Hawaii Vacations, Vegan Sandals on Pinterest and Speaking Up for Animals in the Comments on the INTERNET

Hello Everyone,

How are you doing?

I attended Vegan Drinks in NYC the other day. Were any of you there? If anyone who reads this blog lives in NYC, I would love to meet up some time at vegan drinks and meet you. I believe I may be away for this next one because I am going to HAWAII. I am so excited.

This was a really long winter in NYC and all winter long I dreamed, craved, going to the beach. I had dreams of going with my vegan boyfriend and going on holiday, but unfortunately we broke up.

Well, I am going to the beach anyway. On a No Boys Allowed women’s retreat–a pole dancing beach retreat nonetheless!! HA. As you may know if you read my 5 Random facts About Me blog post one time, one of my favorite things is pole dancing. It is so beautiful and athletic and I could go on for days about it. Well I am so excited for the retreat.

 
I have been updating my pinterest board with vegan shoes quite regularly. There are a few cool vegan sandal options on there inspired by HAVAII.

 
 
Today I was reading one of my fave things online ROOKIE magazine (a magazine for teen girls) when I saw someone asking a question about vegan shoes. Though I normally do not get involved in self promotion, I decided to tell this fellow vegan shoe lover about my pinterest board in the comments.
 
While I was there I noticed another commenter being like “vegan shoes are highly toxic and bad for the environment. So is fake fur. People think animals are treated badly and killed in horrible ways on fur farms but that is just not true. Furs are worth less if the animals aren’t kept in good condition…so it’s worth it to the fur farms to treat their animals well.”
 
………………………….
 
I felt I had to comment! I almost didn’t cause I was thinking how can I possibly express how wrong this person is. They prob won’t even accept my comment.” Well, I decided I had to give it a go anyway. One can make a difference.
 
http://www.elephantjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/one-can-make-cover.jpg
 
I calmy wrote that what she said was not true. Most animals are anally electrocuted and go crazy in the cages and chew off eachother’s limbs and what not. I told her to watch The Witness– a great documentary I saw online (wrote about it here) about a man whose love for his cat caused him to see the connection between cats and animal and try to make a difference by educating people about what goes on at fur farms by driving around in a van with footage from fur farms playing out the back, forcing people to witness the truth.
http://photos2.meetupstatic.com/photos/event/c/6/0/4/event_198530692.jpeg
 
http://marthaflatley.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/92313-fur_carcasses_sergey_maximishin2.jpg?w=517&h=344
 
I also told her to watch earthlings.
 
Anyway, YAY for me. I spoke up for animals. I hope some teen girls read that and it gets to them.
 
If you want to learn more about animal rights my humble recommendations are …check out 269 life and follow Anita Krajnc, both on facebook!
 
Do you ever respond to people who try to knock veganism, or vegan shoes, or animal rights? Or do you prefer not to get involved and let their ignorance reveal itself. I always feel releived when people respond to those haters in the comments, but I know it is a rough role as they are attacked themselves. What do you do?
 
Feel free to comment any time and let me know if you ever attend vegan drinks!
 
 

New Vegan Shoes and a Tumblr that will Open Your Eyes through Art

I added some more vegan shoes on pinterest today.

vegan go go boots

white converse high tops.

vegan birkenstocks because I have really been reminiscing about my old pair. They were so comfortable, and incredibly real birkenstocks for all their hippie-ness, are not at all vegan.

These little babies. Converse! Pretty cool right?
Some nice classic “thongs”.
Anyway check em out on my vegan shoes pinterest board!
After you have done that, turn your mind to more troubling matters.

Check out this blog by an unknown tumblrist: I Have Seen Another World.

Through pictures and dreamy captions….it tells a story of a war.

All of a sudden you see it as a war…that’s going on right now…and has been going on for thousands of years…against our fellow earthlings.
It’s incredible. This blog really opened my eyes. Wish I knew who created it. I recognized many of the photos on it as Jo-Anne McArthur’s.
Check it out, and check out the Holocaust Comparison Project by David Sztybel if you didn’t already. It is very ….interesting.

Down the Rabbit Hole into the World of Animal Rights

A few things:

1. I updated my vegan shoe pinterest with some cool vegan shoes such as these:

There are some excellent shoes on there, so check it out if you so desire to clothe your feet in man-made materials. Vegan Shoes 4 Lyfe.
2. Following Anita Krajnc, head of Toronto Pig Save, on facebook is very educational. I feel as if I have gone down the rabbit hole, so to speak.
If you want to learn more about animal rights stuff, just subscribe to her posts and then check out the pages of groups she shares and whatnot.
I don’t even know where to begin.
I now feel certain that animal rights will be the next great battle our society wages for freedom and justice and all that.
Everywhere I see more and more people mentioning veganism. This movement is growing!
Along time ago when I started with vegetarianism, I always used to think to myself “what difference am I making. So I’m not ordering meat at a restaurant…big deal. 1 billion other people are.” Still I stuck to it because it felt like the right thing to do, not really knowing why, besides I loved animals and my dogs.
After all this time I feel I finally understand my true motivation for being a vegetarian and now vegan.
For one thing, it DOES make a difference. Little by little, person by person, vegans infiltrated mainstream media and awareness.
And for a second thing, ( a thing I have become so much more aware of lately thanks to my interviews with animal rights heroes) vegans are, as one blogger put it so well, Conscientious Objectors to Cruelty.
Check out this blog post from the great blog Once Upon a Vegan. She shares the story of a man who privately financed the transport of 669 Jewish children to England…because they were going to the death camps. He saved their lives, but no one, even in his family, ever knew about it until 50 years later he wife found a log in his attic listing all the names of the children he saved. She contacted them and there is a video clip on the blog post showing him meeting some of the children he saved years later…
I could watch it a hundred times. It’s amazing.
She links to this article which tells the whole story of Nicholas Winton. One of the most touching things I’ve ever read. At the end of the article it says he wears a ring given to him by one of the children he saved which said

“save one life, save the world”.

(nicholas winton with one of the children he saved)
a book about him was written by one of the children he saved.
This guy never asked to be recognized, he just quietly did a beautiful thing. I imagine he felt he could die happy after that meeting, knowing that he made a difference in the lives of so many grown men and women. You have to see the vid in the blog post–so good!
3. Speaking of the Holocaust, I saw this video Anita Krajnc posted on Facebook the other day–these two guys discussing why people become violently offended and write vegans off when they compare the exploitation of animals to the holocaust. They do a fantastic job of discussing it, and it’s really fun to watch.

The similarities to the things I saw in the slaughterhouse videos and in the trucks thanks to the youtube videos of Toronto Pig Save have really been haunting me with how similar they seem to the holocaust. Gas Chambers. Cattle Cars. Horrible experiments on animals. The dark barren barns chickens and pigs, for example, live in before being slaughtered.

The moment I decided not to look away and “bore witness” was the moment everything changed. Now I feel like I want to see more, to know what is really happening. Now all these extreme animal rights people’s tirades are really making sense!

When I learned about the holocaust in middle school I read a lot of books about it…in my typical, disturbed and depressed yet can’t look away fashion. I always remember thinking, how could this have happened only 50 years ago? It didn’t make sense. I looked around me and didn’t see evil people who were capable of doing anything like that. It seemed like a blip on the radar. And yet I imagined myself, being half Jewish, in that situation and tried to make it feel real.

Now I see that those behaviors are still in place but they are hidden from our view…in the slaughterhouses of the world. In the video I mentioned above, they talk about how evil is often just no one taking responsibility…like in a bureaucracy where normal people take orders but don’t want to take responsibility for what they are doing–that’s how evil happens. Exactly!

Clicking around, I found this Holocaust Comparison Project, a photo essay by David Sztybel, that the video is responding to. It makes fascinating and disturbing points. The same patterns of violence that existed in the Holocaust are very much alive and well.

At the end of the photo essay there is this post script:

Edgar Kupfer was a survivor of the Dachau death camp. After his liberation, he furtively scrawled the following message on the wall of a hospital barrack:

Wow.

I understand the Holocaust is an extremely sensitive subject. But like they say in the video, by discussing the past, we can learn from the past.

Your thoughts? Do you feel that you know your motivations for being vegan or vegetarian on a deep level or do you sometimes question? What do you think about the Holocaust Comparison Project?

A Great New Way to Find Vegan Shoes and Vegan Bags–My Pinterest Page

Hello!

Yesterday I made a pinterest board for vegan shoes and bags. Wish I had thought of it sooner, it is so easy to use and fun to look at. By clicking on the pics you can be linked to all of (in my opinion) the coolest vegan shoes and bags on the market. It’s exactly why I started this blog to begin with, but pinterest is a much better platform for that. I think from now on, I will just add any cool vegan shoes I see to my pinterest page and that will free up my blog for more interesting things. Also, I’m going to try to integrate the pinterest page into the blog so you can just see what’s available to purchase in case you need some vegan shoes quick.

I have to say, while I was looking for vegan shoes to add to my cool vegan shoes pinterest board I was really struck by how few options there still are for vegan shoes. Some of the websites that are the top search results for vegan shoes are appaling! This probably leads people to believe that it is next to impossible not to buy leather and still be able to look presentable.

On the plus side, there are more than 54 awesome vegan shoes on my page all of which I would love to own. So can’t complain too much.

As I was searching for vegan shoes, I found that slightly contrary to what I say in my article “where to find cool vegan shoes online“,  I found the coolest vegan shoes on the following websites:

The Good Guys

Cri de Coeur

Zara (sort by price, lowest to highest, should under or around $60 may be vegan, but look at the materials)

Asos and Urban Outfitters (ditto what I said about Zara)

mooshoes

Let me know what you think of the page and if you have a pinterest page let me know because I would love to check it out. Thanks to everyone on my Facebook page (mynonleatherlife) who sent me theirs already.

Vintage Vegan Shoes on Etsy: A Short Post Alerting You to Their Existence

Vintage Pale pink Vegan Mary Janes shoes
 

(vegan pale pink mary janes on etsy, size 7)

Hello everyone,

 

I have been delving into a new source of vegan shoes. ETSY. I guess that even in the past shoes were being made with “all man made materials” etc. Therefore you can find vintage vegan shoes! Pretty cool.

I have to say, I am mad jealous of people with small size feet. There seem to be a lot of great options for small footed CInderella-esque women. Is it because our ancestors were smaller? I hear we are getting taller every year, and back in the cavemen days we were like 4 ft tall. How interesting.
Type in “vegan shoes” to etsy and see what gems you come up with. I will be adding this tip to my article “where to find cool vegan shoes online” which can be found at the top of the blog.

An Interview with Shannon Keith: 10 Questions for the Founder of The Beagle Freedom Project and the Creator of the Film “Behind the Mask”

I am really excited about this post.

Today, I have an interview for you with Shannon Keith.

I first learned about Shannon when I found out about The Beagle Freedom Project, an organization which legally negotiates with labs and rescues beagles used in lab experiments after the experiments on them are over. They rehabilitate the dogs and put them up for adoption. I found out about this group through a shared photo of theirs on facebook–WOW you need to check out their facebook page for adorable photos of beagles and fascinating info about what it’s like to do “freedom fighting”. Get this: you know why they use beagles to experiment on? Because they are so small and friendly by nature.

I became so fascinated by The Beagle Freedom Project that I had to know more. I looked up someone I could interview, and when I found the founder, her name rang a bell. I had previously watched a documentary on youtube which completely riveted me: Behind the Mask: The Story Of The People Who Risk Everything To Save Animals (I highly highly recommend it). In it, I remember seeing interviews with this beautiful charismatic animal rights lawyer who was actually the creator of the film, talking about how she had been surveilled by the FBI for her animal rights work. I was shocked. That film led me to read Free The Animals, which together with the documentary was the start of my realization of just how bad the reality is of how animals are treated in this world.

I was so excited when Shannon Keith agreed to do an interview. She is a true animal rights hero. Without further ado, here it is.

10 Questions for Shannon Keith

1. Could you say a little about yourself in your own words (whatever comes to mind) to start us off.

My life is dedicated to making this world a better place for animals; to abolish animal slavery and suffering.

2. I watched your documentary “Behind the Mask: The Story Of The People Who Risk Everything To Save Animals” on youtube, and was extremely riveted, provoked, and enlightened. How did you get the idea to make the film and did you have any experience making films when you began.

Thanks! I got the idea to make the film because I was getting extremely frustrated with the legal system. I had become an attorney to help animals, but it seemed everything was an uphill battle. Most judges are afraid to create new law or take any kind of chances so most of the cases were losing battles. Around that time, the word “terrorist” began being thrown around by media and spreading like wildfire in reference to animal and environmental rights activists. I was getting sick of it and thought the best and quickest way to dispel that was to make a film about it.

I had never made a film and had very little experience. I had only made some student films in high school and college, but I was ready to just jump in and do it – whatever it took.

rescued beagles feeling grass and freedom for the first time

3. How did you get the idea for The Beagle Freedom Project?

I have always been a very passionate and outspoken anti-vivisectionist. In fact, that specific issue has seemed to dominate most of my animal rights activism for the past fifteen years. In December of 2010, I got word that some beagle in a laboratory were being released and two of them still needed rescue. I jumped at the chance! I immediately said yes and took the journey to get these two beautiful boys. I never thought laboratories would actually let some of their animals go. I had tried years ago and had been consistently rejected, so I assumed it was not possible. Now that I knew it was possible, I started Beagle Freedom Project in an effort to be an activist/rescue resource and mission, wherein we would rescue animals from labs and educate the public about animal testing; our rescues essentially being our mascots.

4. As a lawyer, do you have to use your legal skills to negotiate with the labs to release the beagles, or do the labs truly want to find homes for the dogs?

Yes, I have to use my negotiation tools to get them to release. 99.9% of laboratories will not release. It is that minuscule percentage that will, and it is not really because of me – it’s because there is someone who works in the lab who legitimately cares and wants to see these animals released after testing. If not for them, we would never be able to rescue. They would all be killed.

5. Is it easy to find homes for the dogs or is there always a need for more adopters?

I wouldn’t say it’s easy, but we do have a lot of applications. The issue is that we are very strict when it comes to homes. These dogs have been through enough in their lives, so we want them not only to have EVERYTHING, but they also need a home with people who are extremely patient and willing to deal with, essentially, a puppy in a grown-up body. They have to teach them potty-training, their names, what good and bad means, what right and wrong means, how to walk on a leash, eat from a bowl, the list goes on. It’s not easy. Many people like the idea of adopting one of our rescues but do not truly understand what it takes to actually like with one of these dogs. And on top of all of that, adopters have to sign a contract that they will be cruelty-free. We offer to help with the adjustment to switch over to cruelty free products and we expect them to live up to that and to also educate their family, friends, colleagues, and the public about where their beagle came from and the fact that everyone should shop cruelty-free. This is sometimes a little much for people, but we don’t see the point in doing this unless we are also effecting change.

6. I imagine freeing these beagles from labs is an extremely wonderful feeling. What could be more meaningful than giving someone their freedom. Do you ever sense that the dogs understand what has happened to them and recognize that you have helped them?

It is a great experience. For me it’s a little different. I always find it bittersweet because I cannot get the thought of the animals that sis not make it out of my head, the fact that these dogs are so scared and we have no idea what they went through and they are terrified of freedom, but also how sweet that freedom is! There are times when I think they do know what just happened, but not usually. They are SO scared, that I think their heads are spinning. However, I have noticed that LATER, they realize it. Many of our adopted beagles have visited me a few weeks or months later and they remember me and give me love. That’s the greatest feeling because we often get these dogs into foster homes before they feel comfortable enough to give any love or understand love, so to see them later and get and give affection freely, is pretty rewarding.

7. One thing I’m always interested in is why certain people develop a love and feeling of understanding for animals while others don’t. Have you always loved animals and do you have any thoughts about what contributed to your love of animals and your passion for helping them?

I always wonder the same thing! I actually don’t really know how it started for me, but I have thought long and hard about it. All I can come up with is that I was an only child and I was alone a lot of the time. My best friends were the animals we had and I started rescuing at a very early age. I could always communicate with animals and felt most comfortable with them. I think my activism really started, though, when I was in college and learned animals were considered property in the law. Once I decided to change that law, my world opened up. Learning about such cruelty predominant in our society, it was something I simply could not ignore.

8. One shocking thing I learned in your documentary is how dangerous it can be to support animals publicly. Animal supporters are often treated like terrorists. Did you have any idea when you became an animal rights lawyer that you were entering into this kind of life and did it ever give you second thoughts?

In the beginning I had no idea, and that may be because it was before that terrorist word starting getting attributed to animal rights activists. However, I did quickly learn that we, those who cared about animals, were going to have to fight not only for their freedom, but for our own. I had been arrested at protests for simply exercising my freedom of speech for animals imprisoned inside laboratories, and could not understand why I had to sit in jail, wasting time and money, while these abusers were allowed to live gluttonous lives off the torture of innocent victims. This made me angrier and fueled me to be as active as I could be. As our movement became stronger in Los Angeles, I knew that there was a strong possibility that I, among others, was being “watched.” I began to give “Know Your Rights” legal workshops for activists and was very careful with what I presented publicly. When I did find out that I had been followed for years, my trash searched, my phones traced, etc., I was actually in a little bit of shock. Knowing it’s a possibility is very different than reality. Reading affidavits by FBI agents about me and my activism made my skin crawl. I wont lie. At times I was scared. But, the more I thought about it, the more I realized I have nothing to hide and nothing to fear because I am only doing what’s right. If not for the brave suffragettes I would not be here today as a female attorney fighting for animals. I know the only way to effect change is to take a stand; a stand that sometimes can be scary because we will always be up against evil when we are doing what is right.

9. Do you ever find it hard to enjoy your job knowing what you know about animals in labs or is it an easy job to love knowing how much of a difference you are making.

Every day is a struggle. Every day has its ups and downs but I would not change it for anything. I don’t think of what I do in terms of enjoying or not enjoying my job – it’s just something I have to do.

10. Do you have any ideas for how regular people like myself can help animals in labs or animals in general. I’d love to know your thoughts!

Yes. Everyone is a “regular” person. I’m a regular person, too, and I was just a college teen on my own when I made it my choice to change the lives of animals. Anyone can do it, but it takes perseverance and dedication. I would say that you need to find your niche. What do you like and what are you good at? This can easily turn into a way to help animals. Many times people do not realize the impact they can make with their skill set. The most important thing is to do something. Anything. Make that change happen. If you wait for it to happen on it’s own, you’ll be waiting a very long time.

Thank you so much, Shannon, for this awesome interview.

My Non Leather Life T-Shirts and Visions of a Vegan Lifestyle Brand

mynonloeatherlife

A dream I have is to have my own vegan lifestyle brand. A la Martha Stewart.

Of course, everything would be animal cruelty free. There would be no leather, wool, suede, rich calfskin linings, fur trimmings etc. Everything would be fake.

One thing I love is the aesthetics of different companies. Some companies want to be all high fashion, and others are inspired by things like old movies.

Some companies are loud and proudly vegan, preferring to shout the truth about what is happening to animals from the rooftops (OlsenHaus comes to mind). Others prefer to simply present a non leather option with a more subtle animal rights message (Good Guys Don’t Wear Leather comes to mind).

What would my imagined company do? I think I would try to make a brand centered around the fabulous lifestyle of the most well equipped vegan ever–by that I mean, a vegan who never needs to hunt on the internet for cool shoes and what not. Oh no, she has it all already. She has every non leather item you could ever want.

What kind of girl is she? She is a very old fashioned, romantic soul. She lives alone, or perhaps she is married, or perhaps she has several BEAUX, who bring her fresh flowers.

She has a vintage car, and she lives on a farm, a vegan farm though. Maybe this farm grows sprouts or micro greens. She has a big greenhouse full of tropical plants which she collects on fabulous plant hunting and preservation vacations. She has a lavish bed full of DOWN-FREE comforters and pillows. A pair of tan non leather driving gloves lies by her bed side table.

She has a closet of non leather shoes. She has a cool fake leather jacket that looks like she found it in a thrift store. She has faux leather pants for when she needs to impress say, Prince.

She has hats, many hats–but with no wool in them. She has floral couches, with no leather trim. Even her car–the seats are upholstered with faux blue leather.

She likes to fashion herself after a gibson girl, lucy honeychurch from a Room With a View,

a pre-raphelite painting. She wears a golden circlet and flowers clipped to all her shoes.

She LIVES…MY NON LEATHER LIFE.

A little fantasy for today.

Oh, and I made t-shirts!! Comment below if you would like to acquire one.

A Fringed Vegan Non Leather Jacket

I saw this vegan fringed leather jacket on lulus. Very cool.

It reminds me of a scene etched into my mind–The Who from the Woodstock Documentary. Rock god, much?

I think I’ll still wait for a vegan jacket that is fake suede, tan and fringed like Roger Daltrey’s. But this black one is really cool too.

A Patriotic Shoe for Vegans: Jelly Sandals

I have a great  tip for y’all on some hot new kicks that have recently dropped.

Jellies.

I vividly remember having tiny jellies embedded with mysterious sparkles when I was about 3-4.

The more things change the more they stay the same.

You know, that french proverb has got me thinking. I think Jellies can be seen as a kind of patriotic shoe for vegans and vegetarians. Since they are 100% rubber, they say I Wear No Leather in a way fake leather shoes cannot.

It reminds me of the odd attire people wore during the french revolution. Was it red shirts? red caps? Sans Culottes?

Tell me in the comments.

And now.

I give you …..

http://www.stylecompare.co.uk/images/products/2/topshop/nina-heeled-jelly-sandals-4694228-lrg.jpg

THIS!

http://28.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m32gpkVtpE1r4hk4go1_500.jpg

THIS! Continue reading

Spring Roundup: Cool Vegan Shoes around the Web for Spring, 2012

Continuing with my spring shoes round up post!

And Happy Spring…

As always there are tons of vegan shoes at forever21, like these cool polka dot ones.

2. If you want to be the height of fashion, go to Nastygal.com. They have some cool vegan shoes (remember the cheaper ones around $60 and under may be vegan…check the materials)

I love these floral things, but I already have a very similar pair.

Rosie Platform Wedge

and these are really cool too. I love these black strappy shoes.

Bound Platform Wedge - Black Bound Platform Wedge - Black

3. Over at American Eagle, they have these cool vegan jesus sandals:

AEO Cross Strap Sandal - Buy One Get One 50% Off

in classic brown, and white? Hmm…maybe so….

AEO Cross Strap Sandal - Buy One Get One 50% Off

And these vegan gladiators:

Sam Edelman for AEO Gladiator - Buy One Get One 50% Off

5. Over at MaraisUSA they have released their Spring shoes, and these oxfords are really pretty, and unintentionally vegan.

OK so. Those are cool, right?
Have you seen or heard of any other cool vegan shoes around the web that I should know about. Please enlighten me in the comment sections.
Hope you enjoyed,
V-toria