Guest guest Posted September 22, 2006 Report Share Posted September 22, 2006 Meat & Protein: Dispelling the Myths (Part 2) JoAnn Guest Sep 21, 2006 19:22 PDT http://gnhealth.com/scripts/prodView.asp?idproduct=1087 Meat & Protein: Dispelling the Myths (Part 2) Transcript of Gary Null's Radio Show Note: The information on this website is presented for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for the advice of a qualified professional. GARY NULL: Hi everyone. I'm Gary Null and I'd like to welcome you to this special presentation: Meat, Protein, and Dispelling the Myths. This is a continuation of our discussion where we're trying to explain why we should be very conscious of the choices we make about what goes into our system. After all the long-term effects could be heart disease, Alzheimer's, gastrointestinal cancers, breast cancer, prostate cancer, arthritis, fibromyalgia. Now it depends upon who you speak with. If you talk with people within the industries producing these products of course they're going to say there is no connection. And we could say well the tobacco industry said the same thing, but they were wrong. Today I'm going to present more evidence as to why vegetarians and non-vegetarians should be focusing on this very important issue. At the end of the last program I discussed how that in the late '90s the public began to react to the perception that the meat industrial complex was indeed a plague. That nearly a century ago back in 1907, Dr. Alois Alzheimer, who by the way later would be named for Alzheimer's disease how that ended up uh - his research showed that there was a lot that we should be concerned with. And he was joined by Drs. Creutzfeldt and Jakob. They had identified a brain wasting disease and how it was affecting people in Europe. The disease caused the brains of cows to turn into a sponge-like mass, and their behavior was called mad. But now all these years later more than 167,000 British dairy cows had died from the bovine form of this very disease popularly known as mad cow disease between 1985 and 1995. mad cow disease is a member of a family of diseases called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies or TSE's seen in various animals. Not just cows. You can find them in humans, sheep, mink, deer, and cats. TSE's are known by different names depending upon which species of animal they're found in: for example, Creutzfeldt- Jakob Disease in humans; Scrapie in sheep; Chronic wasting syndrome in deer and elk; and bovine spongiform encephalopathy or BSE in cows. Whatever animal is affected however the diseases have very similar characteristics. They attack the central nervous system causing disintegration of the brain. They have a long incubation period between the time when infection first occurs and the appearance of symptoms. They are always fatal, and they are transmitted by eating parts of animals, especially the brains and spinal cords. And during this entire time British health officials adamantly maintained that there was nothing unsafe about eating British beef. They lied. Even as evidence mounted to the contrary the government held stubbornly to this position. Then finally in 1996 a panel of government scientists told parliament that " the most likely explanation for new cases of the human form of mad cow disease was that BSE had moved from cows to people. " The human variant of mad cow disease had been named Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease or CJD. The protein causing CJD has no DNA, and has been described as more like a crystal than (inaudible) material. In labs 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit heat does not destroy this protein particle. Some scientists say that once infected the incubation period can last anywhere from one month to 30 years as the human brain turns into a sponge. The spongiform encephalopathic condition physically debilitates those so infected. At present there is no reliable anti-moratorium diagnosis, specific treatment, or vaccine to prevent the disease. The agent thought to be responsible for this unusual class of disease is a rogue protein, and unlike all other agents known to cause infectious disease contains no DNA, no RNA. The bad form of this molecule holds or (?) a sponge appearance inside the brain in all disease variance. It doesn't matter. It will have the same manifestation in a human as a cow as a pig as a sheep as a deer. All the same. The infectious agent of mad cow disease remains infective even after exposure for an hour to a temperature of 680 degrees Celsius. Enough to melt lead. And it can withstand antibiotics, boiling water, bleach, formaldehyde, every form of solvent, detergent, enzymes known to destroy all other bacteria and viruses. But it doesn't hurt this virus or this protein. By 1996 more than one million infected cows had been consumed in Britain. So in the next few years more than 2.5 million dairy British cows infected with mad cow disease were killed and incinerated at extremely high temperatures in an attempt to eradicate the disease. Meanwhile studies were showing that transmission of these proteins, the prions, from infected cattle to humans by oral intake was also probable. The meat industry was reeling. Statements such as meat is a lush medium for pathogenic bacteria and germs; it can harbor parasites, toxic chemicals, and medical contaminants; and it can bring death by brain rot were circulating in the industry itself as well as in the more popular media. Six months after Oprah Winfrey had discussed these things. In 1999 the US Food and Drug Administration and Canadian health authorities recommended that blood centers refuse blood donations from people who had spent six months or more cumulative time in England during the past 17 years because anyone who had spent substantial time in England during this period was potentially infected with the human form of the disease. And it is transmittable through blood. Meanwhile studies were showing the transmission of the protein from infected cattle to humans by oral intake was very probable. The meat industry was reeling as statements such as meat is just a harbor of all forms of toxins and containments and can cause brain rot were circulating. In 1998 six months after Oprah Winfrey survived a highly publicized suit by the cattle industry for discussing mad cow disease on her show the FDA formally banned the practice of feeding cow meat and bone meal back to cows. But most people didn't know that happened. Most people imagined it well a cow is fed grass or hay when grass is out of season or grains. Little did anyone know that cows are actually fed ground up dead cows. But they're also fed ground up dead chickens and chicken manure and chicken feathers and grease trappings. Just imagine you can only be what you eat. And if a cow becomes all of that that it eats and when you eat the cow that's what your cells become. And there's no discrimination in the body. The cell cannot just take in the good nutrients and leave out all of the contaminants. Every thing that's in the cow comes right through the hamburger, the hot dog, or fried chicken. Well within two years reports surfaced that the meat industry again was ignoring legislation as pigs and chickens were still being fed the bones, brains, meat scraps, feathers, and feces of their own species. So little was really done in a conscious period of time. The British failed first, and the Americans failed behind them always bending to the pressure of the meat industry. Another issue beyond this is what about the irradiation of meat. Doesn't that make it safe? Isn't that better? Doesn't that kill bacteria and viruses and allows to have a healthier cut of meat? The answer is no. When you have an industry which causes up to 33 million cases of food related illness each year - that's 33 million - 9,000 deaths and food poisoning from E. coli, O517-H7, better known as E. coli, which effects up to 73,480 people annually in the United States then there is a problem. On February 22, 2000 the penny dropped. The US Food and Drug Administration gave the green light to the irradiation of beef and other meat products. But would you eat a fast food burger that had been nuked, exposed to nuclear radiation in order to kill pathogens such as salmonella. The FDA claims the technology is safe and effective. My research shows it is neither. There are two major types of food irradiation: electron beam which uses a high speed gun to bombard foods with electrons; and nuclear, which is favored by the nuclear power industry because it provides a use for spent nuclear fuel and it uses nuclear reactors to manufacture the necessary cobalt 60. Electron beam radiation is not in itself environmentally hazardously; but critics say that it is even more hazardous to the food supply than the nuclear variant. In addition to eliminating E. coli the treatment can significantly reduce levels of other pathogens including listeria, salmonella, and campylobacter. The food isn't radioactive and while it is a slight loss of nutrients the food is largely unchanged according to the Food and Drug Administration. And while a label disclosing the irradiation treatment is required for meat products purchased in a store, labeling isn't required for foods used as ingredients in a product like flour and bread for example or for foods served by restaurants or school lunch programs. The animal feeding studies first used to evaluate the safety of food irradiation were inadequate to assure there would be no long-term ill effects. That's according to Dr. Marcy Van Gemmert (sp?), a toxicologist and Chair of the FDA Committee that investigated 441 irradiation studies before the approval of the process for poultry and some other foods in 1982. She says that she's not for or against food irradiation, but believes politics not good science was the basis of its acceptance. In 1963 wheat and wheat powder were the first food approved for irradiation. And in the early '70s meat prepared for NASA astronauts were routinely sterilized with radiation. But these early experiments never affected consumer products. The FDA admits that no more animal feeding studies have been done since 1982, but claims they aren't needed because irradiation has a trivial effect on food. " Conducting animal feeding studies would be a waste of time and effort, " says Dr. Paul Pauley, Director of the FDA's Division of Product Policy. " One could predict what would occur better than one could determine by doing a study with animals. " Pauley claims that studies evaluated in 1982 suggest that there might be ill effects from irradiation were flawed and that the FDA has concluded there are no toxic effects that could be attributed to radiation. He says, " We tried to look at the totality of evidence to see is there any pattern here. When you start getting dozens of studies adding up to thousands of animals and the only thing you can see is that no one found any toxic effects due to irradiation then your assurance of safety becomes stronger. " However opponents of irradiation disagree. " We're about to have a huge experiment at your local McDonald's and Burger Kings so why bother with animal studies, " says Michael Colby, Executive Director of Food and Water, a consumer advocacy group based in Vermont. " The trouble is the government won't go to the trouble of having controlled and experimental groups. We are all subjects of the experiment. " He advises consumers to boycott all forms of non organic meat and poultry and says that unless consumers purchase organically grown products they won't know if the meat has been exposed to radiation or not. If you don't know where your food comes from, you're playing Russian roulette with your meal. You aren't going to know if you buy irradiated food in a restaurant or if your child eats irradiated food at school lunch. You won't know. No labeling is required for any processed food that contains irradiated ingredients even if you're talking about the chicken in chicken soup. These loop holes are a result of extensive corporate lobbying to fool consumers and jumpstart a very dubious technology. Besides creating toxic byproducts such as formaldehyde and benzene, irradiation can create some unique radiolytic products. Chemicals that have not been identified or tested for toxicity. According to Dr. John Goffman at the University of California, Berkeley, " What we do know with certainty is that irradiation causes a host of unnatural and sometimes unidentifiable chemicals to be formed within the irradiated foods. " Goffman says, " Our ignorance about these foreign compounds make it simply a fraud to tell the public that we know irradiated foods would be safe to eat. It is dishonorable to trick people into buying irradiated foods, " he says. Dr. Pauley of the FDA says chemical changes do take place when products are irradiated, but the levels of toxins like benzene are so low it has to be of no concern. He also denies there is any reason for concern about irradiation destroying essential vitamins and minerals. But the Organic Consumer Association claims that by releasing molecular materials called free radicals irradiation may destroy as much as 80 percent of vitamin A, C, E, K, and B complex depending upon the dose of irradiation and the length of the storage time. The group charges that irradiation also deactivates the natural digestive enzymes found in raw food and encourages fats to turn rancid. Another issue has been raised in the safety of irradiated facilities. Colby says that workers in irradiation plants risk exposure to large doses of radiation due to equipment failures, leaks, and other problems. In 1998 in Decatur, Georgia there was a radioactivity release into the water storage pool at Radiation Sterilizers, Inc. Taxpayers paid up to 30 million dollars to clean up in the case. Dr. Pauley responds that it's unfair to equate that accident with an unsafe record for the industry. " What I have seen is that the safety record is good. These are heavily regulated facilities. If anything goes wrong, measures are taken to remedy that, " he says. Still more controversy surfaces when one considers that irradiation kills beneficial microorganisms as well as the harmful ones, and that the use of the technology could lead to the development of radiation and antibiotic resistant bacteria. And there's another factor. One of the things that finally we are paying attention to when we study the American diet and disease patterns is that the average American consuming the average diet has a plethora of gastrointestinal problems. In part this is due to eating wrong combinations and excessive quantities of food, but it's also due to the fact that our diet is substantially lacking in enzymes. Enzymes are the catalysts of life. They are the spark plugs of a food. And when you use irradiation, you are destroying the enzymes. You have to because it's the destruction of the enzymes that's allowing the food to have a longer shelf life. It's no different than when you taste an orange and it doesn't taste very sweet. You eat a tomato and it tastes kind of cardboard-ish. One of the reasons that our fruits and vegetables do not taste quite as good as they once did, and certainly nowhere comparing it to the taste of what comes from a fresh picked something out of your garden is that they are picked unripe and then gassed with chemicals in storage timing how long it will take an unripe fruit to artificially ripen by the time it gets to the store. The difference is that you've speeded up a natural process unnaturally, and you do not get the full maturity of taste. Try a peach. Have you ever seen the peaches that when you bite into them they are kind of mushy? Well that's an example of peaches picked unripe, gassed in transit, and then ripened artificially. Nothing like the sweet orb of juice that flows from a peach right off a tree. Naturally ripened is always better. Allowing a plant to go to its full maturity is better, but naturally ripened fruit generally has a relatively short shelf life. And one of the things that manufacturers want is longer shelf life. Destroy the enzymes. Neutralize them. The enzymes that would normally cause a fruit of any kind or vegetable or meat to go rancid to complete its life cycle are substantially limiting. So the fruit lasts maybe a week longer. Well a week longer is a lot more sales time, but we pay a price for it. We are being nutritionally robbed at one end. There is more to this. We should look for example at a vegetarian alternative. Just for a moment let us examine some of the reasons why millions of Americans, billions of people throughout the world, have selected a vegetarian alternative. Since Americans have been forced fed the propaganda of the basic four food groups they had been taking a beating in many ways. While the profits of the meat and dairy industries have greatly increased, the average consumer has had to dig deeper in to his pocket to pay the rising costs of their products. He is always paying more for medical bills and health insurance because of sharp increases in disease and sickness. The Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs has found an increase in the rate of malnutrition and obesity alongside a decrease in the quality not quantity of food consumed. At the same time there has been a direct increase in the rate of heart disease, cancer, hypertension, arthritis, and other degenerative diseases. The animal producers have successfully brainwashed Americans into believing that without meat and dairy products they're in danger of malnutrition. But with the public health and nutritional well being dramatically declining while meat and dairy consumption greatly increases, their scare tactics are wearing pretty think. A workable alternative to the basic four would be a five-group division that would be utilized not just by the affluent consumer societies of the western world, but also by the average citizens of the third world. Now this trans-cultural food grouping would comprise three principal dietary staples: grains, legumes, and vegetables, and while the two smaller groups would be raw foods and foods containing B12. And this categorization includes all of the foods needed by people in any socioeconomic or cultural group in order to maintain a healthy normal active life. The five-group division is not a new concept. The Canadians have separated fruits and vegetables into two separate categories and together with meat and cereal and milk they end up with five. Those are the bad three. The Puerto Ricans who stress vegetables and fresh fruits also work with five groups. But adapting a vegetarian diet of grains, legumes, nuts and seeds, fruits and vegetables - actually it better be a six group - would not be easy to sell to agribusiness. This brainwashing has blinded us from seeing the health benefits of the vegetarian alternative. The time has come though when the public begins to comprehend the enormous waste of health and the dangers involved in eating meat. We are starting to see through the thinly veiled public education messages of the meat and dairy industries that for years have fabricated our need for animal products. As far back as 1977 agriculture expert Lester Brown informed us that if American cut their meat consumption by just ten percent it would save us about 12 million tons of grain. This savings alone could negate the entire year's nutritional deficit in India where nutritional deficit is among the highest in the world. In By Bread Alone Brown reasoned that if some of us consume more others of necessity must consume less. The moral issue is raised by the fact that those who are consuming less (?) are not so much the overweight affluent, but the already undernourished poor. Continuing to eat animal products amidst starving people in the world is not just thoughtless it's selfish. While the average person in the United States consumes some 2,000 pounds of grain annually all but 150 pounds of that grain is in the form of animal food. As senseless as this seems our gluttony demands for meat has prompted us to waste 170 million tons of grain a year this way. We could eat the grain directly instead of pumping it into livestock thereby enabling us to feast on a greasy steak or fatty hamburger. If we did, we would alleviate the present caloric deficiency of the world four times over. Instead of donating to world hunger organizations, try eliminating beef from your diet, chicken from your diet, veal from your diet, and pork from your diet. It is the most effective and concrete thing to do to help humans end a lot of suffering. Food experts agree that we should eat much more of a vegetarian diet in order to create more nutritional parity in the world. They note that a simple diet would free up grain exports and therefore increase global food resources. By decreasing our demand for meat, we are releasing millions of tons of food that can be used to nourish our starving and malnourished brethren in underdeveloped parts of the world. And we're even becoming healthier for it. On the other hand if we refuse to change our wasteful food production and selfish food consumption amidst the starving millions, the devastation will continue and no one - not even us - will be spared. Sickness and disease, hunger and famine, economic chaos and violent struggles for dwindling food supplies will ensue and augment steadily. So the time has come to reallocate our food resources while the problem can still be solved. Since Brown's appeal to Americans to consume less food a quarter of a century ago, there have been hundreds of studies supporting the vegetarian outlook. And by the late 1990's - early 2000's as Americans incorporated the phrase virtual reality into their vocabulary, many realized that the meat industry complex and Byzantine concepts of offering only virtual meat was not a healthy solution. Various journals picked up on the trend and reported that over 30 million Americans had explored a vegetarian program at some point. About one-third of US teenagers think that being a vegetarian is in. Aging baby boomers who are waking up to their own health concerns are taking a proactive approach to their health by eating more meatless meals. Health and taste were the top two reasons consumers were eating more meat- free meals. The American Institute for Cancer Research reported a 40 percent of the world's cancer cases could be prevented through the adaptation of diets rich in grains, fruits, and vegetables. Recently I was asked in a debate on a Phoenix radio station to explain the proof that a vegetarian diet works. Where is the science behind it? Well right off the bat I was able to cite and give them over 275 references. Lest you feel that there is not adequate proof review Loma Linda University, a Seven Day Adventist Christian Health Science Institution in Loma Linda, California. They've allocated considerable resources towards studying the Adventist vegetarian lifestyle. The Loma Linda University has achieved a 300 plus list of nutritional benefits of the vegetarian diet published in peer review journals dating clear back to 1964. The first research was done by Dr. Hardage on 86 lacto-ovo vegetarians, 26 pure vegans, and 88 non-vegetarian adults, adolescents, and pregnant women. From 1954 to '66, he completed eight published studies in peer review journals comparing the diets of Adventist vegetarians to non-vegetarians. What he found was simple. Blood cholesterol levels were lower in the vegetarian groups than in the non-vegetarian groups. Their heart conditions were better. Another researcher Dr. Winder in 1959 observed that the incidence of cancer and coronary artery disease was much lower in Adventist populations consisting mainly of nonsmokers and nondrinkers since alcohol and smoking are prohibited in their religion. At the time the Seven Day Adventists had a membership of about 300,000 people in the United States. By 1964 researchers reported in The American Journal of Medicine that aschemic heart disease was the most common cause of death among adult white Americans and was increasing in frequency. The author also reported that there was a growing belief this was partially related to " environmental factors peculiar to the so-called highly civilized societies. " While a group of Seven Day Adventists were chosen for this study because they used much less of the animal products. They don't drink coffee, alcohol or tobacco or are not supposed to. The researchers also felt that day-to-day stresses seemed to be less in the Adventists group, but had no objective proof of this. The authors found that the hospital admissions for coronary artery disease were 40 percent less among Seven Day Adventists men than among men in the general population from all other religions. And they had less blood fats that were harmful. They had less aschemic heart disease compared to white males living in New York. In 1996 Winder and Lemon had collected information from several studies reporting in The Journal of the American Medical Association that results in ongoing health survey of Seven Day Adventists. From 1958 to 1962 there were 850 deaths among 11,000 Seven Day Adventists men. The total number of deaths observed was one-half expected in the average population. Half. The death from respiratory disease was one-fourth the average of the rest of America. In the Adventist group there were 28 deaths due to emphysema or lung cancer, but occurred in a minority of Adventists with a history of heavy smoking whereas only one death occurred in the Adventists who had never smoked out of 3,913. So dramatic were these findings in 1966 that it gave the alternative medicine and natural health community strong evidence of the beneficial effects of a healthy lifestyle and an early warning about the detrimental effects of cigarette smoking. By 1969 a report in The Archives of Environmental Health found that there was a greater life expectancy in the population of 34,000 Seven Day Adventists, which was in large part due to not smoking and not eating meat and not having dairy. A series of study on dental health also began around 1958 and confirmed a lower incidence of dental caries, tooth decay, in children of Seven Day Adventists children. Researchers set out to determine if the difference was purely due to diet. There was also a somewhat humorous side of the study of the Adventists diet. A researcher decided to study whether the stress of abstaining from the so-called pleasures of modern society - tobacco, caffeine, and alcohol - had a mental health impact on the group of Adventists. Or perhaps the thinking was that you must be crazy to give up on normal cultural socializing behavior. It wasn't true. They didn't mind it, and they were healthier. And they had less tooth decay due to the diet. In 1966 Dr. R.O. West repeated the earlier cholesterol studies with a group of 466 Seven Day Adventists in Washington, DC. This study matched the Adventists vegetarians with non-vegetarians from the same local population looking at the effects on eating meat and chicken versus vegetarian and measuring their cholesterol. Well the findings were that the vegetarians had much, much healthier lower cholesterol than the non. Now what I've just cited just in the last two minutes is represented by 21 peer review mainstream scientific journals from The Medical Arts and Sciences Volume 21 and The Journal of Dental Research Volume 46. All of these of course and all the citations - hundreds - will be on my website garynull.com at the completion of this particular series of studies. Now I stopped at 1966. From 1966 until today there are over 1,500 studies in the mainstream scientific literature that support the importance not just of eating a healthier diet, but of specifically fruits and vegetables and protecting us against heart disease and cancers. All told there are more than 5,000 studies on all types of dietary changes. That includes soy products in the diet. Well here's how it works. Those people who are going on a meatless diet are more likely to consume more fruits and vegetables and vegetable juices and soy products. They are more likely to take their antioxidants. They're also more likely to exercise with more regularity. It's as if when you raise your consciousness about what is healthy for you in one part of your life, you're less susceptible to resisting making positive changes in other areas. Whereas a person who is smoking and drinking and drinking coffee and eating meat is less likely to deal with stress, is less likely to deal with exercise, is less likely to have the positive thoughts because they're not in the same mindset. It has nothing to do with intellect. Nothing to do with success of life. But it has an awful lot to do with the health of the body. Now there has been a lot said about well do we need all this protein from meat or can we get adequate protein by not having meat. I will deal with that on our next program time permitting. But now I want to take a look at the reverence for life issue in a little more depth. If people were truly concerned about animals, they would never condone the hell they are put through while alive to say nothing about their torturous slaughter. Animals do not enjoy the sunshine or roam the fields or smell the fresh grass after a gentle springtime rain. They are isolated in dark cells. Herded into tight quarters so they can barely move. There they are fed and maintained while they await their slaughter. Their life is like that of the unjustly condemned prisoner who lives out his days on death row awaiting his ultimate death by decree. Animals are not raised on farms anymore but in animal factories. They are seldom cared for by a small farmer running a family business, but by factory management constantly seeking ways to increase profit and decrease overhead. At this time virtually all poultry and better than half of all cows and pigs live their days like inmates on a mechanized factory environment. Poultry, pigs, and calves live a totally confined life. Never to see the light of day until their head is put in the direction of the slaughterhouse. Hens are frequently crowded into tiny cages, which they do not leave for a year or two. Pregnant sows are tightly housed to control their movement. They can barely squeeze their bodies into the minute stalls that are their homes for three months at a time. Cattle and pigs sometimes get to enjoy open air feeding lots, but even that is strictly timed by machines which feed them, water them, and remove their waste. These factory methods of animal farming have greatly endangered the small traditional farmers. Today 95 percent of hens, chickens, and turkeys and more than 50 percent of all cattle, dairy cows, and pigs are raised in this kind of impersonal high tech environment. Agribusiness has little interest in the natural instincts of animals. Confinement is so complete that chickens don't even have enough room to flap their wings. Mating is so controlled and normal sexual activity is so hampered that male animals commonly become impotent and females cannot even menstruate regularly. If you live shoulder to shoulder with other people day after day in a city with walls and no escape and no natural light and controlled central air systems instead of fresh air, what do you think would happen? Predictably animals living under these conditions become so highly aggressive and violent that normal interaction is rare. Subsequent depression lowers the will and the ability to fight off disease and infection, which can easily become epidemic. Agribusiness may not be concerned about the natural instincts of animals per say, but they are when their repression cuts into capital gain. Diseases resulting from the horrendous living conditions described just a moment ago are very costly. If animals die, they can't create profits. But because only so much spoilage is allowed rather than improve the animals' living conditions though producers prefer to initiate health programs. Well we have a difference of opinion on what constitutes a good health program. Their programs are not designed to improve health, but to control sickness. Over half the cattle and nearly 100 percent of the hogs and calves and chickens are fed a study diet of antibiotics and related medicines to keep infection and contagious diseases at a controlled level. One FDA official advises us that antibiotics are most effective in the early growing period in warding off diseases in animals that are crowded or improperly housed or malnourished. Antibiotics in animal feed actually stimulate quicker weight gain while improving the efficiency of livestock feed by 16 percent. Now this might seem to solve the economic problems of producing meat in animal factories. But it bypasses the question of the rights of the animals to decent, natural and even happy lives. Moreover no one is sure of what the long-term effect of many eventually possibly contagious diseases might be in a very sick animal population that gets into the human population. All they do is just keeping pouring more antibiotics in. Commercially they are very profitable. The meat industry, the dairy industry, the poultry industry are hundred billion dollar industries. They do what they feel is in the best economic interest. Methods are devised to inhibit natural extraneous behavior. The chickens are de-beaked so they will not peck under stress. The pigs have their tails cut off because they tend to bite them when they're stressed. Not only physical behaviors are controlled, but also so are biochemical processes. Hormones are given to intervene in reproductive cycles to produce an exceptionally large number of ova in the female and to keep the animal's labor contractions and delivery time on schedule. That is on the animals' factory schedule. There is a recent trend in the United States towards creating fewer and larger feedlots. This trend is expected to mean big overhead cuts for the animal industry, but even greater discomfort and inhumane treatment for the animals. Chickens are now given only one-sixth the space that laying hens had in 1954. Animals are being pushed closer and closer together to cut the cost of operations as well as fixed overhead. On top of these savings as animal's physical activity is restricted by a lack of space it eats less and gains weight faster. But even though overhead and feed costs may dip, obese animals can also become burdensome and undesirable. Chickens frequently gain so much weight that they can't even stand up without industrial intervention. Obese cattle may have fatty livers and abscesses that make them more difficult to market and certainly less desirable. Who wants to eat a diseased liver? But then how would you know that the liver you're eating is diseased? Stress accompanied by low tolerance to infection and disease and unusual unsanitary conditions is a typical problem with the factory-farmed animal. Pigs are known to suffer greatly while they are being transported to the slaughterhouse. The respiration and heart rate increase. The blood vessels may constrict from muscular tension causing insufficient circulation of blood and oxygen. A circulatory and respiratory collapse may ensue. Many pigs cannot even stand during the trip to the slaughterhouse because of skeletal rigidity while others are dead long before they ever reach their destination. More than one billion dollars is lost because of livestock injuries and stress and death resulting from the mishandling in transport every year. Not all money saving steps taken by animal producers result in bigger profits. Animal rights activist Dr. Michael Fox contends that happier less-stressed and more naturally raised animals would spell (?) greater productivity while cutting deeply into the costly problems of infections, sickness, and ultimately death. He insists that husbandry conditions should be allowed so that the animal has the opportunity to develop, explore, and experience its telose (?) to some degree. Its chicken-ness or its cow-ness or its pig-ness or whatever. He goes on to list typical basic needs that should be fulfilled. Freedom to form natural physical movement. Association with other animals where appropriate of their own kind. Facilities for comfort where they can rest, sleep, and have body care. Provisions for food and water and to maintain full health. Ability to perform daily routines and natural activities. The opportunity for activities for exploration and play especially for younger animals. Satisfaction of minimal spatial and territorial requirements including a visual field and personal space. Most cattlemen however say nonsense. Why do all that? All we're raising them for is to kill them so you can eat them. Well it makes sense. What we might consider for a moment is shouldn't we know more about what we're eating. Leo Tolstoy a vegetarian once said well there was a woman and he presented her with a live chicken. She was told to decapitate and prepare it for cooking since she had requested chicken for dinner. She turned down the opportunity. If more people were aware of what is involved in producing meat, they would probably be much less enthusiastic about dining on ham and hot dogs. Children are taught early to recognize all their barnyard friends and their different sounds and peculiar habits. Yet they may think nothing about eating a juicy hamburger or chicken leg until they make the actual association between the food and its source. That juicy hamburger is the friendly brown cow with the big gentle eyes and the chicken leg is the same one that was being used by a real chicken that might have been running in the yard that very day. Unfortunately most people don't see the raw cuts of beef hanging on hooks while the blood drips dry or the screams of the pigs as they're hauled off to the slaughterhouse. Living in apartments in the city and shopping for prime cuts of meat neatly packaged and nicely colored you've lost the touch with the actual processes of food gathering and food processing. We're too removed from the origins of our food. Too insulated from the sights and sounds and smells of the animal factories and slaughterhouses that we silently support by eating meat in fine restaurants or at the family table. Doctor Fox explains that what the eye doesn't seem the consumer doesn't grieve. The Styrofoam carton of impeccable eggs, neatly trimmed meat in the plastic wrappers or a delicate slice of veal cordon bleu served on a silver platter doesn't tell us the whole story. What would tell the story is a trip to an animal factory or a slaughterhouse. Arthur Richard Rhoades gives us some idea of what such an experience might be like as he describes his impressions at the ID Packing Company and meat producer for the Armour Meat Company. He says, " Down goes the tailgate and out come the pig enthusiastically after their drive. Pigs are the most intelligent of all farm animals by actual laboratory tests. They talk a lot to each other. So you can listen. They do talk. Low grunts. Quick squeals. Kind of a hum sometimes. Angry shrieks. High screams. A fear. It was a frightening experience seeing their fear. Seeing so many of them go by it had to remind me of things no one wants to be reminded of anymore. All mobs. All death marches. All mass murders and extinctions. The slaughter of the buffalo. The slaughter of the Indian. The Inferno. The Judgment Day. That we are the most expensive of races able in our affluence to hire others of our kind to do their terrible work of killing another race. Even though meat eating is allowed in the revised Judeo Christian tradition, the inhumane treatment of animals is strictly forbidden. Isaac Singer, author of Yentl and The Family Moskat, became a vegetarian when faced with the moral dilemma created by eating meat. He relates accounts of the brutal and heartless treatment of animals in Blood and The Slaughter and other works. He raises the issues of animals having as much right to a life as a man has. All creatures being God's creatures he challenges the very basis of our social order in a New York Times article entitled, " When Keeping Kosher Isn't Kosher Enough. " He asks how can we speak of right and justice if we take an innocent creature and shed its blood? Singer was interested in being a vegetarian even as a child, but his parents discouraged it. Now for the past 20 years he has championed the cause of vegetarianism and even adopted it as his religion. He's experienced understandable reservations with adhering to any religion that could justify the abominable practice of slaughtering animals. Nowhere is reverence for life expressed more profoundly than in the philosophy of the vegans. Not only do vegans refrain from meat eating but also shun dairy products and eggs. After all they reason animals suffer unbelievably in the production of these foods. Mark Braunstein writes in Radical Vegetarianism Diet Ethics and Dialectics about the hapless hen forced in to endless labor throughout its life and confined to tight quarters without hardly ever contacting the real world. The hen he says must forever count her chickens before they hatch. Cows too he notes are treated sinfully. They are grossly overworked and have only the most meager quarters. They are even forced to surrender their young calves to the meat producers who are trying to fill the demand for tender veal. Braunstein ponders over just how many vegetarians there are, how vegetarian a person can claim to be if he insists on eating eggs or dairy. After all he reasons, what about the veal floating invisibly inside every glass of milk. There can be no quart of milk where there is no cutlet of veal. The vegetarian might protest that eggs and cheese have nutrients and protein essential to proper health, but Braunstein sees a little difference between the vegetarian and the meat eater in this argument. Both insist that animals must be allowed to suffer so that people can have good nutrition. Braunstein counters it this is the vegetarian dialectic of diet and ethic. That not coincidentally but absolutely essentially those foods, which are the products of the least deprivation of life from others, will contribute to the longest life in ourselves. The vegans' reverence for life runs deep and wide. They will not use any products that have been made possible by any degree of animal suffering. The list of banned items goes far beyond food: fur, leather, silk, pearls, oil-based soaps, cosmetics. A survey done in England indicates that some 83 percent of all vegans have chosen their lifestyle primarily for ethical reasons. They hold closely a reverence of life coupled with the disdain for the atrocities wrought on animals in the name of convenience and commercialism. The second reason for their preferred lifestyle is their own health. The third is to conserve our dwindling food supplies. The sort of mistreatment of animals that gives vegans so much cause for concern is exemplified by the dairy cow. A vegan society booklet tells how dairy cows are scheduled by producers for annual pregnancies. They are only allowed to suckle the young calf for a maximum of three days. Although in most cases the calf is taken for slaughter just after birth to be processed as meat or to utilize its stomach lining as rennet for cheese. It's a little wonder that vegans are left scratching their heads when a vegetarian refuses to eat veal and instead has a cheese casserole. Both require the suffering of animals. Atrocities that few would care to hear about at the dinner table. A certain number of calves are reserved to be used for white veal, a fine delicacy in many circles. But the animal must have its physical activity virtually stopped cold if it's to be tender and white. The calf is squeezed into a small crate where it stays for over a quarter of a year. Its diet is mostly liquid frequently leaving the animal to eat at the siding of the crate in order to satisfy its natural craving for substance and roughage. By the time this confused animal is ready for slaughter it can barely stand up without support. It is so lacking in normal muscle tissue and skeletal support and stamina and vigor. Meanwhile even the poor old dairy cow is chopped up into convenient size meat packages after her milk dries up. Her flesh is too old for prime cuts. Though it is only suitable for export. We must wonder why this violence and abuse is allowed to continue. The Texas Cattle Feeders Association leader gives up a pretty good reason why. He says, " We the cattle industry are willing to produce any kind of animal the consumer wants. " In other words this situation persists because we the consumer support it with our dollars and our eating habits. If we think that the consumer is not really capable of setting the pace for what's so vast an industry thinks, well think again. Think of what would happen if we the consumers became vegetarian. They would of course cease functioning - the meat industry. Land now being used and abused to grow animal feed could then be used to grow well for real human feed. Vegetables and grains for people. The wanton destruction of life would be diminished and energy spent on killing and violence might begin to be used to foster peace and goodwill. How could we even hope for peace among men until we have taken steps towards establishing harmony with the animal life? An organizer for a World Vegetarian Congress in India is convinced that vegetarianism must precede international peace. He says the demand for vegetarian food will increase our production for the right kind of plant foods. We shall cease to breed pigs and other animals for food thereby ceasing to be responsible for the horror in the slaughterhouses where millions of creatures cry in agony and in vain because of man's selfishness. If such concentration camps for slaughtering continue, can peace ever come to earth? Can we escape the responsibility for misery when we are practicing killing every day of our lives by consciously or unconsciously supporting this trade of slaughter? Peace cannot come where peace is not given. Pete Singer coauthor of Animal Factories is likewise concerned about the animal carnage that we are too readily to defend as a tradeoff for human survival. He says the root of the problem is our blithely taking power over the lives and deaths of other creatures whose suffering is in no way necessary for our survival. If we so easily take the lives of animals who are only a few evolutionary steps removed from us, what is to prevent us from doing the same to humans who are physically very different from us, of a different color or speaking in an unintelligible language or primitive in their customs? The exploitation of animals is nothing new to civilizations. Its roots can be tracked back to over 10,000 years. But it has become a particularly perilous problem in the 20th century in the presence of mechanized technology and antibiotics and hormones and horrendously artificial living conditions. Animal care is no longer a simple matter of man caring for animals. Feeding, watering, cleaning and doctoring it. Now machines tend to the basic animal care. Hormones are used to make them grow. Antibiotics help keep them from dying prematurely. Raised in horribly close quarters and unnatural environments. Obese and unhealthy from lack of exercise and excessive drug use. Depressed from lack of warmth, affection and normal social interaction. Modern day animals are exploited more completely than animals have ever been before. They are physically abused, mentally tortured, and spiritually castrated. But we can stop all that. After all it was Mahatma Gandhi who said the greatest of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. I'm Gary Null. This brings us to the end of this particular program: Meat, Protein and Dispelling The Myths. More on our next program. (End of Meat, Protein and Dispelling the Myths Part Two) © 1996-2006 Gary Null & Associates, Inc. (GNA). . Some of the articles and materials that appear herein are reproduced with the permission of the copyright owner(s). No reproduction or duplication allowed without the written permission of GNA. The statements contained herein have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Nothing contained herein is intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. The materials contained on this website are for educational purposes only, and GNA does not endorse or express any opinion as to the validity of the information or advice contained on this website. Consult with your knowledgeable health care provider to determine which and what amounts of vitamins, minerals, food supplements, dietary plans, or exercise programs would be beneficial for your particular health needs. If you are using any medications, you must consult with your physician and pharmacist to determine if any vitamin, mineral, nutrient, chemical, phyto-chemical, herb, botanical, juice, drug, or food may be counter-indicated. Disclaimer The information on this website is presented for educational purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for the diagnosis, treatment and advice of a qualified licensed professional. Throughout this website, statements are made pertaining to the properties and/or functions of nutritional products. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and these materials and products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. JoAnn Guest mrsjo- www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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