Donal's picture

    I'm OK, You're Meat

    Meat Bikini

    I have come to regard nutritional advice as a giant pendulum. It swings one way and you are supposed to drink eight to ten glasses of water a day; a few years go by, the pendulum swings back, and - no one can remember who was giving us that advice.

    A few weeks ago, I caught the Democracy Now interview of David Kirby, author of Animal Factory: The Looming Threat of Industrial Pig, Dairy and Poultry Farms on Humans and the Environment.

    I've read for some time that eating too much meat was not great for people and that raising too much meat livestock demands a lot of water. But what Kirby had to tell us seemed particularly disgusting.

    These things, when you drive down the highway in Iowa, for example, you see them one after the other after the other. They’re often interspersed, poultry factory next to a hog factory, which of course increases the chance for interspecies mingling of influenza virus. If we thought swine flu was bad, we may get an avian swine flu hybrid from the close proximity of these factories. From the outside, they look fairly innocuous. You’ve probably seen them on TV, this row after row of those tall green buildings. It’s once you go inside that the horrors really become apparent.

    These chickens are kept in tiny little cages stacked one on top of the other, crammed in by the hundreds of thousands—same with pigs, oftentimes same with dairy cattle, crammed in by the hundreds into small confinements where the air is foul. They have to pump clean air at one end, and at the other end they push out all of the odors and gases and bacteria and ammonia and viruses and even antibiotics out into the atmosphere. These are not clean or sustainable operations. And without proper regulations, these kinds of diseases will keep coming.


    Eggs were the big story:

    We still don’t know exactly how these chickens got the salmonella, but there’s widespread speculation either just from the filthy conditions in the barns or it was in the feed itself. And that’s something else that Americans don’t realize. We worry about what we eat, but we also need to worry about what we eat eats. And the quality of feed can be highly compromised in these factories, where the drive to lower costs and prices is so great, and the temptation to cut corners is there, and this is the result. And we have to remember that factory farming has produced not only salmonella, but also E. coli, also mad cow disease, also swine flu, I believe, and MRSA, the drug-resistant staph infection that now kills more Americans than AIDS.


    But the discussion spread to feed - and what's added to feed:

    AMY GOODMAN: And explain the significance of feed and what’s in it.

    DAVID KIRBY: Well, feed is a huge issue. And for example, with the chickens that we eat, so-called broiler chickens, they often add arsenic into that feed to make the birds grow faster and to prevent intestinal diseases. Another thing we do in this country—

    AMY GOODMAN: Arsenic?

    DAVID KIRBY: Arsenic, yes.

    AMY GOODMAN: Isn’t that poison?

    DAVID KIRBY: It is poison. Yes, it is poison.

    AMY GOODMAN: And how does it affect humans? I mean, the chickens eat the arsenic. Why do they grow faster?

    DAVID KIRBY: They don’t know. No one knows. The theory is that when you poison a chicken, it gets sick, so it eats and drinks more, consumes more, to try to get the poison out of its body. That makes a chicken grow faster, and it prevents intestinal parasites. The risk to humans, there have been studies done, and they have found residue of arsenic in some chickens. The real threat is in the litter that comes out the other end of the chicken. When that gets spread on farmland, people breathe in that arsenic dust. And there’s a town in Arkansas where cancer rates are just through the roof. There’s been over twenty pediatric cases in this tiny town of Prairie Grove with just a couple of thousand people.


    It gets worse:

    Something else we feed chickens that people don’t realize is beef products. And when those chickens eat that beef product, some of it falls into their litter. Well, we produce so much chicken litter in this country, because of these factory farms, and it is so rich in phosphorus and nitrogen, its land application uses are limited. So you have surplus chicken litter and nothing to do with it. What do they do with it? They feed it to cattle. So we feed beef cows chicken crap. That chicken litter often contains bits and byproducts of cattle. So we are actually feeding cattle to cattle, which is a risk factor for bovine spongiform encephalopathy, better known as mad cow disease. We actually feed cattle products to cattle in three different ways: chicken litter, restaurant scraps, and blood products on dairy farms. And all the mad cow cases in this country came from mega-dairies where, when that calf is born, they remove it from its mother immediately, because that mother’s milk is a commodity, it’s worth money, so instead they feed that calf a formula that includes bovine blood products, and again increasing the risk of mad cow disease.


    On to pork:

    Pig factories, for me, were the hardest to witness and take in and see and hear and smell. Pigs are incredibly intelligent animals, about the same IQ as a three-year-old child, smarter than dogs. The breeding facilities, in particular, are just horrendous, where these pigs, these female sows, are kept in crates, gestation crates. They’re kept pregnant virtually their whole lives. And then, when they give birth, they’re moved into another crate where the piglets go under the bars so that the sow won’t crush the piglets. Their life is horrendous. And quite honestly, the piglets have it good, because they’re only going to live about four or five months before they go to slaughter. When you go into these facilities, they put the piglets in when they’re young, and by the time they’re done, they’re 250 pounds each, but they’re in the same space. So they’re now so big they can’t turn around. ... And at night, of course, people switch off the lights and leave. Nobody lives, typically, on a factory farm. It’s not a farm; it’s a factory. And the racket, the screaming and squealing and crying of these pigs that were obviously attacking each other and fighting and biting each other and just miserable, crammed together—they went on all night long. It sounded like a thousand children being tortured at once. It’s a sound I will never forget. And I saw and heard and smelled a lot in doing my research on this book.


    There was a lot more in that interview. I avoided meat for about a week, and I plan to reduce my consumption.

    Then I ran across this article by Georges Monbiot, which was blogged about everywhere, and wondered if the pendulum was swinging back:

    I was wrong about veganism - Let them eat meat – but farm it properly

    In Meat: A Benign Extravagance, Simon Fairlie pays handsome tribute to vegans for opening up the debate. He then subjects their case to the first treatment I've read that is both objective and forensic. His book is an abattoir for misleading claims and dodgy figures, on both sides of the argument.

    There's no doubt that the livestock system has gone horribly wrong. Fairlie describes the feedlot beef industry (in which animals are kept in pens) in the US as "one of the biggest ecological cock-ups in modern history". It pumps grain and forage from irrigated pastures into the farm animal species least able to process them efficiently, to produce beef fatty enough for hamburger production. Cattle are excellent converters of grass but terrible converters of concentrated feed. The feed would have been much better used to make pork.

    ...

    He goes on to butcher a herd of sacred cows. Like many greens I have thoughtlessly repeated the claim that it requires 100,000 litres of water to produce every kilogram of beef. Fairlie shows that this figure is wrong by around three orders of magnitude. It arose from the absurd assumption that every drop of water that falls on a pasture disappears into the animals that graze it, never to re-emerge.


    So it isn't exactly a pendulum. Fairlie agrees with Kirby that much of our livestock is raised both cruelly and unsustainably, but argues that we could raise about half as much livestock more ethically and sustainably. Will that actually happen, or does it just open the door for high end shops like Whole Foods to sell meat with a clearer conscience? I don't know that.

     

    Comments

    Donal...it's not just the farms, it's the whole damn industrial food network right on down the line. Just try to find meat tha isn't mostly additives and not cured with sugar and some preservative that makes it last until the turn of the century.

    Or vegetables that contain nutrients or fruit that is not green as grass when it's picked and not coated with some insecticide. And 10% is pitched out if it doesn't sell by some expiration date. 


    I won't argue with that.


    They don't know, no one knows

     

    How comforting


    we probably only need half as much livestock for slaughter, donal.  we consume way more meat and poultry than human beings need.  and if halving production would allow for raising  livestock "more ethically and sustainably," i'd pay more and do with less because of that if i had to, and still say hip hip hooray. 

    trouble is the food industry is ugly and mean and powerful and i don't see how anything even close to this could happen anytime soon.  i mean, the whole thing, one endof the industry to another, is a cockup -- from the production of poultry and meat to the way we make the good for you healthy children's food known as peanut butter that, in most commercial varieties, is about as good for kids as eating Crisco would be. and the fish farms are beyond skanky -- not to mention major polluters.  

    but i think your post is fabulous, because, well, who talks about this stuff?  and what we eat, and put in our kids mouths to eat, is important.  one of the things that made me want to applaud when obama first took office was that he also talks about this stuff.  i mean, when has that ever happened? 

    but those ugly mean powerful bastards are going to fight tooth and nail.  they already are.


    Pendulum swinging back? Yes! Give peas a chance!


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