 Marks and Spencer launches oat milk in the same cartons as dairy in UK first. Let's have a look! Check it out! The farmers are going to be having a conniption here, aren't they? Can you imagine them? In what could be a supermarket first, Marks and Spencer has launched a dairy-free milk alternative in cartons similar to those holding cow's milk. The British oat milk products are part of the vegan plant kitchen range. They come in semi and whole varieties just like their dairy counterparts. They're fortified with calcium, iodine, vitamin D and vitamin B12. Wait a second, bro! I thought you had to stab animals to get B12. This is crazy! A spokesperson for the supermarket told Plant-Based Mutant News that they decided to launch the product due to customers asking for vegan milk in larger size packaging. Go customers! That's supply and demand, isn't it? Is that supply and demand? According to statistics from September 2021, a third of UK adults drink plant-based milk with oat milk being by far the most popular choice. What about the Sawyer milk, man? Sawyer milk's way more nutritious. The longer you're vegan, you realise that oat milk is just oats and water and some other stuff. But Sawyer milk has got them soybeans and it's got the more protein, more calcium, more nutrition and it's tasty. Young people are increasingly opting to choose these alternatives over dairy with 84% using standard cow's milk. So that would be 16% of people are eating plant milks, 84% are using standard cow's milk and 60% and over 96% are drinking up that cow's titty. Why is it? Why is it that the older blokes like sucking on that cow tit? Is it because they're big babies or do they honestly think that they're a cow? Last year the dairy industry blamed vegan cancel culture. Cancel culture? You absolute losers. Losers. Cancel culture. It's that damn cancel culture that's just got us once again. All we're doing is stabbing cows in the neck, stealing their babies, sticking our entire arm into their ass hole and sticking semen into their vagina, you know, to impregnate them and bashing them in the head every now and then when they don't get into the milking parlour. You know what I'm saying? Britt Dairy Company, Arla Foods launched a campaign named Don't Cancel the Cow. You cancel the cow. How could you possibly say that vegans are canceling the cow when you literally stick knives in their throats, stick their body parts through a mincer to make hamburgers? Which argued the need to balance the conversation when it comes to food and planet. Yeah, it looked balance the conversation. You want to balance bolt guns on cow skulls and then pull the trigger. That's the only thing they want to balance. The only thing they want to balance is their arm length glove on their arm as they're sticking their whole entire arm inside the anus of a cow. That's what they want to balance. The dairy industry are just glorified animal abusers who have good marketing campaigns. Despite what the dairy industry may say, there are undeniable costs associated with dairy. They're around, okay, yeah, they're around 1.9 million dairy cows in the UK. They will generally be artificially inseminated once a year. I would probably say they're definitely 100% raped in the ass with an entire arm. They have their baby taken away from them, or yeah, the baby stolen from them straight away. Dairy is also costly for the environment contributing to greenhouse gas emissions and they slaughter those dairy cows. 50% of the beef in the UK comes from slaughtered dairy cows. What do you think about that, everyone? The dairy industry blaming cancel culture. What do you think about that? We're getting canceled. No, you're mass murdering cows, often torturing them. June is National Dairy Month. I can't believe they've got a month to celebrate in fantaside where they kill babies, murder, arm raping. What do people think the dairy industry does? They've got a really good marketing. I'll give them that. When they get exposed, it's just horrifying. You know, there's that saying where they say like, the more vulnerable the victim, the greater the crime. They know cows are vulnerable. They've got like Stockholm syndrome. They've been born into this situation. They only care they've ever known. So the farmers do what they want to them, basically. And then they murder them when they want to. And then they say, oh, well, we brought them into the world so we can do whatever we want to them. We love them like we love our own children, call the CPS. These people do not care about animals. They only care they have about animals is what money they can provide for them. Once they can't provide money anymore, they send them to the slaughterhouse, hang their entire weight by their hoof after bolt gunning them in the skull, you know, and they dislocate their hip upside down. And then they slash their neck open and decapitate them as their blood drops onto the floor. And then they got the audacity to say they care about animals. Then they got the further audacity to say it's cancel culture. Absolute joke. What a bunch of jokers. So dairy industry, if you're watching this, I hope you go down for all the suffering and murder that you've caused so you can steal cows, breast milk. Okay, here we go. M&S have started a revolution in the way we farm chickens in this country. Like here in Somerset. See what they've been up to. Emily, what's going on here? So this farm's really special. It might look like your ordinary farm, but when you open the door and see the chickens in there, it's really different. Wow. That's a big news. M&S have really raised in the bar with their open gold chicken. They've got more space. They've got natural light. They've got perches to perch on. They've got the bales. It is such a relief to be growing this slower reared chicken. They've got everything set up for them to be able to express their natural behaviour and do what chickens want to do. So you've got half your chickens, half your farmer. Absolutely. And I hope that everybody thinks about how it was grown and where it came from. M&S have been revolutionary in the way chickens reared. We'd love to see other retailers doing so. Yeah, the chickens being reared here. There's that flavour coming back into it. Okay. The way that they cared for the love, the heart, the soul. It adds up to everything. Living and growing up in an environment like this, sure, it's going to taste incredible. It's going to taste incredible. Wow. What an absolute load of crap. If you're not switched on, you just would have thought, that looks amazing. Did you see the chickens on the perch there? Happily perching on that nice little branch there and how their feathers were all intact and how like what the RSPCA lady said and what the man said about higher welfare and how he's so happy about it and how compared to non RSPCA chickens, they're like loving life. Did you see all that in the commercial? And if it's in a commercial, obviously that's reality. Every time there's a commercial like this, every single time someone goes down and investigates it later, it's always exactly like it is on the commercial, isn't it? No, it's not. Oh, that's right. Because they're propagandists and they lie. We're very proud of our animal welfare here. That there is what you call grade one, 100% pure uncut English animal agriculture propaganda. That's what that was. And shame on you, the RSPCA, you propagandists.