This slghtrhouse truck is full of baby calves being sent to their deaths.
Scared and confused, they suckle the fingers of those trying to comfort them.
They often try to suckle the hands of the slghtrhouse workers 2, right before they have their throat slits.#FebruDairy Day19? pic.twitter.com/PK6FRNAZRo— ANikett ? ????? (@aniket_anikett) February 19, 2020
This slghtrhouse truck is full of baby calves being sent to their deaths. Scared and confused, they suckle the fingers of those trying to comfort them.They often try to suckle the hands of the slghtrhouse workers 2, right before they have their throat slits.
Plastic straws are 0.03% of total plastic waste by mass.
Meanwhile, 46% of ocean debris is abandoned fishing equipment.
If you want to be trendy, boycott straws.
If you want to save the ocean, boycott fish.pic.twitter.com/LujRjPprYh
— Macken (@MackenMurphy) May 12, 2019
Interestingly, for the purpose of grasping Costco’s ethical boundaries, you have to look away from their embrace of wellness trends or organic foods. Instead it’s the Costco best sellers that have been in the stores for literally decades — like the $4.99 Rotisserie Chicken or $1.50 Hotdog — that actually speak the best towards the store’s Overton window. That you can simultaneously crave cold pressed juice, but not bat an eye at the inherent questions of sustainability that surround a $1.50 1/4 pound all beef hot dog seems to embody the Costco ethical stance well: Sustainability or Ethics are not things rooted in facts but perceptions.