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- Vegetarianism
- "To Meat or Not to Meat"
-
- To Meat or Not to Meat
-
- As children, one of the first things we learn is to recognize the
- friendly barnyard
- animals. We easily can spot the furry cow with the gentle eyes, the
- feathery chickens
- who run wildly about, and the pink pigs that roll in the mud. We may
- also sing about that
- nice farmer, Old McDonald, and all of his nice animals. The truth is
- that Old McDonald
- with a straw hat has been replaced by a business man in the hard hat.
- Ninety-five percent of the meat we eat does not come from Old
- McDonald's farm.
- Hens, chickens, turkeys, and over half of beef cattle, dairy cows, and
- pigs come from an
- "animal factory" (Sussman, 95) which is a mechanized environment. This
- new farming
- method finds blue skies, tall silos, and grassy hillsides good for
- calendars but, bad for
- business. Those pictures are not cost effective. Animals are not
- treated with the loving
- care of a farmer but, are treated like inmates on death row.
- Poultry, pigs, and calves are forced to live in total confinement
- never to see the
- light of day until they head to the slaughter house. Hens are frequently
- crowded into
- small cages which they may not leave for a year or two. Pregnant sows
- are often put in
- stalls that are their homes for three months at a time. After having her
- piglets, a sow may
- be pinned to the floor for four to seven weeks in order to keep the sow
- from rolling over
- on her babies. Cows may be fed steady diet of molasses laced saw dust,
- shredded
- newspaper, plastic pellets, poultry manure, and processed slaughter house
- wastes in order
- to gain weight faster. Confinement is so complete that the animals do
- not have room to
- move (206).
- Not only are the animals forced to live in this unnatural
- environment, they are
- also pumped full off antibiotics, hormones, steroids, and are dipped in
- pesticides. Over
- half the cattle and nearly all pigs, calves, and poultry are fed a steady
- diet of antibiotics
- and related
-
-
-
-
-
- Jarboe 2
-
- medications to help control diseases. No one is sure what the long term
- side effects may
- be for people who consume these meat and dairy products (145).
- Have you ever seen a big rig driving down a highway hauling
- cattle? A trucker
- hauling livestock can legally drive two to three days nonstop leaving the
- creatures
- without food or water. Truckers who do stop to rest or water their cargo
- do so because
- they choose to, not because the law requires it . It is not surprising
- that much livestock is
- driven through days of suffocating heat and below zero nights uncared
- for, crowded, and
- sometimes literally frightened to death. Some of the animals arriving
- alive at the
- slaughter house have broken limbs or other injuries due to crowding and
- piling. At the
- journey's end the cattle are already confused and frightened at their
- treatment and strange
- surroundings. Now they must be sent through such procedures such as
- castration,
- dehorning, branding, and injections and various chemicals (Null, 86-87).
- The four slaughtering methods the government has declared humane
- are captive
- bolt, carbon dioxide, electrical stunning, and gunshot. The methods were
- devised from
- the Humane Slaughter Act of 1958. The Act says that all livestock must
- be unconscience
- before slaughtering. Unfortunately, the act has not provisions for
- punishment of those
- who choose to use an inhumane slaughtering technique (Sussman, 223).
- Captive bolt gun, which is usually used on cattle, uses
- compressed air or blank
- cartridges. The device fires a thick bolt into the animals' forehead.
- Some bolts are
- designed to stun the animal by concussion rather than penetration of the
- skull.
- Carbon dioxide is used on swine and sometimes sheep and calves.
- The animals
- ride on a conveyor belt into a pit filled with 65-75% concentration on
- carbon dioxide.
- The gas causes the animals to become unconscience.
- The electric stunner is handled by a packing house worker on any
- kind of animal.
- The stunners are shoved against the animal, shocking it into
- insensibility. If not handled
- correctly, the electical stunner can cause temporary paralyzation.
-
-
-
- Jarboe 3
- The gunshot method is preferred among small operations and most
- farmers. A
- .22 or .38 caliber bullet is shot into the animals brain. Unfortunately,
- if the animal
- moves it's head at the wrong time, the bullet can miss the desired spot
- causing the animal
- to bleed in agony until another bullet is fired (224-226).
- Chickens continue to be treated like dumb birds. In large
- poultry packing houses,
- birds are attached by their feet to a moving belt or chain. Conscience
- birds are moved
- along upside down to a motorized revolving blade that slices their neck
- just short of
- decapitation. Some operations force a knife blade into the birds mouth,
- piercing the base
- of the skull, and causing a fatal hemorrhage (Null, 136).
- Foodborne illnesses are the most common non-fatal diseases in the
- United States
- according to the U.S. Public Health Service. Food poisoning, with
- symptoms like those
- of the 24 hour flu, often goes unreported or undetected. Although not
- that harmful to a
- healthy adult, a mild case of food poisoning can be fatal for an elderly
- person, a baby, or
- someone who is already ill (245).
- Bacteria are easily transferred from raw meat to other foods.
- Unwashed utensils,
- cutting surfaces, sloppy meat markets, and restaurants may spread
- salmonella and other
- food poisonings. People who eat raw meat may also ingest beef tape
- worms.
- When barbecuing, the drops of fat dripping off of the juicy steak
- onto the burning
- charcoal and become superheated causing the fat's chemical properties to
- change to the
- form of a carcinogen. A grilled steak coated with greasy smoke can
- contain as much
- carcinogens as thirty packs of cigarettes (232).
- Dr. Michael Jacobson, the co-director of the Center for Science
- in the Public
- Interest, calls bacon "the most dangerous food in the supermarket."
- Bacon, sausage, and
- lunch meat contain sodium nitrate which, when hitting the human gut, form
- nitrosamines,
- the deadliest family of carcinogens (234).
-
-
-
- Jarboe 4
- If a group of health educators, home economists, and average
- individuals were
- asked the question, "What is the most important nutrient to a person's
- diet?" most of the
- responses would be "protein." Most people associate protein with meat
- cheese, milk, and
- eggs. Due to a person's need for protein, the USDA says that the average
- American
- annually consumes 93 pounds of beef, 57 pounds of pork, 45 pounds of
- chicken, nine
- pounds of turkey, and 12 pounds of seafood. Dr. Mervyn Hardinge, a
- medical physician
- with degrees from Harvard and Stanford Universities, says that the
- animals you are eating
- did not get their protein from eating other animals. If we think about
- it logically, the
- animals received their protein from the green or leave portions of the
- plant. Therefore,
- we should also get our protein by eating vegetables. The essential amino
- acids that make
- protein complete can only be received through plants (Sussman, 12).
- Funk and Wagnall's Standard Desk Dictionary defines "healthy" as
- having good
- health and having characteristics of a sound condition (296). Some
- people consider
- "healthy" to mean eating right and being at a "correct" weight. With
- planning to meet the
- requirements for calcium, iron, and B12, a vegetarian diet can be
- perfectly healthy and
- will reduce obesity and cholesterol. The use of whole grains,
- vegetables, and fruit will
- cover the recommended daily allowance for the nutrients found in meat
- without the
- heavy cholesterol count. Vegetarians take in fewer calories and fat and
- more complex
- carbohydrates and fiber (Interview,Kevin Vance). Although calcium and
- riboflavin tend
- to be lower, the vegetarian diet is closer to the diet recommended by the
- U.S. Department
- of Agriculture than the average American diet which consists of Big Macs,
- chicken
- nuggets, and Oscar Meyer wieners.
- Vegetarian diets depend heavily on four groups of plant foods;
- grains and cereals,
- legumes (including beans and peas), fruits and vegetables, and nuts and
- seeds. Including
- something from each of these four "vegetarian" food groups at every meal
- guarantees
- maximum nutrition (Interview,Kevin Vance).
-
- Jarboe 5
- Besides the nutritional benefits of the vegetarian diet,
- the human body is
- not suited for meat. For example, our teeth structures are those of
- herbivorous, or plant
- eating, animals. Although our bodies are designed to rely on vegetarian
- foods, modern
- man has changed his dietary habits to those of the carnivore, or meat
- eater. We may
- think of ourselves as carnivores but, our flat teeth are not designed to
- tear through hide,
- flesh, and bones. Tenderizer is put on meat so that it will be more
- easily chewed.
- Furthermore, the digestive system of the carnivore is designed to get rid
- of the meat it
- eats before it decays. The human digestive system is designed to break
- down complex
- carbohydrates and fibers like those of the herbivore (Sussman, 300).
- Taking a look past the cruel treatment of animals and the
- nutritional value of the
- vegetarian diet, maybe God did not intend for us to eat meat at all. In
- Genesis 1:29-30
- God said:
- I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of
- the whole earth and every
- tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be
- your for food. And to all the
- beasts of the earth and all the birds of the air and
- all the creatures that move
- on the ground - everything that has the breath of life
- in it - I give every plant
- for food. And it was so.
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