The vegetarian myth
#1
Posted 05 October 2011 - 06:59 AM
"...the first mistake is in assuming that factory farming—a practice that is barely fifty years old—is the only way to raise animals. Their calculations on energy used, calories consumed, humans unfed, are all based on the notion that animals eat grain.
You can feed grain to animals, but it is not the diet for which they were designed. Grain didn’t exist until humans domesticated annual grasses, at most 12,000 years ago, while aurochs, the wild progenitors of the domestic cow, were around for two million years before that. For most of human history, browsers and grazers haven’t been in competition with humans. They ate what we couldn’t eat—cellulose—and turned it into what we could—protein and fat. Grain will dramatically increase the growth rate of beef cattle (there’s a reason for the expression “cornfed”) and the milk production of dairy cows. It will also kill them. The delicate bacterial balance of a cow’s rumen will go acid and turn septic. Chickens get fatty liver disease if fed grain exclusively, and they don’t need any grain to survive. Sheep and goats, also ruminants, should really never touch the stuff.
This misunderstanding is born of ignorance, an ignorance that runs the length and breadth of the vegetarian myth, through the nature of agriculture and ending in the nature of life. We are urban industrialists, and we don’t know the origins of our food. This includes vegetarians, despite their claims to the truth. It included me, too, for twenty years. Anyone who ate meat was in denial; only I had faced the facts. Certainly, most people who consume factory-farmed meat have never asked what died and how it died. But frankly, neither have most vegetarians.
The truth is that agriculture is the most destructive thing humans have done to the planet, and more of the same won’t save us. The truth is that agriculture requires the wholesale destruction of entire ecosystems. The truth is also that life isn’t possible without death, that no matter what you eat, someone has to die to feed you.
I want a full accounting, an accounting that goes way beyond what’s dead on your plate. I’m asking about everything that died in the process, everything that was killed to get that food onto your plate. That’s the more radical question, and it’s the only question that will produce the truth. How many rivers were dammed and drained, how many prairies plowed and forests pulled down, how much topsoil turned to dust and blown into ghosts? I want to know about all the species—not just the individuals, but the entire species—the chinook, the bison, the grasshopper sparrows, the grey wolves. And I want more than just the number of dead and gone. I want them back."
My link
I'd be interested to hear opinions on this subject.
#2
Posted 05 October 2011 - 01:00 PM
Skaz, on 05 October 2011 - 06:59 AM, said:
Sounds like this is outlining problems with capitalism and not with vegetarianism. Of course a decentralized form of agriculture will be less damaging than one that is not, but I'm not sure why that is an argument for weaning yourself back onto meat.
#3
Posted 05 October 2011 - 03:45 PM
Punk Rock Geek, on 05 October 2011 - 01:00 PM, said:
#4
Posted 05 October 2011 - 04:00 PM
Skaz, on 05 October 2011 - 03:45 PM, said:
I'm not opposed to eating eggs, provided the chickens aren't being exploited for them. I just don't see why you are attempting to eat more meat now, when peak oil may or may not be over dramatacized. It's like eating the other (dead) passengers before the rescue plane has a chance to arrive, no? Why not hold off on eating meat until it becomes necessary for your survival, especially if you feel more comfortable being vegetarian at the moment?
#6
Posted 05 October 2011 - 06:15 PM
horse_ebooks, on 13 September 2012 - 09:47 AM, said:
http://chorusofone.no-ip.org/ -strike anywhere forum. join it.
"Move to Atlanta!"
#7
Posted 05 October 2011 - 06:43 PM
Floyd, on 05 October 2011 - 06:15 PM, said:
#8 Guest_Kalli_*
Posted 06 October 2011 - 02:32 AM
I personally need a high protein based diet, but I only consume grass fed beef, raw milk, free range eggs, ect. It is true that cows should never ever eat grain. This is the cause of health problems associated with meat not the meat itself. You are going to get sick if you eat meat from a sick animal, and factory farmed animals are sick animals.
Another big issue is the grain myth. Most people shouldn't be eating grains.
#10
Posted 21 November 2011 - 09:18 AM
Crusty Rat, on 21 November 2011 - 08:34 AM, said:
#12
Posted 22 November 2011 - 05:45 PM
"Decentralisation of food production, a return to polyculture and living in harmony with nature, rather than against it is the way to protect ourselves from catastrophe I think." - this is how I feel, but I don't see where meat factors into that.
It also fails to address many issues e.g. deforestation for grazing land, gases released through respiration and digestion, pesticide-heavy GM crops being imported for feed, waste production, environmental damage caused when silos of faeces overflow etc. etc.
#13
Posted 24 November 2011 - 09:26 AM
Crusty Rat, on 22 November 2011 - 05:45 PM, said:
Crusty Rat, on 22 November 2011 - 05:45 PM, said:
Crusty Rat, on 22 November 2011 - 05:45 PM, said:
Crusty Rat, on 22 November 2011 - 05:45 PM, said:
#14
Posted 06 December 2011 - 10:36 PM
#15
Posted 11 January 2012 - 11:27 PM
#17 Guest_BamBam_*
Posted 25 January 2012 - 12:03 AM
Skaz, on 05 October 2011 - 06:59 AM, said:
"...the first mistake is in assuming that factory farming—a practice that is barely fifty years old—is the only way to raise animals. Their calculations on energy used, calories consumed, humans unfed, are all based on the notion that animals eat grain.
You can feed grain to animals, but it is not the diet for which they were designed. Grain didn’t exist until humans domesticated annual grasses, at most 12,000 years ago, while aurochs, the wild progenitors of the domestic cow, were around for two million years before that. For most of human history, browsers and grazers haven’t been in competition with humans. They ate what we couldn’t eat—cellulose—and turned it into what we could—protein and fat. Grain will dramatically increase the growth rate of beef cattle (there’s a reason for the expression “cornfed”) and the milk production of dairy cows. It will also kill them. The delicate bacterial balance of a cow’s rumen will go acid and turn septic. Chickens get fatty liver disease if fed grain exclusively, and they don’t need any grain to survive. Sheep and goats, also ruminants, should really never touch the stuff.
This misunderstanding is born of ignorance, an ignorance that runs the length and breadth of the vegetarian myth, through the nature of agriculture and ending in the nature of life. We are urban industrialists, and we don’t know the origins of our food. This includes vegetarians, despite their claims to the truth. It included me, too, for twenty years. Anyone who ate meat was in denial; only I had faced the facts. Certainly, most people who consume factory-farmed meat have never asked what died and how it died. But frankly, neither have most vegetarians.
The truth is that agriculture is the most destructive thing humans have done to the planet, and more of the same won’t save us. The truth is that agriculture requires the wholesale destruction of entire ecosystems. The truth is also that life isn’t possible without death, that no matter what you eat, someone has to die to feed you.
I want a full accounting, an accounting that goes way beyond what’s dead on your plate. I’m asking about everything that died in the process, everything that was killed to get that food onto your plate. That’s the more radical question, and it’s the only question that will produce the truth. How many rivers were dammed and drained, how many prairies plowed and forests pulled down, how much topsoil turned to dust and blown into ghosts? I want to know about all the species—not just the individuals, but the entire species—the chinook, the bison, the grasshopper sparrows, the grey wolves. And I want more than just the number of dead and gone. I want them back."
My link
I'd be interested to hear opinions on this subject.
#19 Guest_Layne_*
Posted 09 March 2012 - 01:56 AM
http://www.criticala...HAM-pp-8-32.pdf
http://www.animallib...d-at-book-fair/
#20
Posted 09 March 2012 - 02:18 PM
Layne, on 09 March 2012 - 01:56 AM, said:
http://www.criticala...HAM-pp-8-32.pdf
http://www.animallib...d-at-book-fair/
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