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	<title>World Change Cafe &#187; Beef</title>
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		<title>In depth: Are you taking global warming personally?</title>
		<link>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2010/11/26/in-depth-are-you-taking-global-warming-personally/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Nov 2010 23:45:17 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Animal Ag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Animal Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Environment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Global Warming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sustainability]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beef]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.worldchangecafe.com/?p=1465</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[While growing concern about global warming is welcome, the many connections between the increasingly globalized western-style diet and global warming have generally been overlooked, marginalized, or outright denied. 

]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>While growing concern about global warming is welcome, the many connections between the increasingly globalized western-style diet and global warming have generally been overlooked, marginalized, or outright denied. </strong></p>
<p>October 27, 2010</p>
<p>Dan Brook, Ph.D. &amp; Richard Schwartz, Ph.D.</p>
<p><strong>Global warming goes way beyond “an inconvenient truth”.</strong> We are overheating our planet to alarming levels with catastrophic consequences. Thirteen of the past fourteen years have been the hottest on record and 2010 is on a sizzling pace to break another record. Picture an overheated car (and what we drive), an overcooked dinner (and what we eat), and someone sick with a fever (and how we act). Now imagine that on a planetary scale.</p>
<p>Global warming is perhaps the biggest social, political economic, and environmental problem facing our planet and its inhabitants. Global warming refers to the increasing average temperature of the Earth’s air and water. People are becoming increasingly aware of and concerned about global warming and its serious consequences — despite corporate misinformation and right-wing obfuscation — due to frequent reports regarding record heat waves, blazing wildfires, an increase in the number and severity of storms, the length of droughts, the melting of glaciers, permafrost, and polar ice caps, rising sea levels, flooding, changes in wind direction, acidification of the oceans, endangered species, spreading diseases, shrinking lakes, submerged islands, and environmental refugees. While not all climatic changes can be directly attributed to global warming, most are consistent with the scientific projections for the warmer globe we are creating. Earthlings may be standing at a global precipice.</p>
<p>In recent years, we have been experiencing waves washing across and submerging islands, massive ice shelves breaking off in the Arctic, and the threatening of endangered species, most notably polar bears. Global warming is also endangering penguins, seals, walruses, salmon, elephants, frogs, butterflies, birds, and <em>many</em> other animals, threatening up to one-third of all species. In contrast, increases in carbon dioxide and heat levels will lead to an increase in the number and range of mosquitos, further spreading discomfort and disease.</p>
<p>In 2010 alone, we are witnessing many countries experience unprecedented heat waves, raging wildfires in Russia, profound drought in Australia and Israel, massive flooding in China and Pakistan, along with the continuing disappearance of glaciers — about 80% of the world’s glaciers are shrinking — and the snow on Mt. Kilimanjaro, and other ominous signs of disaster. In August 2010, an “ice island” more than twice the size of San Francisco calved from the Petermann Glacier in Greenland into the sea (earlier, the Ayles Ice Shelf calved entirely in August 2005 and the Markham Ice Shelf broke up in 2008, just to mention a couple of other such alarming events). “Such a path is not merely unsustainable”, according to John P. Holdren, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and former president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, “it is a prescription for disaster.”</p>
<p>Humanity is threatened as perhaps never before and major changes have to occur to put our imperiled planet on a sustainable path — soon. Even though some individuals still deny the reality of global warming, there is a complete scientific and environmental consensus — among <em>all</em> major scientific and environmental organizations, journals, and magazines, and <em>all</em> peer-reviewed scholarly articles — that global warming is real, serious, worsening, and caused or exacerbated by human activity. The evidence is overwhelming. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its Fourth Assessment Report in February 2007, which was researched and written by about 2,500 climate scientists over a six-year period and then vetted by over 130 governments. The Report carefully delineates clear trends and potentially catastrophic consequences associated with climate change, warning of the possibility of irreversible change, unless we make concerted efforts to counter global warming. The IPCC makes it plain that the current and projected climate change is not simply “natural variation”, solar activity, or other cyclical phenomena, but “very likely” (meaning <em>at least</em> 90% certainty) the result of human activity. The case is closed on the problem of global warming, with only the mitigations and solutions to still debate.</p>
<p>It therefore should not be surprising that the U.S. Pentagon states that global warming is a larger threat than even terrorism. “Picture Japan, suffering from flooding along its coastal cities and contamination of its fresh water supply, eyeing Russia’s Sakhalin Island oil and gas reserves as an energy source”, suggests a Pentagon memo on global warming. “Envision Pakistan, India and China — all armed with nuclear weapons — skirmishing at their borders over refugees, access to shared river and arable land.” The Secretary General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, has said that climate change needs to be taken as seriously as war and, further, that “changes in our environment and the resulting upheavals from droughts to inundated coastal areas to loss of arable land are likely to become a major driver of war and conflict”. Fighting global warming may be one way to prevent future wars, simultaneously increasing energy security and physical security.</p>
<p>Progressives have additional causes for concern. The people disproportionately affected by global warming are the poor and socially disadvantaged, since they are in the weakest position to guard against environmental damages and will likely suffer the most harm. In the underdeveloped world, and perhaps especially in China, India, and Southeast Asia, as well as much of Africa and the Middle East, global warming will negatively affect urban drinking water systems, agricultural output, and commercial and other transport on rivers.</p>
<p>Further, increased suffering and increasing numbers of environmental refugees, along with greater anxiety over access to food, water, land, and housing — the material essentials of life — often lead to unstable conditions that give rise to anger, ethnic violence, terrorism, fascism, and war.  “It’s the poorest of the poor in the world, and this includes poor people even in prosperous societies, who are going to be the worst hit,” states IPCC Chair Rajendra Pachauri. Those who needlessly degrade and destroy the environment to satisfy their own selfish pleasures are like the pre-revolutionary Queen Marie-Antoinette, declaring “Let them eat carbon dioxide”!</p>
<p>Yes, we need our governments, corporations, schools, religious institutions, and other organizations to get actively involved in fighting global warming. Yes, we need to stop deforestation and increase reforestation. Yes, we need more resource conservation and more energy-efficient buildings, houses, cars, appliances, electronics, batteries, and light bulbs. And, yes, our society needs to switch away from fossil fuels and toward renewable ones, such as solar, wind, tidal, wave, biomass, hydrogen, geothermal, and others. But while we are struggling for these important and positive large-scale social changes, we also need to say <em>“yes!”</em> to <em>personal</em> changes.</p>
<p>In fact, the latest IPCC report states that “Changes in lifestyles and consumption patterns that emphasize resource conservation can contribute to developing a low-carbon economy that is both equitable and sustainable.” A major study showing how personal “changes in lifestyles and consumption” can affect global warming is in the 2006 UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report, entitled “<a href="http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000448">Livestock’s Long Shadow</a>”. It states that animal-based agriculture causes approximately 18% of greenhouse gas emissions (in CO2 equivalents), which lead to global warming, an amount greater than that caused by all forms of transportation on the planet combined (about 13.5%). A 2009 report for the respected WorldWatch Institute entitled “<a href="http://www.worldwatch.org/node/6294">Livestock and Climate Change</a>” determined that the FAO underestimated livestock’s contribution by excluding important phenomena and, instead, calculates livestock’s contribution at 51% — a absolute majority of anthropogenic greenhouse gases.</p>
<p>Cars are still problematic, of course, but cows and other animals raised for human consumption are contributing more to global warming, thereby causing more damage to our existence and, indeed, to life on Earth. Therefore, what we eat is actually more important than what we drive and the most important personal change we could make for the environment, as well as for our own health and for the lives of animals, is a switch to vegetarianism.</p>
<p>The world is feeding nearly 60 billion farmed animals, while millions of people, disproportionately children, starve to death each year. Almost 40% of the grain produced worldwide — and about 70% in the U.S. — is inefficiently and immorally diverted to feed farmed animals, simply to satisfy the lust for money and meat. The FAO study reports that the livestock industry, in total, uses and abuses roughly 30% of the planet’s surface, thereby “entering into direct competition [with other activities] for scarce land, water and other natural resources.” Further, overuse of the land by livestock, leading to overuse of fuel and water, also degrades the land and pollutes the water around it, contributing to additional environmental and health problems. While factory farms may be the worst offenders, similar dynamics occur with free-range livestock as well. In fact, free range livestock actually occupy and potentially pollute a greater amount of land.</p>
<p>An animal-based diet also uses energy very inefficiently. Grains and beans require only 2 – 5% as much fossil fuel as beef.  Reducing energy consumption is not only a better choice in terms of fighting climate change, it is also a better choice in terms of being less dependent on foreign oil and the vagaries of both markets and dictators.</p>
<p>Additionally, the editors of <em>World Watch</em> (July/August 2004) concluded that “The human appetite for animal flesh is a driving force behind virtually every major category of environmental damage now threatening the human future — deforestation, erosion, fresh water scarcity, air and water pollution, climate change, biodiversity loss, social injustice, the destabilization of communities, and the spread of disease.” Lee Hall, the legal director for Friends of Animals, is more succinct: “Behind virtually every great environmental complaint there’s milk and meat.”</p>
<p>While growing concern about global warming is welcome, the many connections between the increasingly globalized western-style diet and global warming have generally been overlooked , marginalized, or outright denied. The production of meat contributes significantly to the emission of the three major gases associated with global warming: carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O), as well as other eco-destructive gases such as ammonia (NH3), which contributes to acid rain, and hydrogen sulfide (H2S), which has been implicated in mass extinctions.</p>
<p>Indeed, according to the United Nations Environment Programme, Unit on Climate Change, “There is a strong link between human diet and methane emissions from livestock.” The 2004 World Watch publication <em>State of the World</em> is more specific regarding the link between animals raised for meat and global warming: “Belching, flatulent livestock emit 16% of the world’s annual production of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas.” Likewise with the July 2005 issue of <em>Physics World</em>: “The animals we eat emit 21% of all the carbon dioxide that can be attributed to human activity.” We now know that these statistics are actually underestimates. With the accumulation of scientific studies, the climate picture is getting increasingly — and frighteningly — clearer.</p>
<p>Eating meat and other animal products directly contributes to this environmentally-irresponsible industry and its devastating impact on the environment, including the dire threat of global warming. People who still deny the critical link between meat and global warming are not fundamentally different than those who still deny the critical link between fossil fuels and global warming. Either way, the climate change deniers are fooling while Earth burns.</p>
<p>While carbon dioxide is the most plentiful greenhouse gas (currently about 35% higher than pre-industrial atmospheric levels), methane and nitrous oxide are <em>much</em> more powerful than carbon dioxide in terms of global warming potential. Methane is at least 23 times, and possibly as much as 72 times, more powerful (and about 150% higher than pre-industrial atmospheric levels) and nitrous oxide is a whopping 296 times more potent (and about 20% higher than pre-industrial atmospheric levels). With the livestock industry emitting such a huge amount of methane and given that methane degrades relatively quickly in the atmosphere (in approximately 12 years as compared to hundreds or even thousands of years for carbon dioxide), a sharp decrease in animal consumption, and therefore subsequent livestock (re)production, would provide the necessary near-term alleviation from global warming potentially “spinning out of control”.</p>
<p>Changing from the Standard American Diet (SAD) to a vegetarian or, better yet, vegan diet, according to geophysicists Gidon Eshel and Pamela Martin at the University of Chicago, does <em>more</em> to fight global warming than switching from a gas-guzzling Hummer to a Camry or from a Camry to a Prius. It has been said that “eating meat is like driving a huge SUV… [and] a vegetarian diet is like driving a [hybrid]”, while local, organic, vegan eating (LOVE) [<a href="http://www.truth-out.org/love-environment59878" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.truth-out.org/love-environment59878</span></a>] is like riding a bicycle.</p>
<p>Shifting away from SUVs, SUV lifestyles, and<em> </em>SUV-style diets, to energy-efficient, life-affirming empowering alternatives, is essential to fighting global warming. Planetary sustainability and the well-being of humanity are greatly dependent on a shift toward plant-based diets. One easy and effective way to fight global warming every day is with our forks, knives, spoons, and chopsticks! If we don’t, the “procrastination penalty” will be painful.</p>
<p>It is increasingly clear that eliminating, or at least sharply reducing, the production and consumption of meat and other animal products is imperative to help reduce global warming and other grave environmental threats, in addition to greatly benefitting one’s physical and spiritual health and the lives of animals. For some people, this means becoming vegetarian or vegan; some vegetarians are leaning towards or becoming vegans; many omnivores are engaging in Meatless Mondays or otherwise increasing their number of meatless meals; others are becoming “weekday vegetarians”, “vegan before dinnertime”, or other types of flexitarians. Which path are <em>you</em> on?</p>
<p><strong>Are you taking global warming personally? You should. Mark Twain once quipped that “Everybody talks about the weather, but no one ever does anything about it.” Now you can!</strong></p>
<hr size="2" />Dan Brook, Ph.D., is an author, poet, photographer, activist, and instructor of sociology and political science. He also maintains Eco-Eating at <a href="http://www.brook.com/veg" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.brook.com/veg</span></a>, The Vegetarian Mitzvah at <a href="http://www.brook.com/jveg" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.brook.com/jveg</span></a>, No Smoking? at <a href="http://www.brook.com/smoke" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.brook.com/smoke</span></a>, and welcomes comments via <a href="mailto:brook@brook.com" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">brook@brook.com</span></a>.</p>
<p>Richard H. Schwartz, Ph.D., is the author of <em>Judaism and Vegetarianism</em>, <em>Judaism and Global Survival</em>, and over 150 articles and interviews located at <a href="http://www.jewishveg.com/schwartz" target="_blank">www.JewishVeg.com/schwartz</a>. He is President of Jewish Vegetarians of North America (JVNA) at <a href="http://www.jewishveg.com/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.JewishVeg.com</span></a>, Director of the Veg Climate Alliance at <a href="http://www.vegclimatealliance.org/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.vegclimatealliance.org</span></a>, Coordinator of the Society of Ethical and Religious Vegetarians (SERV) at <a href="http://www.serv-online.org/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">www.serv-online.org</span></a>, and can be contacted via <a href="mailto:President@jewishveg.com" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">President@jewishveg.com</span></a>.</p>
<p>This article was reposted from <a href="http://world.edu/content/global-warming-personally/">World.edu</a>.</p>
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		<title>Yummy! Ammonia-Treated Pink Slime Now in Most U.S. Ground Beef</title>
		<link>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2010/01/03/yummy-ammonia-treated-pink-slime-now-in-most-u-s-ground-beef/</link>
		<comments>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2010/01/03/yummy-ammonia-treated-pink-slime-now-in-most-u-s-ground-beef/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Jan 2010 01:40:31 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Animal Ag]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.worldchangecafe.com/?p=1164</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You're not going to believe what you've been eating the last few years (thanks, Bush! thanks meat industry lobbyists!) when you eat a McDonald's burger (or the hamburger patties in kids' school lunches) or buy conventional ground meat at your supermarket.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>By Jennifer Poole, Daily Kos.</strong></p>
<p>You&#8217;re not going to believe what you&#8217;ve been eating the last few years (thanks, Bush! thanks meat industry lobbyists!) when you eat a McDonald&#8217;s burger (or the hamburger patties in kids&#8217; school lunches) or buy conventional ground meat at your supermarket:</p>
<p>According to today&#8217;s <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/31/us/31meat.html">New York Times</a>, The &#8220;majority of hamburger&#8221; now sold in the U.S. now contains fatty slaughterhouse trimmings &#8220;<strong>the industry once relegated to pet food and cooking oil</strong>,&#8221; &#8220;typically including most of the material from the outer surfaces of the carcass&#8221; that contains &#8220;larger microbiological populations.&#8221;</p>
<p>This &#8220;nasty pink slime,&#8221; as one FDA microbiologist called it, is now wrung in a centrifuge to remove the fat, and then treated with <strong>AMMONIA</strong> to &#8220;retard spoilage,&#8221; and turned into &#8220;a mashlike substance frozen into blocks or chips&#8221;.</p>
<p>Thus saving THREE CENTS a pound off production costs. And making the company, Beef Products Inc., a fortune. $440 million/year in revenue. Ain&#8217;t that something?</p>
<p>And to emphasize: this pink slime isn&#8217;t just in fast food burgers or free lunches for poor kids:</p>
<blockquote><p>With the U.S.D.A.’s stamp of approval, the company’s processed beef has become a mainstay in America’s hamburgers. McDonald’s, Burger King and other fast-food giants use it as a component in ground beef, <strong>as do grocery chains</strong>. The federal school lunch program used an estimated 5.5 million pounds of the processed beef last year alone.</p></blockquote>
<p>Bush&#8217;s U.S.D.A. also allowed these &#8220;innovators&#8221; to get away with listing the ammonia as &#8220;a processing agent&#8221; instead of by name. And they also OKd the processing method &#8212; and later exempted the hamburger from routine testing of meat sold to the general public &#8212; strictly based on the company&#8217;s claims of safety, which were not backed by any independent testing.</p>
<p>Because the ammonia taste was so bad (&#8220;It was frozen, but you could still smell ammonia,&#8221; said Dr. Charles Tant, a Georgia agriculture department official. &#8220;I’ve never seen anything like it.&#8221;) the company started using a less alkaline ammonia treatment, and now we know &#8212; thanks to testing done for the school lunch program &#8212; that the nasty stuff isn&#8217;t even reliably killing the pathogens.</p>
<blockquote><p>But government and industry records obtained by The New York Times show that in testing for the school lunch program, E. coli and salmonella pathogens have been found dozens of times in Beef Products meat, challenging claims by the company and the U.S.D.A. about the effectiveness of the treatment. Since 2005, E. coli has been found 3 times and salmonella 48 times, including back-to-back incidents in August in which two 27,000-pound batches were found to be contaminated. The meat was caught before reaching lunch-rooms trays.</p>
<p>In July, school lunch officials temporarily banned their hamburger makers from using meat from a Beef Products facility in Kansas because of salmonella — the third suspension in three years, records show. <strong>Yet the facility remained approved by the U.S.D.A. for other customers.</strong></p>
<p>Presented by The Times with the school lunch test results, top [U.S.D.A.] department officials said <strong>they were not aware</strong> of what their colleagues in the lunch program had been finding for years.</p></blockquote>
<p>The New York Times <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/31/us/31meat.html">article</a> today has a rather innocuous headline, &#8220;Safety of beef processing method is questioned.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;d say this quote from the U.S.D.A. department microbiologist, Gerald Zirnstein, who called the processed beef &#8220;pink slime&#8221; in a 2002 e-mail message to colleagues, represents the situation better: &#8220;I do not consider the stuff to be ground beef, and I consider allowing it in ground beef to be a form of fraudulent labeling.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been thinking about an action item on this issue, and I&#8217;ve got three ideas: a. write Michelle Obama through this web form: <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/">http://www.whitehouse.gov/&#8230;</a> or snail mail: The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20500; 2. print out the NY Times article and give it to the manager of your local supermarket, and ask them if they sell any kind of ground beef that doesn&#8217;t contain this &#8220;pink slime&#8221; or if their butchers will grind meat fresh for you; 3. just stop buying the damned stuff altogether.</p>
<p>Republished from <a href="http://www.alternet.org/">Alternet.org</a>.</p>
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		<title>Make meat-eaters pay: Ethicist proposes radical tax, says they&#8217;re killing themselves and the planet</title>
		<link>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2009/11/28/make-meat-eaters-pay-ethicist-proposes-radical-tax-says-theyre-killing-themselves-and-the-planet/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Nov 2009 02:29:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.worldchangecafe.com/?p=1103</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[First, eating red meat is likely to kill you. Large studies have shown that the daily consumption of red meat increases the risk that you will die prematurely of heart disease or bowel cancer. This is now beyond serious scientific dispute. When the beef industry tries to deny the evidence, it is just repeating what the tobacco industry did 30 years ago.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By <a href="http://www.nydailynews.com/authors/Peter%20Singer">Peter Singer</a></p>
<p>Taxes can do a lot of good. They pay for schools, parks, police and the military. But that’s not all they can do. High taxes on cigarettes have saved many lives – not only the lives of people who are discouraged from smoking as much as they would if cigarettes were cheap, but also the lives of others who spend less time passively inhaling smoke.</p>
<p>No reasonable person would want to abolish the tax on cigarettes. Unless, perhaps, they were proposing banning cigarettes altogether – as <a title="New York City" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/New+York+City">New York City</a> is doing with transfats served by restaurants.</p>
<p>A tax on sodas containing sugar has also been under consideration, by <a title="David Paterson" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/David+Paterson">Governor Paterson</a> among others. In view of our obesity epidemic, and the extra burden it places on our health care system – not to mention the problems it causes on a crowded <a title="New York City Subway" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/New+York+City+Subway">New York subway</a> when your neighbor can’t fit into a single seat – it’s a reasonable proposal.</p>
<p>But in all these moves against tobacco, transfats and sodas, we’ve been ignoring the cow in the room.</p>
<p>That’s right, cow. We don’t eat elephants. But the reasons for a tax on beef and other meats are stronger than those for discouraging consumption of cigarettes, transfats or sugary drinks. </p>
<p>First, eating red meat is likely to kill you. Large studies have shown that the daily consumption of red meat increases the risk that you will die prematurely of heart disease or bowel cancer. This is now beyond serious scientific dispute. When the beef industry tries to deny the evidence, it is just repeating what the tobacco industry did 30 years ago.</p>
<p>Second, we have laws that ban cruelty to animals. Unfortunately in the states in which most animals are raised for meat, the agribusiness lobby is so powerful that it has carved out exemptions to the usual laws against cruelty.</p>
<p>The exemptions allow producers to crowd chickens, pigs and calves in stinking sheds, never letting them go outside in fresh air and sunlight, often confining them so closely that they can’t even stretch their limbs or turn around. Debeaking – cutting through the sensitive beak of a young chick with a hot blade – is standard in the egg industry.</p>
<p>Undercover investigations repeatedly turn up new scandals – downed cows being dragged to slaughter, workers hitting pigs with steel pipes or playing football with live chickens. We may not be able to improve the laws in those farming states, but taxes on meat would discourage people from supporting these cruel practices.</p>
<p>Third, industrial meat production wastes food – we feed the animals vast quantities of grains and soybeans, and they burn up most of the nutritional value of these crops just living and breathing and developing bones and other unpalatable body parts. We get back only a fraction of the food value we put into them.</p>
<p>That puts unnecessary pressure on our croplands and causes food prices to rise all over the world. Converting corn to biofuel has been criticized because it raises food prices for the world’s poor, but seven times as much grain gets fed to animals as is made into biofuel.</p>
<p>Fourth, agricultural runoff — much of it from livestock production, or from the fertilizers used to grow the grain fed to the livestock — is the biggest single source of pollution of the nation’s rivers and streams, according to the <a title="U.S. Environmental Protection Agency" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/U.S.+Environmental+Protection+Agency">EPA</a>. A meat tax would be an important step towards cleaner rivers. By reducing the amount of nitrogen that runs off fields in the Midwest into the <a title="Mississippi" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Mississippi">Mississippi</a>, it would also stop the vast ?dead zone? that forms in the <a title="Gulf of Mexico" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Gulf+of+Mexico">Gulf of Mexico</a> each year.</p>
<p>The clincher is that taxing meat would be a highly effective way of reducing our greenhouse gas emissions and avoiding catastrophic climate change.</p>
<p>Here’s just how bad eating meat is for global warming.</p>
<p>Many people think that buying locally produced food is a good way to reduce their carbon footprint. But the average American would do more for the planet by going vegetarian just one day per week than by switching to a totally local diet.</p>
<p>In 2006 the <a title="Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Food+and+Agriculture+Organization+of+the+United+Nations">United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization</a> surprised many people when it produced a report showing that livestock are responsible for more emissions than all forms of transportation combined. It’s now clear that that report seriously underestimated the contribution that livestock — especially ruminant animals like cattle and sheep – are making to global warming.</p>
<p>As a more recent report by the <a title="Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Intergovernmental+Panel+on+Climate+Change">Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change</a> has shown, over the critical next 20 years, the methane these animals produce will be almost three times as potent in warming the planet as the FAO report assumed.</p>
<p>Meat-eaters impose costs on others, and the more meat they eat, the greater the costs.</p>
<p>They push up our health insurance premiums, increase <a title="Medicare" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Medicare">Medicare</a> and <a title="Medicaid" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Medicaid">Medicaid</a> costs for taxpayers, pollute our rivers, threaten the survival of fishing communities in the Gulf of Mexico, push up food prices for the world’s poor, and accelerate climate change.</p>
<p>Red meat is the worst for global warming, but a tax on red meat alone would merely push meat-eaters to chicken, and British animal welfare expert <a title="John Webster" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/John+Webster">Professor John Webster</a> has described the intensive chicken industry as “the single most severe, systematic example of man’s inhumanity to another sentient animal.?</p>
<p>So let’s start with a 50% tax on the retail value of all meat, and see what difference that makes to present consumption habits. If it is not enough to bring about the change we need, then, like cigarette taxes, it will need to go higher.</p>
<p><em>Singer is professor of bioethics at <a title="Princeton University" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Princeton+University">Princeton University</a>, the author of “Animal Liberation” and the author, with <a title="Jim Masion" href="http://www.nydailynews.com/topics/Jim+Masion">Jim Masion</a>, of “The Ethics of What We Eat.”</em></p>
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		<title>Bellying Up To Environmentalism</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Nov 2009 02:10:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I gave a talk in South Texas recently on the environmental virtues of a vegetarian diet. As you might imagine, the reception was chilly. In fact, the only applause came during the Q&#038;A period when a member of the audience said that my lecture made him want to go out and eat even more meat. "Plus," he added, "what I eat is my business -- it's personal."]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By James E. McWilliams</p>
<p>I gave a talk in South Texas recently on the environmental virtues of a vegetarian diet. As you might imagine, the reception was chilly. In fact, the only applause came during the Q&amp;A period when a member of the audience said that my lecture made him want to go out and eat even more meat. &#8220;Plus,&#8221; he added, &#8220;what I eat is my business &#8212; it&#8217;s personal.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been writing about food and agriculture for more than a decade. Until that evening, however, I&#8217;d never actively thought about this most basic culinary question: Is eating personal?</p>
<p>We know more than we&#8217;ve ever known about the innards of the global food system. We understand that food can both nourish and kill. We know that its production can both destroy and enhance our environment. We know that farming touches every aspect of our lives &#8212; the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the soil we need.</p>
<p>So it&#8217;s hard to avoid concluding that eating cannot be personal. What I eat influences you. What you eat influences me. Our diets are deeply, intimately and necessarily political.</p>
<p>This realization changes everything for those who avoid meat. As a vegetarian I&#8217;ve always felt the perverse need to apologize for my dietary choice. It inconveniences people. It smacks of self-righteousness. It makes us pariahs at dinner parties. But the more I learn about the negative impact of meat production, the more I feel that it&#8217;s the consumers of meat who should be making apologies.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s why: The livestock industry as a result of its reliance on corn and soy-based feed accounts for over half the synthetic fertilizer used in the United States, contributing more than any other sector to marine dead zones. It consumes 70 percent of the water in the American West &#8212; water so heavily subsidized that if irrigation supports were removed, ground beef would cost $35 a pound. Livestock accounts for at least 21 percent of greenhouse-gas emissions globally &#8212; more than all forms of transportation combined. Domestic animals &#8212; most of them healthy &#8212; consume about 70 percent of all the antibiotics produced. Undigested antibiotics leach from manure into freshwater systems and impair the sex organs of fish.</p>
<p>It takes a gallon of gasoline to produce a pound of conventional beef. If all the grain fed to animals went to people, you could feed China and India. That&#8217;s just a start.</p>
<p>Meat that&#8217;s raised according to &#8220;alternative&#8221; standards (about 1 percent of meat in the United States) might be a better choice but not nearly as much so as its privileged consumers would have us believe. &#8220;Free-range chickens&#8221; theoretically have access to the outdoors. But many &#8220;free-range&#8221; chickens never see the light of day because they cannot make it through the crowded shed to the aperture leading to a patch of cement.</p>
<p>&#8220;Grass-fed&#8221; beef produces four times the methane &#8212; a greenhouse gas 21 times as powerful as carbon dioxide &#8212; of grain-fed cows, and many grass-fed cows are raised on heavily fertilized and irrigated grass. Pastured pigs are still typically mutilated, fed commercial feed and prevented from rooting &#8212; their most basic instinct besides sex.</p>
<p>Issues of animal welfare are equally implicated in all forms of meat production. Domestic animals suffer immensely, feel pain and may even be cognizant of the fate that awaits them. In an egg factory, male chicks (economically worthless) are summarily run through a grinder. Pigs are castrated without anesthesia, crated, tail-docked and nose-ringed. Milk cows are repeatedly impregnated through artificial insemination, confined to milking stalls and milked to yield 15 times the amount of milk they would produce under normal conditions. When calves are removed from their mothers at birth, the mothers mourn their loss with heart-rending moans.</p>
<p>Then comes the slaughterhouse, an operation that&#8217;s left with millions of pounds of carcasses &#8212; deadstock &#8212; that are incinerated or dumped in landfills. (Rendering plants have taken a nose dive since mad cow disease.)</p>
<p>Now, if someone told you that a particular corporation was trashing the air, water and soil; causing more global warming than the transportation industry; consuming massive amounts of fossil fuel; unleashing the cruelest sort of suffering on innocent and sentient beings; failing to recycle its waste; and clogging our arteries in the process, how would you react? Would you say, &#8220;Hey, that&#8217;s personal?&#8221; Probably not. It&#8217;s more likely that you&#8217;d frame the matter as a dire political issue in need of a dire political response.</p>
<p>Vegetarianism is not only the most powerful political response we can make to industrialized food. It&#8217;s a necessary prerequisite to reforming it. To quit eating meat is to dismantle the global food apparatus at its foundation.</p>
<p>Agribusiness has been vilified of late by muckraking journalists, activist filmmakers and sustainable-food advocates. We know that <em>something</em> has to be done to save our food from corporate interests. But I wonder &#8212; are we ready to do what must be done? Sure, we&#8217;ve been inundated with ideas: eat local, vote with your fork, buy organic, support fair trade, etc. But these proposals all lack something that every successful environmental movement has always placed at its core: genuine sacrifice.</p>
<p>Until we make that leap, until we create a culinary culture in which the meat-eaters must do the apologizing, the current proposals will be nothing more than gestures that turn the fork into an empty symbol rather than a real tool for environmental change.</p>
<p><em>James E. McWilliams, an associate professor of history at Texas State University at San Marcos and a recent fellow in the agrarian studies program at Yale University, is most recently the author of &#8220;Just Food.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Republished from <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/">The Washington Post</a></p>
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		<title>Amazon rainforests pay the price as demand for beef soars</title>
		<link>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2009/08/10/amazon-rainforests-pay-the-price-as-demand-for-beef-soars/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Aug 2009 22:25:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A three-year survey by Greenpeace shows that western demand for beef and leather and an increase in cattle ranching is leading to intensified deforestation in the Amazon.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By David Adam</p>
<p>Four-year old Daniel Santos da Silva and his older brother Diego Mota dos Santos, 10, heard their first gunshots in April. Their father was shot in a dispute over land on a cattle ranch near the Brazilian town of El Dorado, in the Amazonian state of Para. The boys heard he was taken to hospital, but they have not seen him since.</p>
<p>The ranch is called Espirito Santo, holy spirit, though goodwill to all men is hard to find there. Heavily armed guards protect the thousands of cattle that roam its lush pastures and the hacienda-style complex built on a hill at the farm&#8217;s centre, complete with swimming pool.</p>
<p>Daniel and Diego live on the muddy fringe of the farm in a hastily erected collection of palm frond-roofed huts to shield them and a hundred-odd other families from regular tropical downpours. They are squatters, but squatters rights are rarely observed in Para.</p>
<p>Espirito Santo and thousands of farms like it raise cattle on Amazonian pasture that was once rainforest. The farms are huge, and so is their impact. The cattle business is expanding rapidly in the Amazon, and now poses the biggest threat to the 80% of the original forest that still stands. Where loggers have made inroads to the edge of the forest in the states of Para and Mato Grosso, farmers have followed.</p>
<p>A report today from <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/greenpeace">Greenpeace</a> details a three-year investigation into these cattle farms and the global trade in their products, many of which end up on sale in Britain and Europe. Meat from the cattle is canned, packaged and processed into convenience foods. Hides become leather for shoes and trainers. Fat stripped from the carcasses is rendered and used to make toothpaste, face creams and soap. Gelatin squeezed from bones, intestines and ligaments thickens yoghurt and makes chewy sweets.</p>
<p>Greenpeace says it has lifted the lid on this trade to expose the &#8220;laundering&#8221; of cattle raised on illegally deforested land.</p>
<p>The environment campaign group wants Brazilian companies that buy cattle to boycott farms that have chopped down forest after an agreed date. To get the industry onside, it is seeking pressure from multinational brands that source their products in <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/brazil">Brazil</a>, and, ultimately, from their customers. Three years ago, a similar exposure of the trade in illegally grown Brazilian soya brought a rapid response from the industry, and a moratorium on soya from newly ­deforested farms that still holds.</p>
<p>Last month, the Guardian joined Greenpeace on an undercover visit to the cattle <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/farming">farming</a> heartland around the town of Maraba, deep inside the Amazon region. While saving the rainforest is a fashionable cause in faraway developed countries such as Britain, in Maraba it is a provocative and even ­dangerous ideal.</p>
<p>Many people in Maraba work at the slaughterhouse perched on a hill that overlooks the town. The facility is owned by the Brazilian firm Bertin, one of the companies targeted by Greenpeace for buying cattle from farms linked to illegal <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/deforestation">deforestation</a>. After slaughter, Greenpeace says Bertin ships the meat, hides and other products to an export facility in Lins, near Sao Paolo. From there, they are shipped all over the world. The firm is Brazil&#8217;s second largest beef exporter and the largest leather exporter. It is also the country&#8217;s largest supplier of rawhide dog chews.</p>
<p>Bertin denies taking cattle from Amazon farms associated with deforestation. The company says it &#8220;makes permanent investments in initiatives that minimise impacts resulting from its activities&#8221; and that it seeks &#8220;to be a reference in the sector&#8221;. It says it has already blacklisted 138 suppliers for &#8220;irregularities&#8221;.</p>
<p>Brazilian government records obtained by Greenpeace show that 76 cattle were shipped to the Bertin slaughterhouse in Maraba from Espirito Santo farm in May 2008. Another 380 were received in January this year.</p>
<p>Standing on Espirito Santo&#8217;s shady veranda, Oscar Bollir, the farm manager, insists they do nothing wrong.</p>
<p>Under Brazilian law, such farms inside the Amazon region must retain 80% of the original forest within their legal boundary. So why is there pasture for as far as the eye can see? The farm is very big, Bollir says, and most of the required forest is on the other side of some low-slung hills in the distance.</p>
<p>The squatters on the farm, part of a political movement to settle landless people on illegally snatched farmland, are troublemakers, he says. &#8220;They don&#8217;t want land they just want trouble. They want to take all the farms.&#8221; Earlier that day, he says, he and his men had been forced to visit a neighbouring farm where squatters had killed cattle. Unlike the previous incident on Espirito Santo, when Daniel and Diego&#8217;s father was shot alongside several others, Bollir says, this time there had been no trouble.</p>
<p>He adds that he is aware of environmental concerns, but that his priority is to produce <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/food">food</a> and jobs. &#8220;Why are these other countries looking at Brazil and telling us what to do?&#8221;</p>
<p>The next day, Greenpeace investigators flew over Espirito Santo &#8211; the group has a single-engined plane donated by an anonymous British benefactor. Bollir&#8217;s promised bonanza of forest was not there. GPS data combined with satellite images show that just 20% to 30% of the farm is forested. A local lawyer also reported that during the nearby dispute over the killed cattle, three squatters had been shot and injured.</p>
<p>The Greenpeace report identifies dozens of farms like Espirito Santo that it says break the rules across Para and Mato Grosso to supply Bertin and other slaughter companies. Campaigners say there are probably hundreds or even thousands more.</p>
<p>Cheap pasture from clearing and seeding rainforest is very attractive to farmers without easy access to the expensive agrichemicals and intensive land management techniques used in more developed countries. Within a few years, the planted pasture becomes overrun with native grass, unsuitable for cattle. Many farmers then take the cheap option and knock down adjoining forest to start again, leaving swaths of unproductive deforested land in their wake.</p>
<p>Andre Muggiati, a campaigner with Greenpeace Brazil based in the Amazon town of Manaus, says efforts to protect the forest in frontier regions such as Para are crippled by a lack of effective governance. Government inspections are inadequate and many farms are not even registered so checks cannot be carried out. Casual violence and intimidation are common. &#8220;It&#8217;s totally unregulated and many people behave as if the law does not apply to them. It&#8217;s like the old US wild west,&#8221; he says.</p>
<p>Illegal deforestation is not the only problem: farms are regularly exposed as using slave labour, and, like many tropical forest regions, there are regular and violent clashes over land ownership.</p>
<p>The problem is clear a three-hour flight across the patchy forest from Maraba, where a clearing on the side of the river is home to a few hundred Parakana people, a tribe with no contact with the outside world until 1985.</p>
<p>Greenpeace can only reach the village because its plane is equipped to land on the sluggish water, but cattle farmers are steadily intruding. Hundreds of farms have been set up in the surrounding reserve, and they are not welcome.</p>
<p>&#8220;Since the invaders arrived there have been many problems,&#8221; says Itanya, the village chief. Food is harder to find, he says, and discontent is growing. &#8220;If the government don&#8217;t find a solution we will solve it ourselves. We know how to make poison arrows and we are ready to kill people.&#8221; It is not an idle threat: in 2003 the bodies of three farmers were discovered in the jungle not far from the village. Itanya says it was the work of a neighbouring group.</p>
<p>&#8220;We asked them many times to stay away,&#8221; Kokoa, the chief of the neighbouring group, told the Guardian through an interpreter. &#8220;They wouldn&#8217;t, so one time we said to them that you will never go back and you will stay here forever. We killed them. We are proud that we defended our land.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Food for thought</strong></p>
<p><strong>How much of the Amazon rainforest has been lost and how quickly?</strong></p>
<p>Since the 1970s, when satellite mapping of the region became available, around a fifth of the rainforest has been destroyed, an area the size of California. Greenpeace US estimates that, between 2007 and 2008, another 3m acres (1.2m hectares) of the Brazilian Amazon have been destroyed.</p>
<p><strong>What is driving the destruction?</strong></p>
<p>Logging, cattle farming and soy plantations are key, plus the increased construction of dams and road, and shifting patterns of farming for local people and mining (for diamonds, bauxite, manganese, iron, tin, copper, lead and gold). These factors are often interlinked &#8211; trees are cut down for timber and the cleared land can be used for grazing cattle. Soybeans are then cultivated on the same land. Land is also cleared for biofuel crops. According to Greenpeace, around 80% of the area deforested in Brazil is now cattle pasture. Brazil&#8217;s biggest export markets for beef are Europe, the Middle East and Russia. Friends of the Earth Brazil estimate that cattle farming in Brazil has been responsible for 9bn-12bn tonnes of CO² emissions in the past decade, almost equivalent to two years worth from the US. Infrastructure projects such as hydroelectric dams also threaten the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/forests">forests</a> because they cause large areas to be flooded. Currently, the biggest planned project is the Tocantins River basin hydroelectric dam, the effects of which stretch over a distance of 1,200 miles.</p>
<p><strong>Why are cattle a particular problem?</strong></p>
<p>In 2006, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation found that the livestock industry, from farm to fork, was responsible for 18% of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, livestock-rearing can use up to 200 times more water a kilogram of meat compared to a kilo of grain. Furthermore, global meat consumption is on the rise, having increased by more than two and half times since 1970.</p>
<p><strong>Who is trying to stop the destruction?</strong></p>
<p>At this year&#8217;s climate change negotiations in Copenhagen, governments will consider the &#8220;Redd&#8221; mechanism. This is the idea that richer countries could offset their carbon emissions by paying to maintain forests in tropical regions. The idea has roots in the 2006 review of the economics of climate change by Nicholas Stern, who said £2.5bn a year could be enough to prevent deforestation in the eight most important countries. But Friends of the Earth says the proposals seem to be aimed at setting up a way to profit from forests, rather than stop climate change, and fail to protect the rights of those living in the forests.</p>
<p>In 2007, Greenpeace also came up with a plan to stop deforestation in the Amazon by 2015. It included creating financial incentives to promote forest protection; and increased support for agencies to monitor, control, and inspect commercial activities. So far, only some of these proposals have been taken up by the Brazilian government.</p>
<p><strong>Alok Jha</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>This article was amended on Tuesday 23 June 2009. We said that according to Greenpeace US, between 2007 and 2008 an estimated 3m acres of the Amazon rainforest have been destroyed. That figure was for the Brazilian part of the rainforest only. This has been corrected.</li>
</ul>
<p>Reposted from the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/">Guardian</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Frightening Diet of American Cows: Potato Chips, Chocolate and Chicken Manure</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Oct 2008 00:49:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[In The Physiology of Taste, written in 1825, Anthelme Brillat-Savarin wrote, "Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you what you are." This is the origin of the popular phrase, "You are what you eat." It’s no secret that America is facing an unprecedented obesity epidemic. So, just what are Americans eating?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Joanne Waldron</p>
<p>(NaturalNews) In <em>The Physiology of Taste</em>, written in 1825, Anthelme Brillat-Savarin <a href="http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Anthelme_Brillat-Savarin/">wrote</a>, &#8220;Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you what you are.&#8221; This is the origin of the popular phrase, &#8220;You are what you eat.&#8221; It&#8217;s no secret that America is facing an unprecedented obesity epidemic. So, just what are Americans eating?</p>
<p><strong>Cows fed Junk Food</strong></p>
<p>According to an <a href="http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/full/78/3/660S#T1">article</a> in <em>The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition</em>, the average American eats about 44 kg (about 97 pounds) of beef every year. That number may be shocking to some people. However, it&#8217;s not nearly as shocking as the <a href="http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/blogs/shapley/beef-cows-junk-food-47081501">news</a> reported by <em>The Daily Green</em> concerning the latest addition to the diet of the American cow: &#8220;potato chip and chocolate waste not fit for the junk food aisle at the grocery store.&#8221;</p>
<p>That&#8217;s right. Farmers are feeding cattle potato chips and chocolate scraps. Ever wonder what happens to those broken potato chips and chocolate candies? It&#8217;s bad enough that many children are permitted by their parents to eat this kind of junk food. Now, to make matters worse, they are experiencing even more ill health-effects through a meat-based diet, courtesy of farmers whose primary concern is turning a huge profit.</p>
<p><strong>Cows Should eat Grass</strong></p>
<p>Ask a little kid what a cow is supposed to eat, and the little kid will almost always give the correct response: grass. What&#8217;s up with American farmers? Why are they so confused? <a href="http://www.csuchico.edu/agr/grassfedbeef/health-benefits/index.html">Studies</a> have shown that beef produced from cows that eat the diet that nature intended is much more beneficial to human health.</p>
<p><strong>What Else are Cows Eating?</strong></p>
<p>However, cows have been given things like corn to fatten them up quickly for the last fifty years, according to <em>The Daily Green</em>, but corn is something that isn&#8217;t easily digested by cows. In fact, eating corn creates an acidic environment in the cow&#8217;s stomach that encourages the growth of E.coli. This, of course, requires the cow to be treated with antibiotics.</p>
<p>Of course, cows are also given growth hormones, and CNN <a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9708/23/chicken.manure/">reports</a> that some farmers think regular feed is too expensive and are feeding their cattle chicken manure. (Maybe it&#8217;s so expensive because it&#8217;s irradiated &#8212; most animal feeds are irradiated, too.) If that&#8217;s not bad enough, the FDA allows all sorts of chemicals, contaminants, drug residues, and euthanized animals in animal feed. By the way, it&#8217;s no secret that many of the drugs found in animal feed are linked to weight gain. Anyone hungry?</p>
<p><strong>You Are What You Eat</strong></p>
<p>For those who think they can escape all of this ugliness by eating organic beef, think again. While eating organic, grass-fed beef is certainly healthier than eating the meat of cows that have been fed corn, chicken manure, chocolate, potato chips, euthanized animals, and irradiated feed laden with chemical residues, organically-raised cows still have to go to the slaughterhouse. For a great description of what happens at the slaughterhouse, be sure to read the chapter entitled &#8220;The Dead, Rotting, Decomposing Flesh Diet&#8221; in the book called <em>Skinny Bitch</em> by Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin.</p>
<p>It doesn&#8217;t take a rocket scientist to see that the FDA is pretty worthless when it comes to protecting the health of the American people. The FDA even allows chemicals to be added to meat to make it look nice and red at the grocery store so that it will appear fresher longer. You are what you eat. Looking at the backsides of most Americans walking down the street, this is most certainly true.</p>
<p><strong>About the author</strong></p>
<p>Joanne Waldron is a computer scientist with a passion for writing and sharing health-related news and information with others. She runs the <a href="http://forums.delphiforums.com/nakedwellness/start">Naked Wellness: The Gentle Health Revolution</a> forum, which is devoted to achieving radiant health, well-being, and longevity.</p>
<p>This article was reprinted from <a href="http://www.naturalnews.com/">Naturalnews</a>.</p>
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		<title>The National Animal Identification System &#8211; Who Wins and Who Loses</title>
		<link>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2008/03/26/the-national-animal-identification-system-who-wins-and-who-loses/</link>
		<comments>http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2008/03/26/the-national-animal-identification-system-who-wins-and-who-loses/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Mar 2008 04:12:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Animal Ag]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Animal Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beef]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beef Producers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cows]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Downer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Downer Cows]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Factory Farms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Food Safety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homesteaders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NAIS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[National Animal Identification System]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[No Chicken Left Behind]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patriot Act]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pet Owners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Recall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USDA]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.worldchangecafe.com/2008/03/26/the-national-animal-identification-system-who-wins-and-who-loses/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The recall of 143 million pounds of beef processed over the past two years is the largest meat recall in the history of the world. The USDA had no choice following an animal group's release of videotape of "downer" cows being dragged across filthy floors and pushed around by a fork lift, before joining their healthier brethren on the hamburger highway. Since we all agree that the primary responsibility of the USDA is food safety, the question is, where were the USDA inspectors? The answer may be that for several years, the top priority at the USDA has not been food safety, but the creation of the National Animal Identification System (NAIS).]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> by Barbara L. Minton</p>
<p>(NaturalNews) The recall of 143 million pounds of beef processed over the past two years is the largest meat recall in the history of the world. The USDA had no choice following an animal group&#8217;s release of videotape of &#8220;downer&#8221; cows being dragged across filthy floors and pushed around by a fork lift, before joining their healthier brethren on the hamburger highway. Since we all agree that the primary responsibility of the USDA is food safety, the question is, where were the USDA inspectors? The answer may be that for several years, the top priority at the USDA has not been food safety, but the creation of the National Animal Identification System (NAIS).</p>
<p><strong>What is NAIS?</strong></p>
<p>Formulated under the Patriot Act and therefore with no legislative review or input of the people, NAIS is a government program originally designed to give US beef producers help in getting their products into the export markets, as well as protection from liability involving those products.</p>
<p>Often labeled &#8220;no chicken left behind&#8221;, the program has grown to include all livestock species, including cattle, bison, deer, elk, llamas, alpacas, horses, donkeys, mules, goats, sheep, swine, all poultry species, and fish. Owners are required at their expense to electronically, and with geo-satellite coordinates, tag each group or groups of animals and report within 24 hours to a data base: animal births, deaths, ownership transfers, and animal ingress and egress from the owner&#8217;s land.</p>
<p>Under this system, animal owners who want to sell or take their animals off their property are also required to register their land with the USDA, thus putting their property under federal jurisdiction.</p>
<p>Of course, the benefit is to the big factory farms who clearly do need some type of regulation. They will do single ID&#8217;s for large groups of animals. Small farmers, pet owners and homesteaders will have to tag and track every single animal individually.</p>
<p>Under NAIS, there are no exceptions. Even small farms that sell directly to local consumers will be required to pay the fees and file paperwork on each of their animals. Homesteaders who raise their own meat and grandma with her one egg hen will also have to register their homes as &#8216;farm premises&#8217; and obtain a Premise ID, as well as tagging each animal.</p>
<p>The animal tracking, logging and reporting components of NAIS are scheduled to become mandatory nationwide in January, 2009. Strict enforcement involving fines, inspections of properties and confiscation or redistribution of livestock can be done by the USDA or state government without trial or legal hearings and with no compensation to the owner of the animals. Failure to register your home or farm with a Premise ID already faces a $1,000 fine in some states. This is in violation of the Fourth Amendment Constitutional rights as outlined in the Bill of Rights.</p>
<p>Nearly $150 million of taxpayer money as been spent on promoting NAIS, money that could have been spent on more inspectors to oversee meat processing plants. Instead, NAIS money has been used to influence non-government organizations into a public/private partnership to promote the NAIS. The Future Farmers of America and the 4H Club received large sums to encourage their parents to quickly register their property into the program.</p>
<p><strong>NAIS and Food Safety</strong></p>
<p>NAIS does nothing to prevent or arrest disease or contamination in the food supply. The initiative is not intended for this purpose. The goal of NAIS is to provide a 48 hour trace back to the farm of origin in the case of problems, a requirement for export to foreign markets. NAIS expands corporate profits, not consumer safety. The 48 hour trace back time that follows any problem detection could mean weeks or months have elapsed since any problem would actually have occurred.</p>
<p>Contamination of the food generally happens after the food leaves the farm. Many examples of factory contaminated food fill the news. And if the problem is not discovered at the factory but later, at the consumer level, there is a recall. The systems are already in place to handle this type of problem.</p>
<p>As to disease, meat sold in stores and restaurants is supposedly USDA inspected during slaughter and processing. The reality is that large numbers of recalls show us that meat from big commercial producers may not have been properly inspected because there are not enough inspectors, and because priorities lie elsewhere.</p>
<p>NAIS does nothing to halt the spread of Mad Cow Disease, a disease believed to be caused by the practice of grinding up old cows and adding them to cow feed. This practice is banned, and it is the job of the USDA to enforce this ban.</p>
<p>NAIS cannot help prevent the feared Avian Flu which is spread by wild birds.</p>
<p>Had the NAIS system been fully in place, it would not have prevented the &#8220;downer&#8221; cows in California from getting into the food supply. Nor would it have prevented any of the other meat recalls in recent years. Only a more efficient USDA inspection program can improve food safety.</p>
<p><strong>Who Benefits and Who Loses From NAIS?</strong></p>
<p>Today&#8217;s NAIS is an outgrowth of international agreements brought to the USDA by the National Institute of Animal Agriculture, a not-for-profit organization consisting of large meat packers, manufacturers of animal tags and tag-reading equipment, and the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture. These are the organizations benefiting financially from the NAIS. Farmers, ranchers, and producers who must pay for this program were not invited to participate in its development.</p>
<p>The tag and reader manufacturers anticipate windfall profits from NAIS. State Departments of Agriculture are also slated to benefit. And certainly this is a full employment act for the USDA.</p>
<p>Animal owners who have to pay the bill for all this are being urged to sign up before NAIS becomes law in their states. Early sign up is billed as a patriotic act. To encourage early signing, animals cannot be shown at state fairs unless their premises are registered in the NAIS. Breed associations are being encouraged to withhold registration of animals for people not first registered with NAIS. There are reports that animals have been slaughtered by USDA inspectors on small farms where the owners resist registration.</p>
<p>Agri-business is the clear winner under NAIS. The prize is expanded export markets, and legal liability protection at minimal cost. Small farmers will be forced out of business due to the additional fees and paperwork, resulting in market share gain, bigger monopolies, and higher profits for the corporations. Anyone wishing to raise his own, better quality food will face the obstacles of paperwork and regulation.</p>
<p>NAIS is going to be expensive and guess who will pay for it in higher food prices? You!</p>
<p><strong>About the author</strong></p>
<p>Barbara is a school psychologist, a published author in the area of personal finance, a breast cancer survivor using &#8220;alternative&#8221; treatments, a born existentialist, and a student of nature and all things natural.</p>
<p>Reprinted from <a href="http://www.naturalnews.com/"><em>Natural News</em></a>.</p>
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