Vegitable Rights Movement: Difference between revisions

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The vegitable rights [[movement]] reached it's peek in the last decade of the previous century.[[Eric Podd]], founder of [[Plants are People]], the most vocal of the activists still lives in Humbold County, California. These people belived that it was wrong to eat plants, mow lawns, or pull weeds. Smoking tobacco and cannibis was a sin for it caused harm and abuse to the most innoscent of all things, the plants. The protests they made often turned into riots. They where evenatually infiltrated by [[control]] and shut down, most of it's members still in special camps in a foreign country.
The vegitable rights [[movement]] reached it's peek in the last decade of the previous century.[[Eric Podd]], founder of [[Plants are People]], the most vocal of the activists still lives in Humbold County, California. These people belived that it was wrong to eat plants, mow lawns, or pull weeds. Smoking tobacco and cannibis was a sin for it caused harm and abuse to the most innoscent of all things, the plants. The protests they made often turned into riots. They where evenatually infiltrated by [[control]] and shut down, most of it's members still in special camps in a foreign country.
[[Category: Pineal Traffic]]
[[Category: Infictive Politics]]

Revision as of 06:25, 11 February 2012

The vegitable rights movement reached it's peek in the last decade of the previous century.Eric Podd, founder of Plants are People, the most vocal of the activists still lives in Humbold County, California. These people belived that it was wrong to eat plants, mow lawns, or pull weeds. Smoking tobacco and cannibis was a sin for it caused harm and abuse to the most innoscent of all things, the plants. The protests they made often turned into riots. They where evenatually infiltrated by control and shut down, most of it's members still in special camps in a foreign country.