
Years ago, about 1990 I read a few books about it and finally got around to becoming a vegetarian. About that time the Iraq war was raging and I was getting a little radical, even thinking about joining a commune. The right wing nuts at the store I was working at were cheerleading the war and the bombs dropping on the TV and it was making me sick to my stomach. It was interesting to observe how my abstinence from meat seemed to piss people off. They demanded reasons and they seemed positively put off by my diet choice. So, tiring of giving a few lame reasons each time I was confronted I decided to sit down and put together a little hand out. I was about 24 and didn't remotely have the skeptical/discernment skills I have developed since so I don't expect a lot of this to hold up very well. I will not defend all of it!
I quit eating red meat because it wasn't agreeing with my digestive system (I grew up on a dairy farm so I ate enough for a lifetime anyway). I also quit booze for several years back then as well. I always ate eggs and dairy but years later slowly trickled back to eating chicken. It makes it much easier to at restaurants. After seeing the film Forks Over Knives I am thinking of going back to more emphasis on the plants, better quality food, less poultry and dairy. Nothing radical really, it's just that since I'll be 45 in a month or so, I would like to lock in some good long term heath practices. I want to be one of those buggers who is active into the 80's.
Anyway, here is the little package I put together about 20 years ago, as reasons for my choice for a vegetarian diet. Maybe I should revisit the project, update it and improve it. "Beef it up" a bit so to speak.
After having so many debates with climate change deniers, smoking causes disease deniers, etc., after snooping around the internet it's interesting to see how controversial diet is. Just as addiction to political ideologies seems to drive climate change denial, and tobacco addiction mostly drives smoking/disease denial, perhaps it is food addiction and addiction to our particularly crappy sugar/fat/salt laden variants that drives resistance on this topic as well? Or perhaps it's just good solid science? Let's duke it out.
Three sections: Health, Waste, Cruelty
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HEALTH
1. An animal-based diet is invariably high in saturated fat, animal protein and cholesterol, which raises the level of cholesterol in the blood - the warning signal for heart disease and stroke. Due to the meat-centered diet of most Americans, these diseases account for nearly 50% of all deaths in the U.S.
2. In a March, 1984 cover story, Time magazine reported the latest findings regarding cholesterol and heart disease. They noted that "in regions where ... meat is scarce, cardiovascular disease is unknown."
3. Whereas the average risk of death from a heart attack for a man in the U.S. is 50%, it is only 15% for someone who doesn't eat meat and 4% for a pure "vegan" who eats no animal products at all.
4. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition and the Food and Nutrition Board recommend that eating a mere 2.5% to 6% of one's calories as protein adequately satisfies protein requirements. It is almost impossible to get below 9% with an ordinary vegetarian diet. Today's average American excessively eats 28% of his or her calories as animal protein and an additional 12% as non-animal protein.
5. Meat-centered diets are linked to many kinds of cancer, most notably of the colon, breast, cervix, uterus, ovary, prostate and lung.
6. Factory-farmed animals contain as much as 30 times more saturated fat than yesterday's free-range, pasture-raised animals. Americans also now eat twice as much meat as they did 50 years ago.
7. The human intestine is not designed to digest meat. Where a natural carnivore bowel is relatively short (3 times the length of its body) and smooth inside, a human's bowel is 12 times the length of the body and deeply twisted and puckered. Having no fiber of its own, meat quite arduously inches itself through the long convoluted human digestive tract. Before it gets to the end it often has become putrid and toxic to the body.
8. The National Cancer Research Institute found that women who eat meat on a daily basis are almost 4 times more likely to get breast cancer than those women who eat little or no meat. This year approximately 186,000 women (and 1000 men) will get breast cancer.
9. Drug fed animals are supposed to have their dosage stopped at a certain interval before slaughter. Withdrawal schedules, however are not always properly followed, if at all. Troughs of old, drug-laden feed may not be cleaned away when withdrawal should begin. Also, since animals are often fed animal waste and flesh, drug and pesticide residues continue to be recycled.
10. The allied naval blockade during World War 1 of German-occupied territories in 1917 forced Denmark most dramatically into nationwide vegetarianism. The death rate there from disease during the period dropped by 34%.
11. About 98% of all milk is produced with factory methods in the US. Today's factory cow is fed dangerous levels of hormones to produce two to three times more milk than yesterday's pasture cow. After about four years, the hormones no longer work and the spent cow becomes your hamburger. Slaughter day will end the agony of mostly solitary, intense confinement where this animal has never seen a blade of grass. A cow naturally lives 20 years.
12. The common cold, as well as allergies to dust, cats and pollen, are more likely to go away when milk is taken out of the diet. No other mammal in nature drinks milk after weaning, nor drinks the milk of other species, as do humans.
13. There are 20-30 thousand animal drugs currently in use. As many as 90% have not been approved by the FDA. Fifteen million pounds of antibiotics are used in animal production every year. In 1988, animal drug sales came to $2.5 billion.
14. The U.S. is the only completely industrialized country to still allow the implantation of hormones into beef cattle today. Because of the routine feeding of antibiotics to livestock, European countries have banned nearly all imports of American beef.
15. Today, animals are packed indoors and kept alive with drugs and vitamin injections. The battle against bacteria in the factory farm shed is a constant concern. Misting the animals with insecticides has become routine. In the chicken house, the birds are fed chemicals to control flies which stay active in their droppings (and flesh?), able to kill larvae.
16. Meat contains approximately 14 times more pesticides than plant foods; dairy products contain 5-1/2 times more pesticides than plant foods.
17. Nearly all (95% - 99%) toxic chemical residues in the American diet come from animal sources. Toxic chemical management today amounts to no more than self-regulation by the chemical companies. The Environmental Defense Fund estimates that, on average, each American has 1.5 grams of DDT in his or her body.
18. Fish are living magnets for toxic chemicals. According to Consumer Reports (Feb., '92), a notable incidence of unacceptable levels of PCB's and mercury were found in certain species of fish that were tested. Ingesting PCB's is considered a chief reason for the sperm count among American men to be 70% of what it was 30 years ago. Today, half the worlds fish catch is fed to cattle.
19. An animal at the top of the food chain will accumulate in its own flesh and fat most of all the toxic substances of its prey, its prey's prey, and so on. Due to the excessive use of pesticides, insecticides and petrochemical fertilizers on cropland, the injection of hormones and antibiotics into farm animals, and the abundance of PCB's and mercury in our oceans, there is toxicity in the flesh of all animals people eat. Today, more than ever, it is wise to eat "low on the food chain." with plant food being the lowest and safest.
20. Nearly half the fish tested in a 6 month investigation by Consumers Union were found to be contaminated by bacteria from human or animal feces, suspected to be the result of poor sanitation practices in one or more points along the fish handling process.
21. No law in the U.S. requires seafood inspection. The food and Drug Administration is for the most part, the only regulator over the fishing industry at all. Only 1,604 fish were checked by the FDA in 1989.
22. Four different surveys of the U.S. milk supply were conducted by independent researchers between 1987 and 1989. The studies found between 63 and 86 percent of milk samples to contain sulfa drugs, tetracyclines, and other antibiotics. A March '88 FDA survey found sulfamethazine (a sulfa drug that is a suspected human carcinogen) in 74% of the samples tested. After this test the FDA took steps to eliminate the use of sulfamethazine in milk production. In December '89 a survey sponsored by the Wall Street Journal found drug residues including penicillin and sulfa drugs in 38% of milk samples taken from 10 major cities.
23. Cattle need roughage for their digestive systems to function properly. In this world of hi-tech farming traditional hay is now often replaced by "exotic feeds," which include plastic hay (pellets made of 85% ethylene and 15% propylene), sawdust, bark, newspapers, cardboard scraps, poultry litter, feathers, and industrial sewage. According to the USDA, cement dust may become a feed additive in the future because it produces a 30% faster weight gain than regular feed.
24. The USDA does not inspect for trichinosis in pork, and it is widely known that pork must be thoroughly cooked before eating. Still, about 4% of Americans have trichinella worms in their muscles which periodically cause flu-like symptoms.
25. Chicken feed today is routinely laced with hormones and antibiotics. Only by maintaining the birds on drugs, a practice which began about mid-century, is agri-business allowed the luxury and efficiency of massive flocks and intensive confinement. Today's medicated feed also pumps out market weight birds in half the time from two-thirds the feed of 50 years ago.
26. Chicken feathers, guts, and waste water, which normally need to be discarded during processing, are routinely "recycled" back to the layer and broiler houses as feed. Industry experts believe that along with unclean slaughtering and processing techniques, this forced cannibalism is leading to rampant salmonella in poultry plants. Ignoring these root causes, the U.S. government recommends food irradiation to "sanitize" contaminated birds.
27. Detection of salmonella is not required of meat packers by the USDA. There is not a single plant in the country that inspects for it. CBS's "60 Minutes" found half of the chickens they randomly bought at a supermarket contaminated with salmonellosis.
28. The treatment of human disease with antibiotics is showing signs of being hampered by the flagrant overuse of antibiotics injected into to the animals people eat (55% of all antibiotics used yearly in the U.S.). To the surprise of scientists, by the end of the 60's, epidemics caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria were being reported around the world. Studies have since shown that bacteria can acquire multiple resistance to antibiotics and that they can pass that resistance on to other bacteria. As people have to take stronger and stronger drugs to have the desired effect, it is predicted that we might enter into a pre-antibiotic era.
29. The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a group of 3,000 physicians, came out in 1991 with the "New Four Food Groups." They are: fruit, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes. Meat, poultry, fish, nuts, seeds, and oils have been termed "optional" foods, not considered necessary for health.
30. The world's longest ongoing investigation into heart disease and diet, the Framingham Heart Study, was begun in 1949. The director, Dr. William Castelli when asked if he could say which food choices are the best, responded: "Vegetarians have the best diet. They have the lowest rates of coronary disease of any group in the country.... Some people scoff at vegetarians, but they have a fraction of our heart attack rate and they have only 40% of our cancer rate. On average they outlive others by about six years."
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WASTE
31. Meat contains no essential nutrients that cannot be obtained directly from plant sources. By cycling grain through livestock, we lose 90% of the protein, 96% of the calories, 99% of its carbohydrates, and 100% of the fiber.
32. Agricultural engineers have compared the energy costs of producing poultry, pork and other meats with the energy costs of producing a number of plant foods. It was found that even the least efficient plant food was nearly 10 times as efficient in returning food energy as the most energy efficient animal food.
33. Approximately 1.28 billion cattle populate the earth at any one time. They are sustained unnaturally in these numbers to satisfy the excessive human demand for their flesh. Their combined weight exceeds that of the entire human population. Their sheer numbers (and consequent appetite for the world's resources) have made them one of the primary causes for the destruction of the environment. In the U.S., beef cattle return to us only 1 pound of meat for every 16 pounds of grain and soybeans they are fed.
34. Meat industry defenders claim that livestock do not compete with humans for edible food because they live on forage humans cannot eat. Actually, the livestock population of the U.S. today, consumes enough grain and soybeans to feed more than five times the number of humans in the country. These animals are fed 80% of all the corn, 95% of all the oats, and 70% of all the grain grown in the U.S. In fact, 50% of all grain produced in the world is fed to livestock.
35. The world's cattle alone (not including other livestock such as pigs and chickens) consume a quantity of food equal to the caloric needs of 8.7 billion people - nearly double the entire human population. Hundreds of millions of tons of grain go to animals while only 5 million tons of grain could adequately feed 15 million children throughout the world, the approximate number who starve to death every year.
36. Our dwindling supply of good water is directly tied to meat consumption. Over half of the total amount of water consumed in the U.S. goes to irrigate land growing feed and fodder for livestock.
37. It takes an average of 2,500 gallons of water to produce a single pound of meat. According to Newsweek, "The water that goes into a 1,000 pound steer could float a destroyer". In contrast, it takes only 25 gallons of water to produce a pound of wheat.
38. The great Ogallala Aquifer, which supplies the nation's bread basket with water, is being pumped dry, primarily due to agribusiness growing grain to feed livestock. Spanning over 8 midwestern states with an area three times the size of the state of New York, this natural blessing from the last Ice Age may be gone in 30 years.
39. Spinach grown on an acre of land can yield 26 times more protein than beef produced on the same acre. Calorie for calorie, spinach has 14 times the iron of sirloin steak.
40. Livestock in the U.S. produce 20 times the excrement of the entire U.S. population. Since farm animals today spend much or all of their lives in factory sheds or feedlots, their waste no longer serves to fertilize pastures a little at a time. Eighty-two tons of waste per week is produced in a hen house of 60,000 birds. An average feedlot steer produces over 47 pounds of manure every twenty-four hours. The livestock operator may properly store or disperse this animal waste. Or he may simply flush it away, dangerously raising ammonia and nitrate levels in our drinking water. Becoming a vegetarian does more to clean up the nation's water than any other single action.
41. At the expense of their own hungry populations, exporters in poor countries will produce luxury foods such as meat for sale to rich countries. Meat is much more profitable to produce than subsistence crops of rice, beans and vegetables.
CRUELTY
42. About 7 billion farm animals, mostly chickens, die or are slaughtered in the U.S. every year (28 animals per person) for the production of meat.
43. Aside from the prospect of certain species of fish becoming extinct from overfishing, demand for ocean fish contributes to the over 200,000 deaths of marine mammals and birds caught in nets each year.
44. There are virtually no laws against cruelty to animals raised for food in the U.S. The Animal Welfare Act, which governs the humane treatment of animals, excludes animals intended for food consumption.
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References:
1. Robbins, John, Diet for a New America Stillpoint Publishing, Wapole, NH, 1987, pp. 206, 208.
-also, Campbell, M.D., T. Colin; his speech to the 1991 American Natural Hygiene Society Conference about his involvement in, and the findings of, The China Study.
2. Diet for a New America, p.216.
3. Diet for a New America, no page ref.
4. Diet for a New America, pp. 172, 185.
- also, Campbell, speech, per above.
5. Diet for a New America, pp. 253-73.
6. Diet for a New America, pp. 308-09.
7. Diet for a New America, pp. 258-60.
-also, Judaism and Vegetarianism, pp. 42-43.
8. Diet for a New America, p. 264.
9. Mason, Jim, and Peter singer, Animal Factories, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, 1980, p. 63.
10. Beyond Beef, p. 170.
11. Diet for a New America, pp. 110-112.
-also, Coats, C. David, Old MacDonald's Factory Farm: The Myth of the Traditional Farm and the Shocking Truth about Animal Suffering in Today's Agribusiness,
Continuum Publishing Company, New York, NY, 1989, pp. 49, 53.
12. Old MacDonald's Factory Farm, p. 119
13. Judaism and Vegetarianism, p. 113.
-also, Mason, Jim, "Down on the factory Pharmacy," The Animals' Agenda, Monroe, CT, July/August, 1990, Vol. X, No. 6, p. 47.
14. Our food Our World: Realities of an Animal-Based Diet, compiled by the EarthSave Foundation, Santa Cruz, CA, March, 1992, p. 16.
15. Animal Factories, pp. 38-39 and 53-54.
16. Diet for a New America, p. 351.
17. Diet for a New America, 315-16, 326.
18. "Is our fish fit to Eat?" Consumer Reports: A Publication of Consumers Union, Yonkers, NY, Feb., 1992, Vol. 57, No. 2, pp. 103, 114.
19. Diet for a New America, pp. 314-16.
-also, Beyond Beef, p. 13.
-also, Is Our Fish Fit to Eat? pp. 112, 114.
20. "Is Our Fish Fit to Eat?" p. 103.
21. "Is Our Fish Fit to Eat?" p. 113.
22. Robbins, John, May All Be Fed, William Morrow and Company, Inc., New York 1992 p.112-13
23. Diet for a New America, pp. 93, 110.
-also, Beyond Beef, p. 13.
24. Beyond Beef, p. 264.
25. Diet for a New America, p. 65.
--also, Pacelle, Wayne, Biomachines: "Life on the Farm Ain't What it used to Be," Vegetarian Times, Oak Park,
IL, Jan. 1989, Issue 137, pp. 31-34.
--also, Mason, Jim, "Chicken is Cheaper than Ever, But What are the Hidden Costs?" essay published by the Coalition for Non Violent Food, a project of Animal Rights International, New York, NY, (no pub. date, no page reference).
26. Chicken is Cheaper Than Ever, But What are the Hidden Costs? (no page reference).
-also, Old MacDonald's Factory Farm, p. 115.
-also, Resenfeld, Ph.D., et. al., "A Menu for food Safety Failures: What the Bush Administration is Serving Consumers," published by Public Voice for Food and Health Policy, Washington, D.C., June, 1992, p. 5.
27. Diet for a New America, pp. 301-03.
28. Diet for a New America, p. 303-04
-also, Biomachines, p. 65.
29. Croydon, Ireland, "New Four Food Groups Introduced," Vegetarian Voice, published by the North American Vegetarian Society (NAVS), Dolgeville, NY, Vol. 18, No. 1, p.4.
-also, "Eating Well: Rethink Food Groups, Doctors Say," The New York Times, April 10, 1991, pp. C1 and C4.
30. Castelli, W., quoted in Barnard, N., The Power of Your Plate, Book Publishing Co., Summertown,TN, 1990, pp. 25-26.
31. Diet for a New America, pp. 351-52. -also, Judaism and Vegetarianism, p. 43.
32. Diet for a New America, pp. 374-76.
33. Diet for a New America, p. 351.
34. Beyond Beef, p. 1
-also, Animal Factories. p. 117.
-May All Be Fed. p.35
35. Diet for a New America, p. 353.
-also, Old MacDonald's Factory Farm. p.22.
36. Diet for a New America, p. 366-67.
37. Diet for a New America, p. 367.
-also, Our Food Our World. p. 4.
38. Beyond Beef, p. 1
-also, Klapper, M.D., Michael, "Water Worries: The Connection Between Animal Agriculture and the Water Shortage," EarthSave, the newsletter of EarthSave Foundation, Santa Cruz, CA, Vol. 2, No. 2 and 3, p. 8.
39. Beyond Beef, p. 162.
-also, Diet for a New America, pp. 297- 99
40. Diet for a New America, pp. 371-73.
-also, Animal Factories, pp. 84,88.
41. Boyd, Billy Ray, For the Vegetarian in You, San Francisco, CA, Taterhill Press, 1987, pp. 20-21.
42. Beyond Beef, The FARM Report, newsletter of Farm Animal Reform Movement, Bethesda, MD, Spring, 1992 p.6.
43. Specter, Michael, "The World's Oceans are Sending an SOS," The New York Times, May 3, 1992, p. E-5.
44. Mason, Jim, "Taking Stock From Farm to Slaughter," Animals' Agenda, Monroe, CT, April 1991, Vol. XI, No. 3, pp. 16-23.
-also, Old MacDonald's Factory Farm, pp. 102-03.
* Page 3 footnote, see 11/01/92 Vegetarian Times magazine, page 4 editorial.
* Page 4 footnote, Schell, Orville, Modern Meat, Random House, 1984.
MEANWHILE back at the ranch, E.F. "Bud" Loats, central-regional manager of Cyanamid Animal Industry Department (385 million in animal drug sales-'84), explains the thoughtful attitude that prevails in today's open frontier:
"I'm not sure what all the ruckus over drug resistance is about. I mean, you've got these animals on drugs in their feed.
Then five months after they're weaned, they're on a truck. Then they arrive at the packing plant and -boom!- they're gone. That's the end of that."
This document is largely a condensation of the flyer "101 reasons why I'm a vegetarian" by Pamela Teisler.
12.4 million Americans now consider themselves vegetarians, almost 7% of the population.
One million Americans per year are adopting some sort of vegetarian diet, about 20,000 a week.
The most frequently cited reason: health.
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