How is Veganism Anticolonial?


From back cover:

The colonizer and the animal agriculture industry use the same logic. They identify difference, assert inferiority, and use the asserted inferiority to justify domination.

Animal agriculture is colonialism applied to animals. Hunting is organized warfare applied to animals. It is the assertion that animals exist for human use, that their bodies and lives are resources to be extracted, that their interests do not matter because they lack the characteristics that would grant them consideration. This is the same assertion that colonialism makes about colonized peoples: they exist for the use of the colonizer, their land and labor are resources to be extracted, their interests do not matter because they are not fully human, not fully civilized, not fully deserving of sovereignty.

The logic is identical. And the recognition of this identity is what the system cannot allow. Because if it were recognized that animal agriculture operates through the same logic as colonialism, then the refusal of animal agriculture would be recognizable as an anticolonial resistance. It would be understood not as a distraction from anticolonial struggle but as part of it. It would reveal that the logic of domination is unified, that rebellion requires setting ablaze the entire structure.

How is Veganism Anticolonial pdf

On the Hunt: Morality in the Crosshairs, Hunting the Hunter in Anti-Civ Discourse

On The Hunt_Morality In The Crosshairs_Hunting the Hunter in Anti-Civ Discourse pdf

Vegan Amorality: An Egoist Nihilist Critique of Speciesism

From back cover:

“From an egoist perspective, the question of veganism is not moral at all. It is: Do I wish to participate in a system that reduces other sentient beings to instruments? Do I wish to fund, through my consumption, the brutally violent industrial machinery of animal agriculture? Do I wish to carry within my body the consequences of choices made by others on my behalf? The answer an egoist gives is likely to be: No. Not because egoism demands universal compassion. Not because the suffering of animals is an objective moral fact. But because the egoist recognizes that they are not separate from the world they participate in. They recognize that domination structures—the logic that justifies the reduction of animals to meat, of the natural world to resources, of life itself to extractable value—are the same logic that dominates the egoist themselves. To refuse to participate in animal agriculture is, for the egoist, to refuse one mechanism of the domination structure that constrains their own freedom. This is not altruism. This is not moral duty. This is the recognition that the spook of “hierarchy is natural” and “domination is justified” must be shattered everywhere it appears, because everywhere it appears, it limits the egoist’s own power…

“The anarchist individualists do not present themselves as proletarians, absorbed only in the search for material amelioration, tied to a class determined to transform the world and to substitute a new society for the actual one. They place themselves in the present; they disdain to orient the coming generations towards a form of society allegedly destined to assure their happiness, for the simple reason that from the individualist point of view happiness is a conquest, an individual’s internal realization.” – Emile Armand, Individualist Perspectives

Individualist anarchism operates from an adjacent but compatible premise: that imposed categories, enforced identities, and hierarchical arrangements are the fundamental problem, and that liberation consists of refusing to be sorted into their schemes. In this sense, anarcho-egoism is typically considered nearly synonymous with individualist anarchism. From this perspective, veganism is not about creating a new identity (“I am a vegan,” as if this were a fixed property), but about refusing participation in a particular form of categorization and domination. Animal agriculture categorizes sentient beings as property, as things, as resources. It sorts the world into the edible and the inedible, the valuable and the disposable. Individualist anarchism refuses this sorting. It refuses to participate in the logic of categorization that treats senti ent beings as mere things.”

Vegan Amorality_An Egoist Nihilist Critique of Speciesism pdf

Stories of Total Liberation Volume 2

From back cover:

When we speak of Total Liberation, we are very upfront and honest about what we mean: We encourage all anarchists – the individuals who question authority and go to war with cops and fascists in the streets, to connect with the vegans who utilize tactical diversity to speak out, disrupt, liberate, and fight tirelessly against the everyday violence of human supremacy. And we encourage all of these same anarchists and vegans to connect with the straight edge individuals – the ones who’d rather reclaim and weaponize their minds and bodies against chemical escape than make the CEOs of the alcohol and tobacco industry richer.

Authority demands that we remain silent, civilized, and law abiding in order for capitalists to continue profiting from turning our bodies into individualized graveyards for slaughtered animals and dumpsters for their intoxicating chemical vices. We have two choices in life: compliance or resistance. Do we stand on the sidelines or in the streets? Some of us have made our decision:

A life of rebellion against the death machine.
No matter how hopeless, defiance over defeat.

 

Stories of Total Liberation Volume 2 pdf