20 Reasons to Go Vegan
Are you are thinking of going vegan? But you're
not quite sure why you should? Well I hope that the following
short list of reasons will help you to make up your mind. There
are of course many other reasons related to why it's important to
follow a vegan diet, so many in fact that it would be difficult
to list them all here. Generally though, the issues which
motivate people to change to a vegan diet can be divided into the
following categories: animal rights, environmental concerns,
health reasons, use of the world's resources and spiritual
reasons. So here goes then. Twenty reasons to get you started on
the vegan path!
- First of all spare a thought for the farm
animals. Today many farm animals are reared in
overcrowded and often inhumane conditions. Chickens
probably suffer the most inhumane conditions of any farm
animal (a typical cage for five battery hens measures
just 18" x 20" and has a wire floor which can
cause severe damage to the hen's feet and claws). But of
course other farm animals suffer too. For example, many
factory farmed pigs live in close confinement, often
being kept in squalid and overcrowded sheds with concrete
or slatted floors. And despite the fact that close
confinement in stalls was banned in the UK in January
1999 for all but strictly limited circumstances, Animal
Aid has recently filmed pigs still being kept inside such
stalls. You can find out more about this sorry state of
affairs in the Summer 2000 issue of Outrage. And
if you want to find out more about the general conditions
that farm animals in the UK have to endure, then you
should read Today's Farm Animals: The Inside Story. This
interesting booklet covers the dairy cow, sheep, pigs,
battery and broiler chickens, turkeys, ducks, quail and
ostriches and is available from Hillside Animal Sanctuary
(see further reading list).
- When you think of Easter do you think of
fluffy yellow chicks cheeping happily away? This is
certainly the image of chicks, often presented on the
Easter card. Yet for many newly born chicks the reality
they experience is completely different. Each year large
numbers of unwanted male 'layer' chicks are killed, many
of them suffering a slow and distressing death in the
gas-filled 'rubbish bins' into which they are tossed.
Female chicks are allowed to survive of course. But many
are debeaked in order to prevent them from tearing each
other apart when they are kept in overcrowded and
stressful conditions. This debeaking process can cause
considerable pain and some chicks will starve to death
afterwards because they are no longer able to eat. So,
it's worth sparing a thought for those cute, fluffy
chicks too, when you next crack open a cholesterol-ridden
egg.
- Much has been written about the often
inadequate ways in which animals are slaughtered and the
fear that animals suffer as they wait to die. A new
report on how animals suffer in the slaughter process was
published by Compassion in World Farming Trust (CIWF
Trust) on the 15th June. Peter Stevenson, Political &
Legal Director of CIWF and author of the report, says:
'People like to trust in the term 'humane slaughter',
believing that farm animals are gently and caringly put
to sleep. CIWF Trust's new report reveals that in reality
animals are hustled through modern abattoirs at such
great speed that many are not being properly stunned and
some actually recover consciousness from the stun as they
are dying.' Yet it has been calculated that eight billion
animals are slaughtered in the U.S. alone each year -
just so that people can eat animal products. What makes
this shocking figure even worse is the fact that all of
these deaths are completely unnecessary. There is
absolutely no need to eat animal products at all - they
are not essential for human health. In fact there's
mounting evidence that vegan foods are far healthier.
- Long standing weight problems often
disappear on a vegan diet. Many overweight people consume
a lot of animal foods which tend to be high in calories
and saturated fat and low in fibre. Obesity is of course
best avoided because it can lead to serious health
problems. Obese people for example suffer higher than
average rates of heart disease, hypertension, stroke,
diabetes and cancer. From my own personal experience, I
know that it is very difficult to get fat on a vegan
diet!
- It has also been shown that low-fat,
plant-based diets keep blood cholesterol levels low.
People following a plant-based diet have a much lower
risk of dying from heart disease than the general
population. U.S. studies have shown that vegans have
cholesterol levels 35% lower than average! The vegan diet
also contains little saturated fat which is even more of
a health hazard than dietary cholesterol. The only
sources of saturated fat in the vegan diet are tropical
oils, hydrogenated fat and coconuts. The first two of
these sources should definitely be avoided.
- Most cases of food poisoning are caused by
eating meat. Studies have shown that 53% of bovine
carcasses and 83% of pig carcasses are contaminated with E.coli
and that raw chicken can be contaminated with salmonella
and campylobacter. Eggs can of course be contaminated
with salmonella and eating shellfish can also lead to
poisoning.
- Vegans have a much lower risk of
developing certain types of cancer. It has been estimated
that a vegetarian has a 40% lower risk of dying from
cancer than a meat eater.
- If you follow a plant-based diet you are
also less likely to suffer a stroke.
- Vegans usually have low blood pressure.
And people with high blood pressure often experience a
downward progression of their high blood pressure when
they follow a vegan diet.
- Antibiotics are routinely given to
intensively-reared farm animals to stave off infection.
British farmers are one of the heaviest users of
antibiotics in Europe. These drugs and the residues of
hormones fed to animals are still present in meat when it
is eaten. Antibiotic
resistant bugs have developed mainly because of the use
of antibiotic growth promoters in farm animals.
- Drink up your milk and you'll grow big and
strong! But is milk really so good for us? Milk has been
shown to contain more than 25 proteins that can lead to
allergies. In fact milk allergies are the most common of
all allergies. In addition, many people have trouble
digesting milk after childhood due to a shortage of the
enzyme lactase which is needed to break down the milk
sugar - lactose - present in the milk. A shortage of this
enzyme can lead to diarrhea, bloating and cramps. Milk
also contains varying amounts of the antibiotics and
growth hormones used on dairy herds. And there is also
some evidence that milk protein may trigger the onset of
insulin-dependent diabetes in children, probably by
causing them to produce antibodies which then destroy the
insulin-producing cells of the pancreas. There may also
be a connection between dairy products and leukemia in
children. Leukemia is common in dairy herds, being caused
by the bovine leukemia virus which passes into the milk.
Denmark has the highest rate of leukemia in its cattle
and in its children. Is this just a coincidence, or not?
Insulin Growth Factor (IGF-1) is also found in milk and
high levels of IGF-1 are thought to be a risk factor for
both breast and prostrate cancer. (See article in Daily
Mail May 22, 2000 for more information.) Milk does
of course contain a fair bit of calcium and its
consumption is still recommended by some for strong bones
and teeth. So why then does the U.S. have such a very
high rate of osteoporosis, despite being one of the
highest dairy consumers in the world? The explanation for
this anomaly is probably that milk is also very high in
protein. New evidence suggests that a high-protein diet
can actually cause calcium loss. I'd avoid milk. It's far
safer to obtain your daily supply of calcium from
plant-based souces such as kale, broccoli, turnip greens,
collards, fortified soya milk or calcium-processed tofu.
- Cattle produce methane in the process of
gut fermentation. This is released into the environment
when they belch and fart, thus contributing to the
greenhouse effect. A typical animal emits 48 kilograms of
methane per year according to the Vegan Society. And this
figure does not include the methane produced in the
animal's manure.
- Half the rainforests in the world have
been destroyed in order to clear ground for cattle
grazing in order to produce beefburgers. Twenty-five
percent of the world's land is now used to graze cattle -
1.25 billion of them altogether! These cattle eat more
and produce more waste than humans. According to Robin
Hur and Dr David Fields in: Are High Fat Diets
Killing Our Forests? 'Every person who changes to a
pure vegetarian diet saves one acre of trees!'
- Burning down forests to produce grazing
land also releases vasts amounts of carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere, another potent greenhouse gas.
- Livestock production has been shown to be
the most harmful type of land use in history.
Over-grazing can lead to soil erosion, desertification,
loss of wildflowers and wildlife. Dr Michael Klaper in
his book Vegan Nutrition Pure and Simple points
out that most of the six billion tons of priceless
topsoil that erodes off American farmlands yearly comes
from grazing lands and that the animal-based diet is
responsible for most topsoil erosion.
- Animal manures are often spread onto the
land as fertilisers. Farm slurry (containing manure and
urine) and silage (a liquid produced when crops are
preserved for fodder) can enter and pollute nearby
streams, removing oxygen from the water and sometimes
killing fish. Streams are also fouled by cows wallowing
in them.
- To feed a vegan requires 1/8 of the land
needed to feed a meat eater. (Vegan Society)
- To produce a day's food for a meat eater
requires 15,000 litres of water compared with 5,000 for a
vegetarian and 1,500 for a vegan. (Vegan Society) Meat
production requires enormous amounts of water. For
example, water is needed to grow grain for feed and also
to quench the thirst of the cattle and slaughterhouse
operations require millions of gallons of water per
minute.
- Every six seconds someone in the world
starves to death because people in the West are eating
meat. Just think how many of those lives could be saved
if the grain which is now being used to feed cattle and
other farm animals was fed directly to these hungry
people instead?
- Producing animal flesh for human
consumption wastes a lot of energy. According to Dr
Michael Klaper in Vegan Nutrition: Pure and Simple,
sixty calories of petroleum energy must be ploughed into
the soil in order to harvest one food calorie from animal
flesh. Yet growing grains and legumes to feed directly to
people will yield 20 calories of food energy for each
calorie of fuel energy invested. In addition, farm
animals are very inefficient converters of grain energy
into edible flesh. It takes 16 pounds of corn and soy
beans to produce just one pound of beef flesh! And much
additional energy is also needed to keep animal carcasses
refrigerated in order to prevent them from decomposing.
Further Reading:
- 21 Reasons for being VEGETARIAN -
a leaflet by Dr Vernon Coleman.
- Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating
by Erik Marcus (McBooks Press, 1998)
- Today's Farm Animals: The Inside
Story. Booklet produced by The Farm Animal Welfare
Network, The National Society Against Factory Farming and
Hillside Animal Sanctuary. Obtainable from: Hillside
Animal Sanctuary, Hall Lane, Frettenham, Norwich NR12
7LT.
- Outrage (Issue 119, Summer 2000)
p6. 'Pig misery exposed'. Outrage is published
four times a year by Animal aid. E-mail: info@animalaid.org.uk
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