World’s largest vegan grocery store

HUGE news coming out of Australia today.

I previously posted about The Cruelty Free Shop, an Australian grocery store chain with outlets in Brisbane, Sydney, Canberra and Melbourne as well as online shopping. You can see that post here.

The big development today is that the Melbourne store has relocated to a site which the owner claims makes it the largest vegan grocery store on the planet.

The Cruelty Free Shop website says of the launch:

We’re pleased to announce that we are opening the biggest vegan shop in the world in Melbourne on Wednesday 12 April 2017.

Our new store will have more than 3500 different vegan products with all sorts of foods including 50+ vegan cheeses, as well as fashion, cosmetics, coffee, cake, hot pies, fruit & veg, and more.

From humble beginnings, the Cruelty Free Shop started as an online store based out of Jessica Bailey’s spare room in Sydney. We now have five stores across Australia and the widest range of vegan products in the country.

Our Melbourne store has also grown over the years and it’s now bursting at the steams at its current location so we are moving it around the corner to 124 Johnston Street, Fitzroy (just a five minute walk or two minute drive from the current location).

Be sure to visit our new store to check out the 1000+ amazing new items we’ll have in stock, grab a coffee, view the Edgar’s Mission photo gallery and stock up on all the very best vegan products from local, Australian and international businesses. Every Saturday we also have free food tastings of delicious new products and old favourites.

Thank you to all our wonderful customers who have made this possible and supported us over the past 15 years.

Wow.

More than 3,500 products certainly puts this up their as the largest vegan store of which I know.

You should follow Cruelty Free Shop on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter no matter where you live in the world and take the time to wish them continued success.

If you are in Australia and would like to know the exact location of the new giant shop, click here to get the info via Google Maps.

Food is not porn

Yesterday I wrote a blog post that got a HUGE amount of attention.

I posted about a new vegan pop-up cake business set to launch in east London called Vegan Sweet Porn. The photos were beyond impressive, almost to the point of looking too good to be true.

Well, guess what? It was too good to be true. It was pointed out to me by several readers that not only did the photos not belong to the business that sent them to me, the food in the photos was not even vegan.

This is certainly the worst possible start for a vegan food business. DO NOT send non-vegan food photos to a vegan blog, especially if you have stolen the photos from someone else. It is the wrong thing to do on multiple levels. People spend countless hours baking and photographing food. It is immensely unethical to use these photos without permission in an attempt to further your own business.

In addition, I was contacted by another reader named Yellow Dot Vegan who wanted to share some thoughts about how Vegan Sweet Porn uses pornography and sexualisation of food as a marketing tool.

I have been considering a blog post about the hyper-sexualisation of vegan food and the use of #veganfoodporn for a while now, but I’m more than happy to share this space with a reader who has expressed similar concerns.

You can can read Yellow Dot Vegan’s concerns and observations right now:

I have been thinking a lot over the past few days about how veganism and feminism sit alongside each other.

The East London pop-up SweetVeganPorn has caused quite a storm by using sexualised language to describe food (and using uncredited food photos from other blogs for promotion). When it was pointed out, the owner of the business was unwilling to see how the use of the term ‘porn’ and the sexualisation of food with comments like ‘please don’t go on like you ain’t just came in your pants’ would be alienating to many woman.

A number of women reached out to the owner via social media to explain how they were deeply uncomfortable with pornography terminology being used to sell food and that a business called VeganSweetPorn (no matter if the food is plant based) feels hostile to them. The response from the business owner was a lack of understanding, frustration, anger, plus a clear statement that ‘sex sells’.

Yes, sex does sell and there is no denying that many businesses have exploited women to sell their products.

The online argument continued with the business owner expressing the opinion that feminism isn’t relevant to veganism and therefore shouldn’t be used to critique a vegan business.

But veganism does align closely with feminism. It is about reducing the suffering of all animals (including females) and ensuring we fight against ill treatment and injustice.

Personally, I can’t understand how you can be a feminist and not be a vegan, but that is a matter for another time. Not all feminists agree on the damage that pornography does to women, but many do and there is a substantial amount of literature available that echoes this view. Regardless of the principles at play here, surely any business wanting to break into an industry of largely ‘ethical’ consumers needs to think carefully about the terminology they use to sell products? Even if they don’t care about being inclusive, they at least would want to appeal to the widest market possible.

Luckily, east London is awash with delicious vegan cake including two fantastic local vegan bakers tickling our taste buds without subjecting us to pornography terminology and the sexualisation of food. Tegan the Vegan & Heart of Cake provide us with treats on a weekly basis. You can find more details on Tegan on Facebook and Heart of Cake online and Instagram. Rest assured that ALL photos on these pages are of vegan food!

VBF-TWCover

My words after Orlando

I was recently asked by VegNews editorial assistant Richard Bowie to give my views on the horrifying mass shooting in Orlando as both a vegan and a member of the LGBTQ community.

My words were edited down in order for them to fit into an article sharing space with several other voices, so I felt I would like to share my thoughts in full with you here.

You can view the edited versions on VegNews here.

My original response is below.

VegNews: What was your initial reaction as soon as you heard the news? What have you been feeling since then?

FGV: My first reaction to news of the murder of dozens of LGBTQ people and their allies in Pulse nightclub was a total non-reaction. I didn’t blink.

News of mass shootings out of the USA are so commonplace as to now be almost expected. Something so shocking occurring with unrelenting repetition creates a space for the mind to retreat into a state of denial.

But of course the numbness wore off to be replaced with sadness, anger and exasperation.

I am beyond distressed that a space created for LGBTQ people was the site of mass murder. LGBTQ spaces exist for very real and critical reasons. Society marginalises queer citizens via individual acts of aggression, media misrepresentations, institutionalised homophobia and Government legislation and laws. We need our safe spaces to socialise, organise, feel valued and survive.

Many of the patrons of Pulse nightclub needed this space on many levels more than their non-Latin@ comrades would. A queer person of colour in the USA might tell you their reality is the struggle against all of the above in addition to racism, gay white cis-male privilege, colonialism, racial profiling, wealth disparity, bigotry within the LGBTQ community and an overwhelmingly-racist mainstream political discourse designed to demonise their very existence.

My initial numbness has morphed into outrage at how these oppressions are being ignored in the reporting of the tragedy. Media channels, organisations and Government agencies working relentlessly to silence and erase queer Latin@ people are continuing to do so in this moment of horror and tragedy. Politicians ask for prayers for a community they have tirelessly legislated against on multiple levels.

VegNews: What do you say to those who don’t see a connection between the LGBTQ community and vegans/veganism?

FGV: To anyone not able to see the connection between the oppression of LGBTQ people and the oppression of non-human animals, I would say look a little harder.

There are far-reaching forces that work to shape multiple oppressions across the USA and the entire planet. Just as Professor Kimberlé W. Crenshaw details how the same forces enable both racism and sexism to oppress women of colour, we can see dominate narratives working to perpetuate both the oppression of LGBTQ people and the industrialised control and destruction of farm animals.

White male, heteronormative, conservative power structures work to promote an idealised, damaging and tightly-prescriptive projection of the human experience that also indoctrinates citizens to view animals as dispensable products existing solely for the purpose of consumption.

Capitalism doesn’t need LGBTQ people so we are violated, marginalised and openly discriminated against. Capitalism does need swathes of nameless food animals, leading to unfathomable horrors and mass suffering. Both LGBTQ people and non-human animals are subjected to control, degradation and suffering as a direct result of white male-powered, toxic capitalism.

VegNews: As someone from the United Kingdom and as a well-versed international traveller, do you have any insight into why this type of (gun) violence happens so often in America as opposed to other parts of the world?

FGV: Why do more mass shootings happen in the USA in comparison to other parts of the world? Even pro-gun people know the answer to this question and the answer is the easy access to high-powered assault weapons.

I was a younger person in Australia when a man killed 35 people while injuring a further 23 in Port Arthur, Tasmania in 1996. The killer used a semi-automatic rifle.

The response from the Australian Government was swift and decisive in the form of the National Firearms Programme Implementation Act 1996. This restricted the private ownership of high capacity semi-automatic rifles, semi-automatic shotguns and pump-action shotguns.

Of course there has been gun crime in Australia across the two decades since the Port Arthur massacre, but very few incidents that can be referred to as mass shootings. In contrast, mass shootings occur close to every two weeks in the USA.

There is no denying that the removal of semi-automatic weapons from public spaces drastically reduces the number of fatalities related to gun violence.

I also believe the USA has shamefully neglected its duties to fund and support mental health initiatives, in turn contributing to the alienation of at-risk citizens. Vulnerable people are being left to fend for themselves within a culture that glorifies gun ownership and perpetuates toxic masculinity across all levels of society. It is a recipe for disaster that is not about to explode, rather it is already tearing apart the population with alarming frequency.

VegNews: Anything else you want to say? To the LGBTQ community? To Americans in general?

FGV: I would like to reiterate what many LGBTQ people are saying. We need to actively resist the proliferation of, and obscenely-easy access to, assault weapons across the USA. We need to see the connection between gun worship and anti-queer sentiment. The hegemonic forces that power gun fanaticism are the very same that fuel racism, homophobia, transphobia, misogyny and hate crime.

When we stand up against money-obsessed gun lobbyists, we are not simply saying we don’t want to be shot in the street, cinema, place of worship, school or club. We are also announcing our intent to topple the inequitable dominant power structures that want to destroy and control LGBTQ people legally, economically and emotionally. We can and should fight these multiple oppressions simultaneously.

Pax Ahimsa Gethen has published their full response here.

Saryta Rodriguez has published her full response here.

Extra note: I have used Latin@ as a non-gendered device to refer to multiple people without relying on the gendered words Latino and Latina. This was a term explained to me by friends in Mexico. It is also common for people wishing to be inclusive to use the term LatinX.

Walk on with hope in your heart

My passion for veganism and my love of Morrissey often intersect, but not usually in such a meaningful manner as they did a few weeks ago.

When I heard world wide web whispers of a vegan fair taking place in the Midlands town of Wolverhampton, I went through my usual Morrissey tragic routine of recalling the significance this UK city holds for lovers of the Mancunian legend. As any Morrissey fanatic worth their weight in NME-related litigation would know, over 20 years ago the artist bestowed the honour of his first solo gig upon Wolverhampton. The Smiths had recently been consigned to pop history and Morrissey wanted to show the world he was ready to tread the boards once again.

The fact that a vegan fair was taking place in this historically-significant (for Moz fans) city was almost enough to get me there. What I found out next sealed the deal and got me leaving the south and travelling north (no horses were harmed).

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I guess this sound is soothing

If you visit this blog often, you could be forgiven for thinking my days are stuffed solid with cruelty-free food and alcoholic beverages. It is true I like to overeat and I do enjoy a tipple, but I also make a lot of room in my FGV world for music. If a band or singer I appreciate is also known for promoting the welfare of non-human animals, all of my worlds collide.

Adalita and PETA against fur

Many of the entertainers I admire care for non-humans. My life-long main obsession, Morrissey, has raised the profile of vegetarianism to untold heights. Thanks to Meat is Murder, I believe he is as well known for his animal-friendly politics as he is for his contributions to music. Nellie McKay has integrated her love and respect for all creatures into complex, quirky and irresistible pop classics. The card sleeve for her 2008 release Pretty Little Head was even produced with the aid of soy ink.  And then there is Adalita.

Adalita Srsen is a phenomenally- charismatic and talented singer/songwriter who has emerged from Magic Dirt, one of the greatest alternative bands in Australian history, to forge a stomping solo career. After

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