A practice of calculating what we actually pay for animal products by including suffering, ecosystem destruction, and spiritual damage—exposing the hidden arithmetic of our consumption.
The Hodja often exposes false economics in his stories—deals that seem advantageous until examined carefully. Applied to animal ethics, this means counting real costs. When we eat factory-farmed meat, we pay with currency, but the animal, the ecosystem, and our own capacity for empathy pay additional hidden prices. Industrial agriculture has externalized these costs, making destruction appear cheap. The Economy of True Cost asks us to examine what we're actually spending: How much wild habitat becomes monoculture? How many individual animals suffer? What do we lose in our souls by participating in systems that require us to not-see? This framework isn't about guilt but clear-eyed accounting. When we count truly, our choices change naturally. We discover that the 'cheap' chicken is actually expensive—expensive to the bird, to the land, to our capacity for the examined joyful life. Real economy includes everything.
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