Gentle World
August 2011
[Ed. Note: For a myriad of facts and opinions and inspirations about the impacts of our eating animals on our environment, visit Environmental Articles.]
No matter how strong the current opposition, it will
soon have to be accepted that the vegan solution is our hope for the future,
as it contains the power to address, all at once, the many different yet
interconnected issues – from the environmental devastation we are causing,
to the global pandemic of violence. These crises are crippling our
civilization and threaten our very survival.
Our lifestyles need to change beyond recognition.
Around a third of the land on this planet is involved in livestock
production, according to the FAO, which also estimates that animal
agriculture generates nearly a fifth (18%) of the world’s greenhouse gases –
more than all transportation combined. Animal agriculture also requires
enormous amounts of water and energy, and ever-increasing quantities of soy,
corn, and other grains, leading to the destruction of vast tracts of
rainforests.
Despite growing awareness of the ethical and environmental implications
of animal exploitation, the dialogue of our society continues to revolve
around just about anything other than the need to change our eating habits.
Ironically, it may well be that the survival of our species, and perhaps
even life as we know it, is dependent upon learning the very lessons of
empathy, responsibility and self-control that the vegan ideal embodies, and
that our society seems so reluctant to embrace.
With our world within sight of a major breakdown from resource scarcity and
subsequent geopolitical conflict, it has become crucial that we face up to
the need for a radical shift – in behavior and beliefs. Drastic, sweeping
changes are needed, and a fundamental shift in our values, which must begin
with each one of us.
No matter how strong the current opposition, it will soon have to be
accepted that the vegan solution is our hope for the future, as it contains
the power to address, all at once, the many different yet interconnected
issues – from the environmental devastation we are causing, to the global
pandemic of violence. These crises are crippling our civilization and
threaten our very survival.
Making the transition toward a vegan way of life is the single-most
important investment an individual can make in the future of our planet and
our civilization. By becoming vegan, each of us can lessen our ecological
footprint more than with any other personal change, as well as take our
health into our own hands, work toward eliminating world hunger, rediscover
our connection with the other animals with whom we share our world, and make
a powerful personal contribution toward the beginning of peace on earth.
The world stands at a turning point. We simply cannot go on as if our old
ways can continue to sustain us. As environmentalist John Grant states in
The Green Marketing Manifesto, “Our lifestyles need to change beyond
recognition.” (Emphasis in original.)
As industrialization expands ever further – now including large Asian
populations – it brings with it the excesses of animal agriculture. Resource
depletion, pollution, species extinction, and global warming are increasing
at an alarming rate, and we currently run the risk of driving into collapse
the essential life-preserving systems of the planet itself.
Our appetite for flesh and for the products that come from the bodies of
animals, combined with our growing human population, has caused us to create
systems of animal ‘farming’ that are not only completely unsustainable in
the long-term, but are also immediately damaging to many of the natural
eco-systems that we depend on, including rainforests, rivers, oceans,
grasslands, marshes, and even the atmosphere.
Despite assertions to the contrary, even ‘free-range’ or ‘grass-fed’ animal
farming is destructive to the natural environment. For more information,
please read Free-Range
is Not the Answer.
Livestock’s Long Shadow, the now well-known report from the United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization, stated that “livestock production is one
of the major causes of the world’s most pressing environmental problems,
including global warming, land degradation, air and water pollution, and
loss of biodiversity.”
Around a third of the land on this planet is involved in livestock
production, according to the FAO, which also estimates that animal
agriculture generates nearly a fifth (18%) of the world’s greenhouse gases –
more than all transportation combined. Animal agriculture also requires
enormous amounts of water and energy, and ever-increasing quantities of soy,
corn, and other grains, leading to the destruction of vast tracts of
rainforests.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, agriculture in the United
States – a large percentage of which serves the demand for animal products –
contributes to nearly three-quarters of all water-quality problems in the
nation’s rivers and streams.
For too long, the environmental movement has emphasized small lifestyle
changes, without addressing the core issues behind the problems, mistakenly
teaching people that it is possible to ‘make a difference’ without making
substantial changes in one’s personal behavior. This is where the vegan
solution contains the power to revitalize the environmental movement,
because it embodies exactly what is required to inspire the necessary
change: a revival and restoration of our core ethical values.
The global environmental crisis and the global humanitarian crisis offer us
a wealth of opportunities. They are opportunities for change, for conscious
evolution of ourselves, which is something we humans collectively resist as
much as anything. Changing oneself requires an admission that something in
us needs to change, and that is a challenge for anyone. But the rewards of
making such a change are profound. The keys to a new world of safety and
plenty are available to us right now. What we must do is to embrace and
encourage the evolution of values that will illuminate our choices and show
us a peaceful and prosperous way forward.
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