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Lifestyle the vegan way

Australian fashion industry in search of a new more comprehensive ethical marquee

Here is the original article and here is my rant:

Australia’s textile, clothing and footwear industry is working on an ethical marquee to distinguish fashion products. Products that are made without resorting to sweatshops labour, polluting chemicals and that should take into account animal welfare. We all know the length certain companies will go to market themselves as “ethical champions” along the line of “organic-eco-bio-fair trade-ethically produced products”: buy me, buy me buy me I am good for you and the environment! People simply will buy such branded items and will feel better thinking they have helped children in Africa, the environment and have also contributed to improve working condition in some obscure country of South America. It’s a fact people are resort to shopping for instant gratification as a way to fight stress in modern life. And it’s a fact that environmental and animal exploitation issues are growing concerns among consumers. Put the two together and you find the most attractive marketing device ever, the one that suits both sides of the economic world: the producer and the consumer. One spends without feeling guilty, the other gains and both feel happy. Far from saying that the whole bio and organic market is a marketing device to attract consumers, we also need to acknowledge that in many circumstances it has become simply a strategy to promote products that ultimately have little to do with this philosophy: what’s the consequence of my “bio mango” organically grown in Brasil, transported unripe all the way to Belgium? Still people will buy tasteless organic mangoes grown in far distance lands without thinking of the real environmental impact. People either buy or think, they are mostly unable to do both at the same time, so someone is cunningly reducing the gap between thought and wallet presenting products of the “I care” fashion.

The real issues for Australia’s textile, clothing and footwear industry is animal rights or more appropriately animal welfare in this case. When it come to include animals rights in the ethical standards there is a tendency to neglect some of the moral and ethical implications and not to remain faithful to what real ethics should be about. The big question is: “Shall we include animal welfare issue into this new Australian branding proposal or shall we leave it out?” This issue is currently causing a big problem in the Australian working group as it engaged in defining the boundaries of what is ethical and what is not. Can ethics move beyond superficial marketing strategy into real ethical concerns toward animals rights to have a life devoid of torture and suffering? We will see what Australia, the first nation to tackle such issue will have to say.

The biggest problems are caused by two materials that have always been extra popular at catwalk shows around the world: leather and wool, “the” fashion materials par excellence. Can we really consider them ethical or do we have to forget about the reality of their production and see economic interests as the driving force for our ethical concern? If you ask me you should by now have a pretty good guess at what my answer is. When it comes to the “real world” though, the world out there, so much entangles in animal exploitation the answer is much less straight and simple than mine. These two products still make fashion (unfortunately!) and are directly linked to huge economic interests not only in Australia but the world over.

Is leather simply a by-product of meat consumption, a “given” in our carnist culture or it is incompatible with ethical concerns that deal with animal suffering and exploitation? As for wool, can it really be labelled an ethical product when muesing is still so widely adopted in Australia? For the unaware muesing consists in surgically removing strips of skin bearing wool from the sheep’s buttocks to reduce the incidence of flystrike (myiasis) on Merino sheep in regions where flystrike is common. And how do we go about the fact that so much work is centred around animal exploitation? Which concerns are “more ethically urgent”: animal or social? These issues are still open for debate and I doubt they will be dealt with in a manner in which ethics will conceived in a format free from economical interests.

I am very curious to see how the promotion of this new marquee will proceed because it will reveal an interesting aspect of human nature: the capacity to filter down ethical concerns when too many economical interests are at stake.

Filed under: Australia, Australian ethical fashion marquee, leather, wool

HEMA goes eco

For those of you living in Belgium or in the Netherlands, it’s worth knowing that HEMA has a range of organic products called Naturally HEMA made according to organic and fair trade standards: you’ll see the organic cotton, organic process, bamboo,  and Fair Trade certificate labels on the packages. It’s mostly underwear and it’s definitely worth having them at these prices. Cick here to refresh your memory on the benefits of organic cotton for the environment.

Naturally HEMA

Naturally HEMA

So next time you pop in at an HEMA shop, do look for the organic and Fair Trade labels.
Good move HEMA: we like when mainstream shops become sensitive to environmentally friendly standards. Good start.

Filed under: bamboo, Fair Trade, HEMA, organic cotton, underwear

Crudo Café + A Vegan Restaurant in Switzerland

* Crudo Café

Saturday night I went to my first raw food event organized by Crudo Café, part of Eva, the Flemish Vegetarian and Vegan society. It was my first time at a gourmet raw dinner and I have to say it was mind blowing! I was served entrées, 3 soups: a shiitake mushrooms soup, a Thai carrot soup (get me the recipe now because my creamiest carrot soup has never felt this velvety !) and a paprika and mint soup; Pad Thai entirely made of vegetables; mushroom and broccoli curry and a wonderful coconut and walnuts dessert. The evening was very pleasant, I went there on my own and I had the pleasure to share the table with 4 other people. We were all so pleased with the food presented to us that we could not believe raw vegetables could be so malleable.

As the organizers Stefan Lemoine and Jan De Ceuleneer rightly explain: “we are alienated from our food and its origins and addicted to food that undermines our health (and the planet). With Café Crudo our aim is to combat both of these points. Raw food is a valuable addition to our current diet which is too full of meat, fats and sugars.”. It was a total 10/10 for me and easily the most delicious meal I have ever had in Belgium so far.

Theevent is organized (regularly I hope) at restaurants around Belgium and it aims to promote vegan, healthy ways of eating as part of the Eva philosophy about ethical eating. All preconceptions about raw food were crushed on the spot by the beautiful and delicious dishes served on the night. Well done Crudo! Now, when’s the next one because I so want to come back!

mushroom and broccoli curry

mushroom and broccoli curry

coconut and walnuts cake

coconut and walnuts cake

* Swiss Vegan Hotel

Yup, you’ve heard t right, a vegan hotel in cheeseland! Pretty amazing considering the setting! Well done Swiss Vegan Hotel! One reason to go to Swiss I guess.

Swiss Vegan Hotel

Swiss Vegan Hotel

Filed under: Eva, raw vegan, Swiss Vegan Hotel

Copy and Clone video

Clever video about the meat industry:I haven’t found a way to embed video from Vimeo yet, so please click on the links.

Copy and clone from louis rigaud on Vimeo.

Filed under: activism, video

Itadaki Zen London, the first organic Japanese vegan restaurant in Europe.

Itadaki Zen London is marketed as the first Japanese Vegan Organic Restaurant in Europe. Itadaki means ‘to take the food life’ and zen means ‘to fix, to mend’. Amazingly, the restaurant’s aim is to reach a state in which the restaurant can self-produce its own vegetables following farming methods which are themselves sustainable for the wider ecosystem. Check the menu and book a flight to London, when Eyjafjallajokull allows you.

Itadaki zen is at 139, King’s Cross, London Tel: 02072783573. An experience not to miss on your next visit to Europe’s vegan capital.

Itadaki Zen

Itadaki Zen

Filed under: Eyjafjallajokull volcano, Japanese restaurant, London, vegan restaurants

Vogue Award for Ethical Fashion + Edun + People Tree

Vogue has come out with 10 brands you should keep on your fashion agenda if, like us you care about the environment. Not al of these are vegan, but hey, it’s a step in the right direction to push awareness in the fashion world who is generally not very coherent when it comes to respecting the environment and animals’ suffering.

Edun is a companys et up by Bono and Ali Hewson in 2005. EDUN’s mission is to help build Africa as a viable source of production for fashion. All their products are Fair Trade, 100% organic cotton. On the expensive side but you’re sure all the money goes to a good cause: development of a community-based work and awareness for environmental issues in Africa. A new men’s line s set to hit the shelves in May. In the meantime you can browse their bargain section where you’ll find these interesting t-shirts.

Edun

Edun

People Tree is another interesting British company heavily based on Fair Trade, they actively support 50 Fair Trade producer groups, in 15 developing countries, provide training to artisans and their organisations so they can improve their skills, and strengthen their businesses and social impact.In this case though, their womenswear is more interesting than their menswear. Watch out every single item because not everything is vegan as there is some wool in their creations.

The most interesting and daring designer though has to be Christopher Raeburn whose creations are made out of recycled parachute textiles.

Christopher Raeburn

Christopher Raeburn

More on the issue of what is Ethical Fashion in the posts. It seems as if the fashion industry is churning out “eco, organic, bio” items which have little to do with the real intention behind these labels. My rants will follow.

Filed under: Christopher Raeburn, eco-fashion, Edun, People Tree, Vogue Award for Sustainable Fashion

Settling the Soy Controversy by Neal Barnard, M.D.

Here is an article by doc Neal Barnard, M.D. president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. The original was posted on the Huffington Post on the 24th Feb:

Settling The Soy Controversy

by Neal Barnard, M.D.

Soy products are remarkably versatile. Manufacturers have found ways to turn them into soymilk, veggie burgers, hot dogs, ice cream, yogurt–you name it. One day, they’ll probably turn soy into snow tires.

Because soy products are so widely consumed, some people have raised the question as to whether they are safe. The biggest question mark was whether they affect the risk of breast cancer and, for women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer, whether they would help or harm their chances for survival.

After years of research, science is weighing in. Here is what the studies show:

Cancer Prevention and Survival

Women who include soy products in their routines are less likely to develop breast cancer, compared with other women. In January 2008, researchers at the University of Southern California found that women averaging one cup of soymilk or about one-half cup of tofu daily have about a 30 percent less risk of developing breast cancer, compared with women who have little or no soy products in their diets (1). However, to be effective, the soy consumption may have to occur early in life, as breast tissue is forming during adolescence (2-3).

What about women who have already been diagnosed with breast cancer? A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2009 shows that soy products may reduce the risk of recurrence (4). In a group of 5,042 women previously diagnosed with breast cancer who were participating in the Shanghai Breast Cancer Survival Study over a four-year period, those who regularly consumed soy products, such as soymilk, tofu, or edamame, had a 32 percent lower risk of recurrence and a 29 percent decreased risk of death, compared with women who consumed little or no soy. An accompanying editorial suggested that inconsistencies in prior research may be attributable to the comparatively low soy consumption in the United States, making beneficial effects harder to identify (5).

Why should soy products reduce cancer risk? Most research has zeroed in on phytoestrogens found in soybeans (phyto means “plant”). These compounds are in some ways similar to the estrogens (female sex hormones) in a woman’s bloodstream, but are much weaker. Some have suggested that phytoestrogens attach to the estrogen receptors in a woman’s body, blocking her natural estrogens from being able to attach and stopping estrogen’s cancer-inducing effects.

By analogy, the estrogens in a woman’s body are like jumbo jets that have landed at an airport. Phytoestrogens are like small private planes that are occupying the Jetways, blocking the jumbo jets from attaching. This explanation is probably overly simplistic, but it may serve to illustrate how soy’s weak hormonal compounds can have beneficial effects.

Fibroids

Soy products may reduce the risk of fibroids, knots of muscle tissue that form within the thin muscle layer that lies beneath the uterine lining. A study of Japanese women found that the more soy women ate, the less likely they were to need a hysterectomy, suggesting that fibroids were less frequent (6). In a study of women in Washington State, soy did not seem to help or hurt, perhaps because American women eat very little soy, compared with their Japanese counterparts (7). What did have a big effect in this study were lignans, a type of phytoestrogens found in flaxseed and whole grains. The women consuming the highest amounts of these foods has less than half the risk of fibroids, compared with the women who generally skipped these foods. So, again, phytoestrogens seem beneficial, countering the effects of a woman’s natural estrogens, although in this case the benefit comes from foods other than soy.

Soy and Male Hormones

How about men? Although compounds in soy products have been likened to very weak female hormones, they have no adverse effects on men and may actually help them prevent cancer. A meta-analysis to be published in Fertility and Sterility, based on more than 50 treatment groups, showed that neither soy foods nor isoflavone supplements from soy affect testosterone levels in men (8). An analysis of 14 studies, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed that increased intake of soy resulted in a 26 percent reduction in prostate cancer risk (9). Researchers found a 30 percent risk reduction with nonfermented soy products such as soy milk and tofu.

Thyroid Health

Clinical studies show that soy products do not cause hypothyroidism (10). However,
soy isoflavones may take up some of the iodine that the body would normally use to make thyroid hormone (11). The same is true of fiber supplements and some medications. In theory, then, people who consume soy might need slightly more iodine in their diets (iodine is found in many plant foods, and especially in seaweed and iodized salt.) Also, a note for people with hypothyroidism: Soy products may reduce the absorption of medicines used to treat the condition (10). People who use these medicines should check with their healthcare providers to see if their doses need to be adjusted.

Other Health Effects

Soy products appear to reduce low density lipoprotein (“bad”) cholesterol (12). They may also reduce the risk of osteoporosis-related hip fractures. In a study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, women who consumed at least one-fourth cup of tofu per day averaged a 30 percent reduction in fracture risk (13).

Protein: A Little Goes a Long Way

Many soy products are high in protein. Manufacturers have exploited this fact, packing isolated soy protein into shakes and turning it into meat substitutes. But some have raised the concern that pushing protein intake too high–from any source–might not be wise. The concern is that an overly high protein intake may boost the amount of insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) in the bloodstream (14), a phenomenon known to occur with cow’s milk (15). High IGF-I levels are linked to higher cancer risk. Some reassurance comes from the fact that soy intake is linked to lower, not higher, cancer risk, and simple soy products, such as tempeh, edamame, or soynuts, are unlikely to affect IGF-I levels, in any case.

In summary, evidence to date is reassuring. Soy products may reduce the risk of breast cancer and breast cancer recurrence. They do not appear to have adverse effects on male hormone function or on the thyroid gland, but may reduce the absorption of thyroid medications.

Having said that, soy products are certainly not essential. Many people who start a healthful vegan diet, as I and many other doctors recommend, seem to feel they must have soy products. But the fact is, a vegan diet can follow a Mediterranean tradition, focusing on vegetables, fruits, beans and pasta. Or it might follow a Latin American tradition of beans, rice, and corn tortillas. Soy products come from an Asian tradition with many healthful delights and the most enviable health statistics on record. So soy is handy, but it is certainly not essential. If you choose to include soy products in your routine, you’ll have science on your side.

References

1. Wu AH, Yu MC, Tseng CC, Pike MC. Epidemiology of soy exposures and breast cancer risk. Br J Cancer 2008;98:9-14.

2. Korde LA, Wu AH, Fears T, et al. Childhood soy intake and breast cancer risk in Asian American women. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2009;18:OF1-10.

3. Shu XO, Jin F, Dai Q, et al. Soyfood intake during adolescence and subsequent risk of breast cancer among Chinese women. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2001;10:483-8.

4. Shu XO, Zheng Y, Cai H, et al. Soy food intake and breast cancer survival. JAMA. 2009;302:2437-2443.

5. Ballard-Barbash R, Neuhouser ML. Challenges in design and interpretation of observational research on health behaviors and cancer survival. JAMA. 2009;302:2483-2484.

6. Nagata C, Takatsuka N, Kawakami N, Shimizu H. Soy product intake and premenopausal hysterectomy in a follow-up study of Japanese women. Eur J Clin Nutr 2001:55:773-7.

7. Atkinson C, Lampe JW, Scholes D, Chen C, Wahala K, Schwartz SM. Lignan and isoflavone excretion in relation to uterine fibroids: a case-control study of young to middle-age women in the United States. Am J Clin Nutr 2006:84:587-93.

8. Hamilton-Reeves JM, Vazquez G, Duval SJ, Phipps WR, Kurzer MS, Messina MJ. Clinical studies show no effects of soy protein or isoflavones on reproductive hormones in men: results of a meta-analysis. Fertil Steril. June 11, 2009. DOI:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2009.04.038.

9. Yan L, Spitznagel EL. Soy consumption and prostate cancer risk in men: a revisit of a meta-analysis. Am J Clin Nutr. 2009;89:1155-1163.

10. Messina M, Redmond G. Effects of soy protein and soybean isoflavones on thyroid function in healthy adults and hypothyroid patients: a review of the relevant literature. Thyroid 2006;16:249-58.

11. Divi RL, Chang HC, Doerge DR. Anti-thyroid isoflavones from soybean: isolation, characterization, and mechanisms of action. Biochem Pharmacol 1997;54:1087-96.

12. Pipe EA, Gobert CP, Capes SE, Darlington GA, Lampe JW, Duncan AM. Soy protein reduces serum LDL cholesterol and the LDL cholesterol:HDL cholesterol and apolipprotein B:apolipprotein A-1 ratios in adults with type 2 diabetes. J Nutr. 2009;139:1700-1706.

13. Koh WP, Wu AH, Wang R, et al. Gender-specific associations between soy and risk of hip fracture in the Singapore Chinese Health Study. Am J Epidemiol. 2009;170:901-909.

14. Dewell A, Weidner G, Sumner MD, et al. Relationship of dietary protein and soy isoflavones to serum IGF-1 and IGF binding proteins in the Prostate Cancer Lifestyle Trial. Nutr Cancer 2007;58:35-42.

15. Heaney RP, McCarron DA, Dawson-Hughes B, et al. Dietary changes favorably affect bone remodeling in older adults. J Am Dietetic Asso 1999;99:1228-33.

Filed under: health concerns, Neal Barnard, soy controversy

Urtekram, veganism the Danish way

Urtekram is a new line of Danish vegan toiletries easy to find in Europe, particularly here in Belgium and Holland. The company subscribe to ECEA, European Coalition to End Animal Experimentation, Fair Trade standards and guarantees organic ingredients. Urtekram also has a particular line called No Perfume concerned with people’s allergies and asthmatic reactions (a big burden for a lot of people nowadays). Good stuff as I have tried and tested myself.They also produce a line of food and cleaning products .

Urtekam

Urtekram

Filed under: European Coalition to End Animal Experimentation, no animal testing, toiletries, vegan cleaning products

Jònsi goes solo + Good Heart raw recipes

Jònsi of Sigur Ros is out with a solo album titled Go: magical (and theatrical) atmospheres from Iceland, one of the coldest and coolest land on earth. I have always loved the artistic mind behind Sigur Ros because of his ability to build magical musical landscapes, no doubt inspired by the harshness and openness of the Icelandic countryside. The upcoming concert too promises to draw you straight into Jònsi’s imaginary world with a set of special effects and animations: there is an interesting video interview with the production company behind this concerts, go and have a look. It seems like something not to miss and I am definitely going to travel in order not to miss it! Here is the first video form the Go album.

– Jònsi and his boyfriend Alex also have a website JonsiandAlex in which apart from their music project Riceboy Sleeps (another good album) they share a raw foods recipe book titled Good Heart. You can download it or you can read it online: it’s visually a very nice pdf full of healthy and yummy recipes the due have collected loving together. Cool work guys!

We love vegan artists, we adore vegan raw artists like Jònsi and Alex, especially when they come bounded in such a creative couple. Following is Happiness, a track from their Riceboy Sleeps.

Both Jònsi’s own site and Jònsi & Alex sites are full of amazing visuals, something the due obviously take great care of. Jònsi and Alex [*sigh*] such an amazing lovestory.

Filed under: Jònsi, music, raw vegan, vegan cooking

Monkee Genes goes pop

Skinny jeans are back in fashion and Monkee Genes is producing them according to great environmental and anti sweatshop standards. They have new lines certified by the Organic Standard Soil Association. Think design with a retro twist in pop art colours (very very this season!).  Organic Standard Soil Association guarantees that factory working standards are considered as important as the environmental factors. This means each and  every stage of the process is carefully monitored: from cotton  growth and picking down to the content of the button and label. The Monkees experiment with bamboo denim too: check out their website and snatch a pair or two because at these prices stocks will not last long. Watch out for the interchangeable waistband system, banana waist buttons and the contrast stitching on some models. Very cool indeed.

Monkee Genes new lines

Monkee Genes new lines

Now, who’s going to help me getting into a pair of skinny jeans?

Filed under: antispecism, Monkee Genes, Organc Standard Soil Association, organic cotton, skinny jeans, , ,