Got Beef? Apparently not!
It seemed that the place was here to stay, and every time I drove by, the stupid Got Beef neon sign was burning in the window. Until a few weeks ago, that is. Now the store and its coolers are empty. A paper sign on the door indicates that the place is for rent, and the Got Beef sign, although still hanging in the window, is now satisfyingly dark. The restaurant's number has also been disconnected. Perhaps this means that some gentle life will be spared somewhere, or that a new one will not be created to fill the space left when another is shipped to slaughter.
I must give credit where credit is due: there was a veggie burger on the menu. But its inclusion was small consolation when the rest of the menu read like a who's who of suffering farmed animals. If you know that some people don't eat meat, aren't you also aware of the reasons? Wouldn't you know that there's something unsavory about raising and killing animals simply for food?
I should perhaps feel bad for the owner, though. Any time someone's local business folds it likely creates a hardship for the owner and his or her family. Then again, if he were a slave trader, would I have any sympathy? Unlikely. And selling the bodies of animals is a form of slavery, so my sympathy comes to an end before it even begins. So long, Sebastian's. Let's hope that's the end of the meateteria trend in Ithaca (or anywhere else).
There's one other local place that's making a name for itself with local meat. One down, one to go...

3 Comments:
"I think of a big, wet nose, breathing contentedly in the grassy country air--throughout a long and pain-free life. A different world really is possible."
Your words brought tears to my eyes. I hope you are right, that this is possible. So often it doesn't seem so.
Tamara, thanks for stopping by. It does seem like animal suffering is overwhelming and getting worse by the day. But caring people like you really do make a difference. When people become vegan, they create for themselves a personal world that is humane and just for animals, and that is huge! Collectively, those people also make an enormous political statement about their refusal to participate in the commodification of animals. We can't end all suffering overnight, but in our own lives, we really can, and that is just the start. Don't get discouraged, and keep fighting the good fight!
You make very good points, and I do feel I should make more of an effort to give up animal products. Do you recommend any websites for newbies to veganism or vegetareanism?
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