Meat and Metal: When did the metal community get so soft? It used to be that metal was synonymous with rebellion, aggression, and an unapologetic embrace of the primal. Now, a growing number of so-called metalheads are waving the flag of animal rights, promoting veganism and vegetarianism as some sort of moral superiority. I’m sorry, but the idea that you can be brutal while sipping on a kale smoothie doesn’t cut it for me. Metal is raw, savage, and unrestrained—like tearing into a rare steak after a night of headbanging. If you’re swapping your leather boots for hemp sandals, maybe you’ve lost touch with what metal truly stands for. And no, it’s not compassion.

A black metalhead man and woman dressed in leather with long black hair, smoky eye makeup, and long black nails, standing in a dark gritty environment.

The Rise of Veganism and Animal Rights in Metal

Let’s get one thing straight—there’s a disturbing trend infiltrating the metal scene. Some bands and fans are suddenly concerned about whether their burger came from a cow that lived a cushy life. These are the same people screaming into the void about the destruction of nature, hailing the destruction of everything sacred. Yet, they think it’s “progressive” to care about what’s on your plate? We all know about famous metal musicians like Doyle Wolfgang from the Misfits, who’s loud about his veganism, and sure, I respect the guy’s music, but let’s be real: animal rights do not fit the heavy metal ethos.

Heavy metal was born from rebellion, from the fiery depths of societal anger. It’s not about compassion. It’s about destruction, chaos, raw power, and aggression. Now, we’re expected to stand around, hold hands, and mourn for chickens? The cognitive dissonance in this movement is mind-boggling. How can you be a fan of music that glorifies darkness, death, and destruction but turn squeamish at the idea of eating meat? Does the blood-splattered album art not offend you, but a steak does?

A black metalhead man and woman holding raw steaks, dressed in leather with long black hair, smoky eye makeup, and long black nails, in a dark environment with guitars in the background.

Animal Rights: A Misguided Crusade

Look, I get that some people have soft hearts. Maybe watching “Earthlings” made you tear up, and now you feel guilty about eating a burger. Fine, do you, but don’t try to drag the rest of us into that mess. Heavy metal is about confronting harsh realities, not hiding from them. In nature, animals eat animals. It’s called the food chain. A lion isn’t going to have a moral crisis over whether it should eat a gazelle. You think it’s “wrong” to eat meat? That’s cute. Tell that to a grizzly bear next time you find yourself hiking in the woods.

Metal is about primal instinct, and eating meat is as primal as it gets. When we consume flesh, we’re connecting to something ancient, something that existed long before political correctness came along to make us feel bad for exercising our natural rights as omnivores. The act of killing and eating an animal is, in many ways, a reflection of the harsh realities that metal music often explores. Death is inevitable, and in the end, we are all food for something else. But hey, maybe tofu fits into that brutal narrative somewhere. (Spoiler: It doesn’t.)

A black metalhead man holding a large cut of meat, and a woman dressed in leather with spiked accessories, standing in a gritty, shadowy setting with knives on the wall.

Veganism: A Trend Masquerading as Morality

One of the most ridiculous claims I’ve heard from animal rights supporters is that going vegan or vegetarian is the “moral” thing to do. Let me stop you right there. Heavy metal doesn’t give a damn about your morality. If anything, it’s about questioning morality, pushing boundaries, and embracing taboos. So, this notion that not eating animals somehow makes you a better person? It’s laughable at best, and downright delusional at worst.

The vegan movement is a trend, a fad designed to give people an inflated sense of self-importance. Slapping a “plant-based” sticker on your lifestyle doesn’t make you morally superior. It makes you just another cog in the ever-turning machine of consumerism. They’ve sold you the lie that abstaining from meat somehow cleanses you of guilt and makes you more “compassionate.” Guess what? Compassion isn’t metal.

True metalheads are unapologetic. We don’t do things to fit into society’s neat little boxes of what’s “acceptable.” We don’t need a corporate-backed movement to validate our existence. Metal has always been counter-culture, and now, veganism has the audacity to claim that mantle. It’s pretty hard to be anti-establishment when you’re buying overpriced, mass-produced soy products because Whole Foods told you it’s the moral choice. Good luck with that.

Full-body shot of a black metalhead man and woman dressed in leather, both with long black hair, standing in a gritty industrial environment holding raw meat.

Meat, Death, and the Essence of Metal

What these animal rights advocates fail to understand is that meat consumption is more than just a dietary choice. It’s a visceral experience that aligns with the core of what metal represents. There’s a reason the term “flesh and blood” is so often associated with heavy metal imagery. Eating meat connects us to the primal, the savage, the untamed. It’s a reminder that life feeds on life, and death is an integral part of that cycle.

Some metalheads claim that opposing animal cruelty is about aligning their values with their music. But if you truly align with metal’s values, you’ll realize that cruelty and brutality are often inherent parts of existence. You can’t escape that fact. Heavy metal doesn’t shy away from it; it embraces it. When you bite into a piece of meat, you’re participating in the raw reality of life and death. It’s not pretty, but neither is the world.

Those pushing veganism in the metal community have diluted what heavy metal is about. They’ve replaced the raw aggression with a sanitized version of rebellion that aligns more with a Pinterest board than a mosh pit. This shift toward compassionate eating is nothing more than a symptom of a larger problem—metal losing its edge.

Full-body shot of a black metalhead man and woman holding raw steaks, both dressed in leather, standing in a dark industrial setting, surrounded by chains and cooking equipment.

Conclusion Meat and Metal: Don’t Let the Scene Go Soft

So, where does this leave us? Are we supposed to abandon our primal instincts because a few bands and fans have jumped on the vegan bandwagon? I say hell no. Metal has always been about embracing the darkness within us, confronting uncomfortable truths, and living unapologetically. Eating meat is just one of the many ways we connect with that primal part of ourselves, and letting go of that means letting go of a core part of what makes heavy metal what it is.

If you’re one of those metalheads who think veganism and animal rights somehow enhance your connection to the music, more power to you. But don’t expect the rest of us to follow you down that rabbit hole. We’ll be over here, biting into a bloody steak and cranking up some Slayer.

So, if you’re ready to keep the metal scene alive and raw—whether that’s through the music or the food on your plate—stick around. And if not, enjoy your tofu burger while we continue to embrace the primal chaos of metal, unfiltered and uncensored.

Stay brutal!

For more controversial takes like this one, head over to Haborymx.com. If you want to keep up with all my unfiltered thoughts, music rants, and everything in between, hit me up on all my social media channels via this link.

Full-body shot of a black metalhead man and woman dressed in leather, holding raw steaks in a gritty industrial setting. Both wear spiked outfits, with the man in heavy leather boots and the woman in high-heel boots, embodying a fierce, rebellious attitude with dark, smoky eye makeup and long black hair.

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