14/06/2026
He’s leaping because he’s young and the world still feels like a place that might love him back. Baby #24 doesn’t know what the blue paint means. He doesn’t know that someone has already decided how long he’s allowed to exist. All he knows is sunlight on his back, his hooves in the grass, the warmth of his mother somewhere nearby.
There’s a sweetness to him that’s almost unbearable once you understand the context. He jumps because he feels safe. He runs because he trusts the ground beneath him. He looks at the humans around him with the open curiosity of a child who has never been given a reason to fear.
And that’s the part that is the most heartbreaking - the innocence that will be used against him. The way his joy is temporary - not because of anything he’s done - but because he was born into a system that treats his life as product. He has no idea that the same hands that tagged him will soon take everything from him.
Right now, he is pure vitality. Pure hope. Pure life.
But his end will not look anything like this moment. It will begin with separation from his mother. He will cry for her, not knowing that she is crying for him too. He will be loaded into a vehicle that smells of fear and unfamiliar bodies, pressed against others who tremble because they already sense what they cannot understand.
The journey will be confusing, and loud. Every jolt will frighten him. Every unfamiliar sound will make him search for something familiar - his mother, the grass, the open sky. He is too young to understand why the world suddenly feels so hostile.
His final moments will be shaped by panic, not peace. He will be surrounded by others who are terrified, each one a child like him, each one marked by the same indifferent paint. He will look for escape, for comfort, for anything that resembles the life they knew, and find only walls and noise and the unmistakable scent of suffering.
And the tragedy is that he will never understand why any of it is happening. He will die with the same innocence he lived with - trusting, gentle, bewildered.
So here is the plea - quiet, human, and urgent.
If his joy matters to you, then his fear should matter too. If his leap in the grass makes you smile, then the thought of his final moments should make you pause. And if you feel even a flicker of sorrow for what awaits him, you have the power to ensure no other child is ever marked with a painted number on their side or meets the same fate.
Mercy is not complicated. It is simply choosing not to be the reason a gentle life ends in terror.
He cannot ask for that mercy himself. But we can. And we can choose it—for him, and for every other innocent little one who still believes the world is kind.
Vegans