Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Helen Browning's Totally Organic

By now you have realized that the farm is the epicenter of the suicidefood movement. It is here where the need for rationalization is most urgent, and so it is here where the message is most potent. Farms are where it all goes down. Life, death, blood, gore, and the final bleats, kicks, and spasms. This can be dressed up only so much. No matter how "organic," no matter how "humane," how "free range," butchery is the order of the day.

Our first glimpse of Helen Browning's Totally Organic is a slice of pure absurdity: one pig on a motorcycle (!) and another watching on in bloated contentment. Their interlude occurs at night, with no farmers visible, no fences to keep them in. And yet, they play. Livestock at leisure. It's a farm farce: "It Happened at Happy Meat Farm."

The problems with Helen Browning's extend past the ridiculous imagery, however. We can see more of these problems and take their measure when we look at the farm's "Good Veal Guide." The Guide is a hymn of conscientious stewardship, of a deep and abiding love of animals. Here, let's see what the Guide has to say.

The zeal with which organic farmers pursue their animal welfare does not stop at dairy cows—they rear their dairy calves with the attention they devote to their other stock... The typical male dairy calf will never turn itself into a great beef animal, but good farming will produce superb meat from these livestock, at a younger age. (Emphasis added, dizzily.)

“…will never turn itself into a great beef animal.” There are worlds contained within that phrase. The key to an entire way of life, to its towering, teetering philosophy, can be found inside it. Imagine it! The sense of failure felt by the “typical” male dairy calf! How it stings, knowing he lacks the wherewithal, the grit, the starch to turn himself into a great, walking chunk of meat!

The Guide gushes on:

This is robust… mature meat, pink in colour, aged for flavour and a good bite. Food to grace any table. This is not veal from dimly lit crowded pens.

These animals enjoy a very full life, with plenty of space and light, inside suitable buildings over winter and outside at pasture for the rest of the year; a varied diet; and the care of a foster cow when available.

We want to remove the stigma attached to these animals. With a life span of six months, they live twice as long as even the slowest growing chicken; they have the same life span as a good organic pig, and longer than many organic lambs.

According to various sources, a cow with a less “zealous” upbringing could expect to live as long as 25 years or so. (The world-record holder appears to have lived for 48 years!) But Helen Browning’s crows about the “very full life” they afford their "veal" calves. Six months! Note that they compare their track record with others in the industry, not with people who have a vested interest in providing long life to animals.

Return to the pigs-with-motorcycle image. Does doing so make your mind feel funny? Do you wish there were something solid to hold onto? Such a loopy juxtaposition—the carefree pigs, the nocturnal motorcycle jaunt, and the calves granted their "very full" six months.

Of course, this sort of bracing dissonance is the suicidefoodist's stock in trade. H.B.'s is also the institution that stages Pigstock every year, an event featuring both spit-roasted pigs and, for the kids, a "petting pen."

And may we please take a moment to appreciate Helen Browning's clever dig against the cretinous vegetarians, those who—what perversity!—would rather not spit-roast the pigs after petting them?

9 comments:

Francois Tremblay said...

I do appreciate their dig against vegetarians (who are indeed cretinous), but the whole "we're 'organic' so we're better than the rest" (when "organic" generally means very little) is extremely annoying. Like you said, they are trying to turn slaughter into an act of compassion. I don't think anyone is fooled.

Ben said...

I do enjoy your contributions, Francois, my friend, my foe, my foil.

bazu said...

As Marge said to Homer when Bart was flying a kite at night, "that is just so unwholesome."

/vomit

bazu said...

P.S. I'm linking to your blog from mine right now.

Ben said...

Thanks, bazu!

Keep coming back!

Anonymous said...

i have read all of your entries and this one, by far, is the most offensive.

Attempting to claim that factory farming is humane by any means is worse than saying, "Meh fuck 'em. they're animals."

Francois Tremblay said...

So I guess both sides agree that "organic" propaganda is sickening. Wow! We found something we can all agree on! This is a momentous occasion.

Lisa S. said...

I am totally linking your blog to mine! This is great. I love finding someone with a sense of humor like this.

Now, those dairy calves sound like they live the high life. They are granted 6 whole months by their captors & spend their time dreaming of the London Broil they'll never become. Sounds like a wonderful life indeed....

Proud to be Vegan.

Ben said...

Thanks for stopping by, oboe-wan.

Tell your friends and enemies!