Opinion Beware of ‘Grass-Fed’ and ‘Free Range’ Labels—Why Sustainable, Ethical Meat Doesn’t Exist

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Beware of ‘Grass-Fed’ and ‘Free Range’ Labels—Why Sustainable, Ethical Meat Doesn’t Exist

“Grass-fed,” “organic,” “free-range,” and “pasture-raised” are four labels you’ll often see on animal products that claim to be better for us, the animals, and the planet. But what do these claims mean? Do they guarantee that animals are well-cared for, and raised in an ethical, sustainable way? Research suggests it’s unlikely. Instead, labels like this just seem to be propping up destructive and exploitative meat, dairy, and egg industries. Here’s more about why they exist, and why they might not be as ethical as they imply.

Cognitive dissonance and animal products​

Most people are animal lovers. In the US, nearly 90 million homes are shared with a companion animal, like a dog or a cat, and most Americans see their furry friends as another family member. In fact, in July 2023, one study from Pew Research Center noted that around half of the people with companion animals in the US say they are as much a part of the family as the human members.

And yet, most Americans also eat animals. Nearly 90 percent of people in the US include meat in their diet, research suggests. This is despite the fact that farm animals, like pigs, are intelligent, playful, and inquisitive—just like dogs.

The fact that many people can cherish one animal and eat another largely comes down to societal conditioning. We see animal products in wrapped packages on grocery store shelves, but most of us never see the process that got them there, which likely involved a cramped factory farm and a slaughterhouse. In 2018, one Alliance for Sciencesurvey found that nearly 50 percent of Americans rarely seek information about how their food is produced.

But while many try to avoid it, sometimes, it’s hard to avoid thinking about the fact that meat comes from animals. And this is when cognitive dissonance kicks in. According to Psychology Today, this “is a term for the state of discomfort felt when two or more modes of thought contradict each other.”

To deal with the cognitive dissonance that results from being an animal lover and also eating them, some might go vegetarian or vegan. But others might seek out reassurance that the animals or the planet aren’t really suffering that much. Enter: clever labeling.

Can meat ever really be ethical?​

“Using animals for food raises ethical concerns,” Monica Chen, executive director of the New Roots Institute tells VegNews. The nonprofit, which used to be called the Factory Farming Awareness Coalition, is dedicated to ending factory farming in the US through education. “It involves treating sentient beings as property,” she continues. “Disregarding their inherent value and right to life.”

A cow might be raised in a pasture, for example, instead of a factory farm (where 99 percent of farm animals are raised), or a chicken might be given access to the outside (as is the case with free-range hens), but neither of these things takes away the fact that the animals will be killed for the dinner table. In the wild, cows can naturally live up to 20 years, but a cow raised for beef will typically be slaughtered before the age of four.

In the egg industry, the term “free-range” is misleading, too. Even “high welfare” chicken farms, like the one recently announced by Kipster and Kroger, still treat animals like commodities.

“Animals have their own interests in living free from exploitation, pain, and suffering,” adds Chen. “Consumers should understand that most animal products originate from systems that prioritize profit over animal welfare. Even terms like ‘free-range’ or ‘organic’ do not address the fundamental issue of exploiting animals for food.”

And they don’t address many of the environmental issues, either.

What about sustainability?​

Animal agriculture has a monumental impact on the planet; it contributes around 14.5 percent of annual emissions (that’s significantly more than the aviation industry, which emits 2 percent) and drives deforestation and habitat destruction.

But by opting for “grass-fed” or “organic” animal products, many believe they are choosing food that is better for the environment.

True Food Kitchen, for example, which has more than 40 restaurants in the US, recently announced Verde Farms as its grass-fed, organic beef partner. “True Food Kitchen carefully selected Verde to be our partner for certified organic ground beef because they believe that food sourced the right way is better for the guest, the environment, and the creatures that inhabit it,” Kevin Quandt, the chain’s senior vice president of supply chain and sustainability, said.

In September, organic food brand Organic Valley also launched a new campaign to protect small organic family farms and claimed that its organic dairy farms produce 24 percent less greenhouse gas emissions than conventional dairy farms.

However, some research suggests that many organic and grass-fed products may not actually be better for the environment at all.

In 2020, one analysis found that only organic pork was slightly better for the environment than its conventionally farmed counterpart. In the case of organic chicken, the meat is actually worse for the planet than conventionally farmed chicken. And for beef and lamb, the study found a similar climate impact for organic and conventionally farmed.

“We expected organic farming to score better for animal-based products but, for greenhouse gas emissions, it actually doesn’t make much difference,” Maximilian Pieper of the Technical University of Munich, told The Guardian.

Some researchers have also rejected the claim that grass-fed beef, which comes from cows who have spent most of their lives on pasture eating grass, is better for the planet than factory-farmed beef.

“Grazing livestock are net contributors to the climate problem, as are all livestock,” Tara Garnett, PhD, of The Food Climate Research Network told the University of Oxford in 2018. “Rising animal production and consumption, whatever the farming system and animal type, is causing damaging greenhouse gas release and contributing to changes in land use.”

To deal with cognitive dissonance, choose plants​

Many experts now advocate for a plant-based food system for the planet. “This analysis confirms the high costs that animal-source foods have for the planet,” Marco Springmann, PhD, of the University of Oxford said, speaking to The Guardianabout the organic meat study.

“The policy implications are clear: applying an emissions price across all sectors of the economy, including agriculture, would provide a consistent and much-needed incentive to change towards healthier and more sustainable diets that are predominantly plant-based,” he added.

In 2022, one study from the University of Bonn also concluded that rich countries must cut their meat consumption by 75 percent to meet climate targets. In 2018, one of the biggest food production studies ever noted that going vegan was the single biggest way a person could reduce their impact on the planet.

It’s also the single biggest way to help the animals, too. Every year, billions of animals are raised in cramped, industrialized factory farms, before they are sent to the slaughterhouse, for the food industry.

So if you’re dealing with cognitive dissonance, it makes sense to stick with plants. “It’s essential for consumers to recognize the inherent ethical concerns within animal agriculture and consider alternative choices that align with ethical and compassionate values,” says Chen.
 
Sustainable, ethical anything doesn't exist because you nannies keep changing the definition each time we address the problems you bring up.

And if you think the constant goalpost moving will make us tired of eating meat instead of just tired of you?

Dream on.
 
In the egg industry, the term “free-range” is misleading, too. Even “high welfare” chicken farms, like the one recently announced by Kipster and Kroger, still treat animals like commodities.
Because they are. Livestock are a resource whose sole purpose for existence is to be killed for human consumption. The only reasons I remotely care about welfare for livestock is the quality of the meat produced and preventing zoonotic diseases. Other than that they're no different from a log or a pile of coal.

Exactly what they'd be in the natural world, except when a hawk, bear or lion hunts down and catches their prey the slaughtering process is not quick and certainly isn't painless.
 
Because they are. Livestock are a resource whose sole purpose for existence is to be killed for human consumption. The only reasons I remotely care about welfare for livestock is the quality of the meat produced and preventing zoonotic diseases. Other than that they're no different from a log or a pile of coal.

Exactly what they'd be in the natural world, except when a hawk, bear or lion hunts down and catches their prey the slaughtering process is not quick and certainly isn't painless.

"you're still alive when they begin to eat you" - t. Dinosaur scientist from Jurassic park

Also, the agonizing screams of the bear retard that got eaten by bears on camera.
 
In 2022, one study from the University of Bonn also concluded that rich countries must cut their meat consumption by 75 percent to meet climate targets. In 2018, one of the biggest food production studies ever noted that going vegan was the single biggest way a person could reduce their impact on the planet.

How about telling India and China about their gas emissions and leaving us alone?
 
The fact that many people can cherish one animal and eat another largely comes down to societal conditioning. We see animal products in wrapped packages on grocery store shelves, but most of us never see the process that got them there, which likely involved a cramped factory farm and a slaughterhouse. In 2018, one Alliance for Sciencesurvey found that nearly 50 percent of Americans rarely seek information about how their food is produced.
Look, faggot, I like certain animals. I have also killed dozens of deer at this point, field dressed them, and learned to butcher them. I know how the sausage is made.

You are a loser. You are a weak willed loser who could not survive without the entire of society propping you up. Your opinion means less than nothing to me.
 
ugh more Vegan propaganda

While I do prefer grass fed beef, it's not because the animals get to "frolic thru the daisies all the day long" but because it makes the critters taste better. Life sucks sometimes but we didn't make the rules, we must merely play the game.
 
A cow might be raised in a pasture, for example, instead of a factory farm
Or a farm populated by flightless bipedal birds...

In 2022, one study from the University of Bonn also concluded that rich countries must cut their meat consumption by 75 percent to meet climate targets. In 2018, one of the biggest food production studies ever noted that going vegan was the single biggest way a person could reduce their impact on the planet.
Vegan food is horrendously processed. Vegan != raw foodist (or whatever they call themselves now). Anyone that's had an impossible burger, tofurky or vegan mayo knows that vegan food short of salads is a shambling aberration of the food it intends to mimic.

That processing costs time and energy. Energy is dirty. But as long as we don't hurt the poor animals cut carbon emissions everything is K.

So if you’re dealing with cognitive dissonance, it makes sense to stick with plants.
Plants are fine. Venison ham WITH plants is dandy.
 
“Using animals for food raises ethical concerns,” Monica Chen, executive director of the New Roots Institute tells VegNews. The nonprofit, which used to be called the Factory Farming Awareness Coalition, is dedicated to ending factory farming in the US through education. “It involves treating sentient beings as property,” she continues. “Disregarding their inherent value and right to life.”

nature decided that one for us, bitch. it would be great if humans could live entirely off inert matter like fuckin, rocks or some shit, but the one inflexible rule of survival is that every living organism must consume others to continue living. if you have a moral objection to that, feel free to stop eating and starve and die like a retard. I'm sure the maggots will feel very guilty about consuming the corpse of such a wonderfully ethical dumbass.
 
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