Re: Statement from Morrissey: It isn't nice and you shouldn't do it - TTY, 22 May 20
To say it once more, I agreed with his statement on fois gras. I found it to be refreshingly to the point and, by the standards of his recent statements, relatively calm and focussed.
Morrissey's views on victims of terrorism are well known. I don't need to cover that ground again. He considers them to be useful to the advancement of his political views. A bit like the perpetrators, in fact.
No, please, lets cover that ground again, perpetrator. And, anyone, who stands for something, you included, tends to use whatever jolt may be in the news to get peoples' attention. But, as long as animals are treated this way lawfully, so will be humans. Non-empathic numbness and denial rule our lives. Why? We are capable of so much more - more understanding, better care, better treatment, empathy, respect, and love.
From:
http://true-to-you.net/morrissey_news_110729_01
Morrissey's statement:
The recent killings in Norway were horrific. As usual in such cases, the media give the killer exactly what he wants: worldwide fame. We aren't told the names of the people who were killed - almost as if they are not considered to be important enough, yet the media frenzy to turn the killer into a Jack The Ripper star is .... repulsive. He should be un-named, not photographed, and quietly led away.
The comment I made onstage at Warsaw could be further explained this way: Millions of beings are routinely murdered every single day in order to fund profits for McDonalds and KFCruelty, but because these murders are protected by laws, we are asked to feel indifferent about the killings, and to not even dare question them.
If you quite rightly feel horrified at the Norway killings, then it surely naturally follows that you feel horror at the murder of ANY innocent being. You cannot ignore animal suffering simply because animals "are not us."