by Ebyss » Sat 02 Jun 2007, 07:50:02
I'd really like to see you grow corn or soybeans on our crappy, scrubby mountains out back. Sheep seem to love it though.
Not all agricultural land is suitable for growing grain, it's not a simple case of switching over. It takes a good few years for organic farms to reach the yields of petrochemical based farms, particularly if the land has been recently fertilised/sprayed using these same inputs. And lets not forget, organic farms need fertiliser too, just not petrol based - so they use animal based instead. Take away all the meat animals, where's your fertiliser to grow veg? One can do a biointensive approach - and it would work well on a much larger scale than it does today, but it's not going to feed everybody on the planet right now.
Also - do vegetarians not understand that millions of wild animals are shot and killed each year to protect grain and veg crops? 5 million pigeons in the UK alone, and still there is damage. Deer are another pest that is in greater numbers now than it has ever been - why? They no longer have any animal predators, and humans don't eat the cute animals anymore... so now deer are incredibly abundant and need their population controlled so they don't destroy grain and veg crops. Only one way to control deer population, and that's shooting. The real sin of course is that many of these carcasses are not eaten as there is no interest.
So unless you grow every bit of grain and veg and fruit that you eat, vegetarianism is not a cruelty free, or even animal free, choice.
Lets not even think of the amount of extra wilderness and wildlife habitat that we'd have to destroy in order to grow more grain and veg to feed a nation of vegetarians.
Now, I do buy locally reared meat (I'm surrounded by sheep, chickens and cows, the climate here is just too harsh for most grain), and I will soon be growing my own. It's much harder for me to get locally grown veg, as large scale veg and grain growing isn't feasible in my immediate area. Small scale does quite well, and that's what I'll be doing in my own garden. So, as it stands, my meat and eggs are local, I don't drink dairy so my soymilk is imported (can't grow soy on a large scale in Irish climate - though small scale soy is possible with a new breed that can tolerate colder climates - I intend to try growing this). My oranges, citrus fruit, melons etc most certainly do not come from my local area. I don't know where my dirt cheap pasta wheat comes from.
Humans have lived in harmony and balance with this planet, while eating meat, for thousands of years. Now, at our current population, that is simply not possible. Why do we continue to avoid the real crux of the issue here - overpopulation - in favour of forcing people to be vegetarian, or use biofuels (btw, how you gonna grow all the grain for eatin' and drivin'?) or build more coal fired power plants?
For what it's worth, people eat far too much meat and the intensive methods of rearing cattle and pigs sickens me to me very core. I don't buy cheap meat. I do buy cheap grain - perhaps I should look for a different source of grain. Or eat less of it.
We've tried nothin' and we're all out of ideas.
I am only one. I can only do what one can do. But what one can do, I will do. -- John Seymour.