Influential Vegetarians in History: Musicians
October 05, 2012In this addition of Influential Vegetarians in History, we take a look at two musicians from contrasting backgrounds and opposing generations. On the surface, Paul McCartney and Mike Ness could not appear any more different. One was as a founding father of the “Fab Four,” while the other was giving everyone “The Creeps” as the in-your-face front man of Social Distortion. But where these two men differ in sound and style, they share a compassionate commonality in their mutual love for animals and the environment. Let’s take a closer look at these guitar playing greats, and their immense influence as vegetarians.
Paul McCartney
McCarthy has had a storied history with philanthropy and social activism and has raised money for various relief organizations around the world by lending his music to charitable recordings and performing live benefit concerts. After making the moral decision to become a vegetarian, McCartney quickly used his celebrity status and resources to encourage others to follow his lead. McCartney’s famous words, “If the meat industry had glass walls, everyone would be a vegetarian,” are described by PETA{1} as “the most well-known quote in the animal rights movement,” and serve as the title for a video McCartney narrated for the company which exposes the cruel and inhumane treatment of animals within the meat industry, as well as the dangers presented to consumers due to a common lack of sanitation in slaughterhouses and factories.
Mike Ness
Like McCartney, Ness has used his role as a celebrity to encourage others to take up an ethically sound lifestyle, and in 2009 appeared in the “Meat’s Not Green” campaign in conjunction with PETA{2}, stating, “I feel a responsibility to try to make the world a better place. The more educated I have become about the cruel and inhumane treatment of animals, becoming a vegetarian was a no brainer.” After over thirty years of intense touring, Ness knows more than anyone the wear and tear the road can place on you. Since becoming a vegetarian, Ness says that “I feel stronger, healthier, and cleaner.”
Enduring Ethics and Timeless Rebellion
Bridging the gap between the British invasion of the 1960’s and the Orange County hardcore explosion the 1980’s, McCartney and Ness show us that while the stage can be a center for entertainment and an escape from daily life, it can simultaneously be used as a platform for ethical education and world improvement that transcends all generations.
For more information check out:
{2} The Story of Mike Ness’ Animal-Friendly Life. Peta.org. Web. 9.14.2012