PETA India Supporters Mimic Frozen Meat to Urge People of Hyderabad to Go Vegan During World Vegetarian Awareness Month
On World Vegetarian Awareness Day (1 October) and during World Vegetarian Awareness Month (October), PETA India supporters smeared with “blood” lay “dead” on large trays wrapped in cellophane to mimic packages of frozen meat. Other PETA India supporters held signs reading, “Meat Is Murder”, to urge people to ditch meat and go vegan. The action demonstrated that all animals, including humans, are made of flesh and blood. We all feel pain and a variety of emotions, and eating meat is literally eating the corpse of a tormented animal.
Animals killed for food suffer terribly, as can be seen in PETA India’s disturbing and highly publicised video exposé “Glass Walls”. Chickens on factory farms are packed by the thousands into crowded sheds that reek of ammonia from the accumulated waste in which they’re forced to stand. They’re denied everything that’s natural and important to them. Chickens and other animals are crammed into vehicles and transported to slaughterhouses in such high numbers that many sustain broken bones or even die from suffocation on the way. At slaughterhouses, workers often hack at the throats of goats, sheep, and other animals with dull blades. And fish suffocate or are cut open while they’re still alive on the decks of fishing boats.
Each person who goes vegan spares nearly 200 animals per year immense suffering and a terrifying death. In addition, raising animals for food is a leading cause of water pollution and water and land use, and a United Nations report concluded that a global shift towards vegan eating is necessary to combat the worst effects of the climate catastrophe.