DO YOU LOVE PEOPLE OR ANIMALS?
by Neville Heath Fowler N.D.A., Director of HIPPO.
"If you were to put as much effort into caring about people
as you do for animals you would do more good." Anyone who has
been on the street collecting funds for animal charities may have
been the butt of such comments as that at some time or the other.
I have usually found that the quickest way to see the back of such
a heckler is to ask: "So what do you do for people then?" The
fact is that those who care about animals are more likely to care
about people too. Sociologists and criminologists know only too well
that violence to animals and violence to people, especially to children,
often go hand in hand.
Need versus Greed
Our street antagonist whose concern for people spares him no time
for animals might be disturbed at the fact that hundreds of millions
of humans in this world live on the edge of starvation. Take India
for example. Mareka Gandhi, Minister of State for Social Justice
and Empowerment in the Government of India states:
"In a country where millions of people go hungry 37% of all
arable land is being used to grow fodder for animals that are being
raised and killed for export. As if that were not enough we are exporting
soy beans to feed European livestock, who will in turn be murdered
for meat. These kinds of figures cry out against any kind of meat
production at all, compassionate or otherwise. I see no reason why
India should feed the world at the expense of her own land, her water,
her people, her hunger."
It is not just India that pays the price for western greed. Many
poor countries contribute to sustaining the high meat diets of westerners. "In
Brazil alone, 5.6 million acres is used to grow soy beans for animals
in Europe." (Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy and Director
of the Centre for Food Policy at Thames Valley University). Even
poor Ethiopia exports food to Europe, even during famines! It is
getting worse. The recent EU-wide ban on feeding Meat & Bone
Meal to livestock as a result of the BSE and nvCJD catastrophe has
led to a mad scramble by the compounders of livestock feeds for vegetable
proteins like soy. Every third world country is in danger of being
ransacked to find protein food for Europe's cattle, pigs and poultry
- food that could be used for direct consumption by hungry human
beings. The USA produces lots of soy (its principal agricultural
crop) but most of it is now contaminated by Genetically Modified
Organisms and the growing demand in Europe is for meat from animals
not raised on genetically engineered feed. When our proverbial 'man-
in- the- street' wakes up to the fact that through his meat-eating
habit he is grabbing many times his fair share of the earth's resources
of land and water, his concern for humanity and sense of fair-play
should persuade him to become a vegetarian even if he doesn't care
much about animals. The extra land needed to feed meat-eaters has
to come from somewhere. With approximately 0.2 hectares of agricultural
land for each of earth's inhabitants, many are bound to starve if
some insist on consuming 2 hectares each. Meat production is a woefully
inefficient process as animals waste about 90% of what they eat and
use vast quantities of water - a precious and scarce commodity in
most poorer parts of the world.
Suffering at home too
It is possible that our challenger was thinking less about foreigners
in distant lands and more about his "own people". If
so, has he stopped to think of all his fellow countrymen and women
who are suffering pain and disability as a direct consequence of
unhealthy diets loaded with flesh and dairy products? Coronary
heart disease (CHD), arterio-sclerosis, hypertension, strokes,
cancers, kidney failure, diabetes, obesity, osteoporosis, abound.
Not only do they cause the afflicted individuals great suffering
and their families much sorrow but they throw a huge burden of
cost onto often overstretched Public Health Services. No-one is
altogether immune from sickness it is true but the fact is that
the incidence of all these causes of human suffering and death
is greatly increased by diets high in animal fats and animal proteins.
Then there is new variant CJD, Salmonella, E-coli, Listeria, Crohn's
Disease - the list is long and growing longer almost daily. He
may not be bothered about the mass slaughter of animals - over
2 million per day in the UK alone plus 12,000 newborn calves killed
to steal their mothers' milk plus the massacre of hundreds of thousands
in the name of disease control - Foot & Mouth Disease, BSE,
Swine Fever etc. But at least his love for humans should make him
want to persuade them to stop taking such risks with their health
and to press the government to back preventive health measures.
After all, they impose heavy taxes on other substances that are
known to cause illness, such as tobacco and alcohol. Meat they
subsidise! Why? It is more than ten years since the World Health
Organisation of the United Nations called on governments around
the world to make a radical change. "Policies should be geared
to promoting the growing of plant foods and to limiting the promotion
of meat and dairy" they said, on the grounds that it is cheaper,
more efficient, and above all healthier. The plea has fallen on
deaf ears.
The Threat Grows
It is nothing short of alarming that our western meat culture is
rapidly spreading to the Third World too. In developing countries
the per capita production and consumption of the traditional plant
protein foods like peas, beans, and lentils, has declined drastically
over the last four decades. The production and use of animal food
has correspondingly increased. A growing middle-class in these
countries strives to adopt wasteful western 'standards' including
its burger culture, and the poor get hungrier. Overgrazing and
deforestation are often the result, leading to climate change,
land degradation, desertification, soil erosion by wind and water,
and flooding. This trend must be arrested and reversed urgently.
Why do otherwise well-meaning aid agencies continue to promote
the introduction and expansion of livestock enterprises? Is it
because they are run by meat-eaters who find it impossible to contemplate,
let alone advocate, a meatless future for the world because of
their own personal addiction to meat? Those who are poor and hungry
for food and land to grow it on do not need more mouths to feed
in the form of farm animals. Instead, people should be taught to
have a proper appreciation of the value of their plant protein
crops, how to grow them efficiently and healthily, and how to utilise
them to make nutritious and palatable foods. This is the aim of
HIPPO, a Not for Profit Organisation Registered with the Charity
Commission for England & Wales in 1999. HIPPO (Help International
Plant Protein Organisation) encourages people at home and abroad
to 'go vegetarian' and takes practical help to people in poor countries
who are working to improve the nutrition of the needy, through
the provision of good plant protein foods. People and animals are
HIPPO's concern. "Feeding the world with compassion" is
its motto. The work is entirely dependent on voluntary donations
and volunteer workers. Every penny given goes to the work and nothing
is wasted on paid staff or glossy brochures. Requests for further
information are very welcome.
HIPPO, Llangynog, Carmarthen SA33 5BS, Wales, United Kingdom. email