Stop eating meat. Stop being a consumer cannibalizing other living creatures. That way, you send an unmistakable message to careless administrations, like the hazardous administration of Trump, corporate exploiters, meat monopolists and profiteers and eaters of animals.
Drawing by Nathaniel St. Clair
Growing up in a village
I was born in a Greek village where land and food self-sufficiency were
everything. My father had a few strips of land where he raised enough food
for his family and the family of his brother who lost his life during the
war years of the 1940s. My father cultivated wheat, barley, lentils, vine
grapes for wine, and olive trees for oil.
Animals made our lives possible – and easier. We had a mule, a donkey,
goats, sheep, chickens, dogs and cats.
I learned to respect and love these animals. I could not conceive life
without them.
My most interesting agrarian memory comes from our harvesting of grapes
during the heat of Summer in late August. My sisters and cousins would fill
wicker baskets with ripe bunches of white, blue and red grapes, load them on
the donkey, and my younger cousin, George, and I would take them home. We
would unload the baskets and pour the grapes into the linos, a rectangular
stone and cement enclosure a meter high with a cement bottom. One of the
stone walls of the linos had a hole that allowed the liquid wine to drain to
a small cement pit below.
After filling the linos with the ripe and tasty fruits of Dionysos, George
and I washed our legs and entered the soft hills of grapes, which we treaded
to pulp while laughing and having fun.
In America
At age eighteen I left the village for America where I discovered the beauty
and pleasures of Greek civilization – and much, much more. This happened
slowly.
Like other young Greeks and most foreign students from many countries, I saw
America as a land of opportunity for those with technical knowledge and
skills. This pushed my love for the Greek classics to the back recesses of
my mind. In 1961, when I arrived in America, I simply wanted some education
that would enable me to earn a good living. I had a vague notion of a good
life.
However, my education in zoology and Greek history and the history of
science and my work on Capitol Hill and the US Environmental Protection
Agency brought me face to face with modernity – and I did not like it. I
could not stand looking at skyscrapers and cringed at seeing gigantic
tractors crushing the land. I had the feeling I had to turn to classical
thought. If I were to survive the hubris and crimes of technicians armed to
the teeth, I would have to have the support of my ancestors.
I read Pythagorean writings with great interest. Pythagoras was a sixth
century BCE philosopher of heavens and Earth. He said number was the
constituent of everything in the cosmos. He thought music and songs had a
healing and educational effect, invigorating humans with inner harmony. He
even said he heard the music of the spherical planets moving around the Sun,
which he equated to a large fire at the center of the cosmos. He called that
fire the House of Zeus. He was in love with animals and life. He was against
destroying or eating any living thing, animals in particular. He was certain
there was a brotherhood between humans and animals. He urged the Greeks to
stop eating meat and never sacrifice animals to the gods.
I read Xenophon, an Athenian military man and historian who flourished in
the first half of fourth century BCE. I agreed with his theory and
conviction that agriculture was a school for courage, freedom, military
training, and the raising of food and civilization.
Then the fourth century BCE philosopher Aristotle came into my life like a
breath of fresh air. In contrast to the dry and uninspiring classes I took
while studying zoology at the University of Illinois, the writings of
Aristotle brought me in touch with the roots of zoology. His works on
animals, especially his History of Animals, lifted me to heavens. They were
insightful, riveting, enormously important, and pioneering. They explained
to me the origins, complexity, and beauty of the animal kingdom, the
perfection of nature, and the meaning and importance of the science of
zoology, which Aristotle invented.
At work
I cannot say these Hellenic scientific and philosophical insights blended
nicely with my life. After a couple of years on Capitol Hill, in 1979, I
started working for the US Environmental Protection Agency. For the first
time, I began to grasp what America was all about.
I was so embarrassed the United States had fallen so low: pretending its
scientists at the EPA and other agencies like the US Department of
Agriculture could employ science in the “regulation” of the abominable
chemical weapons it called “pesticides.” Those deleterious chemicals kill
more than unwanted insects and weeds. They kill all life. They should have
never reached agriculture, a political, cultural and scientific process of
raising food and civilization.
I was confused, and not a little concerned about this gigantic country I had
chosen as my second home.
Decoding scientific research
Unable to influence or change policy, I turned to research and writing.
Scientists often publish important work. But to protect themselves, they
garble their stories and publish them in obscure journals read by few
people.
I tracked down dozens of those stories, which I decoded and merged with the
highlights of the stories I heard from my EPA colleagues, who also gave me
their memos and briefings. In addition, I met a few outstanding scientists
who answered my questions: about pesticides, agriculture, animal farms,
water, endangered species, biodiversity, politics. They worked for
universities or the federal departments of the Interior and Agriculture.
Out of this chronic investigation, the picture that emerged was disturbing
and just as deleterious as that about pesticides.
The plight of animals
The industrialization of agriculture started in late nineteenth century.
Machines replaced animals in the cultivation of the land and the irrigation
and harvesting of crops. The size of the farms expanded without limits.
Stone and wooden fences between farms became obsolete. The new mechanized
farm surpassed the slave-run plantation. Almost nothing could stand on its
way, least of all animals.
The factory farm, sometimes described as meat processing operation, put
domesticated animals in the maws of machine feeding, slaughter, and sales to
the insatiable appetites of meat-eating humans the industry calls
“consumers.” Armies of academic and for profit corporate scientists issue
false claims that confuse the public by legitimizing the inhuman treatment
of animals.
Most of these agribusiness scientists teach and do research and extension at
land-grant universities funded by the federal and state governments and
industry. They are a parody of the original agricultural colleges founded by
the Morrill Act of 1862.
Congressman Justin Smith Morrill of Vermont introduced the land grant
college bill and President Abraham Lincoln signed it. Morrill and Lincoln
inspired that great innovation to help family farmers. Now these 76 schools
have become the brains of agribusiness, thinking and inventing all the
gadgetry and machinery and chemicals fueling America’s gigantic farms and
agribusiness.
Land-grant universities designed animal farms. It does not bother them that
it is wrong treating animals like inanimate things good only for eating.
Animals are living beings. They have feelings of enjoyment and fear. Those
who have pet dogs and cats see their pets like their children. I have had
dogs all my life. They are my best friends. I speak to them in Greek and
English. They look at me straight in the eyes and shake their tales. I saw
once a few days old calf in a farm at the Central Valley of California. It
had tags on both ears. It turned and looked at me, his big eyes telling me
of its horrible fate, taken away from its mother and expecting slaughter
soon, so the farmer might sell veal.
At another time, in a visit to China, I saw a white bull in absolute terror
written all over its eyes.
Animals probably coevolved with humans and, for millennia, were
indispensable to human survival and civilization.
With some exceptions, most people have been eating domesticated and wild
animals for millennia. However, the difference between traditional people
and modern people eating animals is fundamental.
Traditional people ate animals because they often had to. Those living in
mountainous regions with limited access to fishing or growing fruits and
vegetables, relied on sheep and goats. Ancient Greeks, for example, ate
primarily wheat and barley bread, cheese, olive oil, fruits and vegetables,
and every so often they ate the meat of sheep and goats and even sacrificed
them to their gods.
In contrast, modern animal farms completely dissolve any contacts people
have had with animals or the natural world. They make animals dead meat
through mechanical slaughter. Ordering a hamburger is no different from
ordering French fries. Both have been made commodities of a cruel factory.
Mechanizing the slaughter of animals is the last straw of human violence
against animals. It dehumanizes the relationship of people with animals. It
undermines the philosophical and biological connections humans have had with
the natural world.
Gaming the system
In practical political terms, the brutal treatment of animals has been
increasing corruption among farmers, ranchers, butchers, and consumers.
Large farmers / ranchers game the system. Their money power trumps our
meager protection of human health and that of the natural world: laws
defining and protecting organic food, meaning food raised without synthetic
chemicals and without the genetic engineering of crops; laws designed to
prevent pollution of the water we drink and laws protecting endanger
species.
Large ranchers / meat companies are monopolizing the slaughtering of
animals, forcing out of business smaller companies competing with them. In
1986, the largest 4 poultry processing companies controlled 35 percent of
the market. In 2015, they slaughtered 51 percent of the country’s poultry.
With the virus plague all over the country and in the slaughtering plants,
and with the non-existent regulatory regime of the Trump administration,
meat monopolies endanger workers, farmers and those eating meat.
Meat monopolies are also taking over a large part of the slaughter of
grass-fed animals. Which is to say, they occupy a significant niche in
organic food production, pretending their organic brand shows a concern for
human health and the environment.
The risks and effects of animal farms
Large farmers /ranchers, and slaughter companies put cattle, pigs, and
chickens and turkeys by the hundreds and thousands next to each other in
confined spaces. According to PETA, an animal welfare organization, factory
farm animals are flooding the country with huge amounts of toxic and
pathogenic waste:
“Animals on factory farms generate many times the amount of excrement produced by the entire U.S. population, and this waste pollutes the air we breathe and the water we drink. Every second, our nation’s factory farms create roughly 89,000 pounds of waste, which contains highly concentrated chemical and bacterial toxins—all without the benefit of waste-treatment systems.”
At about 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a study
that justifies the concerns of PETA. The study concluded: “Concentrated
animal feeding operations [CAFOs] or large industrial animal farms can cause
a myriad of environmental and public health problems.”
The study reported that even the air close to CAFOs is unhealthy:
“The most typical pollutants found in air surrounding CAFOs are ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, methane, and particulate matter, all of which have varying human health risks.”
These risks are serious. The CDC study summarized the health effects of ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, methane, and particulate matter in the air:
The CDC report also listed some of the pathogens found in the enormous amounts of manure in the CAFOs:
“Sources of infection from pathogens include fecal-oral transmission,
inhalation, drinking water, or incidental water consumption during
recreational water activities. The potential for transfer of pathogens among
animals is higher in confinement, as there are more animals in a smaller
amount of space. Healthy or asymptomatic animals may carry microbial agents
that can infect humans, who can then spread that infection throughout a
community, before the infection is discovered among animals.” (emphasis
mine)
For us, in 2020, living through the corona virus plague, these results are
terrifying. The sources for the pandemic are all over the United States, in
thousands upon thousands of CAFOs. Yet, the US government has been turning a
blind eye, allowing these festering disease factories to go on.
Despite the grave risks to both animals and people, the owners of these
large animal feeding operations refuse to shut them down, much less face the
responsibility for the colossal and toxic and pathogenic wastes of their
factories. They pour all those rivers of filth and plague into lagoons.
The stench from those wastes is powerful enough to make life unbearable to
powerless and, usually, minority communities neighboring animal farms. This
is especially blatant in east North Carolina where blacks live not far from
millions of pigs confined for feeding and slaughter in giant industrial hog
farms.
CAFOs are equally dangerous to wildlife. Their waste lagoons become death
lakes for flying and migrating birds. In addition, during storms, waste
lagoons overflow into creeks, rivers and ground water aquifers – harming
both wildlife and humans.
To prevent plagues among thousands of caged animals and plagues from
escaping animal farms, agribusiness workers add antibiotics and hormones to
the pesticide-rich and genetically engineered feed animals eat. This
guarantees the consumers of those animals also eat meat rich in antibiotics,
pesticides, hormones and genetically engineered crops – and potentially
pathogenic diseases.
The other significant consequences of mass slaughter of animals is water
pollution and the gases these animals emit into the atmosphere.
Manure gives off methane and nitrous oxide, which, respectively, are 23 and
300 times more potent greenhouse gases than carbon dioxide. These emissions
from manure have been affecting climate change in a significant degree.
According to the Humane Society, the country’s largest animal protection
organization, “There is no question that the meat, egg, and dairy industries
contribute significantly to greenhouse gas emissions.” The society “
encourages each individual to take important, daily steps to mitigate the
devastating effects of climate change:”
Stop eating meat
For these reasons (ethical, political, environmental and existential),
vegetarianism is more timely and important now than ever before.
Stop eating meat. Stop being a consumer cannibalizing other living
creatures. That way, you send an unmistakable message to careless
administrations, like the hazardous administration of Trump, corporate
exploiters, meat monopolists and profiteers and eaters of animals. You tell
those unethical and violent business and political guys that you are not
going to continue supporting their hazardous business.
Second, abandoning meat means you help our chances of surviving the colossal
climate change around the corner.