
Hope for the Animals Vegan is a Boycott with Janet O-Shea
Aug 16, 2025
Janet O'Shea, an academic and activist from UCLA, delves into the debates surrounding veganism as a form of boycott. She critiques the notion that going vegan is ineffective, highlighting how individual actions can create social change. Drawing parallels with Gandhi’s Khadi movement, she emphasizes the historical significance of grassroots efforts. Janet also discusses the environmental impact of animal agriculture and the importance of positioning veganism within the broader framework of social justice, urging for collective action to challenge systemic issues.
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Panel Pushback Sparked The Episode
- Hope Bohanec recounts a Q&A where an environmentalist dismissed going vegan as ineffective and pushed only legislative work.
- She responded that we need both individual change and systemic campaigns because they reinforce each other.
Veganism Is An Upstream Boycott
- Janet O'Shea argues veganism is an upstream boycott that targets production, not a downstream fix like recycling.
- Veganism applies economic pressure and directly challenges a leading driver of environmental harm.
Industry Models Use Rigged Assumptions
- Meat-industry models often assume absurd outcomes like burning surplus feed and needing more synthetic fertilizer.
- Those assumptions rig results and ignore alternatives like composting, veganic agriculture, or reduced production.




