Elephant rides are being banned in places like Indonesia. That’s progress. But removing the ride doesn’t remove the system. Zoos, safari parks, and wildlife attractions still rely on turning living individuals into tourist experiences.
@herbivoreclub
All things #AnimalRights since 2016. We exist to end exploitation & achieve total liberation, a world where "treating someone like an animal" is a GOOD THING. Check out: www.herbivore.club Support at: https://ko-fi.com/herbivore
Elephant rides are being banned in places like Indonesia. That’s progress. But removing the ride doesn’t remove the system. Zoos, safari parks, and wildlife attractions still rely on turning living individuals into tourist experiences.
The image features a large orca (killer whale) visible through the glass of an aquarium tank, with silhouettes of people in the foreground observing it. A quote overlays the image: "No aquarium, no tank in a marine land, however spacious it may be, can begin to duplicate the conditions of the sea. -Jacques-Yves Cousteau". The logo for PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) is in the top right corner, and there's a small attribution to © Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals in the bottom left corner.
#DolphinAwarenessMonth
There’s no excuse to use, exploit, torment and kill other animals. #EndSpeciesism
🎬 menkay
F*CK Kamogawa
F*CK Loro Parque
F*CK Marineland
F*CK Mundo Marino
F*CK Nagoya
F*CK Ocean Kingdom
F*CK Ocean World
F*CK Seaquarium
AND
F*CK SeaWorld
F*CK DOLPHIN PRISONS! 🐬
#DolphinAwarenessMonth
This is how orcas live at #SeaWorld – unmotivated and defeated, languishing in tiny tanks, far far away from their ocean homes. #EmptyTheTanks
#DolphinAwarenessMonth
Angora rabbits have been selectively bred to produce unnaturally thick, fluffy coats. This isn’t how rabbits evolved , this is how humans made them 🐇
"Not everyone can follow a plant-based diet. Some people live in third-world countries and food deserts!"
- Sent from iPhone
- Located in London
- Posted from their local Costa
- Is sitting across the street from two supermarkets
When meat-eaters encounter vegans, they transform into lions! 🦁
Such a fascinating phenomenon 😂
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Animals are somebody
Guy does perfect impression of how a new vegan feels.
🎥 Full Video: @ces._r / @kimari1111
Via: @vswolf2 @elwoodsorganicdog
Speciesism 101
#AnimalLovers #Caturday #DogsOfBluesky #CatsOfBluesky
#BirdWatchers #BirdPhotography
Same. I've dated non-vegans but if they don't change with the info it can't continue. My partner went vegan shortly after meeting me.
When someone rejects animal exploitation and their partner sees animals as food, the conflict isn’t culinary. It’s ethical. A new survey shows nearly half of UK vegans consider that divide a relationship dealbreaker.
A four-panel comic featuring a captive dolphin in a small pool, expressing her perspective on captivity. 1. In the first panel, she is drawn with clown makeup and a party hat. The text reads, **"I am not a clown."** 2. In the second panel, she is depicted as a mechanical toy with a wind-up key and a ball on her nose. The text reads, **"I am not a toy."** 3. In the third panel, she is wearing a pink bow while posing for a selfie with a human. The text reads, **"I am not a photo prop."** 4. In the final panel, she looks sad while gazing at another dolphin swimming freely in the ocean. The text reads, **"I am a sentient being that lost her family and freedom."** The comic, drawn in soft blues and greys, critiques the exploitation of dolphins in captivity for entertainment, showing how they are treated as objects rather than individuals.
Not here to be a clown.
Not here to be your toy.
Not here to be a photo prop.
She’s here to live freely, to thrive in the wild with her family. Instead, she’s trapped for human entertainment.
It’s time to stop treating sentient beings like objects.
#EmptyTheTanks
🎨 Just Comics
A four-panel comic featuring a captive dolphin in a small pool. 1. In the first panel, the dolphin looks up from the water with a sad expression. The text reads, **"My whole life has been here."** 2. The second panel shows the dolphin leaping out of the water, while a trainer stands on the edge holding a ball. The text reads, **"I have never felt the ocean."** 3. In the third panel, the dolphin is mid-jump, looking upward with determination. The text reads, **"If I could jump a little higher."** 4. The final panel reveals the dolphin’s perspective—just beyond the concrete walls of the enclosure, the vast ocean is visible under a bright sky. The text reads, **"I'd see the freedom of the world."** The comic, drawn in soft blues and greys, highlights the confinement of marine animals in captivity and their longing for the wild.
Freedom belongs to everyone, not just humans.
🎨 Just Comics
A digital illustration features a cartoon-like "ghost net" with a friendly face, resembling a ghost but made of fishing net material. The net is trapping a dolphin, which appears sad and struggling. The background is a soft blue, representing the ocean. Above the illustration, the text reads "GHOST NETS," and below, it states, "THE MOST DANGEROUS SOURCE OF OCEAN PLASTIC." The artist's credit, "Just Comics / Joan Chan," is written at the bottom.
Ghost nets are abandoned fishing gear floating in our oceans, trapping and killing countless marine animals. These invisible killers devastate wildlife and ecosystems. Do you support this or are you vegan?
🎨 Just Comics
A four-panel comic illustrates the impact of plastic pollution. In the first two panels, a child and an adult sit at a table playing with small plastic toys. The adult warns, "Never eat anything plastic!" The child asks, "What will happen if I do?" The adult replies, "Your stomach will hurt! You'll go to the hospital!" In the last two panels, the scene shifts underwater, where a mother dolphin and her calf swim among floating plastic debris. The mother dolphin repeats, "Never eat anything plastic!" The calf asks, "What will happen if I do?" The mother solemnly responds, "You'll starve and die painfully..." The comic highlights the devastating consequences of plastic pollution for marine life.
Ghost nets are abandoned fishing gear floating in our oceans, trapping and killing countless marine animals. These invisible killers devastate wildlife and ecosystems. Do you support this or are you vegan?
🎨 Just Comics
When someone rejects animal exploitation and their partner sees animals as food, the conflict isn’t culinary. It’s ethical. A new survey shows nearly half of UK vegans consider that divide a relationship dealbreaker.
Worried about resistance to ABX? Look who uses most of them ⬇️ #animalag #superbugs #zoonoticillnesses
Your tongue isn’t an ethical argument for using someone else’s body as you see fit.
This planet belongs to all life. Stop acting like we have the right to take it all.
I just scrubbed my bathroom with a vegan cleaning spray. This is the weirdest diet I've ever been on.
🚫 We need to stop saying "pork" - it's flesh 🐷
Animals are exploited on such a massive scale that they lose their individuality - reduced to numbers instead of lives.
Sales of medically important antibiotics for farmed animals jumped 16% in one year. More are used in animal farms than in humans.
The image is a thought-provoking illustration showing a group of orcas swimming freely in the ocean. In the center, a large orca is playfully interacting with a transparent bubble containing a tiny human. One of the orcas, possibly attempting to reassure another, has a speech bubble that says, "Don't worry. I'm sure he likes it." This image appears to reverse the roles commonly seen in marine parks, providing a critique of human practices by depicting a human in the type of enclosure typically used for marine animals.
If the tables were turned at SeaWorld...
A four-panel comic by *Just Comics / Joan Chan* depicts a dolphin in captivity, highlighting the misconception that its "smile" means happiness. Each panel shows the dolphin suffering while people misinterpret its facial expression. The first panel shows the dolphin performing with a ball, captioned: "When I'm held captive and forced to perform. People see me smiling." The second panel shows the dolphin in pain from loud sounds: "When the sounds hurt my sensitive hearing. People see me smiling." The third panel shows the dolphin looking up at a hand offering food: "When I'm being starved for obedience training. People see me smiling." The final panel shows the dolphin staring blankly: "When I have never experienced the ocean or had an ordinary dolphin life. People still see me smiling." The comic critiques marine captivity and the false perception of dolphin happiness.
They're not smiling 🐬
🎨 Just Comics
This is an imaginative illustration showing an orca leaping out of water. The body of water is contained within a fish bowl. Above the whale is a human figure, arms raised in what could be a gesture of triumph. Inside the glass, beneath the whale, are silhouettes of numerous dead orca.
What lies beneath SeaWorld's sea circus.
🎨 d_delphinidae
A comic illustration features a scientist in a white lab coat holding a clipboard while standing next to a pool where a dolphin is swimming. The scientist says, "Your brain is even bigger than ours." The dolphin responds, "Perhaps that's why we don't find imprisoning you & forcing you to do tricks 'entertaining.'" A schedule or chart is visible on the wall behind the scientist. The comic is signed by Dan Piraro and is part of Bizarro Comics.
#DolphinAwarenessMonth