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Success Quote by K. D. Lang

"If you knew how meat was made, you'd probably lose your lunch"

About this Quote

K. D. Lang’s line lands because it hijacks a familiar piece of folksy wisdom and spikes it with disgust. “If you knew how it was made” usually props up harmless mystery (sausage, politics, pop hits). Lang swaps in “meat,” a word that’s both literal and loaded, then finishes with “lose your lunch,” a punchline that turns knowledge into nausea. It’s not a moral lecture delivered from a podium; it’s a bodily threat. Your stomach becomes the site of ethics.

The intent is plain: push listeners toward a confrontation most of us outsource. Meat arrives as product, not process, neatly packaged so the violence is invisible and responsibility feels optional. By framing the issue as something you physically couldn’t tolerate if you truly saw it, Lang suggests the system depends on distance, euphemism, and curated ignorance. The subtext is sharper: our appetites are not just preferences but agreements. We keep eating because we keep not-looking.

Context matters here because Lang isn’t a politician; she’s a public artist whose credibility comes from voice, not policy. In the early-’90s moment when celebrity activism around animal rights was gaining volume, her persona carried a particular kind of candor: earnest, unflashy, hard to dismiss as performative outrage. The line functions like a backstage pass offered and rescinded at once: you can know, but knowing will change you. It’s persuasive precisely because it doesn’t argue; it dares your conscience to survive contact with the assembly line.

Quote Details

TopicFood
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If You Knew How Meat Was Made You Would Probably Lose Your Lunch
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About the Author

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K. D. Lang (born November 2, 1961) is a Musician from Canada.

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