look, it just makes the dal taste amazing. Don't ruin this for me."

The absurdity is almost beautiful. We condemn human slavery universally, yet we perpetuate a system where a sentient being's only purpose is to serve as a resource for us. The law says they have the same status as your old slippers.
As the Kahu Advocacy Foundation, we believe this is the core problem:
 All sentient beings are equal for the purpose of not being used exclusively as a human resource. Until we change this property status, all our claims of compassion are just noise,
a cheap distraction from the great scam we enable every day.


What is this magnificent moral headache?

#Veganism is a philosophical commitment to exclude (as far as possible and practicable) all exploitation of animals.

This means:


No meat, no eggs, no leather, and, God help us, no Dairy. They want to take away the
doodh from our chai, the Ghee from our parathas, and the malai from our souls. It’s an act of war, essentially.

Go ahead. Right now. Just for one minute, trace your dinner back to its origins. Do a Google search on exactly how your food arrived on your plate.

See how many humans often migrant workers (paid starvation wages) were involved?

The statistics, even in India, are a collective shame we politely ignore. The agricultural sector is the largest employer of child laborers globally.

And how many thinking, feeling animals had to go through unimaginable, routine brutality?

We're talking about factory farms where billions of chickens, pigs, and cows are confined in conditions so cruel that their suffering is the baseline of the industry. They are unable to move, unable to express natural behaviors, often mutilated just to keep them from hurting each other out of sheer madness. This is not just meat, it's industrial, mass-produced agony.

We know that even after knowing the facts our ethical resolve will disappear faster than a politician's promise the moment your nose catches the scent of your neighbor's biryani.

Instead, we want to use this day for collective intellectual honesty. Now that you know your food choices and your very existence contribute to the inhuman suffering of sentient beings who are treated as mere property:

Take five minutes today and truly confront the moral cost of your most cherished animal-derived product.

Is that taste worth the suffering you know is required?

If you accept that something must be done (because "I like it" is not a justification), what is the most effective, meaningful action you can take to reduce that suffering?

We're not talking about starting with a tiny, guilt-reducing step.

We're asking for your best, most radical idea.

Should we all go full vegan (a Herculean task, we know)?

Should we collectively target one specific area of animal exploitation?

What is the most effective way to save animals and reduce suffering, now that you know the depth of the problem?

We've found our solution in veganism,antinatalism,minimalism and other philosophies, but we want to hear yours.

Tell us in the comments:

Given that your food choices cause suffering, what is the best possible way for you to reduce that harm, starting now?

Let’s think this through.


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