'The Times They are a Changin’ ... Changing our diet is one, very significant way every single person can help to stop the disaster of climate change. We have to accept that the need is urgent.
Back in 1964 Bob Dylan wrote ‘The Times They are a Changin’ which became an
anthem of change for the Civil Rights movement. In 2019, while we are facing
a myriad of environmental and social issues, the song remains a point of
reference.
As we enter the 2020s, we have to realise that change is now imperative. If
we don’t change our ways very quickly, we may not have a habitable Earth to
live on. Climate change, which in large part has been caused by industrial
activity and animal agriculture, is creating massive biodiversity loss,
collapse of ecosystems and extreme weather events. Unless real and sustained
efforts are made now, it will only get worse, with cataclysmic results
Everyone wants to avoid this, and everyone wants a change for the better.
Yet just what ‘better’ is remains a point of contention. Some people want to
continue with the old ways. ‘Old ways die hard’, the saying goes, something
that Dylan also recognized. Addressing mothers and fathers he talked about a
new path, and told them:
‘Your old road is
Rapidly agin’
Please get out of the new one
If you can’t lend your hand’
The message then, and now, is to the older generation who want to stick to
the old model to ‘get out of the way’. It is our version of ‘human progress’
that has caused the disastrous problems we now face. But our view of human
advancement, based on human supremacy and domination over other animals and
the environment, has ultimately been our downfall.
Fortunately, more and more people are recognising that the old methods of
domination and killing are not the way forward. More of us are recognizing
that we need to respect the Earth and all her inhabitants, and work with her
not against her.
One of the ways we need to change involves animal-based agriculture. Raising
animals for food is no longer sustainable. The creation of
antibiotic-resistant bacteria, water pollution, climate change, and land
degradation are all significant problems associated with farming animals.
And – dare I say it – rearing and slaughtering them, often in appalling
conditions in order to eat them, is both barbaric and cruel.
No one wants to die, least of all the animal on your plate. We should not be
breeding animals with the explicit purpose of consuming their flesh. Not
only does it cause them immense suffering and pain, study after study has
shown that it is also bad for our health and the environment.
Calls to convert to a plant-based diet and plant-based sustainable
agricultural systems have been met with resistance, yet more and more
high-profile people are calling for this change. For example, Oscar-winning
director James Cameron and his wife Suzy Cameron Amis advocate that
individuals shift to a plant-based diet, and countries begin the transition
to plant-based agriculture.
Changing our diet is one, very significant way every single person can help
to stop the disaster of climate change. We have to accept that the need is
urgent. If we don’t become part of the solution rather than part of the
problem, then we will only have ourselves to blame when we no longer survive
as a species.
‘Come gather ’round people
Wherever you roam
And admit that the waters
Around you have grown
And accept it that soon
You’ll be drenched to the bone.
If your time to you
Is worth savin’
Then you better start swimmin’
Or you’ll sink like a stone
For the times they are a-changin’.’
Change is hard, but it is imperative we embrace it. If you don’t want to be part of compassionate social change for the better, then you had better step aside.
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