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Raging Over Spilt Milk: Behind the scenes of Animal Rebellion

It’s like there’s a brick wall in front of us... And that brick wall is the system that’s killing us by being so inflexible to change. Day after day after day we’re trying to weaken the wall. That’s why we continue… because you never know which stone will be the one to break through.

TOM ELLEN: People were shocked, and understandably so,’ says Steve Bone, a 40-year-old photographer from Clacton-on-Sea, Essex. ‘I mean — you walk into a shop and all of a sudden there’s a tall, ginger-bearded man pouring milk all over the cheese display. You’d think: “My God, what’s going on?”’ Bone, the tall, ginger-bearded man in question, is a member of Animal Rebellion, the animal and climate justice group that dominated headlines last week after several of their direct action protests went viral. You will have seen the clips: activists entering high-end food stores such as Fortnum & Mason, Selfridges and Waitrose, and proceeding to binge-dump dairy products across the floor.

To say that these antics divided opinion would be something of an understatement. Depending on where you go for your news, you’ll either find passionate voices of support for Animal Rebellion’s cause, or (and due to the nature of online commentary, this one’s probably more likely) splenetic, expletive-filled rants about ‘entitled lefties’ wasting food. But more on all that noise in a moment: during the protest itself, Bone says, things felt far less hostile.

‘There were a few derogatory terms thrown at us,’ he tells ES Magazine of the actions he took part in at Fortnum & Mason and Selfridges. ‘But we were expecting to be roughly frog-marched out, and that didn’t happen [Bone and fellow protester Sofia Fernandes Pontes were arrested the next day: both appear in court on 7 November]. I go into this kind of Zen mode during these acts of civil resistance,’ he adds. ‘At one point, there was a gentleman stood next to me as I was pouring the milk and I was concerned he would get splashed. I was already prepared to smell like milk all day, but I didn’t want him to have to as well. So I just said, “Excuse me, sir, would you mind moving over, please?” It was all totally non-violent….

These episodes don’t always proceed quite so peacefully. At Animal Rebellion’s previous campaign in September in which holes were drilled into delivery truck tyres at dairy production sites, Bone was ‘struck in the chest’ by a less-than-impressed onlooker. ‘I just took it and moved away,’ he says, diplomatically. ‘I’m quite a calm person anyway, but when you’ve got people shouting at you or hitting you, you just have to keep telling yourself why you’re there. You’re fighting for a better future.’

It won’t have escaped you that lately, the sight of people such as Bone being shouted at or hit as they fight for the future has become an almost daily occurrence. Whether it’s protesters super-gluing themselves to roads, activists hurling soup cans at a Van Gogh painting or tall, ginger-bearded men redecorating the Fortnum & Mason carpet, groups including Animal Rebellion and Just Stop Oil have been consistently engaging in non-violent disruption across the UK for months. Their actions represent an attempt to draw the Government’s focus to the climate crisis and, in Bone’s words, ‘start a national conversation’. In this, there can be no doubt that they’ve succeeded…

In typically measured fashion, Piers Morgan branded Animal Rebellion’s milk-pourers ‘pathetic, attention-seeking morons’ on Twitter. Just prior to her resignation, the UK’s shortest-serving home secretary, Suella Braverman, placed the blame for the disruption squarely on ‘The Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati’ (didn’t they do a John Peel session in 1986?). These are extreme examples, of course. But no matter where you stand on the political spectrum, you will undoubtedly have come across people (online or off) who share the protesters’ concerns but are sceptical about their methods of expression. Were there any worries on Animal Rebellion’s part about throwing away food during a cost-of-living crisis?…

Animal Rebellion’s proposed solution to this wastage is for the Government to support farmers to transition away from animal farming to a plant-based food system. ‘That would free up so much land, which can then be rewilded, bringing down greenhouse gases and bringing back our beautiful British countryside,’ says Bone. ‘I’ve got a six-year-old girl — I don’t want her growing up in a country that’s brown and barren…

Appropriate or not, the protesters remain adamant that their actions are getting results, and not only in raising the blood pressure of Daily Mail readers… A YouGov poll, taken after a blockade she was involved in outside an oil terminal, that showed ‘a small increase’ in people willing to take direct action on the climate. Bone, too, talks of the lengthy historical success rate that non-violent civil disobedience has enjoyed…

Consensus on these demonstrations is still a long way off, so don’t expect the protests to stop any time soon. Animal Rebellion is planning various outreach events in the run-up to its next campaign in spring next year… ‘It’s like there’s a brick wall in front of us… And that brick wall is the system that’s killing us by being so inflexible to change. People have been throwing stones at this wall for years and now we’re doing it, too, with these protests. Day after day after day we’re trying to weaken the wall. That’s why we continue… because you never know which stone will be the one to break through.’ SOURCE…

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