THE MOST IMPORTANT THING YOU CAN DO FOR THE ENVIRONMENT
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| MEAT PRODUCTION AND LIVESTOCK AGRICULTURE:
Use over 90% of the agricultural land area in the United States - over half of
the total land area of the country Use hundreds of billions of gallons of water
every day for crop irrigation Use more energy per capita than the less developed countries spend per capita on energy for all purposes
Produce soil erosion amounting to several billion tons of soil lost every year
Are the major contributors to deforestation in the United States and in the tropical forests of Central and South America, where forests
are being chopped down at the rate of 25 to 100 acres per minute.
BECOME A VEGETARIAN
Vegetarianism - the practice of not eating meat, fish or fowl - is a logical conclusion of all who
are in tune with the earth, with the animals, or with their own bodies. A vegetarian diet is undoubtedly healthier:
heart disease, cancer, and many of the other "diseases of civilization" are linked to meat consumption. And a vegetarian diet
would also be of direct benefit to the 8,000 animals which are slaughtered for food every minute in the United States alone.
But what about the environment?
VEGETARIANS USE MUCH LESS AGRICULTURAL LAND
Over 90% of all agricultural land (two-thirds of the cropland, all of the grazing land) is used for livestock agriculture
in the United States. Meat consumption is a very inefficient use of plant foods, because you get only a small portion
of any of the food nutrients which you feed the animal back when you slaughter the animal for food. The proportion wasted
varies, but its always at least on the order of 3 to 1, and more usually like 5 to 1, 10 to 1, or higher. The problem is
of increasing importance, as millions around the world starve every year, and even the U.S. may soon be faced with cropland
shortages.
VEGETARIANS PRESERVE TOPSOIL
Soil erosion is another one of the deleterious consequences of meat production. Since the beginning of agriculture, humans
have totally eroded over half of the then available agricultural land. In the United States, we are losing several billion
tons of topsoil each year on cropland and grazing land - almost all of which can be attributed to livestock agriculture. This
is about the equivalent of losing four inches of topsoil over four million acres of cropland. Geographer Karl Butzer puts it
this way: "In about 150 years the agricultural soil resources of the United States have been cut about half, and in some areas
such as Oklahoma, a single generation sufficed to destroy almost 30% of the soil mantle. Such a systematic if unconscious rape
of the land has had an impact that rivals or exceeds that of 6 to 10 millennia of cultivation in the Mediterranean world."
VEGETARIANS LET RIVERS FLOW
Water is another precious commodity which is continuously and contemptuously wasted by the meat industry. It has been estimated
that 80% of all the water used by agriculture goes directly or indirectly for animal products (meat, diary, etc.); and agriculture
both uses and consumes more water than any other use. Agriculture uses 40% of the water used, and consumes over 80% of the (nonreusable)
water consumed, in the U.S.; whereas ALL domestic water consumption by private individuals is less than 5% of the total of water consumed.
The amount of water which we would save by ELIMINATING TOTALLY all personal usage (toilet flushing, lawns, cooking, shower, etc.) does not even
APPROACH what we could save by becoming vegetarian. And this does not even consider that over one billion tons of animal excrement enter U.S.
waterways every year!
VEGETARIANS SAVE TREES EVERY DAY
Forests are another resource being decimated by meat consumption. The single most important
reason for deforestation in the United States and much of the rest of the world, is cattle
grazing. And this is happening at just the time when demands for forest product are escalating
DRAMATICALLY. Wood prices and paper prices have been going up lately - total demand for wood products worldwide
will have more than doubled in the period from 1974 to 2000.
Its the same story in the less developed countries as well; around the world, they are chopping down
tropical moist forests at the rate of 50 to 100 acres per minute. In Central and South America, the leading
cause of this deforestation is - you guessed it - conversion of forest land to grazing land for cattle.
VEGETARIANS MAINTAIN CLIMATOLOGICAL BALANCE
It gets grislier. As forests are decimated, they change the climate. It has been widely observed that
rainfall increases in forested areas, decreases in areas that have been deprived of forests. Deforestation
affect climate in other ways as well. Forests are usually replaced by cows, which belch huge quantities of
methane into the atmosphere, contributing substantially to the greenhouse effect. Worse: the forests stumps
are infested by termites, which are also an important source of methane in the atmosphere. Worse: trees
incorporate 10-20 times as much carbon as does crops or pasture, thus substituting crops or pasture
(or desert) for trees release carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, thus also contributing to the greenhouse
effect.
VEGETRIANS CONSERVE ENERGY RESOURCES
Energy is another vital resource which is wasted. Deep-sea fishing, for example, is extremely inefficient
in terms of fossil fuel energy - getting catfish in the U.S. takes 40 times more energy than growing wheat,
in terms of food calories produced. And in general, meat production requires 5 to 1000 times the fossil
fuel energy that plant foods do. The U.S. spends more than twice the energy per capita on energy consumption
for all purposes. To bring the world "up" to the United States destructive standard of living in diet would
easily bankrupt our energy supplies. In most of the world this would mean (minimally) doubling or tripling
energy inputs - something which is laughable just at the level of energy considerations, even if the vast
quantities of additional land and water required for this were available.
THE CONSEQUENCES OF CONTINUED MEAT CONSUMPTION
How long is this going to continue? Obviously it cannot go on for very much longer, historically speaking.
It may be 20-30 years before we begin to feel the real consequences of continued emphasis on meat consumption.
These consequences are going to be: Famines will become more frequent and more severe, as the third world becomes
more and more impoverished. More and more people will starve every year.
· Much of the U.S. West will cease to be productive as the groundwater disappears and the land dries up.
· Most tropical forests will disappear. Most forested land in the U.S. will be gone as well (Wood prices will
soar out of sight.) · The "greenhouse effect" will set in with a vengeance, resulting in hotter summers
and eventual flooding of most low-lying coastal areas.
· The standard of living of everyone will decline as agricultural resources become more and more scarce.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Fortunately, there is something which we can easily do about this environmental destruction:
we can stop eating meat. Other movements for social change - whether they be animal rights,
ecology, peace, justice or anything else - protest what others are doing. It is these others
who are killing dolphins in tuna nets, creating toxic wastes, waging aggressive war, raising
our taxes, and so forth. The vegetarian movement challenges the individual to change his or
her own life. That is something each one of us can do, and thereby not only help bring about
greatly needed reforms, but also serve as a simple, permanent, unmoving example of the powers
of the individual to change the world. |
| WEB LINKS |
VEGETARIAN WEB LINKS |
|
Several Vegetarian Links |
The Vegetarian pages is a UK site and has news, recipes, resources, books, software, famous vegetarians, fact sheets, and
a lot of stuff that may be of interest. - Guide to Vegetarian Restaurants Around the World|
- Guide to vegetarian organizations in North America|
- Worldwide vegetarian singles and networking service|
- Largest eco-friendly product directory |
|
Veggies Unite |
Over 2,700 recipes, books and magazine reviews, a weekly meal planner, substitutions,
articles, compositing guide, and monthly newsletter. |
|
Vegesource |
Extensive vegetarian listings, over 5,000 recipes, children's resources, links,
live chat, discussion boards, and a Star Trek link. |
VRG Journals |
Vegetarians Resource Group - featuring an e-mail newsletter, recipes, back issues,
articles, nutritional information, and a vegetarian game. |
|
The Virtual Vegetarian |
Web site for Vegetarian Times magazine, recipes, articles, remedies, resources,
substitutions and further links. |
|
vegan.com |
This site features articles, news, profiles of vegans, music, archives, book reviews,
poetry, recipe links and a science quiz. |
Healthfinder |
Even the government U.S.) has setup a site. User-friendly it features news, a search engine,
links, journals, publications, events, listserves and press releases from a variety of federal and state agencies.
With this site you could keep track of what the government is doing in this area? |
American Dietetic Site |
This is the American Dietetic Association Vegetarian Nutrition site, position paper
and fact sheets. |
|
New Vegetarian |
Vegan-oriented, links, articles and books, mostly about raw food resource and
lifestyles. |
|
Happy Cow |
World-wide vegetarion links - restaurants, food, etc. NEW |
|
Center for Science in the Public Interest |
Clearing house of nuturional information, facts on organic food labels, olestra,
alcohol and nutrional news in general. |
|
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine |
A leader and advocate for a vegetarian lifestyle, meat and dairy
misinformation about nutrition and vegetarianism. |
|
Corporate Agribusiness Research Project. |
A public interest central information resource on corporate agribusiness economic, social and environmental impacts
on family farmers, rural communities, ecosystems, labor and consumers. |
(Some of this information courtesy of Vegetarian Society of Colorado, P.O. Box 6773, Denver, CO 80203 U.S.A.)
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