Opinion The myth that meat is essential for human health could harm us all

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The myth that meat is essential for human health could harm us all​

Americans eat more meat per capita than any other country, even though meat consumption is linked to heart disease, diabetes and cancer.

Jennifer Barckley
July 13, 2021
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Bacon and eggs for breakfast, a turkey sandwich for lunch, and roasted chicken for dinner are some of the go-to meal choices in America where meat is considered an essential part of the everyday diet.

Historically, Americans have been led to believe that eating meat and other animal products is necessary to be strong and healthy. This belief was ingrained in most Americans from the moment they were born. The food industry has continuously pushed consumption of these products through ad campaigns that proclaim, “Beef. It’s what’s for dinner,” and “Milk. It does a body good.” An article in Nourish by WebMD raves about chicken’s supposed health benefits, and poultry has appeared in every food guide by the United States Department of Agriculture since the 1940s. Americans have been led to believe that if they forgo these staples of the Westernized diet, they will dissolve into anemic zombies.

In truth, not only is meat consumption not necessary for humans to stay healthy, but it’s also potentially quite harmful. Consider meat’s links to heart disease, diabetes and certain cancers. Or the millions of people who fall sick from listeria, E. coli, and salmonella each year due to the consumption of contaminated meat. Or the more than 2.8 millionAmericans who contract antibiotic-resistant infections—which is a result of a nasty upshot of the rampant use of antibiotics on factory farms.

Americans eat more meat per capita than any other country, according to the World Economic Forum—which referred to the 2016 figures of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development-Food and Agriculture Organization Agricultural Outlook 2017-2026—but meat consumption hasn’t been a boon for the health of Americans. There is a high prevalence of obesityand diabetes and one of the highest rates of canceramong the American population. In light of these numbers, saying meat is essential makes about as much sense as saying cigarettes are essential.

Unfortunately, the notions that we can’t live without meat and that our meat supply is sacrosanct have been even further entrenched during the COVID-19 global pandemic. Thanks to intense lobbying by industrial meat producers in 2020, the U.S. government had deemed meatpacking and slaughterhouse workers “essential.” While many small businesses were crippled or had to shut down in order to stem the virus’s spread during the peak of the COVID-19 outbreak in the U.S. in 2020, the federal government forced slaughterhouses to stay open—this was despite the soaring coronavirus infection rates and employee deaths. A single Smithfield plant in Sioux Falls was linked to at least 1,294 coronavirus cases and four deaths in the spring of 2020, according to an article in National Hog Farmer. In Louisa County, Iowa, which is home to a Tyson plant, 1,301 of the 11,223 residents contracted the virus by July 2021.

Indeed, an insistence on consuming copious amounts of meat poses a grave threat to the very survival of our species. In our mad dash to curtail the virus and develop vaccines at warp speeds, we’ve overlooked—perhaps intentionally—one foundational, inconvenient fact: COVID-19—the source of which has been traced to a live animal market in Wuhan, China—is only the latest in a long line of pandemics that have arisen from our insistence on eating meat:

  • Measles, which was responsible for the deaths of millionsefore the introduction of [the] measles vaccine in 1963,” according to the World Health Organization, is believed to have originated from a virus in cattle that spilled over to the human population through the process of domestication.
    [*]The H1N1 strain of swine flu is a combination of viruses from three different species—pigs, birds and humans—that evolved when a bird flu virus infected farmed pigs. The resulting 1957-1958 so-called “Asian flu” and the 1968 “Hong Kong flu” each caused 1 to 4 million human deaths. The 2009 H1N1 swine flu epidemic killed almost 300,000 people.
    [*]HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, was first identified in chimpanzees in West Africa in 1989 and is suspected to have jumped to humans through the hunting, butchering and consumption of HIV-infected primates. To date, AIDS has killed more than 32 million people, according to the WHO.
    [*]In 1998, the Nipah virus jumped to humans from fruit bats via intensively farmed pigs in Malaysia and killed more than half of the humans infected.
    [*]Ebola, which has claimed more than 11,000human lives in West Africa between 2014 and 2015, has been traced to fruit bats and primates butchered for food.
    [*]The 2003 SARS epidemic—which originated from civet cats, via bats, from a wildlife market in Guangdong, China—infected more than 8,000 people, killed 774, and cost the global economy an estimated $40 billion during that year. At the time this amount was considered staggering, but the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic could be as high as $8.8 trillion, according to the Asian Development Bank.

In short, nearly every epidemic or pandemic in human history has been caused by animal-origin pathogens spilling over to people, usually as a result of the myopic quest for meat by humans.

The proliferation of industrial farms—which often cram tens of thousands of chickens into a single shed—has only made things worse. “If you actually want to create global pandemics, then build factory farms,” says Dr. Michael Greger, in his book “Bird Flu: A Virus of Our Own Hatching.” The situation has become so dire and the threat to public health so acute that in the spring of 2020, a group of Chicago doctors called for a “global moratorium” on the consumption of meat. Given the facts before us, who can blame them?

As we ponder ways to enhance our well-being in the years ahead, it’s crucial to acknowledge with clear eyes the detrimental effects that consumption of meat has on our bodies and even our species at large. A plant-based diet (which, thankfully, is in higher demand these days) can deliver all the protein, fat, and calcium we need, while also reducing the risk of cancer, heart disease and diabetes—three of America’s leading causes of death, and which have all been connected to meat consumption. If adopted broadly, it could even preclude the next global pandemic.

The myth that meat is essential is a deadly one. To bring about a future that’s healthier and safer for everyone, it’s time to leave chicken, beef, fish and other animal products off our plates.

This article was produced by Earth | Food | Life, a project of the Independent Media Institute.
 
Way to make a myth out of a myth retard, the thing wasn't that meat has essential nutrients, it's that a vegan diet is missing essential nutrients.
This adversarial faggotry is really doing these dumbasses's brains in.

And before the next talking point these journo's try is "yes it does durrhurr, it comes from dirt ack ack" one, that's only one of the vitamins and 2 can you properly absorb said nutrients from plant fiber?
 
It is a basic fact that meat isn’t essential, anyone who denies that is denying reality.
Then I guess I'm denying reality. You can survive without certain things, sure, but I wouldn't call it a healthy existence.
We need to popularize a religion that requires people to eat meat. At this rate thats the only way to stop meat from being priced out of our hands or banned.
I'll add it to my list for my under-construction Kiwi religion.
 
Obviously the author has no idea what moderation is, meat, just like anything else, is fine to have in moderation.
I notice that whenever vegans compare their diet to the omnivore one, they’ll use a whole foods vegan and compare it to an omnivore that eats fast food for every meal. Obviously the whole foods vegan is going to seem healthier by comparison. However, an omnivore that eats mostly homemade food with a good balance between carbs, protein, and vitamins isn’t getting compared to the whole foods vegan when vegans go on about the vegan diet being healthier. Also, very few people out there eat meat almost exclusively.
 
Go ahead and not eat meat. Don't bitch to me when you have several vitamin deficiencies from the lack of eating meat and have to take 1000 pills a day to make up for it.

This is the dumb thing. Shift the entire population onto needing dietary supplements. How is that a good idea?

This is one of those things where I wonder if it's bullshit post-structuralist thinking that we can just eat plants and not meat. No actual science or thought. Like the idiots who have vegan cats and are surprised they're unhealthy. There's a corruption in peoples ability to understand reality.

Look at the current crazy world. People already sell pointless and often harmful supplements. That will explode when everyone needs supplements. How will it be regulated? How to we insure people get the right ones? What doses? How do you crack down on unnecessary ones?

Then there'll be class issues. Already we have issues between class, quality and access to food. That will probably get worse.

It will be harder for poorer people to be healthy.

Will we need a government-mandated supplement rollout. "Take your daily pills" like some dystopian sci-fi future.

Then there'll be the anti-supplementers. Celebrities constantly saying, "we have completely healthy and effective supplements."

Also where the fuck does the supplements come from?
 
I notice that whenever vegans compare their diet to the omnivore one, they’ll use a whole foods vegan and compare it to an omnivore that eats fast food for every meal. Obviously the whole foods vegan is going to seem healthier by comparison. However, an omnivore that eats mostly homemade food with a good balance between carbs, protein, and vitamins isn’t getting compared to the whole foods vegan when vegans go on about the vegan diet being healthier. Also, very few people out there eat meat almost exclusively.
On the other hand, you can eat nothing but potato chips, soda, and Jolly Ranchers, and still technically be vegan. Besides, who the fuck can afford McDonald's for every meal? There's a straw man if I ever saw one.
 
Ray Mears, survival expert says otherwise.

Many, many tribes around the world survive on meat from hunting. From the plains of Africa to the outbacks of Australia, From the forest of siberia and the islands of the pacific, all survive on meat.

So enjoy your slime, ill enjoy being a savage. Food cuks
 
It's always fun to ask retarded veggies and vegans just what should be done with the absolutely massive numbers of domesticated animal stocks after the glorious revolution, when meat is finally banned and all of the icky bloodmouths get what they deserve. Set them free to die miserable deaths from disease, lack of adequate grazing, and lack of clean water? Shit, look at sheep. They're so dumb they die in absolutely retarded ways even when they are being intensively cared for.

The only practical solution would be to kill massive numbers of livestock. It would be the largest single culling event in the history of humanity. Nothing says "I'm empathetic to animals!!!!" like killing horrendous numbers of them. Anyway, mention any of this to a True Believer and you'll be ignored or they'll push some retarded idea that basically boils down to "Wave a magic wand and the problem goes away!"
 
If someone brings up food poisoning as a reason not to eat meat, you can immediately disregard anything else they say and write them off as a hack. Why?

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Fruits and vegetables by themselves cause nearly half of food poisonings in America despite being only 13% of the food Americans eat.. The astute will notice that meat is implicated in more food poisoning deaths, yes, but that's mostly because of a small handful of major freak incidents, the most recent of which happened nearly 20 years ago and was specific to a certain brand of turkey.

It's also important to note that the total deaths during the study period attributed to meat is 418. The number of illnesses attributed to plants is eight million. The overall risk is exponentially higher for plants.
This was my first thought. I see massive romaine lettuce recalls at least once a year for salmonella.
 
We’re omnivores. Without meat we’d be dumber apes incapable of carrying this conversation.
It's funny because Chimps eat smaller primates. Its a way of asserting themselves as the dominant ape in the local area and it has the added benefit that eating another ape gives you nutrients helpful to being an ape.
(the downside is more likely to catch a primate disease, which is why humans should have stayed away from ape meat)
 
I'll take a book from the page of Maddox and eat three animals for every one that these fuckos avoid eating. And I'll make sure they're the cute animals just to be extra spiteful.
 
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