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maximios August 20, 2008
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Vegan

Vegetarianism: A Corollary of Animal Rights

Vegetarianism: A Corollary of Animal Rights
ISAR (International Society for Animal Rights) 1-717-586-2200

What is a vegetarian? A vegetarian is a person who abstains from consuming animal flesh, including that from mammals, fish and fowl. Some vegetarians choose to follow a vegan diet. Vegans avoid all foods and products derived by harming animals, including meat, eggs, dairy, leather and wool.

Ethical, Health and Ecological Reasons for Vegetarianism

Ethical Concerns

Americans consume more than nine billion animals each year. The suffering, abuse and slaying of these innocent animals raises serious ethical concerns for many people. What gives humans the right to raise animals for the sole purpose of killing them and then dining on their carcasses?

The vast majority of food animals are raised in deplorable and overcrowded conditions on factory farms where they suffer from routine abuse and neglect.

Health Reasons

There are many health reasons for choosing a vegetarian diet, perhaps most important is the estimate that approximately 60% of all deaths in the United States can be attributed to a meat-based diet. Consumption of animal products increases a person’s likelihood of developing many illnesses, including cancer, diabetes, kidney diseases, and heart disease, which is the leading cause of death in the United States. The American Medical Association states, “a vegetarian diet can prevent 90-97% of heart disease.” A vegetarian male has only 4% chance of suffering a heart attack, compared to the average American male’s risk of 50%.

Another health consideration stems from the farmer’s widespread use of chemicals in the animals’ feed. Farm animals consume vast amounts of hormones, artificial colors and other chemical additives. More than half of all antibiotics in the United States are administered to farm animals to stimulate growth and combat the diseases naturally occurring from living in substandard conditions. These chemicals are then passed on to consumers.

People who eat animal products are also at increased risk for food poisoning. Incredibly, guidelines established by the USDA last year, permit salmonella contamination of 49.9% of ground turkey and 44.6% of ground chicken. The USDA found these criteria reflect the national average found in meat processing plants.

Ecological Effects

The ecological effects of a meat-based diet are far-reaching. Meat production causes environmental destruction, extensive pollution and devastation of natural resources.

The alarming disappearance of America’s forests is often over attributed to urban expansion. For each acre cleared for highways and shopping centers, seven acres are destroyed to provide land for livestock production. Additionally, more than 30 acres of tropical rainforest are destroyed every minute for the specific purpose of grazing cattle, contributing to the extinction of 1,000 rainforest species each year. Current farming methods have resulted in a loss of more than 75% of America’s topsoil.

Farm animals produce more than 20 billion tons of waste each day. This waste, along with the diseased bodies of dead animals and an array of chemical fertilizers and pesticides are released into the environment every day, polluting our land, air and water. Not surprisingly, the livestock industry is the principle cause of water pollution and accounts for half of all water used in the United States. Factory farming’s inefficient use of natural resources also contributes to world hunger. The amount of grain it takes to raise meat for just one person could provide enough food for 12 people.

The inhumane and unhealthy consequences of eating meat are entirely avoidable.

Vegetarianism — a corollary of animal rights — is a choice one can make to help prevent animal suffering. By adopting a vegetarian lifestyle, one can amply meet all nutritional needs while affording him or herself the comfort of knowing that no animals suffered to provide the meal. For more information, please request ISAR’s “Vegetarianism” fact sheet.

We encourage our supporters to purchase one of the many fine vegetarian cookbooks available and adopt healthy, humane, and responsible eating habits.

ISAR offers the following cookbooks available for purchase: #041 The Cookbook For People Who Love Animals PB 192PG $9.95; #141 Food For The Spirit HC 120PG $9.95; #267 The Compassionate Cook PB 244PG $8.99; #276 Eat More Weigh Less PB 425PG $14,00; #294 Famous Vegetarians’ Recipes PB 267PG $14.95.

The information which follows will be sickening to those like we at ISAR who believe that animals have rights and thus must not be exploited for human ends. We present it here in the hope that the raw facts of factory farming will cause some readers to forego eating animals “produced” in that manner.

The vast majority of animals killed for food were raised on “factory farms.” Factory farming derives its name from the intensive, production-line nature of raising billions of animals at the lowest possible cost. The conditions are overcrowded and filthy. Denied the privilege of breathing fresh air, these animals with an acute sense of smell must endure the ammonia, methane and hydrogen sulfide produced by their waste while the farmers who enter the buildings wear respirators. The overcrowded and filthy conditions lead to stress behavior and disease. Abuse and neglect are routine.

CHICKENS Farmers burn off the beaks of chickens to prevent them from pecking one another, a reaction to their extreme confinement. Their faces are often burned in the process. As many as five egg-laying chickens are crammed into a single “battery cage” measuring only one square foot. At egg production facilities, newborn male chicks are discarded into plastic garbage bags. Most suffocate before they are later ground up for chicken feed and fertilizer.

PIGS Female pigs, called sows, are bred constantly. They must be strapped to the floor of their cages during birth and while nursing to prevent them from crushing their piglets in the tiny enclosure. Young pigs are raised in warehouses until ready for slaughter. Their tails are cut off to prevent “tail-biting,” a stress behavior exhibited due to the overcrowding.

BEEF CATTLE Beef cattle suffer from abusive handling in cramped feedlots. Their horns are removed to prevent damage to other cattle that could stem from the overcrowded conditions. This, as well as male castration, is performed without anesthetic.

MILK COWS Milk cows are kept almost constantly pregnant; the natural bond between mother and baby is shattered at birth so humans may drink the milk intended for calves. Female calves are raised for milking while males are generally sold for veal. Milk cows are slaughtered for human consumption when their milk production drops, usually after four or five years.

VEAL CALVES Veal calves’ brief lives are especially tragic. For four months they are confined to stalls only two feet wide and are fed only a liquid diet. They receive no water or bedding. They live in almost complete darkness to discourage movement which would develop muscle and toughen their flesh.

INHUMANE HAULING PRACTICES

En route to auctions and slaughterhouses, animals are subjected to overcrowding, thirst, hunger and temperature extremes. They are denied food and water during transport, which sometimes takes several days. Many die from heat exhaustion in the summer and freeze to sides of trucks in the winter.

Following transport, exhausted and frightened animals are hit, kicked and shocked with electric prods (to unload from trucks). The immobile and dead are dragged, sometimes by tractors, to “dead piles.” Those surviving to the slaughterhouses are prodded through their terror into their final steps amidst the ominous odor of blood and the screams of those before them.

Some are rendered unconscious before they are suspended upside down and their throats are cut. Others are fully conscious for this process, as dictated by Kosher slaughter requirements.

Animals raised on factory farms suffer from birth to death.

“While we ourselves are the living graves of murdered beasts, how can we expect any ideal conditions on this earth?” — George Bernard Shaw

maximios July 4, 2008
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Genetic Engineering

“Compassionate Friend”, the publication from Beauty Without Cruelty, India, raised following two questions regarding this sensitive issue. Please call/write them for your support and comments — Tel: 91 212 66-4321 (fax 66-4312). 4 Prince of Wale’s Drive, Wanowrie, Pune 411 040 INDIA. Internet: http://giaspn01.vsnl.net.in/~bwcindia.

Biotechnology can now cross animals with plants, leaving the vegetarian confused. The scientific world today has the power to alter the very fabric of nature, by transferring characteristics not only between plants , but cross-altering animals, plants and human beings. Genetic engineering which is without ethical limitation has a serious impact on the environment of animals and plants. It violates our relationship with the natural world. Most people believe animals have a right to live their lives free from human interference with their original genetic structure. Also, that animals can never serve as models of human disease — just because they’re much too different. But scientists still keep trying — after all, the human transplant market is worth well over $ 6 billion per year!

Biotechnology in recent years has been progressing in leaps and bounds. It represents a quantum leap in the exploitation of animals, allowing humans to move genes from one species of animal into another totally different species.

Scientists and biotech companies in some major countries of the world want to create new animals that produce more and ‘better’ meat, give up their valuable products such as wool more easily, and have organs that can be used in human transplants. It doesn’t stop there… many of the genetically modified crops now being field-tested in the US (and around the world) could not only have a devastating Jurassic-Park type impact on the global eco-system, but also hit agriculture-based third-world economies dependent on cash crops. Genetic engineering is a one-dimensional ‘reductionist-science’ that ignores the wider dynamics of life systems.

Genetic engineering primarily involves the introduction of genes containing DNA (deoxyribo-nucleus acid) procured from humans or animals into cells of bacteria, yeast or other animals. One of the outcomes is termed ‘Transgenic Animal’. These transgenic animals cannot be bred by natural/traditional selection or artificial insemination.

Donor females are given hormone injections and hormone impregnated sponges are also inserted directly into their reproductive tracts, so as to make them produce lots of egg-cells. This process has been termed ‘super-ovulation’. These eggs are then artificially inseminated either manually or surgically. Next the embryos are collected by further surgery or slaughter. These embryos are then injected with foreign DNA containing the genes of preferable traits, and then transferred into foster mothers, by surgery again.

It takes 80 donors and recipient animals to produce only one transgenic cow — if everything works perfectly — which is VERY rare.

Once the transgenic animal is produced, its suffering just about starts… for example, non-porcine genes have been added to pigs, producing animals with gastric ulcers, liver and kidney disorders, lameness, damaged eye-sight, loss of co-ordination, sensitivity to pneumonia and diabetic conditions.

Genetic engineering research is most often carried out on animals such as pigs, mice, sheep, farm animals, fish and sometimes, even on some plants such as the tomato, tobacco and corn.

Vegetarians around the world are seriously wondering whether the food they are eating is actually vegetarian. In the case of Flavor Savor as they are usually called, tomatoes are genetically altered by introducing into them genes from a fish, the Arctic Flounder, so as to reduce freezer damage, to enable them to have a longer shelf-life, to ripen longer on the tree while remaining firm at the time of picking and transporting and to make them bigger and tastier as well. No layman can make out the difference between Flavor Savor and a normal tomato which is primarily why staunch vegetarians want the altered tomatoes labeled.

Other such experiments with vegetables include chicken genes introduced into potatoes for resistance to disease and for increasing shelf-life and size, tobacco altered with mouse genes to reduce impurities or with a gene from fire-flies that makes the leaves glow at night. Some biotechnologists go to the extent where it becomes a game for them — playing around with genes of animals. This might result in some ghastly creature produced just to satisfy someone’s whims and fancies.

Scientists in the US have bred a mouse called the ‘Oncomouse’ which has been genetically engineered to develop cancer and in due course die a slow, painful death. The first oncomouse was bred in 1981, yet, in the past 15 years, a cure for cancer still seems to elude scientists. Genetic engineering on mice does not stop there. A mouse specifically created to lack an immune

system has been used to grow human organs, like ears, externally, even internally. The absence of an immune system ensures that the mouse will not reject human tissues. Scientists make a look-alike mold of a human organ, say, an ear, with biodegradable polyester fabric or other polymers. They then

transfer the bone/muscle cells into the form and transplant it on the mouse. When ready, the organ is ‘grafted’ from the mouse. The mouse somehow manages to remain alive after the ear is removed.

Similarly, scientists have managed to grow liver, skin, cartilage, bone, ureters, heart valves, tendons, intestines, blood-vessels and breast-tissue with such polymers. But, if the idea of reversing the experiment (substitute the mice with humans) came about, people would call it blasphemous! No thought for the animals is involved. The extent to which these experiments will go is uncertain. A change will only come about when scientists realize the animals’ right to live a normal, healthy life, without man tampering with their genes.

Pigs are also grown transgenetically, so that their organs can be transplanted into humans. Transgenic pigs were first produced in 1985. Scientists have succeeded in making the required organs in pigs capable of producing human cells. These proteins they hope will trick the human immune system while transplanting the organ(s) so that the recipient does not react to the foreign tissue.

Another example is that of sheep that have been injected with hormones, bioengineered to cause wool-shedding to produce the so-called ‘self-shearing’ sheep. This is done in Australia, where, unfortunately for the sheep, the climate is mostly hot and sunny. As a result, some sheep experience an increased rate of abortion.

Talking about sheep, meanwhile, Welsh Mountain clone sheep are living proof that life can be created without sperm! A scientist at Rosalin Institute created them by fusing a cell grown in the laboratory with an empty sheep-egg through a spark of electricity. Imagine growing a sheep in a lab-

dish! Ironically, when pondering about doing the same with human beings, scientists find it ‘unethical’!

In another bizarre experiment, Indian scientists at the Nimbalkar Research Institute, Phaltan, Maharashtra, have, by artificial insemination, created an animal with goat-head and the body of a cow. This animal grows fatter faster and the volume of meat has therefore increased.

Scientists claim that they can, and will make genetically-altered animals that will help cure human diseases and illnesses; well, transgenic research has been going on for nearly 20 years, and it still has not cured a single human illness. But illnesses like diabetes, blindness, lameness and cancer (among others) have all been produced unexpectedly in animals subjected to these ridiculous experiments. Genetic engineering at lengths such as these, are a symbol of consumerism gone berserk. Is it really fair that animals and their environment face the brunt of our insatiable curiosity?

Considering that “to err is human” the probabilities of a mis-judgement or mis-step or mis-reaction resulting in a catastrophe are very high. And in such an eventuality, it will be next to impossible to trick the genie (or ‘gene’) back into the bottle (test-tube).

Genetic engineering on animals is highly undesirable, unnatural and therefore unethical. Some rationalists believe that it is tantamount to tinkering with nature’s pre-planned programme. Once modified, the individual genetic ‘personality’ of the animal stands irreversibly altered. It is used AGAINST the well-being of animals rather than FOR their welfare.

Genetic engineering is highly immoral because of four robust reasons:

1. Although lower in the order of evolution animals are very much sentient beings which means that they are capable of feeling pleasure and pain in the same way as we do.

2. In the case of humans, their permission is taken for genetic engineering. Further, for certain experiments, they are paid ‘inducement money’ and in the case of failure, they are given a generous compensation. In contrast, in the case of animals, genetic engineering is done without their permission or any compensation which is patently mean and unfair.

3. Animals being speechless and defenseless, cannot run away (all escape routes are blocked), resist (they are held down), protest (they are muzzled), or lodge a police complaint nor can they move the court for redressal of their grievances.

4. There are psychological perspectives also. Like human mammals, animal mammals also develop great attachment towards their young. And when any of the young is forcibly separated from the mother, she feels sad and expresses her sorrow. Early weaning leads to abnormal behavior and pathological changes in the small intestine. Even rough handling affects their psyche. Fear of humans reduces the reproductive performance of animals. Further, in cloning of animals (say cow, buffalo, pig, rabbit, mouse etc.) multi-identical offspring are born. The mother becomes attached to her young and each offspring’s separation from her causes mental shock and plunges her into depression. Repeated cycles of this trauma leaves her heart-broken. This is mental cruelty.

Thus, the prime motive for using genetic engineering on animals is not for any real concern for or welfare of them but solely and ultimately for the benefit of man. In other words, all gains go to man and nil to animal — it stands to lose its health, limb or life for man.

To test the validity of my views, I put the same question to Hindu Swamis, Jain Munis, Buddhist Monks and Sikh Saints. At first they frankly said that they had absolutely no idea as to what genetic engineering was. On my briefly explaining the application of genetic engineering to animals, all of them gave more or less the same answer:

The Swamiji said: “According to our Vedas, all living beings have a soul. It is an infinitesimally small part of the Universal Soul (Parmatma) seated in the heart of every being (Jiv Atma). Our religion forbids killing of any animal and exhorts to be kind to them. Now if genetic engineering causes any pain or suffering to animals, then it is definitely not right and it would be very cruel to forcibly subject them to it because as you say, it doesn’t benefit them. It only harms them. Narayan! Narayan!”

The Jain Muniji said: “We hold that all life is precious – be it human or animal. But unfortunately the sanctity of animal life is not recognized and if, during the course of genetic engineering it loses its life, no remorse is felt. The dead body is just carted away. Bhagwan Mahavir has summed up this philosophy very succinctly thus: ‘What we cannot give, we have no right to take. We cannot give life, so we have no right to take life.’”

The Buddhist Monk nodded his head in agreement and added: “Buddhism is essentially a religion of kindness, humanity and equality. It is against animal sacrifices. So those who do these kind of things (genetic engineering) are deviating from the right path. They seem to have only passion for experiments (Paryog) but no compassion for animals.”

The Sikh mystic in his typical Punjabi-accented Hindi opined: “We accept the cyclic Hindu theory of ‘Samsara’ – birth, death and rebirth – and karma. Humans are, therefore, equal to all other creatures – big or small. Conversely, all animals are sentient beings and therefore no pain should be inflicted on them. Because who knows that in our next birth, we may be born as an animal. That is why genetic engineering should not be performed on them.” To make his point clear, he added: “There may be grounds for valuing the life of a person more highly than that of an animal. But these, however, are not grounds for ignoring or devaluing the life of an animal for the simple reason that the basic characteristics (of divine life) are present to some degree in all animals.”

“Genesis” Awards are given to honor and encourage all those who took courage and integrity to expose animal cruelties and thus heighten the public awareness on these issues. This 90 minutes ceremony will be shown on TV three times this year, on each of the two Animal Planet and Discovery Channels, all over the nation. Mark your calendar for dates, and verify them with your local TV Guide for exact time, because the timings are confusing, and there are two separate channels. Animal Planet Channel: (1) Saturday, May 17, 7 pm PST (10 pm EST), again (2) Saturday, May 17, 10 pm PST (1 am EST), and (3) Friday, May 30, 9 pm PST (midnight EST). Discovery Channel: (1) Saturday, May 31, 3:30 pm your own local time, (2) Sunday, June 1, 6:30 pm EST, and (6) Sunday, June 1, 6:30 pm PST. You should be able to catch at least one of the six airings.

maximios July 4, 2008
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Vegan

JIV DAYA RESOURCE CENTRE

We aim at helping members of the Indian community to live by the principle of Ahimsa – fundamental to Indian philosophy — in the American context.  Having

as our guiding motto, our objectives are to educate, promote, and support lifestyles that are harmless in theory and in practice.  We can live, even in this country, without exploiting poor animals.

We put a strong emphasis on a strict plant-based vegetarian diet.  We are also against using animals as ingredient or for testing cosmetics and other household items.  We believe in simplicity of life that is friendly to us, animals, and environment.

maximios August 23, 2007
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Let us do a skit on “DISSECTION”

January-March, 1997 Vol. 1, No. 1

April – June July – September October – December

Inside This Issue

Harmlessness is the Supreme Religion

Compassion is root of a religion.

Ahimsa. It is a very well known word, even in American English language. Commonly, it is translated as “non-violence”. However, the word “non-violence” does not fully convey its deeper meaning. The Webster’s Dictionary defines it as the Hindu and Buddhist doctrine of refraining from harming any living being. The American Heritage Dictionary further defines it as sacredness of all living creatures as strictly practiced by the Jains. Both these definitions put together do come close to its fuller meaning. Refraining from harming any living being; and the sacredness of all the life.

And then Shrimad Rajchandraji went on to say in Atma Siddhi Shashtra, dyaa Saa]Ita samataa xamaa, satya tyaaga vaEraga; haeya maumauxau Gaq IvaPae, taeh sada saujaga. Compassion, peace, equanimity, forgiveness, truth, etc. are essential attitudes for the one seeking Moksha. In other words, he starts with compassion; and further, he puts the responsibility on us, to observe a constant vigilance. Narsinh Mehta also started his summary, with vaEPNava jna taae taenae re kIhyae, je pai` paraw jaNae re. Only he/she is a true Vaishnav, who understands the pains of others. This is a very fundamental principle of the whole Indian culture.

Normally, we consider vegetarianism as Jiv Daya. It is true. Because there are countless cruelties involved in eating meat. But, Jiv Daya can not stop there. It takes us into reading carefully all ingredient labels; it also takes us into avoiding the use of animals in cosmetics and their testing; and use of silk, wool, ivory, pearls, etc. beauty items for fashion; it also questions the use of animals in schools; or using the animals for our entertainment in zoo, circus, or a cage at home. In a very short sentence, we may put it as “Animals are not for ours to eat, wear, to experiment on, or for our entertainment.”

In America alone, 7 billion animals are killed every year, of which 99% are slaughtered for food. Thus, if you are vegetarian, your diet keeps you away from a major portion of that violence. However, this number is staggeringly huge. Even the other 1% animals killed for non-food purposes amount to 70 million. That means, still, that on average one animal is killed per typical vegetarian household, every year, for the other purposes such as leather, cosmetics, its testing, our entertainment, and so on! — unless you become very careful about the way you live. This is the reason for taking some extra effort, and learning all Jiv Daya issues.

Many consider eating eggs acceptable. And almost every Indian can argue why milk is a vegetarian food. But here we will examine these issues also, from a different angle.

We would try to discuss all these issues in detail in this magazine. We will examine, how they also affect our health and the ecology and environment. They are all tied together, far beyond our imagination!!

HISTORY OF NUTRITION EDUCATION
An Examination from Vegetarian Perspective

How Animal Products Got Their Prime Importance, and Why They are Losing it Now

Good nutrition and the establishment of a balanced diet have always been great concerns for the American society. Since as far back as the 1800’s, a curiosity existed about the nutritional values of different foods. During this time, awareness concerning the different components of food was limited to proteins, fats, some minerals, and carbohydrates, with little knowledge about how the body uses these substances. Food was considered to be merely a provider of energy, with proteins needed for tissue building.

THE DISCOVERY OF VITAMINS

In 1912, Casimir Funk discovered substances he called “vitamins.” He noted a direct correlation between the “vitamins” and certain physical conditions. During the same year, Dr. McCollum and Marguerite Davis discovered a substance in cow’s milk, butter fat, and egg yolk that seemed to be essential to growth in animals in laboratories. Their discovery was called vitamin A, the first vitamin to be discovered. Additional vitamins were discovered and elimination of deficiency diseases now became possible through the consumption of vitamin rich foods.

In 1923, the Bureau of Home Economics, a new part of the Department of Agriculture, took on the responsibility of addressing questions of human nutrition, in response to public interest. They came up with a set of diet plans centered around twelve food groupings known as the Basic Twelve. Four diet plans were created that encouraged the selection of foods from the twelve different groups according to level of income. This implied that all levels of income needed some guidance; or adequate nutrition was determined by wise food choices, not just by having enough food. Prestige automatically became attached to animal foods, portraying them as “preferred” foods and foods for the higher class. Furthermore, the government endorsed these eating patterns in order to support the economic interests of producers in the meat, dairy, and egg industries.

R.D.A. AND BASIC SEVEN

In 1941, the Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council formed the Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA), which were the first comprehensive set of nutrition standards. To make the RDA more practically applicable to diet and food choices, they reduced the Basic Twelve to seven food groups consisting of:

(1) leafy green and yellow vegetables, (2) citrus fruits, (3) potatoes and other vegetables, (4) milk and milk products, (5) meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dried beans & peanuts, (6) cereals, bread, and flours, and

(7) butter and margarine.

The Basic Seven was introduced in the schools. The U.S. Department of Agriculture also published a series of pamphlets promoting the latest guidelines. Until 1955, the Basic Seven remained the nation’s nutrition education model.

BASIC FOUR

By 1960, (1) meats, (2) dairy products, (3) breads and cereals, and (4) fruits and vegetables replaced the basic Seven and became the dominant dietary model in the country. It was well-received by industries promoting animal products as food, since their foods made a notable presence, comprising one-half of the recommended categories in this new diet. While other vegetable protein sources were supposedly included in the meat category, they were always considered second rate and most often not mentioned at all. Fruits and vegetables on the other hand, decreased from five of the twelve food groups, to three of the seven food groups, and eventually to one of the Basic Four where they all got packed together, a blatant statement concerning the relative insignificance these foods were to have for the dietary trends of the future.

Dr. McCollum, who was noted for his work with vitamin A, presented the health-giving properties of cow’s milk. Since no one had yet discovered that certain vegetables also contained vast amounts of these vitamins, cow’s milk was immediately declared a wonder food and deemed essential. In addition, McCollum coined the term “protective” foods for any foods containing vitamin A – namely butter, whole milk, and eggs. With the promotion of these foods, the dairy industry boomed. Furthermore, the government decided to guarantee dairy farmers a minimum return for all milk products they produced by purchasing the leftover products. The surpluses were distributed to schools, prisons, and the military in the form of butter, cheese, and milk.

Milk had been priced according to its fat content in order to prevent producers from watering it down. This fat-pricing system had further increased the value of fat and the high cost of cream and butter. Regulations preventing the sale of “filled milk” (milk whose far was replaced with vegetable fat) had ensured people were getting nutrient-packed dairy fat. Legislation had discriminated against margarine to reinforce the sale of butter.

GROWING CONCERNS ABOUT DIETS BASED ON ANIMAL PRODUCTS

It was until the mid 1950’s that the dairy industry remained in a positive limelight. It was then that the first studies connecting these foods with increased blood cholesterol and dairy fat was uncovered. Further studies confirmed that butter had more cholesterol-raising effects than other fats and that high blood cholesterol levels were associated with increased risk of heart disease.

Meat, which had been acclaimed for its favorable protein content and considered the food for the “higher” classes, was also found to be linked to heart disease. During the Korean war, autopsies were performed on the bodies of both American and Korean soldiers, and it was revealed that blood vessels of 77% of the American soldiers had been narrowed by atherosclerotic deposits (a precursor to most heart attacks and strokes), while no such damage appeared in the arteries of the equally young Koreans.

Later it was publicized that saturated fats, found primarily in animal foods, raise cholesterol levels. A diet high in cholesterol and saturated fat appeared to increase the cholesterol in the blood and clog arteries, which often leads to stroke and heart attacks, two of the most common causes of death in America. Heart disease as well as other health problems, such as obesity and diabetes were found to be results of an unhealthy American diet. It was strongly recommended that Americans adopt a diet significantly lower in calories, cholesterol, saturated fats, salt, and sugar. More vegetable and fruit products were suggested.

By 1980, the Basic Four altogether was discarded and replaced with seven simple guidelines:

Eat a variety of foods.

Maintain desirable weight.

Avoid too much fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol.

Eat foods with adequate starch and fiber.

Avoid too much sugar.

Avoid too much sodium.

If you drink alcohol, do so in moderation.

Efforts are being made to educate teachers and the American public about healthier eating habits. Options such as vegetarianism or even an increased consumption of vegetables/fruits and a reduced consumption of meat (especially red meat), are gaining support and attention. The need for nutritious and well-balanced meals is essential to increase the health of the American society. In 1991, when USDA published the New Food Pyramid, it portrayed the importance of animal derived products reduced, and that of the grains, fruits, and vegetables reinstated.

An Award Winning Essay at 1992 Vegetarian Fair at San Diego, by Anita Daudani. Top

What’s Wrong With Dairy & Eggs?

We consume far more ice cream, cheese and other dairy products than our brothers in India. Should we consider cutting some of that down?

Even though most people have never visited a slaughterhouse, the panic, dread, and terror that await innocent creatures, and the gruesome sights and sounds which emanate from these hidden “houses of death” are not at all difficult to imagine. What many people do not realize is that these same horrors are the fate of every factory-raised dairy cow and every hen at commercial egg farms.

Milk’s Got More….Cruelty

A dairy cow’s life is a continuous cycle of impragna-tion, birth, and milking to provide one thing only — a constant supply of milk for human consumption and profit. She will be milked for 10 months out of the year, including seven months of each of her consecutive nine-month pregnancies. Two to three times a day, seven days a week, she will be attached to an electric milking machine, like just another cog in a factory. Then she will be returned to her cramped, narrow, concrete stall to do nothing but await the next milking.

Within hours after giving birth, the cow’s calf will be forcibly taken from her. Male calves will be sold for pet food, killed at just a few days old to make “bob veal”, or raised for beef. Others will be auctioned to producers of “formula-fed veal”. On veal farms, male calves are confined in tiny crates to restrict their movement in order to keep their muscles tender. They are fed an iron-deficient diet which causes severe anima but which keeps their flesh white, making it more valuable when they are sold for meat. Subjected to total sensory deprivation and stripped of any measure of joy, 20% of veal calves will die before even reaching the typical slaughtering age of 16 weeks.

The female calves will be sequestered in tiny stalls in preparation for their enslavement to the dairy industry. When they are old enough to be artificially inseminated, they will begin the drudgery of a dairy cow. Their mother will be promptly put back into intensive milk production, where she will remain at risk for numerous stress related illnesses, infections, and diseases, many of which can be fatal.

A dairy cow will survive a mere four years of this cruel, hollow life, whereas under natural conditions, she might live up to 25 years. At the end of her days, when she can no longer keep up the demanded level of milk production, drained and exhausted, she will be packed onto a crowded truck for transport to her final destination — the slaughterhouse. After a life of slavery and servitude, her retirement gift will be to end up like her fellow “food animals” — on somebody’s plate. All vegetarians, especially those who continue to drink milk while unwittingly clinging to the myth that it is benignly begotten, should be outraged to know that 40% of America’s hamburger is made from “spent” dairy cows.

The Incredible, Inedible Egg

On factory egg farms, laying hens are housed in intensive confinement buildings where up to 100,000 birds are crammed into a single warehouse in stacked rows of bare wire cells called “battery cages”. Four to six laying hens are crowded into each cage about the size of a folded newspaper, unable to stretch their wings, walk, or even roost. Because of this inability, hens’ feet frequently grow directly around the bare wire of their cages.

To reduce stress-induced pecking and fighting resulting from over-crowding, the hens’ beaks are painfully severed at the tip. This delicate tissue is amputated without the use of anesthesia, using a hot knife or a crude guillotine-like device. Debeaking causes excruciating pain and severe shock and frequently results in death.

Hens are also forced to undergo a production process known as “forced molting”. This common egg industry practice involves denying the birds food and water for days on end in order to shock their systems into another egg laying cycle. Ultimately, this destroys a hen’s immune system and greatly increases the risk of salmonella contamination of her eggs.

Although a hen in a natural environment might live to be 15 to 20 years old, at the age of just 18 months, when she is no longer capable of producing eggs at the rate required to be lucrative for the business, she, like her sister the dairy cow, will meet her demise in the abyss of the slaughterhouse. Here she will be ground into pet food or boiled for chicken soup.

Many people naively view dairy and egg production as less abusive than meat production because milk and eggs do not necessitate the immediate deaths of the cows and chickens that produce them. Clearly, dairy and egg farms not innocuous industries as so many of us have been led to believe. Their alliance with animal abuse and slaughter is inextricable and undeniable.

But What About “Humane” Farms?

Although “free-range” hens are generally given more space to live in than hens kept in battery cages, there is no uniform, industry standard defining how “free-range” hens must be housed. The hens may simply be put into larger cages than their sisters who live on factory farms. In addition, it is common for “free-range” layers to be debeaked just like battery cage layers. But even if “free-range” hens were given all the space they could use and an environment in which they could fulfill normal social and behavioral needs, they will still be killed for meat when their egg production rates drop off, usually after just one or two years. And, like other “free-range” animals, they are subjected to the horrors of abusive handling, transportation, and slaughter.

Another problem inherent with ALL egg production involves the disposal of unwanted male chicks at the hatchery. Because males don’t lay eggs and because egg-type strains of chickens don’t grow fast enough to be raised profitably for meat, the baby male chicks are discarded shortly after hatching. There is no incentive for producers to spend time and money to euthanize these chicks which they consider to be a liability. Hence, male chicks are killed by the cheapest and easiest means available. Typically these include suffocation or being ground up alive. All egg hatcheries commit these atrocities whether they provide hens for factory farms or “free-range” farms.

“Organic” Milk

Cows’ milk is intended for calves, not humans, so whenever cows’ milk is taken by humans, calves are denied what is rightfully theirs. Milk production, whether on a small dairy farm or on a large, intensive confinement facility causes animal suffering and death.

For a cow to produce milk she must bear a calf. Most cows on modern dairy farms are forced to have a calf every year. The female calves are used to replace worn out, less productive cows in the milking herd. While dairy cows living on less abusive dairies may live longer and suffer somewhat less than cows in intensive production, ultimately ALL dairy cows end up at the slaughterhouse.

Unlike female calves born to dairy cows, male calves cannot produce milk. Therefore, they are used solely for meat. The veal industry was created as a direct result of the dairy industry. It was developed in order to capitalize on the millions of male calves born to dairy cows each year. This ongoing alliance among the dairy, veal, and beef industries occurs whether the farms are “organic” or intensive, factory-style operations.

The above article was written by Joanne Stepaniak for “Sanctuary News”, by Farm Sanctuary. She is a renowned cookbook author, who teamed up with Farm Sanctuary to produce a unique vegan cookbook, “Vegan Vittles” featuring a plethora of dishes to enjoy. It also includes sections on nutrition and vegan diets, “food animal” production, substitutes for meat, eggs, and dairy products, vegan mail order sources, and heartwarming photographs and rescue stories of the Farm Sanctuary critters. The Farm Sanctuary is very much like a “Panjarapol” in India. The book costs $ 11.95 plus shipping $ 4.00. Send your order to Farm Sanctuary, P.O. Box 150, Watkins Glen, NY 14891-0150. The Farm Sanctuary also accepts donation support for adopting animals. Call 607-583-2225 or 916-865-4617 for more information and details of their activities. Top

Kosher Parve Certification
What Advantage it Offers to a Vegetarian or a Vegan

“Kosher” is meant for observant Jews. How can it help any Hindu or Jain?

The answer is, that the word “Parve” (also spelled as “Pareve” or “Parevine”) is very functional. It means a guarantee that the food product does not contain any meat or dairy products, and it has not come in contact with either. So it is very useful for all the vegetarians, and vegans.

It is also important to know and to understand that it has some limitations.

This article is based upon a talk given by Rabbi Yoel Levy, at a workshop sponsored by the Natural Products Expo West, at Anaheim, CA, March 1995. Rabbi Levy is the Kashruth Administrator of the Organized Kashruth Laboratories, or Circle K.

The word ‘Kosher’ actually means ‘fit’ or ‘spiritually fit’, as described in the books of Deuteronomy and Leviticus. As a result of kosher supervision, kosher products are scrupulously clean, and the word Kosher has become synonymous with premium quality. Kosher requirements are far more stringent than U.S. Department of Agriculture requirements.

There are three segments to the Kosher inspection: (1) ingredients, (2) processing, and (3) equipment.

The Organized Kashruth Laboratories maintains a computer data base of 40,000 primary ingredients that come from certified kosher sources. Before visiting a manufacturing plant that has applied for kosher certification, the rabbi checks their ingredients and other factors in the manufacturing process to determine if there is something blocking the products from being certified kosher.

No one thinks of stainless steel equipments as absorbing an odor and therefore being to absorb a non-kosher material, but such is not the case. A stainless steel pickle vat will have a vinegar odor until it is cleaned by boiling water or steam. Vinegar is not necessarily treife (non-kosher), but it proves the point.

Strange situations may arise in the rabbi’s inspection while tracing the finished product to its primary ingredients. A tanker ship carrying cooking oil had been properly cleaned with boiling water but its cargo had to be transferred to a shallow water barge tanker, as the ship could not unload in a shallow water port. The barge had previously carried disinfectant. No kosher law had been violated, but after the rabbi discovered the contamination the manufacturer wisely chose not to accept the cooking oil.

A common food product may contain all kinds of kosher as well as non-kosher ingredients. For example, seaweed is a plant product and therefore considered not subject to kosher requirements, but that is not always correct. The seaweed may contain tiny bits of seahorses, which do not have fins or scales, and are therefore treife. A vegetarian does not wish to ingest parts of a seahorse! Therefore, look for the Kosher Parve symbol! Extracts and flavors do not have to be listed on the label as ingredients, but they may be treife. An example is that of a red coloring that may come from an insect and be described as natural.

Fermented products such as miso or soy sauce present such a complex problem that the certifying rabbi must also be a food chemist. For the initial inoculation to start the fermentation process, peptones are needed. These peptones can be of animal origin or soy origin. Soy peptones are made by either the use of hydrochloric acid or enzymes. If enzymes are used, there are 2 types. One is made from papaya, which is a vegetable source, and the other is made from pepsin, which comes from the stomach of swine. The bacteria used in fermentation is stored in a medium of glycerin. The glycerin can be of animal origin, vegetable origin, or synthetic.

Kosher certification is an on-going process. The plant is subject to inspection at any time, (the rabbi has a key), and the entire process has to be repeated at least once a year.

Some Important Limitations

1. Kosher Parve products are allowed to contain, according to Jewish laws, eggs, honey, and fish. So you still need to READ THE LABEL! In this matter, Jews Kosher does not concur with Hindu and Jain Ahimsa. But still it is a good help for buying processed food.

2. Classification “Kosher Dairy” or “D.E.” signifies that dairy equipment was used. Still the product may contain no dairy product. Read the label!

3. Not every single item in a generally Kosher Parve product line from a manufacturing plant is necessarily Kosher Parve. Learn the symbols below, and look for one on each product.

The above article is reprinted, with kind permission, from Jewish Vegetarian Newsletter, Spring 1996 issue. For subscription, please write to Isreal Mossman, 6938 Reliance Road, Federalsbufg, MD 21632. For a free sample copy, send a self-addressed envelope with 55 cents stamp. Below is a compilation of several kosher symbols. Top

Vigilance While Eating Out at Restaurants

Many times we eat at restaurants. How do we select our items of order there? We know about the sauce problems at Pizza Hut. But let us be fair and objective. We live in a society where meat eating is the norm, and very strict vegetarianism like ours is exceptional. Therefore, Pizza Hut is not the only place where we have to watch out. As listed below, many restaurants have a variety of challenges in store for us! The two most common problems and several others are indicated below in column “BEWARE!”

However, let us find our ways. Here is a guide to what to order, and/or how to order, when in doubt. Please understand that all the businesses continuously keep changing their recipe formulations, and therefore it can never hurt to ask before placing your order. In fact, we encourage that!

This list of popular restaurants was prepared by Bhairavi Talsania, San Diego, CA, with reference to book “Meatless Meals for Working People”, published by Vegetarian Resource Group. For more information, please call Debra Wasserman or Charles Stahler at (410) 366-8343. For regular updates of this information, subscribe to their bimonthly magazine, Vegetarian Journal.

More and more people are now abstaining from using dairy products on ethical, health, and/or ecological grounds. We urge you too to reduce, or preferably to completely eliminate them from your diets, for the same reasons. Use the guide below for making your choices.

NAME BEWARE! VEGETARIAN NOT EVEN DAIRY COMMENTS
Arby’s Beware # 2.

Milk shakes include animal rennet. Buns include eggs.

Green salads, Pita Pockets. Small side salad. They use vegetable oil for frying foods.
Baskin Robbin’s Egg Nog, French Vanilla, Vanilla, Custard, and Marshmallow flavors as well as cookies and cakes contain eggs.   Ices and Sorbets.  
Burger King Beware # 1.

Buns may contain animal shortening. Bagels contain eggs. Snickers Ice Cream Bar contains gelatin.

Garden salad; Croissants; Blueberry muffins; Lemon, Cherry, and Apple pies. Side salad. French, Reduced calorie Italian, and Oil and Vinegar dressings.  
Carl’s Jr. They use vegetable shortening for most of the fried foods, but ask. Zucchini. Baked goods contain no animal shortening. Macaroni. Pasta salads. Bread sticks, hot dog buns, plain bun, flour tortilla, English muffin, Kaiser bun, all-you-can-eat salad bar.  
Denny’s Beware # 1.

Beware # 2.

Veggie burger contains eggs.

Buttermilk biscuits, French toast, waffles, mozzarella sticks, cream of broccoli soup, grilled cheese sandwich and veggie cheese melt sandwich. Garden salad no eggs. Buns are purchased locally, and may contain dairy.  
Domino’s Beware # 2.

The local recipe may contain eggs.

Domino’s crust recipes contain whey, and some other dairy derivatives. Sauce.  
Hardee’s Beware # 2.

Egg and cheese biscuits. Gravy is sausage based.

Garden salad, pancake, cinnamon raisin biscuit, coleslaw, yogurt, crispy curls. Side salad.  
NAME BEWARE! VEGETARIAN NOT EVEN DAIRY COMMENTS
Jack in the Box Beware # 1.

Secret sauce, Worcestershire sauce. Onion rings contain egg yolk. Cheesecake contains gelatin.

Italian dressing. Cinnamon Churritos. Reduced calorie French dressing. Croissant. Grilled sourdough bread. English muffins, hamburger buns, sesame bread sticks, tortilla bowl (wheat), pita bread, gyro bread, guacamole, side salad, low calorie Italian dressing. Apple turnover. The types of shortening used differ. They contain natural flavor from butter.
Little Caesars Beware # 2. Veggie sub sandwich. Dough, tomato sauce, Crazy sauce, Crazy bread no cheese, Tossed salad, Greek salad no cheese.  
McDonald’s Garden salad has eggs. All three Danishes have gelatin. Red French Reduced Calorie Dressing includes Worcestershire sauce, that includes anchovies. Big Mac sauce contains eggs. Side salad, apple bran muffin, cereal. Chocolate chip cookies contain dairy. Side salad, Lite vinaigrette dressing, McDonaldland cookies, apple pie. They may cook in separate vats than those for meat, but ask. Call 1-800-524-5900 for more information.
Pizza Hut Sauce for pasta and bread sticks contains beef base. Sauce for Crusted Stuff Pizza has chicken fat. All sauces contain cheese and animal derived enzymes. Pan Pizza and bread sticks contain whey. Ask specifically for vegetarian sauce, when ordering. Salad, Thin ‘N Crispy and Hand Tossed Crust, without any sauce. Until recently, they made vegetarian sauce with beef base!
Shakey’s Beware # 2. Dough and frying oil are vegetarian. Salad bar. Dough may contain dairy products.  
Subway Wheat roll contains honey. Veggie and Garden burger subs. Salad. White Rolls. Soy cheese contains casein!  
Taco Bell Beware # 2.

Seven Layer Burrito contains dehydrated chicken meat, found in rice.

Guacamole contains sour cream. Heat Pressed Tortilla contains dry milk. Corn and wheat tortillas, Light Heat Pressed Tortilla, cinnamon twists, hard and soft taco, Border Ice Products, regular and low-fat refried beans. Low-fat burritos.  
T.G.I.F. Brown Rice Pilaf contain chicken base. Garden burger has dairy in it. Vegetable Medley without brown rice pilaf. Garden Cob Salad.  
Wendy’s Beware # 1.

Spanish Rice may contain animal flavorings. Fat-free French dressing contains honey. Italian Caesar dressing contains anchovy and eggs. Garden Spot Pasta salad contains eggs.

Wendy’s Superbar, refried beans. Flour tortillas, buns and croutons contain whey. Alfredo sauce. Deluxe garden salad and Side salad contain cheese. Spaghetti sauce, Rotini, Taco chips, Taco sauce, Taco shells, Garden spot salad. Chow mein noodles. Dressings: French, Sweet Red French, Golden Italian, Reduced Calorie Italian. “Super Bar” is one of the best among the fast food salad bars.

Beware # 1: Many restaurants do not have (or enforce) a policy of using separate oil vats for frying vegetarian and non-vegetarian foods. Ask before ordering.

Beware # 2: Many restaurants lack a policy of using cheese made with microbial rennet only. Therefore the chances are, according to the market conditions, that you may end up eating cheese made with animal rennet. To be on safer side, order without cheese, if the employees do not have answers for sure.

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Hunting’s other victim:
The Environment

– Peter Muller – New York State Chairman of the Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting –

Ecology teaches us that there are objective, measurable, quantifiable ways to measure the health of an ecosystem. Biological diversity is one such scientifically recognized indicator.

What is biodiversity? It is a measure of species-richness, or the number of species within a community of organisms. Generally speaking, high biodiversity (a great variety of plants and animals, and not too many of each) is an indicator of a healthy and viable ecosystem while a low biodiversity (few varieties of life forms and hordes of individuals of each species) is an indication the ecosystem is under stress and could collapse.

What effect does hunting — and its concomitant practice of habitat management — have on the balance of ecosystems?

Let’s start answering this question with some other questions: Isn’t hunting part of our nature? Don’t animals, living in a natural environment, hunt? So, what’s wrong with hunting?

Animals living in a healthy ecosystem are in a state of natural predation. By evolving together in the same ecosystem, both predators and prey have adapted so that they both benefit as a species from that relationship. Predator and prey species have adapted structurally and behaviorally to allow them to be healthy predators or prey animals.

For example, prey species usually tend to have very large litters and shorter gestation periods. Rodents such as mice, rats and guinea pigs are typically prey species and are among the most rapidly reproducing species of mammals. Lemmings, another prey animal, can have litters of about six offspring every three weeks. This is nature’s way of assuring the species will survive even though many succumb to predation. Elephants, with no natural predator, typically give birth to one calf after a 22-month gestation period.

The eye structures among prey species tend to be well suited for peripheral vision — their eyes are on the side of the head can rotate to be alert to a predator approaching from any direction. Among predators, the eyes are in front of the head and can be focussed stereoscopically to allow the predator to assess the right distance to take its prey. If we look at birds, for example, we see different eye structures among the raptors (owls, hawks, eagles) as contrasted to passerines (sparrows, starlings, orioles).

The ability to move and survive on their own shortly after birth (precocial) is markedly more developed among the prey species than among species that have no predators. The various species have evolved these adaptations so they can all live and thrive in an ecosystem.

The natural predator will take some of the prey species but will never get close to totally eradicating them. Among species that have evolved together, no predator species ever takes more than about 10 percent of its prey base.

How likely will any individual predator successfully kill its prey in any given attempt? Usually about one chance in five, because the typical rate is around 20 percent — however it sometimes is less than 10 percent.

Natural predation benefits both the predator and prey species (and incidentally, the scavengers). Predators obviously gain a source of nourishment but the prey  species also benefit. Predation usually removes infected and diseased individuals, thus checking the spread of illness, and congenitally weak animals, which prevents them from breeding and improves the gene pool.

Hunting by humans operates in the opposite direction. The kill ratio at a couple-hundred feet with a semi-automatic weapon and scope is virtually 100 percent. The animal, no matter how well adapted to escape natural predation (healthy, smart, alert, quick, etc.), has virtually no way to escape being killed once it is in the cross-hairs of a scope mounted on a rifle. Nature’s adaptive structures and behaviors that have evolved over millions of years are almost useless when man is the hunter.

Hunters generally go after healthy, big animals for meat and trophies. This leaves the diseased and congenitally weak animal to breed — thereby degrading the gene pool and spreading disease.

Hunting by humans has never been akin to natural predation, and modern technology makes the matter worse. But even hunting by indigenous people, before the blessings of Western civilization, was just as destructive — only at a slower rate. The North American Mammoth and the Pantagonian Giant Sloth are just two examples of animals that were hunted into extinction by indigenous hunters.

To see how destructive hunting can be to an ecosystem, let’s look at a specific game animal. Perhaps the most widely hunted animal in North America is one of the common species of deer (white-tailed, mule-deer or black-tailed, with an aggregate of about 50 sub-species).Territories have a natural carrying capacity for each species that has evolved in that habitat. Nature has mechanisms to assure that the appropriate carrying capacity for each species is not exceeded. Let’s assume a naturally segmented area has sufficient browse to feed a deer population of 400 animals. What would happen if the net increase of one year brought the population well over 400?

Let’s say with all normal control mechanisms in place (such as natural predators), the population reaches 500 healthy individuals. At the start of the next rutting season, several mechanisms would kick in to assure fewer fawns the following year. If deer are hungry (not starving, but not well-fed, either) the sexual drive of the male deer declines and the female deer stop ovulating. Because the browse is not sufficient to feed all of the 500 animals, a portion of the deer population would not reproduce during that season. With the normal die-off during the winter and the lower-than-normal birth rate during the spring, the total population would be reduced to less than 500. Within a few seasons, the population would again stabilize around the capacity for the territory.

If the population drops substantially below the carrying capacity (say around 300), similar natural mechanisms would bring the population back up to the normal carrying capacity of 400. Other mechanisms, such as immigration and emigration, stop help maintain the population at the carrying capacity.

These mechanisms with which the species has evolved have intrinsic assumptions that have been true for millions of years. Human hunting destroys some of them. Normally the sex ratio of male to female animals is 50:50. Deer are born about evenly male and female. Most “sport” or “trophy” hunters prefer to take bucks rather than does. This alters the gender ratio of the population.

Let’s say it changes from 50:50 to 75:25 — leaving three times as many does as bucks. Nature’s mechanisms that adjust the population to the food supply will now miscalculate and cause an overpopulation. The same 400-animal herd which would have produced a 100-animal net gain (assuming a 100-animal winter die-off and a 200-fawn increase based on a 50:50 ratio), will now produce a 200-animal increase. (This assumes the same 100-animal die-off, but 300 does give birth to 300 fawns).

With the ratio distorted to 75:25, the population would thus increase to 600 instead of 500. Now indeed catastrophic starvation and die-backs can occur. Hunting is thus not the cure — but rather the cause — of overpopulation and starvation of deer.

State agencies encourage the destruction of the naturally evolved ecosystem by encouraging hunting, which balloons the population of the game species at the expense of non-game animals. Other “management” techniques, in addition to sex-ratio distortion, include:

• Removal of natural predators (such as wolves, coyotes, panthers, bears)

 • Altering the natural habitat to provide additional browse for game species and destroying the habitat of the non-game species, (i.e. clear-cutting and/or burning areas and sowing them with oats for deer at the expense of rabbits, voles, various reptiles and amphibians, etc.)

• Introducing exotic game species into areas and then destroying the habitat to favor their survival at the expense of native species that have evolved in the area (i.e. stocking an area with pheasants — an Asian bird — and cutting tall timber trees needed by raptors for perches).

Hunting by humans is not a sustainable, mutually beneficial predator-prey relationship. Human hunting techniques, even the most primitive ones, are far too efficient to meet the conditions required of a natural predator-prey relationship.

With modern technology, the efficiency becomes totally lop-sided so as to cause instant habitat degeneration. Add to this the conscious mismanagement of habitat to further degrade and obviate all natural corrective measures.

Biodiversity is destroyed by using techniques such as sex-ratio distortion, habitat manipulation, removal of natural predators and introduction of exotic game species. The goal is to maximize the number of targets for humans to hunt, thereby destroying the naturally evolved ecosystems and putting them at the brink of total collapse.

What will it take for these ecosystems to survive? Prohibit hunting by humans and other forms of non-sustainable consumptive uses of these animals. Permit the reintroduction of re-immigration of predators (which is naturally occurring). Stop “managing” the environment of those areas.

When it comes to managing the environment, our knowledge is inadequate to do an even passable job. Even given an ethically sound motivation — which can’t be said of most governmental agencies now — we simply don’t know enough to do a better job than nature. For the sake of life on earth, we must not allow the hunting and gun-manufacturing lobbies to continue to dictate wildlife policies.

The above article is reprinted, with kind permission, from Vegetarian Voice (Perspectives on healthy, ecological and compassionate living), Vol. 19, No. 2. Vegetarian Voice is published by North American Vegetarian Society, P.O. Box 72, Doldgeville, NY 13329. Besides publishing above quarterly, NAVS is also the originator of the “World Vegetarian Day” on October 1, in honor of Mahatma Gandhi, that started in 1975. They also celebrate Summerfest every year. For more information, please call them at 518-568-7970. Top

Teacher: Ok class. I have some really exciting news for you today.

Class: Yeah!

Teacher: Next week, we will begin our study of the physiology of organ systems. That means that we get to dissect animals and learn about how their bodies work.

Julie: Yuck! That’s gross!

Teacher: No. That’s life! You will see what the brain really looks like. You will even see a heart as it is still beating inside a rat. This is the most interesting part of 9th grade Biology.

Kevin: Does that mean that we get to see blood squishing all over?

Teacher: Yes, there will be blood involved.

Tina: Do we really have to touch the animals?

Teacher: You will touch the animals, but you will have gloves on at all times.

(The bell rings and the class runs out of the room, except Ketan, who goes to speak to the teacher).

Ketan: Mrs. Anderson, it’s against my religion to kill animals, so I don’t think I will be able to do the dissections.

Teacher: But don’t you make exceptions for the sake of learning? This will be a very good learning experience.

Ketan: I’m sure it will be, but there are many ways to learn without sacrificing life.

Teacher: Yes, but no matter how you do it, there is no replacing this experience. I can describe to you what a vibrating heart feels like. It’s soft, and moist, and there’s a vibrating feeling under it, but that description could also be used to describe a fish. It’s sort of like this. I can tell you what sugar tastes like, but you will never know until you taste it yourself.

Ketan: Yes, you are probably right. I will never know what a rat’s heart feels like as it is beating, but I don’t think it will make a big difference in my life if I do learn what it feels like. But for the rat… he is being deprived of his life, just so that I can feel what his heart feels like. That is so unfair. How would you feel if some elephants wanted to know what it felt like to step on a human and just stepped on you even if it didn’t make a life-and-death difference in his life?

I understand that it is important to learn physiology and anatomy, and know where things are located, but I feel that it is wrong to do so at the expense of animals’ lives. Especially at this stage of the game, where it does not really matter if we know what an animal looks like inside. And if we really need to learn, sometimes we see dead squirrels and rats lying on the side of the road. We can always get some gloves, pick them up, and cut them open to learn about their anatomy. We don’t need to kill live rats.

Teacher: I guess you have a point here. I will excuse you from this assignment, if you can come up with a reasonable alternative within the next two days.

Narrator: That day, Ketan goes home and talks to his cousin, who is in medical school.

Ketan: You won’t believe what happened in school today.

Chetan: What happened?

Ketan: Our class is going to be dissecting worms and roaches and rats and stuff for the next few months, so I talked to my teacher about it. I told her it was against my religion to kill and that I didn’t think it was very necessary in this case to kill so many animals.

Chetan: No way! You told her that?

Ketan: Yeah, but wait, it gets better! She told me that if I could come up with a reasonable alternative within the next two days, then I could be excused from the assignment.

Chetan: There are lots of alternatives to this. Our medical school has lots of them because we are now moving toward more humane methods of medical education — no one is required to kill anything for the whole 4 years that we go thru medical school.

Ketan: So how do you learn?

Chetan: Well, we have computer programs for anatomy and physiology which are very interactive and fun to use. We click on the mouse to remove the skin or a particular muscle and you can see what is under it. Or, you can click on a screen to see the heart pumping and click on a medication to see the effects of that medicine on heart rate, blood pressure, etc.. It is just like the real lab. Of course, you don’t get to feel what it really feels like.

Ketan: That’s exactly what Mrs. Anderson told me. She said I would never be able to feel the real thing.

Chetan: Yeah, but we have cadavers. These were people who have donated their bodies to the medical school after death, so we can feel a real liver and a real spleen and a real brain. But we don’t have to kill in order to get the experience.

Ketan: Wow! That’s so cool! I wish I could do that.

Chetan: Do you want me to speak to my anatomy professor to see if you can come in and look at my cadaver? I will show you all the important organs. It will be fun for you too. Plus, it will be a real human.

Ketan: Yeah, that would be nice.

Chetan: And you can use our computer programs while you are there to learn about the anatomy and physiology.

Ketan: Cool! I’ll ask my teacher tomorrow.

Narrator: The next day, in school, Ketan brings up his idea to Mrs. Anderson.

Ketan: (raises his hand)

Teacher: Yes, Ketan.

Ketan: Mrs. Anderson, remember when I talked to you yesterday about it being against my religion to kill animals? And you told me that I could come up with an alternative assignment? Well I talked to my cousin who is in medical school; he told me that they have some computer programs that I can use to learn anatomy and physiology and then he could take me to see his cadaver so that I can feel a real human liver and heart. Does that sound like a reasonable alternative?

Teacher: Yes. That sounds fine with me.

Julie: I want to do that too; I think it sounds cool to go to the medical school and use their computer program, and then see a real human body. Can I be excused from the assignment too?

Teacher: Yes, that would be fine Julie.

Kevin: (Whispers to Ketan) Does that mean you get a day off from school?

Ketan: (Whispers back) Probably more than one because I can’t do the whole computer program in one day.

Kevin: (Yells to the front of the class) Me too. I want to do the alternative assignment.

Teacher: We’ll have to see about that. I don’t know how many of you can be accommodated.

Ketan: I’ll ask my cousin — may be they can just have a special class for us or something.

Teacher: That would be fine with me, if it’s okay with the medical school. Perhaps in future we may look into purchasing a computer program for our school too.

This skit was prepared by a medical student, Yashica Ghelani, Absecon, NJ.

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ACTIVITIES TO DO
GREAT AMERICAN MEATOUT DAY
March 20, 1997

Help your friends kick out the meat habit by joining many others, when they go for one whole day without meat, and experience for themselves, how easy and enjoyable it is to live without it. Hopefully, they will continue that way. If not, we still saved a few lives, at least for one day!

FARM (Farm Animal Reform Movement) initiated this move 12 years ago, and hundreds of communities and animal rights organizations and vegetarian societies in all 50 states and several Canadian provinces joined it, to promote meatless eating through colorful educational events. Visitors will be asked to “kick the meat habit on March 20th and to explore a more wholesome, less violent diet.”

From humble beginnings in 1985, Meatout has become a large and colorful annual dietary educational campaign. Headlines include many celebrities such as Casey Kasem, Rue McClanahan, Elvira, and many more. Call 1-800-MEATOUT for a free Meatout Action Kit.

What Can You Do?

Here are some suggestions.

• Sponsor a vegetarian potluck. • Have a vegetarian restaurant gathering. • Take an ad out in the newspaper. • Put up a billboard. • Sponsor bus signs. • Leaflet. • Sponsor an all-day conference. • Have a local newspaper do a story. • Write letters to the editor about the day. • Street theater. • Ask a restaurant to give discounts on vegetarian dishes. • At work or school, have the cafeteria serve vegetarian options.

• Anything else …. that your imagination can come up with.

April – June July – September October – December

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maximios June 18, 2007
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Vegan

The Pain and Suffering in Laboratories

April-June, 1997 Vol. 1, No. 2

What you like for yourself; and what you don’t like for yourself consider similarly for others; that is what the Jain command is.

Similarly, the Christian command also says, “Treat thy neighbor the way you would like to be treated”. We should try to implement this in our daily lives, in every possible way. However, that is not what the modern science does. Let us focus on that, in this issue.

First of all, let us see what Dr. Robert Sharpe said in Sweden at an international conference by International Association Against Painful Experiments on Animals. While disucssing the theme “Towards Ethical Science”, he not only condemned the animal tests, but he also explained why they are outdated and misleading. See pages 2-5.

We can help reduce, if not completely eliminate, the suffering of many animals, simply by donating our organs after death as American Anti-Vivisection Society discusses on page 6.

That is what People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals say in an effort to encourage or discourage the acts of several individuals or corporations. See page 7.

Currently, genetic engineering questions — “Can we play God?” and “How far is it ethical?”– are becoming very crucial and we all need to face them. This subject raises not only severe challenges of animal ethics but also of food science for strict vegetarians, because it has come to mixing the genes of animals in fruits and vegetables. Beauty Without Cruelty, India, has provided a serious, thought-provoking, detailed discussion on this most current subject. See pages 8-11.

Many medical professionals in the past used to raise serious doubts about totally vegan foods being able to provide enough vitamin B12, an essential nutrient for human well-being. “Eat more organic food,” is the answer provided by North American Vegetarian Society, on page 12.

That is what Howard Lyman, a cattle rancher turned vegan advocate, says for the sake of sustainability and environment of our earth. See page 13.

“Is sugar vegetarian or not?” many people have wondered. The answer is not very simplistic but Vegetarian Resource Group has done enough research to provide some insightful guidance. See page 14.

Also see page 15 for another research on how wines are made. The result is very clear, that alcohol is not for vegetarians and we better stay away from it, according to The Vegetarian Resource Group.

And finally, there is an invitation to the Animal Rights ’97 National Convention this summer in Washington DC, on Page 16.

These are the questions: “What if it were you?” “How would you like to be raised as a food animal?” “Or, for testing cosmetics & drugs?” “Or, for entertaining humans?” “Or, as a genetic ingredient for some strange creature or plant, capable of a specific function?”

Whatever we don’t like for ourselves, let us not do to others — humans or animals.

“The Science We Deserve” — Dr. Robert Sharpe

(Text of speech given at International Conference at Helsingborg, Sweden, on 10th August, 1996)

Throughout the world, laboratory animals are the unwilling victims of science. They are used to develop drugs and investigate disease, to test agricultural and consumer products, for military and space research, and for a multitude of other purposes. In Sweden alone, 629,586 animals were subjected to laboratory tests during 1994.

Despite the widespread use of animals, there are powerful arguments against the practice. To begin with, animal research is virtually inseparable from suffering or death. This is partly to do with the experimenter’s desire for a disposable species that can be manipulated as required and killed when convenient. It also arises from the way many tests are performed. In the field of toxicology, which accounts for approximately one fifth of all animal experiments, test chemicals are administered so that at least some dose levels induce harmful effects. For instance, in the LD50 test, animals are deliberately poisoned to death to measure the toxicity of the chemical. A more humane version of the LD50, known as the fixed dose procedure, does not require the animal to be killed. Nevertheless it still requires clear signs of poisoning before it is stopped.

The LD50 is an acute toxicity test requiring a single dose. But even in more prolonged toxicity tests, in which substances are administered every day, the highest dose levels are again chosen to induce harmful effects. This is done so that doctors have some idea which parts of the body require special monitoring during human trials.

Another major area where animals are deliberately harmed is the study of illness and injury. Here, symptoms of disease are induced to promote an ‘animal model’ of the condition. In cancer research for instance, radiation, chemicals or viruses are often used to produce tumors in laboratory animals. Researchers acknowledge that these creatures are likely to suffer pain and distress.

Genetically Engineered Animals

Animals increasingly suffer in genetics research. Techniques have been developed to alter an animal’s genetic make-up producing new strains or species to be exploited by the agricultural, pharmaceutical and biomedical industries. One approach is to insert genes from one species into the embryos of another, the resulting creatures being known as ‘transgenics’. Another methods is to disable or knock out one of the animal’s own genes. Scientists refer to these creatures as ‘knock-outs’.

Genetically engineered animals suffer because scientists are unable to predict the results of their genetic manipulations. The infamous ‘Beltsville’ pigs were genetically engineered to carry human growth hormone genes but developed severe arthritis and were unable to stand. During later experiments by the USDA in Beltsville, growth hormone genes from cows were introduced into pigs in an attempt to increase growth rate and produce leaner flesh. However, the resulting transgenic pigs suffered protruding eyes, gastric ulcers, arthritis, dermatitis, heart problems, lameness, pneumonia and kidney disease. At the University of Cincinnati, research with transgenetic mice unexpectedly led to animals with brain damage, malformed faces, and no back legs. They all died within 24 hours.

Even where there are no unexpected complications, genetically engineered animals suffer and die because in biomedical research they are designed to do so. An example is the so-called ‘oncomouse’, intended for use by cancer researchers. It is produced by inserting human cancer genes into the embryos of mice. The animals quickly develop fatal breast cancer. Another case is genetically engineered ‘cystic fibrosis’ mice. These animals become ill and die within 40 days.

Animals may also suffer from the way they are kept or through poor experimental technique. And for many primates, there are the additional hazards of capture and transportation from the country of origin.

Species Difference & False Sense of Security

Apart from the plight of animals, there are also scientific objections to vivisection. This is because species differ in their response to drugs and disease. Consequently animal experiments are not a safe guide to the treatment and prevention of human illness. For instance, it is well known that oral contraceptives increase the risk of blood clots in women. These and other circulatory problems caused by the Pill, were not identified by animal experiments. In fact, in common laboratory species such as dogs and rats, oral contraceptives produced the opposite effect, making it more difficult for the blood to clot. Another example is the drug fialuridine which was intended for the treatment of hepatitis. However, in 1993 clinical trials of the drug were halted following deaths and serious complications among participants. The dangers were unexpected since the drug had seemed both safe and effective in laboratory animals. Fialuridine is not an isolated example since most of the harmful effects of drugs cannot be predicted by animal tests.

Animals tests not only give a false sense of security, there is also the risk that worthwhile therapies may be lost or delayed through toxic effects that do not occur in human beings. Development of propranolol, the first widely used beta-blocking drug for heart disease and high blood pressure, was put in jeopardy when it caused rats to collapse and dogs to vomit severely. On the basis of animal tests, the transplant drug FK506 was feared too toxic for human use, and if it hadn’t been given as a last chance option to patients in desperate plights, its life-saving qualities may never have been appreciated. And the discovery that tamoxifen caused cancer in rats would have halted development of this anti-cancer drug had the company ICI not already been reassured by its safety profile in human patients.

Similar problems arise when animals are employed as “models” of disease. The use of monkeys to investigate malaria led to the suggestion that steroids would be helpful in treating patients who developed coma. However, human trials showed that steroids are actually dangerous, prolonging coma and increasing the risk of complications such as pneumonia, urinary tract infections and convulsions.

In cancer research some of the animal tumors are so different that any coincidence with human findings must be fortuitous. A widely used animal model of breast cancer is the mouse in which disease is introduced by a virus. Yet even researchers who use this animal admit that “the mouse model . . . has important differences from breast cancer in women.” The disease is not caused by a virus in people and whilst early pregnancy can reduce the risk of illness in women, the opposite is true in mice. And mouse breast tumors seldom spread whereas this is a characteristic of the human disease.

Even the genetically engineered animals that scientists hope will more closely mimic human disease are proving unreliable. It has been found for instance, that cancer genes can behave very differently in mice and people.

These examples show that vivisection is an illogical and unreliable system of research. The method is further undermined by the choice of species. All too often this depends on factors such as cost, breeding rate, ease of handling and tradition rather than whether the animals are likely to respond like people. An example is the use of rabbits for eye irritancy tests. It is known that rabbit eyes have important differences to human eyes but the test has traditionally relied on rabbits because they are cheap, readily available, easy to handle and have large eyes for asserting test results.

The widespread use of rats in toxicity tests highlights the unscientific nature of vivisection. They are one of the main species used to predict the harmful effects of drugs and consumer products, and the assumption is that rats will respond like people. However, there is another major industry whose success relies on differences between rats and people. This involves the development of rodenticides. In this case companies hope to develop products which are toxic to rats but comparatively safe to other animals and people.

Despite the ethical and scientific objections to animal experiments, vivisectors often claim there is no alternative. It has to be remembered that animal experimentation is only one method of research: there are others. One important approach to investigating disease is epidemiology. Here, researchers monitor different groups of people to discover the causes of ill health. Unlike animal experiments, epidemiology produces results of direct relevance to people. Careful detective work by epidemiologists showed how HIV is transmitted and how AIDS can be prevented. This information could not have come from animals since they do not develop the disease when inoculated with HIV.

Tragically, there have been numerous occasions when animal experiments have cast doubt on human epidemiological findings. For instance, epidemiology first highlighted the cancer-causing effects of smoking and asbestos, and of x-rays on foetus but in each case animal experiments delayed progress by producing false results. The same was true for polio research. Epidemiological studies of over 1,000 Swedish cases correctly suggested that polio is an intestinal illness. But experiments with monkeys produced different results and delayed a proper understanding of the disease for over 25 years.

Human Tissue

Another important but underused approach is human tissue research. Tissues are obtained from surgical specimens, from biopsies, or after death, and can be used to investigate disease, develop drugs and produce biological products. There is increasing interest in the use of human tissue to assess the safety of medicines and other products. By producing results directly relevant to people, human tissue tests have the advantage that they can identify harmful effects missed by animal experiments. Although not yet widely used there are enough cases in the medical literature to show their value. The drugs chloramphenicol, phenylbutazone, valproic acid, mianserin and thalidomide all produced injuries which were not predicted by the original animal experiments but which were later identified in the test tube using human tissue.

Scientific Attitudes

The development and adoption of non-animal techniques depends very much on attitudes within the scientific community. Those whose daily work involves the infliction of suffering and death must inevitably become hardened and desensitized. As a result animals are regarded as just another laboratory tool. Because experimenters do not feel strongly about the unnecessary loss of life, some tests continue long after non-animal replacements have been developed. An example is the use of guinea pigs for diagnosing tuberculosis. In 1972 Britain’s TB Reference Laboratory reported that a test-tube technique could be used as an alternative but 14 years later the London Hospital was still routinely using guinea pigs for the purpose. Another case is the testing of hormones like insulin and somatatropin which has traditionally employed animals. In Europe and Japan animal tests are no longer required and have been deleted from official guidelines. However, in the United States the use of animals to test these hormones continues even though it can no longer be considered ‘necessary’.

In contrast, progress is rapid when scientists and industry are sufficiently motivated to avoid using animals. For instance, public pressure has persuaded many companies to adopt more ethical test procedures with the result that consumer product testing has fallen substantially. In Britain, the use of animals to test the safely of cosmetics, toiletries and household products fell by 90% between 1977 and 1994.

The Draize Campaign

The Draize Campaign, which focussed on the use of rabbits for eye irritancy testing, again stresses the importance of attitudes. Since 1944 the Draize test has been employed to assess the irritancy of a wide variety of chemicals including pesticides and consumer products. Usually no pain relief is given and the test often proceeds for 7 days during which the eyes are monitored for signs of damage. It had long been recognized that the rabbit eye is a poor model for the human eye and eventually researchers announced that the traditional Draize test “has essentially no power to predict the results of accidental human eye exposure.” Despite the problem, toxicologists could only suggest using different species. Only during the 1980s, when animal protection groups throughout the world focussed attention on the test, did attitudes finally start to change. The campaign highlighted the cruelty and scientific invalidity of the test and persuaded companies to invest in research to find a humane alternative.

Since then dozens of test-tube alternatives have been developed and some are now routinely used. One of the most successful is EYTEX which is available in the form of a kit and can take as little as one hour to perform. EYTEX uses a mixture of plant proteins and can rapidly identify moderate or severe eye irritants. Another alternative, devised by the Californian company Advanced Tissue Sciences, uses a human tissue system which models the outer layer of the cornea. It can distinguish between innocuous, mild and strong eye irritants.

The Draize campaign has not yet been completed because some animals are still used. Nevertheless it has already led to a substantial fall in the number of rabbits subjected to eye irritancy tests. Above all it has demonstrated what can be achieved when science and industry are sufficiently motivated. This suggests that two key factors are necessary to stop animal experiments. One is an informed public that finds the abuse and exploitation of animals unacceptable. After all, it was public opinion that persuaded many cosmetic companies to stop using animals. The second requirement is a new generation of scientists who no longer regard animals as the disposable tools of research.

Animal protection groups have the power to create these changes and many organizations are now putting great emphasis on education. Already the campaigns are paying dividends. In America for instance, animal laboratories are no longer required by any civilian medical school for teaching purposes. In some of the medical schools the use of animals is now optional: in others the procedures have been discarded altogether. In Britain, dissection is no longer required by any school examining board and has actually been banned in Argentina. And a recent survey of computer-based alternatives in undergraduate teaching found that in 15 out of 20 university departments, students had objected to using animals. The survey acknowledged that “Although there has always been some degree of student objection to using animals, it has never been so apparent as in recent years.” These are important trends because the students of today are the scientists of the future.

In conclusion, there are powerful ethical and scientific objections to animal experiments. We need to use these arguments to educate each new generation of scientists. Our aim is very simple. It is to close down the animal laboratories and create a completely ethical system of scientific research and health care.

A Smart Alternative to Xenotransplantation:
“The Presumed Consent Law”

Tina Nelson — Executive Director, American Anti-Vivisection Society

Xenotransplantation, or the transplantation of organs from animals to humans, is on the rise. Due to the chronic shortage of human organs, many transplant centers are considering the use of substitute organs from baboons, chimpanzees, pigs and sheep.

Approximately 12,000 organ transplants are performed in the United States each year. The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) is a nonprofit organization in Richmond, Virginia that, under federal contract, allocates organs nationally. Patients can register and be placed on a waiting list; however, this does not guarantee that an organ will be available by the time the patient’s own organ fails. For instance, in 1993, 50,169 patients registered with UNOS, but 2,887 died while waiting for donor organs. The primary cause for these mortality rate is the shortage of organs due to the failure of people to donate. Only 1 out 5 people has consented to donate his or her organs at death. At least 100,000 people die each year of accidents or strokes, and approximately 20,000 of these are potential organ donors. However, the number of donors remains low, at about 4,000 per year.

In a 1993 AV Magazine article, John McArdle, Ph.D., our Scientific Advisor, wrote an article which discussed the alternatives to xenotransplantation. Among those alternatives is the Presumed Consent Law. This law was originally recommended by the Council of Europe in 1978 and subsequently passed in most European countries. The basis of this law is the legal presumption that anyone is a potential organ donor, unless he or she has stated an opposite wish, which can be done making a written statement of dissent in any form. At death, family members are not required to extend permission to “harvest” the deceased’s organs. This law is the exact opposite of the current United States organ donation law which requires that the person grant prior permission for the use of his or her organs at death.

The United States law has been extremely ineffective and unable to meet the high demand for organs despite evidence that the majority of people support the concept of donating. The European law, however, has been overwhelmingly effective, especially in Austria where organ availability quadrupled after the Presumed Consent Law was implemented. In Belgium, the experience was similar, proving that the results of presumed consent are very successful.

Several animal protection organizations are presently working on building a coalition, and expect to have legislation drafted and introduced regarding a Presumed Consent Law in the United States. By establishing this law, we will be saving many lives that otherwise would have been wasted and will have provided a smart alternative to xenotransplantation.

I encourage AAVS members to support the implementation of such a law, but offer an additional suggestion in the interim. Please call or write the AAVS and request The Humane Research Donor Card. Millions of animals would be saved if medical researchers used human tissue in their work instead of killing healthy animals. By carrying this card, you ensure promoting ethical research which benefits people and animals. Also available in The AAVS catalog is our publication, Health and Humane Research, which provides factual information on animal experiments and alternatives, and contains The Humane Research Donor Card. The American Anti-Vivisection Society promotes compassion in classroom, laboratories, and dinner plate. This 100+ years old organization also issues grants to scientists for using and/or developing non-animal tests. For more information, please write: 801 Old York Road, Suite 204, Jenkintown, PA 19046-1685. Phone: 215-887-0816.

Profile of a Crusader: Howard F. Lyman

The Director of Humane Society’s “Eating With Conscience Campaign”, who travels the country speaking about the humanity, health and environmental benefits of plant-based organic diets.

As a fourth-generation family farmer in Montana for almost 40 years, he speaks from a background personal experience, when he says that chemically based agri-cultural production methods today are unsustainable, and therefore ecologically disastrous. His experiences range from working in a large organic dairy to raising registered beef cattle to owning a large factory feedlot. He has farmed thousands of acres of grain and reprodu-ced a herd of over one thousand commercial beef cows. In addition to raising cows, he has raised chickens, pigs, and turkeys. He has also grown crops such as wheat, barley, oats, alfalfa, and grass. But after all that, finally he has turned vegetarian, and now a vegan.

He was involved in agriculture at a time when the call dictated getting bigger and better or getting out. He was educated in modern agriculture. He followed all the modern advice and turned a small organic family farm into a large corporate chemical farm. But that is when he saw the organic soil go from a living, productive base to a sterile, chemical-saturated, mono-cultural ground produced by the so-called modern methods.

In 1979, a tumor on his spinal cord caused him to be paralyzed from the waist down. That changed his life forever. He promised himself that, whatever the outcome of the surgery, he would dedicate the rest of his life to doing what he believed to be right — no matter what changes that necessitated.

The period before and after surgery gave him much time to think about the changes resulting from his methods of farming. Convinced that we were going the wrong way, he saw a need to become a voice for the family farmer and the land. In 1983, he sold most of his farm and started working for farmers in financial trouble. This led to his working for the Montana Farmers Union and from there to Washington, D.C. as a lobbyist for the National Farmers Union.

For five years he worked on Capitol Hill. In that time they had some small successes, such as passing the National Organic Standards Act. But even after the act became a law, it took the administration several years to allow funds for its implementation. He became convinced that the changes needed had to come from the producers and the consumers at the grassroot level. Until that alliance is put into play, the big money interest will continue to control public policy in the Congress.

His goal is to see a producer-consumer alliance controlling public policy decisions in North America. To that end he has joined The Humane Society of the United States as Director of the Eating With Conscience Campaign. This campaign has been designed to educate people about organic sustainable agriculture and the dangers of current methods of food production. He believes that informed producers and consumers will help by making humane choices in their personal lives.

His progress in achieving sustainable agriculture has been marked by some very interesting events. He ran for Congress in Montana in 1982 and was able to carry the message through the political campaign. Although he lost, he was able to focus the voters’ attention on who was producing our food and how they were doing it. Later on he took on as the executive director of the international Beyond Beef Campaign (in favor of strictly vegetarian diet), which was able to organize over 2,400 teams consisting of over 10,000 people who handed out over 1,000,000 pieces of information in one day at over 3,000 separate locations around the world. This effort was to educate consumers about their food choices.

He has appeared on over one thousand radio stations and hundreds of television stations. Recently he talked on Oprah Winfrey’s show about the ‘Mad Cow Disease’. He has spoken to thousands of groups. The message is always the same: If there is to be a bright future for our children and grand-children, it will come only from consumer support of producers who work in concert with nature — organically, sustainably, and humanely.

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Genetic Engineering

“Compassionate Friend”, the publication from Beauty Without Cruelty, India, raised following two questions regarding this sensitive issue. Please call/write them for your support and comments — Tel: 91 212 66-4321 (fax 66-4312). 4 Prince of Wale’s Drive, Wanowrie, Pune 411 040 INDIA. Internet: http://giaspn01.vsnl.net.in/~bwcindia.

Playing God?

by Keya Kamat

Biotechnology can now cross animals with plants, leaving the vegetarian confused. The scientific world today has the power to alter the very fabric of nature, by transferring characteristics not only between plants , but cross-altering animals, plants and human beings. Genetic engineering which is without ethical limitation has a serious impact on the environment of animals and plants. It violates our relationship with the natural world. Most people believe animals have a right to live their lives free from human interference with their original genetic structure. Also, that animals can never serve as models of human disease — just because they’re much too different. But scientists still keep trying — after all, the human transplant market is worth well over $ 6 billion per year!

Biotechnology in recent years has been progressing in leaps and bounds. It represents a quantum leap in the exploitation of animals, allowing humans to move genes from one species of animal into another totally different species.

Scientists and biotech companies in some major countries of the world want to create new animals that produce more and ‘better’ meat, give up their valuable products such as wool more easily, and have organs that can be used in human transplants. It doesn’t stop there… many of the genetically modified crops now being field-tested in the US (and around the world) could not only have a devastating Jurassic-Park type impact on the global eco-system, but also hit agriculture-based third-world economies dependent on cash crops. Genetic engineering is a one-dimensional ‘reductionist-science’ that ignores the wider dynamics of life systems.

Genetic engineering primarily involves the introduction of genes containing DNA (deoxyribo-nucleus acid) procured from humans or animals into cells of bacteria, yeast or other animals. One of the outcomes is termed ‘Transgenic Animal’. These transgenic animals cannot be bred by natural/traditional selection or artificial insemination.

Donor females are given hormone injections and hormone impregnated sponges are also inserted directly into their reproductive tracts, so as to make them produce lots of egg-cells. This process has been termed ‘super-ovulation’. These eggs are then artificially inseminated either manually or surgically. Next the embryos are collected by further surgery or slaughter. These embryos are then injected with foreign DNA containing the genes of preferable traits, and then transferred into foster mothers, by surgery again.

It takes 80 donors and recipient animals to produce only one transgenic cow — if everything works perfectly — which is VERY rare.

Once the transgenic animal is produced, its suffering just about starts… for example, non-porcine genes have been added to pigs, producing animals with gastric ulcers, liver and kidney disorders, lameness, damaged eye-sight, loss of co-ordination, sensitivity to pneumonia and diabetic conditions.

Genetic engineering research is most often carried out on animals such as pigs, mice, sheep, farm animals, fish and sometimes, even on some plants such as the tomato, tobacco and corn.

Vegetarians around the world are seriously wondering whether the food they are eating is actually vegetarian. In the case of Flavor Savor as they are usually called, tomatoes are genetically altered by introducing into them genes from a fish, the Arctic Flounder, so as to reduce freezer damage, to enable them to have a longer shelf-life, to ripen longer on the tree while remaining firm at the time of picking and transporting and to make them bigger and tastier as well. No layman can make out the difference between Flavor Savor and a normal tomato which is primarily why staunch vegetarians want the altered tomatoes labeled.

Other such experiments with vegetables include chicken genes introduced into potatoes for resistance to disease and for increasing shelf-life and size, tobacco altered with mouse genes to reduce impurities or with a gene from fire-flies that makes the leaves glow at night. Some biotechnologists go to the extent where it becomes a game for them — playing around with genes of animals. This might result in some ghastly creature produced just to satisfy someone’s whims and fancies.

Scientists in the US have bred a mouse called the ‘Oncomouse’ which has been genetically engineered to develop cancer and in due course die a slow, painful death. The first oncomouse was bred in 1981, yet, in the past 15 years, a cure for cancer still seems to elude scientists. Genetic engineering on mice does not stop there. A mouse specifically created to lack an immune

system has been used to grow human organs, like ears, externally, even internally. The absence of an immune system ensures that the mouse will not reject human tissues. Scientists make a look-alike mold of a human organ, say, an ear, with biodegradable polyester fabric or other polymers. They then

transfer the bone/muscle cells into the form and transplant it on the mouse. When ready, the organ is ‘grafted’ from the mouse. The mouse somehow manages to remain alive after the ear is removed.

Similarly, scientists have managed to grow liver, skin, cartilage, bone, ureters, heart valves, tendons, intestines, blood-vessels and breast-tissue with such polymers. But, if the idea of reversing the experiment (substitute the mice with humans) came about, people would call it blasphemous! No thought for the animals is involved. The extent to which these experiments will go is uncertain. A change will only come about when scientists realize the animals’ right to live a normal, healthy life, without man tampering with their genes.

Pigs are also grown transgenetically, so that their organs can be transplanted into humans. Transgenic pigs were first produced in 1985. Scientists have succeeded in making the required organs in pigs capable of producing human cells. These proteins they hope will trick the human immune system while transplanting the organ(s) so that the recipient does not react to the foreign tissue.

Another example is that of sheep that have been injected with hormones, bioengineered to cause wool-shedding to produce the so-called ‘self-shearing’ sheep. This is done in Australia, where, unfortunately for the sheep, the climate is mostly hot and sunny. As a result, some sheep experience an increased rate of abortion.

WHERE ON EARTH WILL IT ALL END?

Talking about sheep, meanwhile, Welsh Mountain clone sheep are living proof that life can be created without sperm! A scientist at Rosalin Institute created them by fusing a cell grown in the laboratory with an empty sheep-egg through a spark of electricity. Imagine growing a sheep in a lab-

dish! Ironically, when pondering about doing the same with human beings, scientists find it ‘unethical’!

In another bizarre experiment, Indian scientists at the Nimbalkar Research Institute, Phaltan, Maharashtra, have, by artificial insemination, created an animal with goat-head and the body of a cow. This animal grows fatter faster and the volume of meat has therefore increased.

Scientists claim that they can, and will make genetically-altered animals that will help cure human diseases and illnesses; well, transgenic research has been going on for nearly 20 years, and it still has not cured a single human illness. But illnesses like diabetes, blindness, lameness and cancer (among others) have all been produced unexpectedly in animals subjected to these ridiculous experiments. Genetic engineering at lengths such as these, are a symbol of consumerism gone berserk. Is it really fair that animals and their environment face the brunt of our insatiable curiosity?

Considering that “to err is human” the probabilities of a mis-judgement or mis-step or mis-reaction resulting in a catastrophe are very high. And in such an eventuality, it will be next to impossible to trick the genie (or ‘gene’) back into the bottle (test-tube).

How Far is it Ethical?

by P.H. Butani

Genetic engineering on animals is highly undesirable, unnatural and therefore unethical. Some rationalists believe that it is tantamount to tinkering with nature’s pre-planned programme. Once modified, the individual genetic ‘personality’ of the animal stands irreversibly altered. It is used AGAINST the well-being of animals rather than FOR their welfare.

Genetic engineering is highly immoral because of four robust reasons:

1. Although lower in the order of evolution animals are very much sentient beings which means that they are capable of feeling pleasure and pain in the same way as we do.

2. In the case of humans, their permission is taken for genetic engineering. Further, for certain experiments, they are paid ‘inducement money’ and in the case of failure, they are given a generous compensation. In contrast, in the case of animals, genetic engineering is done without their permission or any compensation which is patently mean and unfair.

3. Animals being speechless and defenseless, cannot run away (all escape routes are blocked), resist (they are held down), protest (they are muzzled), or lodge a police complaint nor can they move the court for redressal of their grievances.

4. There are psychological perspectives also. Like human mammals, animal mammals also develop great attachment towards their young. And when any of the young is forcibly separated from the mother, she feels sad and expresses her sorrow. Early weaning leads to abnormal behavior and pathological changes in the small intestine. Even rough handling affects their psyche. Fear of humans reduces the reproductive performance of animals. Further, in cloning of animals (say cow, buffalo, pig, rabbit, mouse etc.) multi-identical offspring are born. The mother becomes attached to her young and each offspring’s separation from her causes mental shock and plunges her into depression. Repeated cycles of this trauma leaves her heart-broken. This is mental cruelty.

Thus, the prime motive for using genetic engineering on animals is not for any real concern for or welfare of them but solely and ultimately for the benefit of man. In other words, all gains go to man and nil to animal — it stands to lose its health, limb or life for man.

To test the validity of my views, I put the same question to Hindu Swamis, Jain Munis, Buddhist Monks and Sikh Saints. At first they frankly said that they had absolutely no idea as to what genetic engineering was. On my briefly explaining the application of genetic engineering to animals, all of them gave more or less the same answer:

The Swamiji said: “According to our Vedas, all living beings have a soul. It is an infinitesimally small part of the Universal Soul (Parmatma) seated in the heart of every being (Jiv Atma). Our religion forbids killing of any animal and exhorts to be kind to them. Now if genetic engineering causes any pain or suffering to animals, then it is definitely not right and it would be very cruel to forcibly subject them to it because as you say, it doesn’t benefit them. It only harms them. Narayan! Narayan!”

The Jain Muniji said: “We hold that all life is precious – be it human or animal. But unfortunately the sanctity of animal life is not recognized and if, during the course of genetic engineering it loses its life, no remorse is felt. The dead body is just carted away. Bhagwan Mahavir has summed up this philosophy very succinctly thus: ‘What we cannot give, we have no right to take. We cannot give life, so we have no right to take life.’”

The Buddhist Monk nodded his head in agreement and added: “Buddhism is essentially a religion of kindness, humanity and equality. It is against animal sacrifices. So those who do these kind of things (genetic engineering) are deviating from the right path. They seem to have only passion for experiments (Paryog) but no compassion for animals.”

The Sikh mystic in his typical Punjabi-accented Hindi opined: “We accept the cyclic Hindu theory of ‘Samsara’ – birth, death and rebirth – and karma. Humans are, therefore, equal to all other creatures – big or small. Conversely, all animals are sentient beings and therefore no pain should be inflicted on them. Because who knows that in our next birth, we may be born as an animal. That is why genetic engineering should not be performed on them.” To make his point clear, he added: “There may be grounds for valuing the life of a person more highly than that of an animal. But these, however, are not grounds for ignoring or devaluing the life of an animal for the simple reason that the basic characteristics (of divine life) are present to some degree in all animals.”

Genesis Awards on TV

“Genesis” Awards are given to honor and encourage all those who took courage and integrity to expose animal cruelties and thus heighten the public awareness on these issues. This 90 minutes ceremony will be shown on TV three times this year, on each of the two Animal Planet and Discovery Channels, all over the nation. Mark your calendar for dates, and verify them with your local TV Guide for exact time, because the timings are confusing, and there are two separate channels. Animal Planet Channel: (1) Saturday, May 17, 7 pm PST (10 pm EST), again (2) Saturday, May 17, 10 pm PST (1 am EST), and (3) Friday, May 30, 9 pm PST (midnight EST). Discovery Channel: (1) Saturday, May 31, 3:30 pm your own local time, (2) Sunday, June 1, 6:30 pm EST, and (6) Sunday, June 1, 6:30 pm PST. You should be able to catch at least one of the six airings.

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Let’s Appreciate..

First Daughter Chelsea Clinton. Yes, if you have heard it, it is true. She is now a vegetarian!

Actor Edward Furlong. While shooting a Calvin Klein ad, Edward said cotton was fine, but the leather shirt had to go! Send “thank yous” to Edward Furlong, c/o. Disney, 500 South Buena Vista St., Burbank, CA 91521-2310.

U.K.’s Pharmagene, the first pharmaceutical company to test new drugs exclusively on human donor tissue instead of unwilling animals. Says company co-founder Gordon Baxter, “If you have information on human genes, what’s the point of going back to animals?”

Cruelty-free toothpaste pioneer Tom’s of Maine for challenging the Fortune 1000 companies that test on animals: Tom’s will donate $5,000 to an animal charity on behalf of the next company that stops animal tests.

Auto Club Europe for cancelling a French foie gras farm visit after learning how geese suffer to produce this epicurean atrocity.

Buñol, Spain, for banning bullfights long ago and substituting the annual Tomato Festival — a food fight of monumental proportions.

Amoco, the latest oil company to cap its open exhaust stacks, saving countless migratory birds and bats from a fiery death.

Oslo, Norway, city court for ruling that cartons of factory-farmed eggs showing hens happily roaming a farmyard are illegal. The court said that the cartons mislead consumers since the eggs are really produced by birds who spend their entire lives squeezed into tiny cages.

Oprah Winfrey, who swore off pork after seeing the hit film Babe and ditched beef. Thank-yous to Oprah (and ask her to save birds and fish, too) go c/o. Harpo Productions, 110 N. Carpenter, Chicago, IL 60607.

The Israeli Army for letting soldiers give leather the boot and wear vegan shoes instead.

ANIMAL TIMES by PETA for publishing such news.

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Let’s Protest!!

New York Police Department for outfitting dogs with videocameras and sending them into high-risk situations. Canine cams beam live footage back to TVs monitored by officers, alerting them to possible dangers. Crimes and criminal problems are created by humans. Why should innocent dogs have to risk their lives and limbs? Please ask the NYPD not to endanger dogs in New York’s “war zones,” and ask them to look for some other alternatives. Write: Mr. Howard Safir, Police Commissioner, 1 Police Plaza, New York, NY 10038.

Edinburgh’s Scottish Life International Insurance Company for delivering boxed homing pigeons to news agencies — and promising a case of Scotch whiskey to the organization whose pigeon returned first — as part of a P.R. stunt. Not all homing pigeons make it “home”!

Sharon Stone, who, asked by Vanity Fair if she would wear fur, said, “Don’t give me that animal-rights crap. Mink is farmed just like leather.” Said stone-cold Sharon, “Damn it, minks are rodents. If people can warm themselves by wearing dead rodents, they don’t have to stop that on my behalf.” Write her c/o. PMK, 955 S. Carrillo Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90048.

Nalge Company, maker of Nalgene sports water bottles, for making laboratory restraints used on rabbits and mice. Write: David Della Penta, President, Nalge Company, P.O. Box 20365, Rochester, NY 14602.

German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and his wife, Hannelore, for A Culinary Journey Through Germany, a cardiologist’s nightmare that includes recipes for sow’s stomach, pork knuckles and other unsavory slaughter-house suppers.

Furrier Yolanda, for selling fur-bedecked Barbie dolls. However, we must appreciate Toymaker Mattel for telling Yolanda to “immediately cease using our trademark.” Says Mattel, “We would never design a fashion for the Barbie doll using real fur.”

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, which gives orphaned bear cubs to the Mayo Clinic for experiments. Complain to Governor Arne H. Carlson, 130 State Capitol, 75 Constitution Ave., St. Paul, MN 55155.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals can be reached at 757-622-PETA, or 501 Front St, Norfolk, VA 23510.

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Vitamin B12 Breakthrough

Commonly, most of the strict vegetarians who do not consume even dairy products (or eggs) are warned about the dangers of missing this essential nutrient. North American Vegetarian Society (NAVS) has some good news: According to their research, organic foods contain much more vitamin B12 than their counterpart, chemically fertilized commercial foods. This is one more reason to include as much organic food in our diets as possible. However, they note that further B12 research is needed, and vegans may want to have their blood levels tested and / or consume foods or tablets fortified with B12 until more information is available.

NAVS can be reached at 518-568-7970, or P.O. Box 72, Dolgeville, NY 13329.

Plants — especially organically grown plants — have been shown to contain vitamin B12, even though previous research had indicated that plants were not reliable sources of this essential vitamin. B12 is needed in microscopic amounts for new cell growth and maintaining a healthy nervous system.

A summary of the results of the study, by Dr. A. Mozafar in Switzerland, was reported in the November issue of New Century Nutrition by T. Collin Campbell, Ph.D., and Jeff Gates, D.H.Sc.

The Swiss research focussed specifically on three plants (soy beans, barley and spinach). Soils enriched with organic fertilizer (cow manure) resulted in a several-fold increase in the soil’s B12 content, as compared to soils worked with conventional inorganic or chemical fertilizers, according to Gates. More importantly, Gates said, the soil’s B12 was actually absorbed by the plants tested. Spinach, the most absorptive of the three tested plants, was found to have 17.8 mcg/kg, as compared to 6.9 mcg/kg for the spinach grown in conventional fertilizers. Barley grown in soil fertilized with manure was found to have 9.1 mcg/kg of vitamin B12, as compared to 2.6 mcg/kg for barley grown with inorganic fertilizers. Soybeans grown with manure had 2.9 mcg of B12 as compared to 1.6 mcg with chemical fertilizers.

“When one recalls that the RDA for B12 is only 2 mcg/day, then a quick calculation finds that just a 4-ounce daily portion of spinach is all that is usually necessary for B12 nutrition,” Gates wrote in New Century Nutrition. Two micrograms is a minuscule amount, approximately the size of a period at the end of a sentence.

Health professionals have warned vegans for years that they may need to take B12 supplements because there is no reliable plant-based source of the vitamin. B12 is not a true vitamin, but rather a by-product of bacteriological action. Animal flesh, milk, cheese and eggs have been shown to contain B12 — but previous studies have not consistently found B12 in plant-foods.

“Are vegans really at greater risk of B12 deficiency?” Campbell ponders in New Century Nutrition. “Some evidence says yes; some invites skepticism. Clearly, vegans do generally have lower blood concentrations of B12. A number of studies have shown this. But these low concentrations mean little unless there is a higher incidence of the accompanying blood (megaloblastic anemia) and nerve (parathesia) disorders, for which there seems to be little or no evidence. What should be acknowledged is that the concentrations of other blood factors, such as cholesterol, also are very different among vegans, and for very good health reasons at that. Why should we expect the lower B12 levels to be an exception?”

B12 is actually found in five forms, only some of which are considered active or useful for humans. B12 deficiencies can be masked by the presence of non-useful forms of B12.

2nd World Congress on Alternatives and Animal Uses in the Life Sciences

It was held on October 20-24, 1996, at Utrecht, Netherlands, to provide a useful forum for dialogue, exchange of information, problem resolution and debate between animal protectionists, scientists, industry, regulators, educationalists and others. The basic premise of the Congress was the policy of ‘Refinement, Reduction and Replacement’ of animal experiments. The next World Congress will be held in 1999.

Top Sugar and Other Sweeteners: Do They Contain Animal Products?

The answer to this question is very complex. Carolina Pyevich provided following clues in Vegetarian Journal, while doing an internship with the Vegetarian Resource Group (VRG).

Refined sugar is avoided by many vegetarians because its processing may involve a bone char filter. The activated filter decolorizes sugar to make it white through an absorption process. Bone char filter is used by some major sugar companies, but not necessarily by all. The other filters may be granular carbon, pressure lead filter, or an ion exchange system. The granular carbon has a wood or coal base, and the ion exchange does not require the use of any animal products. Bones from cows are the only bones used to make bone char.

Two major types of refined sugar produced in the United States are beet sugar and cane sugar. They both are nutritionally equivalent, and one cannot usually taste any difference between them. They are both composed of sucrose. The production and sale of each type are approximately equal.

Beet sugar refineries never use bone char filter, because beet sugar does not require an extensive decolorizing procedure. It is refined with a pressure lead filter and an ion exchange system. Beet sugar is often labeled Granulated Sugar. It is becoming more prevalent in the U.S. because the Federal government subsidizes it. But Jainism would not accept beets, because they are roots.

On the other hand, almost all the cane sugar requires the use of a specific filter to decolorize the sugar and absorb inorganic material from it. The filter may be either bone char, granular carbon, or an ion exchange system.

Domino, the largest sugar manufacturer, uses bone char in the filtration process. The cane refineries of Savannah Foods, the second largest sugar manufacturer, also use bone char. California and Hawaiian (C&H) Sugar employs bone char filters as well as granular carbon and ion exchange filters. All these companies use the bone char in the refining process of brown sugar, powered sugar (sugar mixed with corn starch), and white sugar.

Refined Sugar, producers of Jack Frost Sugar, use a granular carbon. Florida Crystal sugar is a cane sugar which has not passed through the bone either.

Some labels of sugar packages seem to indicate that the product is “raw sugar,” but all commercial sugar has undergone some refining. Genuine raw sugar, according to FDA regulations, is unfit for human consumption.

Turbinado sugar is made by separating raw cane sugar crystals in a centrifuge and washing them with steam. It retains brown color. C&H produces Washed Raw Sugar, without passing through bone char.

Brown sugar is basically refined sugar with added molasses. It could have been refined with bone char.

Molasses is derived from sugar canes. Beet sugar molasses is too bitter for human consumption. The molasses syrup does not go through any filter, because there is no need to eliminate the brown color.

This sweetener may sometimes be non-vegetarian, because the process of making it requires an agent to reduce its foam by adding a small amount of fat to the liquid. This fat is the complex issue.

Traditionally, lard has been used for that. The pork is hung over a tub of maple syrup, and let drops of fat drip into the syrup. Milk, cream, butter, or vegetable oil also could have been used for that process.

Most maple syrup manufacturers now use vegetable oil or synthetic defoamers instead of lard. But one commercial defoamer, Atmos300K, contains glycerides derived from “edible meat and/or vegetable sources.” Thus, it is difficult to determine whether a particular brand has an animal or vegetable based defoamer.

Kosher certified brands, such as Spring Tree or Maple Groves, are unlikely to contain animal products in their defoamers. Holsum Foods, which produces pancake syrup, uses vegetable oil for defoaming. Their products are labeled by food chains such as Dominick’s, Supervalue, and Superfine.

Conclusion: Turbinado Sugar and molasses are top choices. Granualted would be ok, but it is non-Jain.

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Is Wine Vegetarian?


Most probably, the answer is “NO”. Here is another study by Carolina Pyevich, for the VRG.

VRG can be reached at 410-366-8343, or P.O. Box 1463, Baltimore, MD 21203.

Although wine usually contains only grapes, yeast, and a small amount of sulphites, which are added and created during fermentation, the processing of wine introduces small amounts of substances not acceptable to vegetarians and vegans.

Every wine is different and no uniform formula exists for producing them. A clarifying or fining agent makes wine clear by removing proteins from it. If left in the wine, these proteins would denature and form long molecular strands. That would result in wine that is either hazy or has loose sediment floating in it. The agents eventually settle out of the wine. Different proteins serve as clarifying agents depending upon both the type of wine and the desired flavor.

Some clarifiers are animal-based products, while others are earth-based. Common animal-based agents include egg whites, milk, casein, gelatin, and isinglass. Gelatin is derived from the skin and connective tissue of pigs and cows. Isinglass is prepared from the bladder of the sturgeon fish. Bentonite, a clay earth product, serves as another popular fining agent.

Organic protein agents are more likely to be used in the clarification of premium wines which cost more than $7 a bottle.

Egg whites from chicken eggs are used for red wine clarification. Wine makers in France (Burgundy) commonly utilize egg whites in their production. Egg whites generally clarify more expensive wines (above $15 a bottle) or French wines which are expected to age.

Large producers of wine in the United States usually implement potassium caseinate as a substitute for eggs. Whole milk and casein are two other possible fining agents in some red wines.

Gelatin can clarify either white or red wine, or beer. Gelatin pulls suspended material out of wine, and less expensive wines may use this method.

Isinglass is used to fine selected white wines. Germany is one of the main countries that uses this technique. Some American wineries also use isinglass to clarify white wine or chardonnay.

The most popular substance used to remove the proteins of domestically produced white wines is bentonite, the silica clay. It is used to fine most inexpensive wines.

Another fining agent of concern to vegetarians is blood. Although blood of large mammals may serve as a clarifier in some Old Mediterranean countries, it use is forbidden in United States and France.

Both the clarifying agents and the removed proteins coagulate on the bottom of the wine tank or barrel, from where they are removed. The ingredient list will not state the clarifier because it is removed from the final product.

Kosher wine is a specialty item and it is produced directly for the Kosher market. Kosher wines may be more likely to avoid the use of the animal-based clarifying agents, but not all do so. The Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations stated that a wine could theoretically be certified as Kosher if it contained egg whites or if the gelatin were completely removed from the final product. Paper is another agent sometimes used to clarify Kosher wine, as the impurities adhere to paper.

Jay Dinshah — American Vegan Society — 609-694-2887 — P.O. Box “H”, Malaga, NJ 08328

Alcohol causes cirrhosis of the liver, oral and esophageal cancers, hemorrhagic strokes, malnutrition, accidents and suicides. Alcohol injures every cell it touches.

With every drink, you lose 10,000 brain cells. Those cells may be most vital ones for you… Have you ever experienced, that a very few little glitches bring a whole computer operation to a screeching halt or ‘crash’?

Anger, hatred, lust, greed, or any emotion reasonably controlled under normal circumstances may find free rain when one is ‘under the influence’. How can you tell what a man will do when he’s drunk?

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January – March

July – September October – December

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maximios June 18, 2007
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Vegan

Morari Bapu
A Message from the Greatest Scholar on Sri Ram Charit Manas

I encourage all of you to celebrate the Gandhi Jayanti on October 2 as “Vegetarian Day” and to strive to live truly with the principles of

“Jiv Daya.”

I have always been telling in my Katha, that everyone should take high quality food for the sake of high quality in thoughts and action. I trust and bless everyone to make progress in this direction.

We start with an encouraging message from Morari Bapu, the greatest scholar on Sri Ram Charit Manas. The Jiv Daya principles are in his heart, as repeated many times in his Katha, as he tells the story of Ramayan. Only a vegetarian diet can bring progress in spirituality.

The same issue is eloborated in all other major religions. The American Vegan Society has studied them in depth to verify the relationships between Ahimsa, religions, and vegetarianism.

However, the western world has been skeptic, raising time and again the question of whether a vegetarian diet can provide adequate nutrition. We have a few papers from the North American Vegetarian Society that address these issues in detail. Bob LeRoy, RD, MS, EdM, the nutrition editor for Vegetarian Voice, authors them.

First of all, protein. The protein fear is so strong here, that some people are afraid that their bones would crumble and skin peel off if they didn’t eat meat! Let us learn how much protein we really need and how much is available from plant sources,

On page 4 we see that “Beans” provide the answer to the protein question. Actually, beans provide more protein than meat. Furthermore, they also provide vitamins and minerals. However, each individual bean does not provide all the essential amino acids, so some consider them incomplete, or ‘lowly’. But in reality, when eaten with grains, as most Indian foods are eaten, they provide complete and superior proteins.

Who needs fruits and vegetables? Everyone does… Now health officials advise us to have at least five servings a day. In India, due to high prices, we had learned to think of fruits as food only for rich or sick people. Vegetables too, especially among women, were never highly favorite. Take a trivia quiz to check your knowledge about a wide variety of fruits and vegetables and their nutrition values, on page 7. This may motivate you to eat those five recommended servings a day!

The “McLibel” suit in England attacted the attention of people from all over the world. Even though now it is becoming an ‘old’ story, it is worth thinking about what issues are at stake. The issues are large, and they are still real. Read a detailed report on page 10.

Vegetarian Resource Group conducted a Roper Poll to study the eating habits of youths. You will be surprised to see that many people never eat meat, or poultry, or fish/seafood, or all of them, and dairy products, or eggs. See the results.

See how you can contribute in a vegan health study. On page 15, see how Vegan Action targets food packaging with “V” Campaign. Also, learn some terms associated with use of chemicals on foods.

We appreciate generous donations from (1) Umesh & Harsha Shah, Lexington, NC, and (2) Ramesh & Jaya Shah, Mayfield Heights, OH.

Ahimsa, Religion, and Vegetarianism
from 35th Anniversary Issue of “Ahimsa,” by American Vegan Society — P.O. Box H, Malaga, NJ 08328-0908

Questions from two readers: 1) Is there any religion that advocates or teaches Ahimsa? 2) I am a conservative Southern Baptist who loves animals. Have you known others of fundamentalist background who became vegetarian? My friends tell me not to be vegetarian because you have to be very “liberal“ for that. Can you help?

For a religion that teaches Ahimsa in some form, you could practically take your pick. As for its adherents actually living up to it to a great degree, that is another matter. There is an active vegetarian group within the Friends (Quakers), and many Quakers opt for pacifism. About half the Seventh-Day Adventists (including more than a few vegie nutrition researchers and M.D.’s, some naturally-oriented) are vegetarians, many total-veg (most of the rest eat meat sparingly); but this is for human health rather than Reverence for Life.

Dr. Vaclavik’s book on The Vegetarianism of Jesus Christ links this Master to the Essenes, a dissident Jewish sect that practiced pacifism, communal sharing, and vegetarianism. They opposed alcohol use, slavery, the swearing of oaths, animal sacrifice, and the wearing of wool.

Some of Jesus’ advanced teachings on pacifism, marital fidelity, and oath-taking, can still be found in The Sermon on The Mount, though not necessarily in universal practice today.

The worldwide Jewish Vegetarian movement includes societies in several U.S.A. cities.

Hinduism contains Ahimsa, and many are lacto-vegetarians, though not necessarily pacifists. Jains profess Ahimsa in diet and behavior, and nearly all are at least lacto-veg. In the U.S.A. many are realizing the dairy-slaughter connection and developing further into veganism.

Many Buddhists follow a vegetarian diet and pacifism, notably in Asia, relatively fewer among those in the USA. There are teachings of the Buddha that even stress veganism for at least true and sincere disciples or monks, forbidding not only meat but also specifically silk, leather, milk and cheese.

In living by Ahimsan principles, one can be an adherent of any faith one wishes, for they are all enriched by Ahimsa. If one is shopping around, one can find a faith where the theology, cosmology, and rituals, seem harmonious with one’s own traditions or inner promptings. But to the extent that one puts the Golden Rule and Reverence for Life into one’s everyday deeds, to that extent Ahimsa (Dynamic Harmlessness) is being practiced.

AVS does not dismiss out of hands the benefits, serenity and comfort that many people derive from complex theological beliefs, liturgical and ritual practices. But if one does not wish to indulge in endless speculation and disputation on prior existence and potential future life, or metaphysical aspects of the universe, etc., Ahimsa can provide all the religion one needs; then whatever (if anything) comes after this life will not find that person very far off the mark. It is of no importance to us whether one considers oneself a “former” such-and-such religion adherent now practicing Ahimsa, or a present adherent whose Judaism (or Buddhism or Catholicism or Shintoism or whatever) has come into better focus with the understanding of Ahimsa. If one puts Ahimsa (doing the most good and the least harm one can) into practice, one will surely be following in the highest and best traditions of one’s own religion and master (or teacher or prophet or guru). This you can do, as a Christian or Buddhist or Jew, a Muslim or Hindu; as a theist, atheist or agnostic (Jainism and Buddhism, for example, do not even require a personal God), or simply as an Ahimsan, or under any other label, or no label at all.

We are by no means ignorant of the world’s great religions and their tenets; many are fine and positive powers for good, if followed properly. But much of the priestly speculation and arrogance has served only to divide, to sow hatred and mistrust, theological jealously, intolerance and violence, as in the Middle East, Northern Ireland, India, and practically everywhere else on Earth to some degree. That which causes injustice or suffering to humans or fellow creatures, would not be a religion that leads one to the Ultimate. (Ahimsa is always an integral part of a religion — Ed.)

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How much protein do we really need, anyway?
Bob LeRoy, RD — North American Vegetarian Society — (518) 568-7970

Few food nutrients have been persistent “household words” in the 20th century, but protein is certainly one. Schools and government agencies which are usually inept at making nutrition education messages “stick” in people’s minds, have been fabulously successful in instilling lifelong fears of not getting enough protein… but at the same time the researchers the world over have become increasingly clear, year by year, that human protein needs are vastly less than had previously been claimed.

In fact, if there were as much international consensus about political and economical matters as there is about protein requirements, then world peace would be at hand. Policy-makers at the United Nations and at national nutrition boards throughout the globe have for years agreed that people need to derive about 8 percent of their food calories from protein in normal life. This is the simple, reliable conclusion that never seems to “trickle down” to the U.S. general public, which rather is pushed to pile up arbitrary numbers of “grams” of protein, and is warned that animal-derived foods are supposedly crucial to protein nutrition. Results? People cannot comprehend the unwieldy “protein-gram” concept, and end up consuming great protein excesses. The U.S. population has in recent generations taken in 12 to 14 percent of its calories from protein, an inflated share due to sizable meat, fish, poultry, dairy and egg use. Because animal-product industries comprise the largest part of the food economy, and because maximizing protein intake at all costs has long been one of their key marketing messages, it is unlikely that Americans will soon hear news about actually needing only 8 percent of calories from protein.

It is now universally acknowledged that protein deficiency disease is basically nonexistent in the world except where calories are deficient (where people simply don’t have enough food). For the most part, the exercise physiology profession now accepts that complex carbohydrates are the body’s prime and ideal fuel for athletics, and that training regimens do not call for a greater share of protein in the diet (as calories get added, protein just increases proportionately). The medical profession now even accepts that therapeutic diets for the various types of diabetes should draw most calories from complex carbohydrates, and the previously recommended ultra-high-protein diets have been abandoned. As soon as these secrets leak out, we will leave the era of “protein paranoia.”

Protein-calorie-percents for fish range from 30 to 78 percent; those for chicken, eggs, beef, lamb and pork average 43 percent, 33 percent, 29 percent, 21 percent and 11 percent respectively; those for skim and whole cow’s milk average 43 and 23 percent. These foods obviously promote a protein glut in the diet, helping increase risk of osteoporosis and other degenerative diseases. Since all their remaining calories are from animal fat, their protein even carries with it other baggage highly undesirable for human health.

It is noteworthy that human milk contains only about 7.5 percent of its calories from protein, about one-third the content of cow’s milk and close to the overall recommended 8 percent. As the chart below suggests, you can effortlessly take in at least 8 percent of your diet’s calories from protein without using any animal product at all; any random, varied assortment of whole vegan foods will easily provide this. In fact, people who emphasize specialized foods such as soy products at the expense of greater diversity, may find they too consume large excesses of protein though avoiding animal foods.

PROTEIN-CALORIE-PERCENTS

Compiled from data published in Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, Handbook of Amino Acid Content of Food and Biological Data on Protein.

61.2 Tofu 11.1 Cashews 39.4 Soyabeans, whole 11.0 Pistachio nuts 36.0 Cauliflower 10.9 Sesame seeds 33.7 Peas, fresh 9.6 Almonds 28.4 Broccoli 7.9 Brazil nuts 25.6 Spinach 7.5 Strawberries 24.4 Lettuce 7.3 Corn 24.3 Mung beans 6.1 Oranges 20.0 Lima beans 5.7 Peaches 19.5 Chickpeas 5.2 Apricots 17.7 Green cabbage 4.3 Bananas 16.3 Peanuts 4.2 Papayas 14.2 Okra 3.9 Coconuts 13.4 Tomatoes 3.9 Avocadoes 13.1 Wheat, whole grains 3.5 Grapes 13.0 Cucumbers 3.4 Mangoes 12.7 Eggplants 3.1 Dates

11.8 Barley, whole 2.3 Apples

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BEANS
‘Lowly legumes’ offer lasting legacy
By Bob LeRoy, RD, MS, EdM — Nutrition editor for Vegetarian Voice

Among cultivated staple-food plants throughout history, the legume may validly be dubbed “aristocracy.” And yet, we have lost track of much of the value of legumes in the cuisines, daily diets and convenience foods offered worldwide.

Beans and peas — devalued in ignorant pronouncements by nutrition professionals and government agriculturists throughout the 1900s — seem widely regarded as charisma-lacking foods, described half in jest as “lowly,” even by chefs who may better grasp their true worth.

Some say the legume needs a gourmet revival; others in the vegetarian movement or food business seem to think all legumes have vanished except for the “Almighty Soy,” the single weapon with which meat and dairy may be overcome.

But, delicious, nutritious legumes are many and have much to brag about.

Agricultural Breakthrough

Cultivation of beans and peas was one of the most revolutionary agricultural breakthroughs ever. Root systems of leguminous plants develop nodes which harbor staggering numbers of nitrogen-fixing bacteria — organisms which bring in nitrogen from the air itself, making it available for the plant’s use.

Unlike nearly all cultivated crops, which deplete the soil of nitrogen (a key element for the growth process), bean and pea plants actually bolster the soil’s nitrogen content. This remarkable attribute has:

• enabled beans to grow in some soils where nitrogen deficiency would have doomed other crops;

• provided some soil rehabilitation through seasonally alternating legumes and other crops; and

• even allowed soil-sparing systems of interplanting different crops in the same row (practiced in various Native-American cultures with corn, beans and squash).

Powerhouses of Protein

The one nutritional attribute of legumes that has not remained a secret in this century has been their abundant protein content. Based on this, the U. S. Department of Agriculture long ago admitted beans and peas to the “Meat Group” of its Basic Four Food Groups. Of course, legumes have a group all their own in the New Four Food Groups released by Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.

All legumes seem to derive 20 to 44 percent of their calories from protein (except for the peanut, at 16.3% due to its uniquely high fat content). This is daunting in view of recommendations by nutrition authorities in nearly all nations that only 8 – 10 percent of total calories in the diet need come from protein.

A vegetarian can effortlessly achieve an average of at least 8 – 10 percent protein, just by eating non-legume vegetables, grains and fruits — thus in fact, it is very possible to get TOO MUCH protein, if one eats a large amount of legumes!

For those people who are getting enough food to eat, it is not necessary to “combine proteins” in order to get ENOUGH protein. However, it is well known that eating foods of distinctly different amino acid makeup (within some reasonable span of hours) will allow the body to use the protein and nitrogen content of those foods to a greater, more efficient extent for true protein functions (tissue, hormone and enzyme building, etc.).

So, less of the protein will then be shunned off to be used inefficiently by the body as “fuel” — and potentially stored as fat — along with the processing of the useless nitrogen wastes which burdens the liver and kidneys.

The main way people achieve this beneficial protein complementation is by eating foods that are high in the amino acid lysine when compared to sulfur-containing amino acids PLUS foods that are high in sulfur-containing aminos when compared to lysine. Higher- lysine foods include legumes, green leafy vegetables, and cabbage-family vegetables. Higher-sulfur-amino foods include barley, corn, millet, oats, rye, wheat — and the high-fat sesame seeds, almonds, Brazil nuts, walnuts, and sesame, flax, pumpkin and sunflower seeds.

Legumes have been humanity’s best “lysine bargain” throughout history — yielding the most food lysine per cost of agricultural production, and doing this via foodstuffs that can easily be stored year around. Not so for green leafy and cabbage-family vegetables, which are otherwise the champions of vegetarian nutrition. Not coincidentally, beans and peas have been staple-food fixtures alongside foods they “complement” in countless human societies, for example:

  • beans + corn (many Native-American/Latin-American cultures)

  • chickpeas + wheat and/or sesame (Middle East)

  • peanuts + millet (much of Africa)

  • peas + oats (western Canada)

  • one of the several daals + one of the various grains such as rice, wheat, barley, etc. (India) (- Ed.)

Far More Than Protein

The nutritional importance of legumes extends far beyond the realm of protein, and beyond the obvious fact that legumes, grains and starchy vegetables have provided the human race’s staple sources of complex carbohydrates (from which the great majority of calories should come, according to ALL nutrition authorities).

Though most people think of vitamin pills or nutritional yeast when the words “B complex” are mentioned, beans and peas throughout human history have been crucial sources of the full range of B vitamins other than B12.

Major B vitamins like thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, pyridoxine, pantothenic acid and biotin are well supplied by the entire legume family. Niacin-rich peanuts act much like a niacin supplement, and probably gave protection from pellagra to those African peoples who traditionally used them with grains.

But what are the best B complex supplements? Sprouted legumes! The sprouting process manufactures plentiful new B vitamins (but probably not B12). Only cabbage-related dark greens (kale, collards, etc.) offer as much B vitamin content per calorie as do good-quality sprouted beans… and no foods compare to home-grown sprouts in providing so much in B vitamins for so little dollar cost.

Eating sprouted legumes also helps avoid some inevitable concerns about taking commercial supplements: Why take a dose so much higher than what a human could consume from natural foods in a day; and why allow unwanted excesses of irrelevant nutrients to jeopardize delicate balances among nutrients in the body (as with the huge amounts of phosphorus in yeast products, normally almost devoid of calcium).

Legume sprouts (except alfalfa sprouts, which I discourage using) are also a very useful source of vitamin E, an antioxidant nutrient. Among unsprouted legumes, the few that have more than a tiny amount of fat also supply notable amounts of vitamin E or essential unsaturated fatty acids: high-fat soybeans and peanuts, and medium-fat (19.5% of calories) chickpeas.

Calcium Absorption

Magnesium, zinc and iron are amply provided in beans and peas in general, and calcium occurs in much smaller amounts. For all these minerals, absorbability is partly limited by some binding to phytate phosphorus. Both sprouting and fermenting (the latter exemplified by making tempeh from whole soybeans) are effective in breaking down much of the phytate and thereby increasing the amount of these minerals which the body can use.

Soybeans contain more calcium than do other legumes; their calcium-to-calorie, calcium-to-phosphorus and calcium-to-protein ratios are similar to those of chickpeas or navy beans. Despite their phytate and unusual calcium-bindable oxalate content, they show, in some studies, about twice as much calcium absorbability as other common unsprouted beans. This absorption rate is only half to three-quarters’ that of the “calcium champions” (kale, collards and related greens) and broccoli, and soybeans can’t compare to any of these in terms of calcium ratios… but it points to theoretical usefulness for soy as a calcium source.

Soy or no soy, an epidemiological look at any society where beans and peas are among the staples, and dairy products are not consumed, reveals that osteoporosis is conspicuously absent!

Balanced Iron

On the other hand, absorbability of iron from soybeans seems poor (though improved in fermented soy products such as tempeh), and this has been traced to binding by soy protein as opposed to phytate or oxalate… a problem apparently not shared by other legumes.

Still, epidemiological studies of cultures using soybean products heavily and animal products minimally (e.g. the massive, recent Study Of Diet And Disease In China) have not found iron deficiency to be a public health problem.

Balanced diets comprised of natural vegetarian foods — without mega-dosing or iron supplements — seem easily to find iron’s happy medium: avoiding anemia caused by iron deficiency, and avoiding iron excess which, various studies show, can promote free radical formation and undermine the health of the heart.

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Fruits & Vegetables

What’s the big deal about fruits and vegetables? Even if they taste great or look gorgeous, are they meant to be taken seriously? Why were fruits and vegetables put on this planet, anyway? Well, THEY probably think they’re here to have fun and to make more fruits and vegetables, but we humans are convinced that they must be here for our own benefits. So, let’s look at the unique things which they alone among all foods do for us.

Water Foods

Fruits and vegetables are the only foods which, like our bodies, are comprised mostly of water! They assist us in meeting our cells’ daily fluid needs, and in “flushing” the digestive system. When predominantly dry foods are eaten, the body must contribute water from its fluid reserves merely to carry on the chemical breakdown of food proteins. The body must contribute much greater amounts of water to get the whole mass of digesting food into a liquid enough state to be handled at all.

Dried foods basically have a “dehydrating” effect on the body (increasing the need to drink fluids separately), while fruits and vegetables have a water-sparing or “rehydrating” effect. This is a critical issue in parts of the world where fruits and vegetables are the only uncontaminated water source!

Their water content offers some direct nutritional benefits, too: They may be called the finest sources of fiber and undigestible carbohydrate simply because they offer the necessary water without which fiber won’t do any good. Eating dried prunes and bran-containing whole-grain foods in a dry state within an overall-dry meal will, by comparison, do much less for the colon’s health, but will definitely arouse quite a thirst.

Nutrient-Dense Foods

The phrase “nutrient-dense” may conjure images of dry, heavy foods like nuts, dried fruits, and powdered concentrates manufactured from who-knows-what. However, what it actually means is “containing large amounts of nutrients per calorie.” Here again, fruits and vegetables are nature’s unique representatives.

One hundred calories’ worth of mixed fruits and vegetables will certainly offer much greater vitamin and mineral content than 100 calories’ worth of any other class of food; calories we take in from fruits and vegetables are attached to what’s really the most nutritious part of our whole diet.

For various nutrients such as iron, we find that 30 or 40 individual foods providing the most of that nutrient per calorie are ALL fruits or vegetables (a few dried sea vegetables are included.) A calcium chart would list many vegetables that contain more calcium per calorie than the highest-listed animal product, despite long-standing myths touting dairy products as ideal calcium sources. (We will publish a chart next year — Ed.)

Vitamin-C Foods

First known only as a scurvy-preventive substance, ascorbic acid has amassed quite a reputation over the last two generations:

• as vitamin C, one of the first essential vitamins ever identified; • as a nutrient helpful in times of acute or threatened infection; • as a promoter of increased iron absorption from meals in which it is included; • as one of the very few nutrients authoritatively credited with cancer-preventive effects; • as an anti-oxidant nutrient helpful in avoiding free-radical formation;

• and as a chelating agent somewhat useful in drawing heavy metal contamination out of the body.

All of nature’s foods containing vitamin C are fruits and vegetables. (Some, like dark leafy greens and cabbage-family vegetables, have much more than others.)

Carotenoid Foods

Carotenoids sound like invaders from another galaxy, but are actually the family of plant pigments which includes beta-carotene. They are vitamin-A complexes from plants that give carrots and winter squashes their orange-to-deep-yellow coloring inside.

They, like vitamin C, are anti-oxidants and among the few nutrients confirmed as cancer-preventive agents.

Once again, they are only found in fruits and vegetables, though not in all. Examples also include dark leafy greens, red and yellow peppers, dark-flesh rutabagas, apricots, peaches, broccoli, green beans, sugar snap peas and various tropical fruits.

Alkaline-Ash Foods

Virtually all foods whose overall mineral content results in an alkaline residue (i.e. where calcium, magnesium, potassium, iron, zinc are most prominent) are fruits and vegetables. Most other foods yield an acid ash (i.e. where phosphorus, sulfur, silicon, boron are most prominent), while some are closer to neutral. Addition of sodium chloride salt doesn’t change the underlying acid/alkaline character. Fruits and vegetables are thus very important in maintaining certain balances in our mineral metabolism.

Diets which are heavily acid-ash dominant can result in excessive excretion of minerals such as calcium, magnesium, iron and zinc. Particularly, the acid-ash influence of large amounts of meat and animal-products seems to be one major factor causing increased calcium loss in the urine, thus increased daily needs for calcium and increased risk of osteoporosis.

There we have the contributions made uniquely by fruits and vegetables. Yet, much more can be said, for instance:

• They are the predominant sources of nutrients known to be preventive against cancer development. • They commonly play a key role in therapeutic diets designed to combat degenerative disease. • Nearly all of them contain more than enough protein per calorie to meet the overall protein recommendations for human diets. • They include foods which are the best calcium sources, by all measures which matter (calcium per unit of protein, per unit of animal protein, per unit of phosphorus, and per calorie);

• For most nutrients, specific fruits and vegetables are the foods which would yield the most of that nutrient PER ACRE of production.

There’s plenty of evidence for the opinion I’ve held since I was 18: Fresh fruits and vegetables are the most important foods any one of us ever eat.

Super-Trivia Quiz

1. What food contains more calcium per calorie than any other common food? 2. What part of a citrus fruit contains the greatest concentrations of vitamin C and calcium? 3. Fruits picked when ripe provide flavor and nutritional value superior to that of fruits picked unripe. However, what is the one common fruit which must be picked unripe, to avoid rotting within? 4. This food is a fixture in Caribbean and southern cuisines, derives more than one-fourth of its calories from protein, exceeds all dairy products by all measures for calcium content, is very high in all the nutrients which have been considered cancer-preventive for more than a decade, is grown in all climates and survives early frosts, is generally biannual but is perennial in some tropical areas. What is it? 5. This food sounds like the one above nutritionally, and when home-grown in Canada and far-north New England areas is often dug out from under the snow to get fresh early-winter vegetables. What is it? 6. Fructose, when used as an ingredient is a refined product. Natural fructose does not appear abundantly in nature. Fructose is the principal sugar in only common fruit, and in only one common vegetable. What are they? 7. There are only 6 common fruits or vegetables whose calcium content is suspected of having poor or unreliable absorbability. What are they? 8. This food is popular in Caribbean and southern cuisines, contains more protein per calorie than pork, has a greater calcium content (by weight, per calorie, per unit of protein, per unit of phosphorus, and per dollar of retail cost) than cottage cheese, is high in vitamin C, is not a goitrogenic food, grows in the northeast U.S. but definitely doesn’t survive early frosts, and is prized by some as a soup/stew ingredient. What is it? 9. This north-country food is produced by a weedlike perennial plant, adds juiciness and sweetness to salads when shredded, has a name which make no sense at all, and is ready to harvest in the autumn, but may be left unharvested all winter (snow, freezing and all) and then harvested when spring arrives, at which time it has increased dramatically in sweetness and vitamin C content. What is it? 10. What dried vegetable contains more iron than any other food?

11. Eggs are often used as a binding or a thickening ingredient in recipes, but there are various alternatives, some of which are from fruits and vegetables. Arrowroot and kuzu powders come from an uncommon plant root, but there are three common fruit and vegetable items I’ve used in this way. You may have used others. I’ll tell you my three, why don’t you write NAVS and tell us yours?

Answers to Super-Trivia Quiz

1. Bok-choi (spelled other ways too), easy-to-grow oriental green leafy cabbage-family vegetable, a tender delicacy in salads and common ingredient in many cooked Chinese dishes.

2. The white stuff between the sections, and under the skin layer.

3. Pears.

4. Collard greens.

5. Kale.

6. Pears, Jerusalem artichokes.

7. (Due to sizable oxalic acid content.) Beet greens, chard, spinach, parsley, rhubarb, beets. The latter two contain little calcium anyway.

8. Okra. (“Goitrogenic” foods such as most legumes and cabbage-family foods slow down somewhat the rate of use of dietary iodine by the thyroid gland. Just having a dependable iodine source, such as tiny amounts of sea vegetables, avoids any need for concern about this.)

9. Jerusalem artichokes.

10. Dulse, a dried sea vegetable.

11. Mine are potato flour from regular potatoes, pureed papaya and overripe fresh plantain. What are yours?

by Bob LeRoy, RD

Bob LeRoy holds an MS in Nutrition and Public Health, and an EdM in Community Nutrition Education. He has served as nutrition advisor to NAVS since 1990. You can contact North American Vegetarian Society at P.O. Box 72, Dolgeville, NY 13329, or 518-568-7970.

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McLibel Case
The story of two ordinary vegetarians taking on the giant McDonald’s in London Court

A small group distributed leaflets in front of a McDonald’s restaurant — The Big McD’ decided to teach them a lesson — A couple accepted the challenge — Vegetarian organizations from all over the world poured in to support — The case should have lasted only a few days, but instead went on for months… years… — Became the longest in British history — Started in 1994, finished in 1997 — McD’ learned its lesson: “Might is not right!”

The three reports below explain the whole story in a nutshell.

The McLibel Trial – A Mammoth Legal Battle

This was a mammoth legal battle between the $30 billion a year McDonald’s Corporation and two London Greenpeace supporters (Helen Steel and Dave Morris). The trial began in June 1994, became the longest civil case in British history in December 1995, and lasted until end of 1996. McDonald’s sued Steel & Morris for libel over a 6-sided “Factsheet” produced by London Greenpeace, entitled “What’s Wrong With McDonald’s? — Everything they don’t want you to know,” which they distributed in 1989/90.

Approximately 180 witnesses from the UK and around the world have given evidence on all the issues in the case, namely:

The connection between multinational companies like McDonald’s, cash crops, and starvation in the third world.

  • The responsibility of corporations such as McDonald’s for damage to the environment, including destruction of rain forests.

  • The wasteful and harmful effects of the mountains of packaging used by McDonald’s and other companies.

  • McDonald’s promotion and sale of food with a low fiber, high fat, sodium, and sugar content, and the links between this type of diet and diseases including heart disease and cancer.

  • McDonald’s exploitation of children by its use of advertisements and gimmicks to sell unhealthy products.

  • The barbaric way animals are reared and slaughtered to supply products for McDonald’s.

  • The lousy conditions that workers in the food service industry work under, and the low wages paid by McDonald’s

  • McDonald’s hostility towards trade unions.

  • “The Vegan News” — Vol. 2, Issue 3

    ‘McLibel’ Trial pits activists against corporate giant


    British pair defend anti-McDonald’s leaflet

    “Vegetarian Voice” — Vol. 21, No. 3

    It’s “the best free entertainment in London,” according to a British newspaper. This battle is contested by two impoverished campaigners. Originally there were five defendants, but three decided to apologize and avoid any costs, because there is no legal aid to fight libel cases. However, Steel and Morris opted to fight the case, determined to counter McDonald’s attempts to silence its critics.

They did not write the Fact sheet; they only defended the allegations made in it against McDonald’s. Steel is a former gardener. Morris is a former postman and a single parent. Their combined annual earnings totaled less than $ 11,000. They are not even a couple; however, they battled together for a cause they believed in.

Fast food restaurants have been publicly criticized in many parts of the world for many similar reasons. Some observers have argued that McDonald’s brought suit in England because of its relatively more favorable libel laws. The case most likely could never have been filed in the United States, where the First and Fourteenth Amendments provide protection of freedom of speech and a corporation may only maintain an action for libel if it can prove malice on the part of the person alleged to have made the offending comment. Putting the question of malice aside, a person or company bringing a libel suit in the U.S. must also prove that the information published about them:

1) is defamatory (hurts their reputation and/or good name), and
2) is not true.

Thus, if this case had been brought in the United States, the burden of proof would have fallen on McDonald’s. The corporation would have had to prove that the information was both false and damaging to its reputation.

In England, it is the other way around. The defendants in this case had the more difficult burden of proving that the criticisms of McDonald’s published in the London Greenpeace leaflet are true.

Some 180 witnesses, roughly evenly split for each side, gave evidence in court about the effects of the company’s operations on the environment, on millions of farm animals, on human health, on the Third World and on McDonald’s own staff.

The leaflet is still in circulation, with over 1.5 million copies distributed in the UK alone since the libel writs were issued. The defendants argue that every word in the leaflet is true, and thus cannot be considered libelous.

Running concurrently with McDonald’s libel suit is a countersuit by Steel and Morris that alleges the fast food corporation libeled them when it distributed a leaflet in Spring 1994 which claimed Steel, Morris and other critics were deliberately circulating lies about McDonald’s.

The trial reportedly cost McDonald’s some $9,600 a day. A lawyer for the restaurant chain originally expected the trial to last three to four weeks. But when it passes its first anniversary (June 28, 1995), it was widely reported that McDonald’s had started secret negotiations with Steel and Morris and had twice flown members of its U.S. board of directors to London to meet them.

Steel and Morris represented themselves against the burger giant’s team of top libel lawyers. They lacked formal legal training but performed the vast majority of legal preparations themselves, as well as presenting the case in court and questioning witnesses. Some sympathetic lawyers occasionally provided legal advice on an informal basis.

The case attracted hundreds of articles in the press (including front-page coverage in the Wall Street Journal) plus international TV and radio coverage in the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, France, South Africa, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, Japan, Trinidad, Russia, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Thailand and Israel. (In India, animal rights activists Mrs. Maneka Gandhi spoke about this through various media at her disposal. — Ed.)

The Verdict and Aftermath
It was an 800-page Judgement, summarized into 45 pages that the Judge read in Court

JUNE 19, 1997: Mr. Justice Bell gave his verdict. Even though the company had spent nearly 20 million dollars, it got awarded only $ 94,000 (which is being appealed). The Judge found the criticisms made in the Factsheet to be true, which is not surprising since the evidence was overwhelmingly in the Defendants’ favor. After the verdict, at a victory rally, the defendants said, “the company found that all its dirty laundry got aired in public during the trial, exposing the truth behind its glossy image.” The company refused to comment.

McLIBEL JUDGE CONDEMNS McDONALDS’ CORE BUSINESS PRACTICES — Mr Justice Bell ruled that substantial and significant parts of the London Greenpeace Factsheet criticising the company have been proved to be true by the evidence brought by the McLibel Defendants, Helen Steel & Dave Morris. Of the other parts of the Judgment, McDonald’s won on the basis of controversial legal and semantic interpretations of the meaning of the Factsheet, “What’s Wrong With McDonald’s?” These mainly regarded McDonald’s claim that the Factsheet meant that the company itself directly caused rainforest destruction and hunger in the third world (ignoring the Factsheet’s criticisms of multinationals and the food industry in general). It also inferred that people have a very real risk of cancer, heart disease and food poisoning from eating the company’s food, even though the Factsheet did not say this. The judge astonishingly also ruled that all the comments (bar one phrase) in the Factsheet would be treated as statements of fact which had to be proven by primary sources of evidence.

However, the company must be devastated that despite all the disparity and unfairness, the Judge still found it to be factual that McDonald’s “exploits children” through their advertising, that they are “culpably responsible” for cruelty to animals, and that the company is anti-Union and pays such low wages that it further depresses the already low wages in the catering industry. The Judge also found that McDonald’s food was “high in fat, saturated fat, animal products, and sodium” and that “advertisements, promotions and booklets have pretended to a positive nutritional benefit which McDonald’s food ….. did not match” (i.e. that the food is not nutritious and that they are therefore deceiving the public when they promote it as such).

OUTRAGE AS MULTINATIONALS LEGALLY PERMITTED TO LIBEL THEIR CRITICS — Judge finds that McDonald’s published unjustified, defamatory statements about the Defendants in an attempt to discredit them, but says this was permissible in law.

JUDGE FINDS McDONALD’S ISSUED DEFAMATORY AND ‘UNJUSTIFIED’ STATEMENTS TO DISCREDIT THE DEFENDANTS — but rules the company had the right to self-defence! Pre-trial publication by McDonald’s of 300,000 leaflets and press releases attacking criticisms of the Corporation as ‘lies’ had sparked a counterclaim by the Defendants for libel. The company was unable to bring a single piece of evidence to substantiate its defamatory assertions that the Defendants had deliberately circulated false information. In fact, the judge found that McDonald’s leaflets were ‘defamatory’, ‘unjustified’, contained allegations which McDonald’s knew to be untrue and that ‘part of the motive….was to discredit the defendants’. But, astonishingly, he ruled that this was legally permissible as McDonald’s had a right of self-defence to protect itself since the company was under ‘attack’ from Helen and Dave!

JULY 17th FINAL DEADLINE PASSES — McDonald’s abandons legal efforts Thursday July 17th, the four week deadline set by Mr Justice Bell for any final legal applications by the parties in the action. This was passed without McDonald’s making any application for an injunction or costs. The Corporation has thereby conceded a huge victory to the public dissemination of “What’s Wrong With McDonald’s?” leaflets.

CORPORATION CONDEMNED IN PARLIAMENT — MP’s Early Day Motions of July 18th call for sanctions against McDonald’s and an end to multinationals’ right to sue for libel.

CAMPAIGN UNSTOPPABLE — The Defendants stance in fighting the case has been totally vindicated; evidence in the trial has backed up all the criticisms made of McDonald’s over the promotion of unhealthy food, and exploitation of people, animals and the environment. 500,000 leaflets were handed out in the UK and around the world following the verdict. The campaign has become unstoppable.

DEFENDANTS PLAN FURTHER LEGAL ACTION — Plans are now underway to appeal against legal aspects of the verdict and the parts of the judgment which went against the Defendants, to sue McDonald’s hired agents for damages, and to take the British Government to the European Court of Human Rights.

McDONALD’S SLAMMED IN PARLIAMENT — Jeremy Corbyn MP has sponsored two Early Day Motions which were put before Parliament on Friday 18th July. They refer to Mr Justice Bell’s findings in the McLibel Trial and slam the McDonald’s Corporation over its ‘deceptive and exploitative business practices’, calling for ‘effective sanctions’ and ‘appropriate compensation’ to be paid by the company. They further condemn ‘unfair and oppressive libel laws’ and call for ‘urgent reform to safeguard public rights’.

SANCTIONS — The McLibel Support Campaign believes in the public’s right of self-defence, and is now calling for sanctions to be implemented against the McDonald’s Corporation:

(1) The National Food Alliance called, on July 17th, for a ban on food advertising targeting children (NFA — Jeanette 0171 628 2442).

(2) The Farm Animal Welfare Network is demanding immediate legislative action to end the cruel practices identified by the trial judge (FAWN — Clare 01484 688650).

(3) Trade Unions and labour activists are stepping up their recruitment drive in the catering industry and their campaign for a guaranteed minimum wage (TGWU — Oliver 0181 809 4977).

(4) Local residents’ associations are broadening their objections to new McDonald’s stores to include concerns regarding the targeting of local children and the lowering of local wage levels (e.g. NOMAC, North London — David 0181 347 9857).

McDONALD’S U.S. PRESIDENT REMOVED FROM OFFICE — Ed Rensi, the Corporation’s Chief Executive Officer, was removed from office at the beginning of July along with his management team.

For more details on the Judgement, please contact us or visit the home page at address below.

A Plea to McDonald’s New Management Team

Please consider cutting in half the number of meat items on your menu, and diverting your R & D budget towards developing and promoting tasty and healthy recipes that use no animal products.

“U.S. McLibel Support Campaign” — (802) 586-9628 P.O. Box 62 — Craftsbury, VT 05826-0062

[email protected] — http://www.mcspotlight.org

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Roper Poll on “Eating Habits of Youths”
“Vegetarian Journal” — November/December 1995

The Vegetarian Resource Group conducted a Roper Poll of 8 to 17 year olds to find the number of young vegetarians in the United States. There were a few surprises, with some of the numbers being higher than would be expected.

For comparison purposes, we asked the same question as in our adult poll (See Vegetarian Journal July/August, 1994.) “Please call off the items on this list, if any, that you never eat: Meat. Poultry. Fish/Seafood. Dairy Products. Eggs. Honey.” Note that in most polls, respondents are asked if they consider themselves vegetarians. We used the word never which should give us a lower but more accurate figure.

A whopping 11% of girls 13-17 said they don’t eat meat. This compares to 7% of adult females. This may be a trend. However, generally teenage females answer food questions differently from adults because of greater interest in their weight and appearance. Based on information we received over the Internet, our American figures here correspond with British figures. A 1993 Trent survey of children in England aged 11 to 16 indicated 12% of girls claimed to be vegetarian. Also in Great Britain, in The Daily Telegraph Gallup Poll of May 1993, 11% of 15 to 19 year olds described themselves as vegetarian.

Back to the United States, about 5% of male teenagers don’t eat meat, exactly the same as adult men. What’s fascinating is that the opposite figures appeared for 8-12 year olds. Eleven percent of boys say they don’t eat meat, while only 6% of girls don’t eat meat. Is this an inaccurate glitch in the figures or a sign of something to come? Is the meat industry being successful in their campaigns aimed towards males and bringing boys back into the fold? We’ll be very curious to see the figures next time we conduct this poll.

Overall, 7% of youngsters say they don’t eat poultry, with only 3% of adults abstaining. Gender doesn’t affect the figures that much. Not eating fish or seafood is the most surprising finding, with 18% of kids saying they don’t eat it. The children’s age and gender don’t have great impact. Only 4% of adults say they don’t eat fish.

The high number of children and teens who do not eat fish can be explained only by postulating. We would have expected many children to at least eat tuna or fish sticks. Are parents no longer serving this? Do the kids not realize they are fish products? Do children just not like fish? This possible trend will also be fascinating to watch the next time VRG does a poll.

Most other figures are in line with our adult poll. As for vegetarians, almost two percent of 8 to 12 year olds say they don’t eat meat, fish, or fowl. This is consistent with the adult poll, which came up with 1%, although more females than males are vegetarian among adults. A little over one percent of teens are vegetarian. Our adult figures are close to those reported by the National Livestock and Meat Board from research conducted by MRCA Information Services.

Because we are dealing with a small percentage of the population, it’s hard to be sure that we have an accurate picture of vegans. But it appears that, as with adults (disregarding the use of honey), 1/3 to 1/2 of the teen vegetarians are vegan. We wouldn’t have predicted this before doing the adult poll, but it makes sense. Many polls give the number of vegetarians as six to 10 percent. These are people who call themselves vegetarian. This is closer to our figure for people who don’t eat meat. Of course many in this six to 10 percent figure probably eat meat sometimes. It seems that once a person “truly” becomes vegetarian, that is they don’t eat meat, fish, or fowl, they probably continue towards veganism and thus don’t consume dairy and eggs. The implication for marketing is that if you are producing a product for vegetarians, you might as well make it vegan (no animal products).

Another confusing result to us is that 4% of teens in the northeast don’t eat meat, while the highest number of abstainers from meat are in the central part of the country, with 11%. The west is an average of 8%. As far as vegetarians, the highest number also came out of the Midwest, though with the small numbers we may want to avoid making conclusions too quickly. Racial status doesn’t affect the numbers. The percentage of vegetarians is somewhat lower among the upper class than in middle or lower economic situations. Parents having attended college push figures up a little, but not too much. Other factors, such as households owning a personal computer or parents working don’t have much of an impact either.

One thousand twenty-three children and teens participated in this poll, which was conducted by interviewing youths at their homes. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4%. Because of the uncertainty inherent in doing all polls and because we are gathering data about a subset of the population, conclusions have to be put in perspective with other information, trends, and past and future surveys.

The “V” Campaign
Vegan Action Targets Food Packaging

Have you ever wished you could identify vegan products with one quick glance instead of reading long lists of ingredients and memorizing who does and who does not test on animals?

The past few years have seen a tremendous increase in the number of people choosing to adopt a vegan lifestyle. Surprisingly, there is no quick and easy way for these consumers to identify animal-free products. Vegan Action hopes to change all that with the “V” Campaign.

Just as the “K in the circle” logo is used to identify kosher products, Vegan Action will soon be registering a “vegan v” symbol with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. This symbol will quickly tell consumers that products bearing it are completely vegan. Products displaying the logo will have to meet the strictest current definition of veganism, meaning they contain no animal products, were not tested on animals, and they did not involve the use of animal products in their manufacture (i.e., white sugar).

Vegan Action feels that several important benefits will result from the use of the symbol. The most obvious is that consumers will be able to tell at a glance that a product is vegan. But they will also be able to easily identify companies that share their support of veganism. Perhaps most importantly, the logo further propels veganism into the mainstream of public consciousness, raising interest in and awareness of the vegan lifestyle while making it easier to take part in.

Given the scope of this campaign, Vegan Action will need volunteers in a number of areas. If you or someone you know could conduct a trademark search for us, it would defray a major time and monetary expense. Please contact us immediately. Secondly, although we already have a tentative logo, we will consider any ideas that are submitted to us. Keep in mind that the logo should be simple and readily identifiable. Send camera-ready art to our address below. Finally, if you know a representative from a company that produces vegan products, please explain the benefits of using the logo and have the person contact us. If you cannot contribute in one of these ways, your financial support is needed and would be greatly appreciated.

The “V” Campaign “Vegan Action” P.O. Box 4353

Berkeley, CA 94704

WHAT’S IN A NAME?

Stores increasingly are applying labels to fruits and vegetables to indicate decreased use or absence of synthetically compounded chemicals and fertilizers. The following are some of the most frequently used terms and what they generally mean. The list was taken by Vegetarian Resource Group, from Wall Street Journal, March 21, 1989, B-1.

NO-SPRAY: Pesticides and other chemicals are not sprayed onto the crop, but synthetically compounded fertilizers may be used.

SUSTAINABLE: May have some pesticides and other chemicals applied, but attempts are made to use reduced levels in conjunction with biological-control methods to manage rather than kill pests.

TRANSITIONAL: Crops grown on land prepared with organic techniques, but not long enough to be certified as organic by a state or trade group.

ORGANIC: Synthetically compounded chemicals and fertilizers are not used, although some naturally occurring chemicals can be employed on crops.

BIODYNAMIC: The farmer plants and cultivates crops “in harmony” with the earth’s seasons and utilizes organic materials native to the region.

January – March

April – June July – September

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maximios March 24, 2007
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Vegan

January-March, 1999 Vol. 3, No. 1

April – September October – December

Inside This Issue

The Myth About Milk
by Pramodaben Chitrabhanu in a children’s book named “The Bird in a Cage”

published by Mahavir Seva Trust (India), Federation of JAINA (Education Committee, USA) and others

Since our childhood we are made to believe that milk gives nourishment and is good for the bones. Yes, mother’s milk is good. But who says we need milk of other animals for the rest of our life? Even the animals do not drink other animal’s milk after weaning away from their mother’s milk. Then why do we continue drinking milk? Is it necessary or are we doing it out of habit? It is time we evaluate our actions and change them if needed.

Do you know that the glass of milk on your table is meant for an innocent calf? How would you feel if your child were denied its mother’s milk? We never try to relate such problems with the animal kingdom. As though they are meant for human exploitation we continue abusing them. The milk that we drink comes from the cows and buffaloes that are tortured, tormented, and abused in every way. How can we talk about Ahimsa when there is no Ahimsa in our living? Isaac Singer, the Nobel peace prize winner, once said, “How can we ask mercy from God if we cannot give mercy to others.” We only get what we give. If we give joy to others we will get joy but if we give pain we will get pain in return.

Let us find out the real story behind milk and under what horrifying conditions the cows are being milked. The following is the excerpt taken from the book “Heads And Tails” by Menaka Gandhi which explains the fate of the cow. This happens not only in India but also in the other parts of the world where cows are exploited and badly abused.

A continual flow of milk is extracted from the dairy cow only by subjecting her to yearly pregnancies — starting from the age of two and each lasting nine months. After giving birth she will produce the milk for the next 10 months. However, she will be impregnated with semen during her third month and for the remaining seven months she will be milked when pregnant. She has only six to eight weeks between pregnancies. She will be milked twice or more times a day and the average Indian cow used in the Indian milk industry gives five times as much as she would have in the Fifties as she is being genetically bred for bigger and softer udders.

In order to give higher yield, the cow is fed concentrated pellets of Soya bean and cereal (which could have fed a great many more people). But even then the demanded production of milk outstrips her appetite and she starts breaking down body tissue to produce the milk. The result is an illness called ketosis.

Another illness that she contracts early is rumen acidosis induced by large helpings of quickly fermented carbohydrate. This disease leads to lameness. Most of the day the cow stands tied in a narrow stall in her own excrement and udder infections like mastitis (a painful inflammation of the udder), step in. With this long suffering, sick cow is kept alive by antibiotics, hormones, and other drugs all of which come to you in the morning milk.

Each year 20 percent of these dairy cows are taken out due to infertility or disease. These are then starved to death or sent by truck to the slaughterhouse to provide beef for those that see nothing wrong in eating it. Milk production is very closely allied to the meat trade. No cow lives out her normal life span. She is milked, made sick, and then killed.

What happens to the child, the calf? All the calves are separated from their mothers after three days. If the calf is a healthy female, it is put on milk substitutes to become a dairy replacement in two years. The male calves are tied up and left to starve to death which usually takes a week of intense suffering. Some are stuffed into trucks one on top of the other and sent to the slaughterhouse illegally to be killed for the veal that people eat in restaurants, which is also illegal. Some are sold to the cheese industry to have their stomachs slit (while alive) for rennet, the acid that is extracted for cheese making. A few are selected as bulls and kept in solitary pens for the rest of their lives for artificial insemination. Sometimes, when they are old, they are left on the streets of a city, to wonder around till a truck hits them (I should know: In one week, I have picked up eight dying bulls).

What is the basic nature of a cow? To devotedly care for her young, quietly forage, and ruminate and patiently live out her 20 odd years in harmony with nature. She is not a four legged milk pump who is to be orphaned, bred, fed, medicated, inseminated and manipulated for single purpose: maximum milk at minimum cost.

Have you seen the aged old Indian dairy custom phookan — which is illegal by law but which is practiced on thousands of cows daily? As soon as the cow’s milk starts getting less, a stick is poked into her uterus and manipulated causing her intense pain in the belief that this stress will lead to a gush of more milk in the udder. This custom causes sores in the uterus — think about it, women — but what does it matter when the cow is at the end of her milk giving life anyway and due to be either tied up and starved or to be thrown into a truck with 40 others and taken to the butcher?

There is this belief that dairy products give a lot of protein and iron. Most people who consume a lot of milk, specially vegetarians in North India, the people who believe that milk and paneer are a protein substitute for meat, have been found to have iron deficiency causing anemia. Milk not only provides no iron — it actually blocks its absorption. Vegetables are the best source of iron. For instance, 50 gallons of milk are the equivalent (in iron content) of one bowl of spinach.

But what is the point of eating green vegetables if your single glass of milk is going to prevent the absorption of iron that you get from them? Listen to your body. Have you noticed that when you fall even slightly sick, the body feels nauseated at the thought of milk, that doctors recommend that you give it up till your are well? That is because after the age of four a large percentage of people lose the ability to digest lactose, the carbohydrate found in milk. The results often are in symptoms of persistent diarrhea, gas and stomach cramps. (As far as protein is concerned, milk gives the same amount as most vegetables and less than some vegetables). A human being’s total protein requirement is 4-5 percent of his daily calorific intake. Nature has arranged her food in such a manner that even if you live on a diet of chapatti and potatoes, you will still get more than that amount!

The alternative to dairy products is Soya milk that contains vitamin and tastes as good (or bad). It makes excellent dahi, paneer, ice cream, butter, cheese and milk chocolate, vegetable margarine and plain calcium tablets which cost much less than milk.

Milk is a theft. Would a calf benefit from your mother’s milk? No, it wouldn’t. So how will you benefit from its mother’s milk? Most of southeast Asia and the Middle East don’t touch the stuff. And rightly so. All studies have shown that Asians have the highest intolerance to lactose. We have been sold the idea by concentrated western advertising. “Nature’s most perfect food” is far from that — it is the equivalent of a placebo, and a dangerous one at that. And, most importantly, every glass of milk that you drink, every ice cream, every pat of butter, ensures that enormous cruelty to a gentle animal and its offspring goes on.

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Guide to Non-Dairy “Milks”
By Reed Mangles, Ph.D., R.D. — Vegetarian Journal, Jan/Feb 1998

Trying to cut down on or cut out dairy products? There are numerous alternatives available. You can choose milks made from soybeans, rice, oats, other grains, and almonds. These milks come in different flavors, including plain (unflavored), vanilla, chocolate, and carob. They can be nonfat or low-fat, sweetened or unsweetened. Many have vitamins and minerals added in order to provide some of the same nutrients found in cow’s milk. Milks are commercially available in aseptic shelf-stable cartons, in the dairy case, and in powdered form. All these are available at most health food stores, and several major supermarkets.

Generally these products contain no animal-derived ingredients. Sovex does make a powder which contains casein (a milk protein), but they also produce a product which is labeled as caseinate-free and which does not contain animal products. Even beverages which contain added vitamins and minerals do not contain animal ingredients.

Also included is cow’s milk in the plant milks table below, for comparison purposes only.

Calcium (milligrams in 1 cup)

Better Than Milk? Caseinate Free: Light 500 Health Valley Fat Free Soy Moo 400 Better Than Milk? Caseinate Free 350 White Wave Silk and Rice Silk, Westsoy Plus, Pacific Lite, Pacific Ultra, Rice Dream Enriched 300 Cow’s Milk 300 Westbrae Rice Beverage 250 Pacific Fat Free, EdenSoy Extra, Westsoy Low-fat, Westsoy Nonfat 200 Pacific Rice Beverage Fat-free and Low-fat,

Pacific Multi-Grain Original 150

 

Calories

Calorie content of regular soy beverages ranges from considerably less than whole cow’s milk (which has 150 calories in 8 ounces) to slightly more. Rice beverages generally are lower in calories than whole cow’s milk. The Low-fat and fat-free beverages are usually pretty close to skim cow’s milk in calories (86 calories in 8 ounces) but flavored Low-fat milks (vanilla and chocolate) may be higher in calories because of the added sweetener.

Protein

Many beverages are lower in protein than cow’s milk. This is not worrisome for those vegetarians whose diets contain other good protein sources. For those vegetarians who rely on plant-based milk for a significant portion of their daily protein needs or for those vegetarians who need some extra protein (growing children, pregnant or breast-feeding women, and some athletes, for example), beverages which are higher in protein can be chosen. These include EdenSoy Extra, EdenBlend, Health Valley Fat-free Soy Moo, Westsoy Unsweetened, Westsoy Plus, Pacific Foods Ultra, and Vitasoy (all flavors except light versions). For those whose diets have generous amounts of protein from other sources and who want a beverage which does not supply extra protein, rice and nut milks are generally quite low in protein.

Fat

Whole cow’s milk has a hefty 8 grams of fat per cup. Skim cow’s milk has no fat. None of the milks we examined had as much fat as whole cow’s milk. Most regular soy beverages have a fat content like Low-fat (2%) cow’s milk. Beverages labeled nonfat, lite, and Low-fat, as well as rice-based beverages are lower in fat, ranging from 0 to 3 grams of fat per cup.  

Vitamins and Minerals

Cow’s milk is a significant source of calcium, vitamin D, vitamin B-12, and riboflavin. Many non-dairy beverage makers add these vitamins and minerals to their products to make them more closely resemble cow’s milk. Other sources for these nutrients exist, but these beverages do represent options for those whose diets do not otherwise have enough of these vitamins and minerals. While these products are popular with many adults and children, none should be used to replace breast milk or infant formulas. They are not suitable for use by infants as a main food since they do not resemble breast milk or infant formula in composition. Each brand of non-dairy milk tastes different and each has its fans. If you’re new to these products, try several, considering their nutrient profile and your needs, and see which ones suit you.

Vitamin B-12 content (micrograms in 1 cup)

White Wave Silk and Rice Silk, EdenSoy Extra 3.0 Cow’s Milk 0.9

Better Than Milk? Caseinate Free: Plain and Lite 0.6

Vitamin D content (IU in 1 cup)

Pacific Rice Beverage Fat-free and Low-fat; Pacific Lite, Ultra, and Fat-free; White Wave Silk and Rice Silk 120 Westsoy Plus, Low-fat, Nonfat; Westbrae Rice Beverage; Rice Dream Enriched; Health Valley Fat Free Soy Moo 100 Cow’s Milk 100

EdenSoy Extra 40

Plant Milks
Products are listed alphabetically by type. All measurements are for grams in an 8 oz. cup.

Calories Protein Fat Added Vitamins & Minerals

Soy-based Beverages EdenSoy Extra: Original 130 10 4 A, D, E, B12, Ca, Thia Vanilla 150 6 3 A, D, E, B12, Ca, Thia EnerG Soy Quik 50 6 2.5 Thia Health Valley Fat Free Soy Moo 110 7 0 D, Ca Pacific Foods: Plain 100 4 3 Ir Vanilla 120 4 3 Ir Lite Plain 100 4 2.5 A, D, Ca, Ribo Lite Vanilla 110 4 2.5 A, D, Ca, Ribo Ultra Plain 160 6 5 A, D, Ca, Ir, Ribo Ultra Vanilla 170 6 5 A, D, Ca, Ir, Ribo Fat Free Plain 70 3 0 A, D, Ca Fat Free Vanilla 90 3 0 A, D, Ca Sovex Better Than Milk?: Caseinate Free, Plain, powder form 100 2 2.5 B12, Ca Caseinate Free, Plain, liquid form 86 2 2 B12, Ca Caseinate Free, Plain, Light 80 2 0.5 B12, Ca Caseinate Free, Chocolate 98 1 2 B12, Ca Caseinate Free, Carob 114 2 2 B12, Ca Sovex Solait 100 5 3 Ca Vitasoy: Creamy Original 160 9 7 Vanilla Delight 190 7 6 Rich Cocoa 210 8 6 Light Original 90 4 2 Light Vanilla 110 4 2 Westbrae Lite: Plain 100 3 2 Vanilla 120 3 2.5 Chocolate 150 3 2.5 Westsoy Unsweetened 80 7 4 Westsoy Original 140 5 5 Westsoy Plus: Plain 130 6 4 A, D, Ca, Ir, Ribo, Thia Vanilla 150 6 4 A, D, Ca, Ir, Ribo, Thia Westsoy Low Fat: Plain 90 4 2 A, D, Ca Westsoy Nonfat Plain, Vanilla 80 3 0 A, D, Ca White Wave Silk: Plain 80 4 2.5 A, D, B12, Ca, Ribo

Chocolate 100 4 2.5 A, D, B12, Ca, Ribo


Rice-Based Beverages
: Amazake Light Almond 110 2 2 Pacific Fat Free: Plain 60 1 0 A, D, Ca Vanilla 70 1 0 A, D, Ca Cocoa 80 2 0 A, D, Ca Pacific Low-fat: Plain 70 1 1.5 A, D, Ca Vanilla 80 1 1.5 A, D, Ca Cocoa 170 3 2 A, D, Ca, Ir Rice Dream: Original 120 1 2 Vanilla 130 1 2 Carob 150 1 2.5 Rice Dream Enriched: Original 120 1 2 A, D, Ca Vanilla 130 1 2 A, D, Ca Chocolate 170 1 3 A, D, Ca Sovex Rice Moo: Original 84 1 0 Vanilla 80 1 0 Westbrae Rice Beverage: Plain, Vanilla 120 1 3 A, D, Ca, Ribo

White Wave Rice Silk 90 2 2.5 A, D, B12, Ca, Ribo

Miscellaneous Beverages:

EdenBlend (soy/rice) 120 7 3 EnerG Nut Quick 110 4 9 Mill Milk Oat Drink: Vanilla 110 2 2.5 Pacific Multi-Grain Original 150 3 2 Ca Pacific Naturally Almond: Original 70 2 2.5 Vanilla 90 2 2.5 Pacific Naturally Oat: Original 110 4 1.5 Vanilla 130 4 1.5 Whole Cow’s Milk 150 8 8.2 A, D, B12, Ca, Ribo

Skim Cow’s Milk 86 8.4 0.4 A, D, B12, Ca, Ribo

*Indicates vitamins and minerals which are present at a level 10% or higher than the Daily Value; A=vitamin A; D=vitamin D; E=vitamin E; B12=vitamin B-12; Ca=calcium; Ir=iron; Ribo=riboflavin; Thia=thiamin

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Move Over Milk – Now We Can Live Without You
Let’s Check out These Dairyless Recipes!

Never in human history there have been more choices in non-dairy “milks” than now. In fact, the proliferation of these alternatives has made choosing a “milk” more difficult than ever before! Each milk is different in nutrition content, consistency, price, and even the taste.

Jennifer Raymond, author of The Peaceful Palate Cookbook, reports that often someone will try one brand, dislike the taste, and decide that a milk alternative is not for them. She says, “People need to try many different brands, as they all taste different.” Raymond recommends that you continue to try brands until you find one you like.

These milks are made from various sources, such as blends of almond, soy, rice, grains and beans, and tofu, in different flavors and with varying degrees of fat and enrichment. They come in powders, liquids, and liquid concentrates in sizes from snack packs to bulk, although most are liquids in quart or liter containers. They can be found plain, unsweetened or sweetened, or containing flavorings such as vanilla, chocolate, or carob. Most of these healthy alternatives are produced from organic grains or beans. They may be used as a beverage or snack or in cooking and baking.

Raymond says, “I tend to use soy milk when I want something thick and creamy. It thickens better than rice milk. If I want a true milk flavor I use rice milk.”

Eric Tucker, the head chef at the highly acclaimed Millennium restaurant in San Francisco says, “I prefer rice milk as it has lighter flavors, although it is a bit sweeter. Also, soy milk tends to curdle when exposed to high heat.”

When converting older recipes calling for dairy milk, always strive for consistency in flavorings, using sweeter products for desserts and plain or unsweetened milks in savory recipes.

Narendra Sheth

Conveniently Vegan Recipes by Debra Wasserman

Vegetarian Journal — May/June 1997

The following recipes are taken from The Vegetarian Resource Group’s recently released cookbook entitled Conveniently Vegan. This new book, written by Debra Wasserman, is meant for experienced vegan cooks, as well as anyone interested in learning how to cook with all the new products found in supermarkets, gourmet shops, and natural and ethnic food stores. The cookbook contains over 150 recipes. You’ll find recipes utilizing fresh vegetables, fruit, and herbs, along with packaged vegan products including beans, grains, pasta, seitan, soy products, and much more. Many of the recipes are quick and easy, and all have a nutritional breakdown. Conveniently Vegan also contains menus, a list of the manufacturers of each vegan product, a glossary, and general information on how to use all these different foods. Conveniently Vegan is available for $15. To request a copy, send payment to VRG, PO Box 1463, Baltimore, MD 21203.

Banana Biscuits

These delicious biscuits make a perfect breakfast item. Leftovers can be re-heated in a toaster oven. (Makes 35)

3 small ripe bananas, peeled and mashed 1 cup lite soyamilk or other milk alternative 2 Tablespoons oil 4-1/4 cups unbleached white flour

1 Tablespoon baking powder

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Mix the mashed bananas, soyamilk, and oil together in a large bowl. Add the flour and baking powder and stir well. Place dough on a floured surface and knead for 3 minutes. Using a rolling pin, roll dough to a ½-inch thickness. Cut into 2-inch-wide circles using a cutter or tin can. Place biscuits on a lightly oiled cookie sheet, bake 20 minutes or until browned. Serve warm.

Total calories per biscuit: 72 Fat: 1 gram

Bulgur, Corn, And Greens
A colorful blend of ingredients, ready in under 25 minutes!
(Serves 4)

1 cup bulgur 2 cups water One 10-ounce box frozen corn kernels ½ pound greens (kale or collards), rinsed and torn into bite-size pieces ½ teaspoon cumin 2 Tablespoons lemon juice

Cook bulgur in water in a large covered pot for 10 minutes over medium heat. Add remaining ingredients. Heat 10 minutes longer, stirring occasionally. Serve warm.

Total calories per serving: 193
Fat: 1 gram

Spicy Mandarin Chickpeas

Serve this tantalizing combination of ingredients over a bed of rice. (Serves 4)

Two 19-ounce cans chickpeas, rinsed and drained Two 10.5-ounce cans mandarin oranges, drained 1/4 cup strawberry jam 2 Tablespoons spicy brown mustard

½ teaspoon cayenne

Heat all the ingredients in a medium-size pot over medium heat for 10 minutes. Serve warm.

Total calories per serving: 357 Fat: 6 grams

Pasta With Black Bean Sauce
Enjoy this delicious sauce.
(Serves 4)

1 pound pasta, cooked and drained One 15-ounce can black beans, rinsed and drained One 10.5-ounce can mandarin oranges, drained 2 large ripe tomatoes, finely chopped

½ teaspoon cinnamon

Heat beans, oranges, tomatoes, and cinnamon in a medium-size pot over medium heat for 8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Serve over your favorite cooked pasta.

Total calories per serving: 603 Fat: 3 grams Fruit Pizza

(Serves 4)

Here’s a beautiful looking dessert that both children and adults will enjoy.

1 large 12-inch-wide pita bread 1 cup unsweetened apple butter 1 kiwi fruit, peeled and sliced 6 large strawberries, sliced 1 apple or pear, peeled, cored, and thinly sliced 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

Spread apple butter over pita bread. Arrange slices of fruit on top of apple butter. Sprinkle with cinnamon. Serve as is or heat in 350-degree oven for 15 minutes and serve warm.

Total calories per serving: 269 Fat: 1 gram

Couscous Pudding

Experiment with different types of dried fruit for variety. (Serves 4)

1-1/2 cups water 5 ounces couscous (a little less than 1 cup) ½ cup dried fruit (raisins, chopped figs, dates, etc.) 1-1/2 cups soyamilk or other milk alternative 1/4 cup maple syrup 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon 2 Tablespoons cornstarch

Bring water to a boil in a small pot. Add couscous and dried fruit. Cover pot, remove from heat, and allow to sit 5 minutes. Meanwhile, in a separate medium-size pot, heat remaining ingredients over medium-high heat until the pudding starts to thicken (about 3 minutes). While heating, stir often with a whisk. Once pudding thickens, remove from heat and add cooked couscous mixture. Mix well. Pour pudding into a serving dish and chill for at least 1 hour before serving.

Total calories per serving: 319
Fat: 2 grams

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The Story of Silk
Beauty Without Cruelty, India

Soft, smooth and shimmering silk is perhaps the most attractive textile man has ever created. More than two thousand years ago, this fabric was imported from China. The method and source of its production was a very highly guarded secret …may be because it involved the killing of millions of lives.

The silk filament is what a silkworm spins its cocoon of and is constructed as a shell to protect itself during its cycle of growth from caterpillar to chrysalis to moth.

The female moth lays about four to six hundred eggs. The eggs hatch in about ten days and the larvae (one-twelfth of an inch) emerge. They are fed on mulberry leaves for about twenty to twenty-seven days, till they are fully grown (three to three and a half inches in length). A fully grown caterpillar emits a gummy substance from its mouth and wraps itself in layers of this filament to form a cocoon in two to four days. The caterpillar develops into a moth in about fifteen days. To emerge it has to cut through the cocoon – thereby ruining the filament of the cocoon.

Hence, to save the filament from being damaged, the chrysalis is either immersed in boiling water, passed through hot air or exposed to the scorching heat of the sun’s rays, thus killing the life inside. The long, continuous filament of the cocoon is then reeled. To produced one hundred grams of pure silk, approximately fifteen hundred chrysalis have to die. Particular chrysalis are kept aside to allow the moths to emerge and mate.

After the female moth lays eggs, she is always mercilessly crushed to check for diseases. If she appears diseased, the eggs laid by her are immediately destroyed.

Generation after generation of inbreeding has taken away the moth’s capacity to fly. After mating, the male moths are dumped into a basket and thrown out. It is a common sight to see crows picking at them outside silk manufacturing centers.

Varieties of Silk

India produces four varieties of silk obtained from four types of moths. These are known as Mulberry, Tussar, Eri and Muga. Mulberry is also produced in other silk producing countries like China, Japan, Russia, Italy, South Korea, etc., Eri and Muga are produced only in India.

Manmade materials that look somewhat like silk are known as Artificial Silk (Art Silk). Of these, rayon (viscose) is of vegetable origin; while nylon and polyester (terene) are petroleum products.

A Material’s Silk Content

Once woven, silk is known by different names depending on the weave, style, design and place where it is woven. Below are put together the most well known materials according to their silk content.

Caution needs to be taken with regard to Zari (gold or silver brocade). The yarn used for this can be silk or polyester.

For real gold zari, silk yarn is almost always used.

100% Silk Materials Boski Pure crepe Pure chiffon Pure gaji Pure georgette Khadi silk Organza Pure satin

Raw silk Matka silk

Matka silk is 100% silk, wherein the yarn in the warp is the usual silk yarn, while the yarn in weft is obtained from the cocoons that are cut open by the moths as they emerge. These moths are allowed to lay eggs, after which they are crushed to death.

100% Silk Saris Banarasi (Varanasi) Bangalore Bhagalpore Dhakai Dharmavaram Kashmiri Khambhat Matka Murshidabad Tanchhoi Tussar Temple Kanjivaram (Kanchipuram) Patola from Patan, Hyderabad and Orissa Paithani Saris of Maharashtra 100% Silk or 100% Cotton Saris Calcutta Gadhwal Madurai Shantiniketan Irkal saris from Narayan Peth (Andhra Pradesh) can be 100% silk or part silk and part cotton. Venkatgiri saris may be all cotton or part silk and part cotton. Saris with Silk/Cotton Yarns in Warp/Weft Chanderi Tissue Poona (Pune) Venkatgiri Maheshwari Saris of Madhya Pradesh

Manipuri Kota and Munga Kota saris have both silk and cotton yarn.

A Test to Determine a Material’s Silk Content

Remember, it is a totally wrong impression that if a material is cheap it has no pure silk in it. It is advisable to check oneself and not rely on the shopkeeper’s word. If you would like to know what yarn is used in a particular material, test in the following way:

Shopkeepers may not allow the silk test by burning to be performed on their premises, a few threads could be asked for and burnt at home. To identify silk, you must burn some yarn. It is very important that a few threads from the warp, a few threads from weft and the zari thread stripped of the metal are individually checked by burning. Since human hair also burns like silk, it would be easier to learn by burning some hair! Hold a strand between tweezers and burn. Observe carefully how it burns. When it stops burning, a very tiny (pinhead size) ash ball will be left behind. Rub it between your fingers and smell the powdered ash. The smell of burnt hair, silk, wool and leather is identified and the way it burns forming an ash ball, will also be the same. If the fiber is cotton or rayon, it will quickly flare up in flames and will not form any ash ball nor will it smell like burnt hair. If the yarn tested is a petroleum product like nylon or polyester, it will burn forming a tiny, hard, glasslike bead.

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I AM AN ACTIVIST!

I am an activist. Am I an animal defense activist? Yes. Am I an environmental activist? Definitely. Am I a human rights activist? Most assuredly. Am I a peace activist? Indeed. I am in complete opposition to all social injustice; I abhor all suffering. I disdain the anti-ethic that has created a society that lives upon the daily exploitation and slaughter of our animal brethren; a society that is rapidly choking off the only life support system we have; destroying our habitat, the earth; a society that embraces a philosophy of “might makes right” and chooses to ignore the plight of our “weaker” brothers and sisters — the homeless, the hungry, the elderly, the children; a society whose economy and “strength” rely on the production and dissemination of tools of destruction. I am an activist. My actions are directed at eradicating the root causes of ALL injustice: humankind’s disregard for our connection with our earth, and our loss of respect for life.

Listen! I am the voice we heard so clearly as children until the din of society’s indoctrination deafened our ears. I am the clutching in the throat and intense sorrow of all those who visit the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. I am the pain and sadness within each one of us who holds the threadlike bodies and swollen stomachs of Africa’s starving children.

I am the peace and serenity that befalls us when our eyes, for a fleeting moment, meet those of a grazing deer. And I am the sentiment that makes us mouth the words, “Set them free,” whenever we encounter animals imprisoned in cages.

I am these and more, and I am omnipresent within each one of us. I draw no political lines; I erect no artificial barriers between races, sexes, or species; I do not recognize boundaries between issues of injustice. I am above politics, devoid of our societal bigotries, and I embody all matters of justice. I am THE answer. I am our physical and spiritual connection to our earth and all life.

I cry out for each one of us to recognize the inseparable biological and ecological bonds that link all life together as earth’s family. I implore us to acknowledge that human and nonhuman needs are complementary, not competitive, as all living beings are indispensable threads of a living tapestry, interconnected to each other and all of the earth’s natural processes that sustain life. And I demand action. I demand that individuals act in accordance with the reverence they so richly deserve. I am the answer. I am the voice within your soul.

We must act. And we must ensure that our actions are guided by our inner voice that affirms our connection with the earth and all of her inhabitants. We cannot continue to alleviate the injustices imposed on an individual or segment of our society through an injustice to another. We cannot attain a true peace through the domination or killing of those who are perceived to be lesser or evil. We cannot “enrich” the lives of the poor people of Central America by boosting their economy through the destruction of their rain forests to raise and slaughter animals for a cheaper hamburger. We must strive to consider all life as brethren and act in accordance with our connection to the earth we share — to do otherwise is to betray not only our fellow beings but ourselves as well.

I want your thoughts in affirmation of our connection to the earth. I want your decisions to be made with an ethic of reverence for life as your guide. And, I need your actions to create a world of wonder, a world of justice, a world of peace bounded only by the limits of life. I am part of a living, caring world. I embrace a boundless ethic.

It is a life-affirming ethic in which I share a journey with the flowers of the field, the children of the streets, and the deer of the forest, in search of our home — a world of peace. I am your soul. I am an activist.

Are Animal Rights People Extremists?

Do you think it’s not extreme to murder living creatures for lipstick?

Do you think it’s not extreme to breed more dogs and cats while 10 million die in shelters each year?

Do you think it’s not extreme to murder a living creature to wear their dead skin?

Finally, do you think it’s not extreme to torture living creatures without their consent to make a living?

We are ALL extremists. I prefer to be an extremist for justice, compassion and peace, and not for pain, murder, rape and oppression.

Anonymous on Internet

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A Simple Way to Save an Animal’s Life Neal Barnard, M.D. – Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine

Animal Guardian, Vol 9, No. 4, 1996 – Doris Day Animal League

When you read about cruel animal experiments, do you ever think that you might hold the key to stopping some of these experiments — that you might actually be the one to give them the “thumbs up” or “thumbs down”?

Although many experiments are funded by government or military programs that are insulated from the public, there is one large group of animal experiments whose sponsors are exquisitely sensitive to public opinion. Certain charities give money year after year to animal experimenters. That money comes from well-meaning donors who have never had a look inside the laboratories that stay in business because of these donations.

But if a charity were to lose even a portion of its public support because of such experiments, it would have every reason to emulate those charities that fund no animal research. In England, the Wolfson Foundation announced that it would fund no animal experiments. In the process, other research-sponsoring charities knew that it had gained a tremendous advantage over them in the competition for donations. After all, there are no donors who especially want money to go to animal experiments, but there are many who definitely do not want their donations going in that direction. Charities that continue to pay for animal experiments risk losing donations and legacies, some of which will be substantial.

On this side of the Atlantic, charities’ policies are only gradually becoming known. But what an eye-opener they are!

The March of Dimes has paid for many animal experiments including experiments in which animals were exposed to alcohol, cocaine, or nicotine, and even experiments in which kittens’ eyes were sewn closed in order to demonstrate the effects on brain development. On the other hand, Easter Seals funds no animal experiments at all and has an explicit policy against making any such grants.

The American Kidney Fund and the Heimlich Foundation never sponsor any animal experiments, while the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association, unfortunately, still do.

Charities are sometimes slow to respond to donors’ wishes, particularly those charities that have been around so long that they have become set in their ways. But there is no doubt about it — charities do not like being connected with cruelty.

The National Head Injury Foundation gave a financial award to a controversial primate experimenter several years ago, and has since tried to distance itself from that indiscretion and from all other animal experiments. While the Shriner’s Burn Institute and Shriner’s Hospitals still pay for many animal experiments, the International Association of Firefighters Burn Foundation is investigating in non-animal alternatives, particularly cellular research, and welcomes the goodwill that this policy brings.

Some animal research foundations try to appease donors by saying that animals are “humanely” treated, that a committee reviews all experiments before they are funded, or that they mainly use small, less popular animals, such as rats and mice. Needless to say, such statements do nothing to address donors’ real concerns.

Before you make a contribution to a charity to help make people’s lives better, please make sure they aren’t hurting animals to reach their goals.

What You Can Do:

1. When a research facility asks for a donation, let them know that you only support those with a strict no-animal-experiments policy. Write to charities, and write again.

2. Be sure to thank charities, such as Easter Seals, for their compassionate, no-animal-experiments policy.

3. Make copies of this list and give to friends and relatives, and pass it out in your neighborhood.

Health Charities Which Do Not Fund Animal Research

American Kidney Fund 6110 Executive Boulevard, Suite 1010

Rockville, MD 20852

Arthritis Research Institute of America 300 S. Duncan Avenue, Suite 240

Clearwater, FL 34615

Association of Birth Defect Children 827 Irma Avenue

Orlando, FL 32803

Cancer Care 1180 Avenue of the Americas

New York, NY 10036

Cancer Prevention & Survival Fund, PCRM 5100 Wisconsin Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20016

Designer Institute for AIDS
150 West 26th Street, Suite 602
New York, NY 10001

Disabled American Veterans P.O. Box 14301

Cincinnati, OH 45250-0301

Easter Seals 230 West Monroe Street, Suite 1800

Chicago, IL 60606-4703

The Green Foundation 9481 Lechner Road

Forth Worth, TX 76179-4055

Heimlich Foundation 2368 Victory Parkway, Suite 410

Cincinnati, OH 45206

International Association of Firefighters Burn Foundation 1750 New York Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20006

International Child Health Foundation American City Bldg; P.O. Box 1205

Columbia, MD 21044

International Eye Foundation 7801 Norfolk Avenue

Bethesda, MD 20814

Multiple Sclerosis Association of America 601 White Horse Pike

Oaklyn, NJ 08107

National Burn Victim Foundation 32-34 Scotland Road

Orange, NJ 07050

National Foundation of the Blind 1800 Johnson Street, Suite 300

Baltimore, MD 20230-4998

National Head Injury Foundation 1776 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Suite 100

Washington, DC 20036-1904

The Rheumatoid Disease Foundation 5106 Harding Road

Franklin, TN 37064

Health Charities Which Still Fund Animal Research

Alzheimer’s Association 919 N. Michigan Avenue, Suite 1000

Chicago, IL 60611-1676

American Cancer Society 1599 Clifton Road, NE

Atlanta, GA 30329

American Diabetes Association 1660 Duke Street

Alexandra, VA 22314

American Heart Association 7320 Greenville Avenue

Dallas, TX 75231-4599

American Institute for Cancer Research 1759 R Street, NW

Washington, DC 20069

American Lung Association 1740 Broadway

New York, NY 10019

American Parkinson Disease Association 60 Bay Street

Staten Island, NY 10301

Arthritis Foundation 1314 Spring Street NW

Atlanta, GA 30309

Cancer Prevention Project 1120 Connecticut Avenue, Suite 303

Washington, DC 20069

City of Hope
30 West 26th Street, Suite 301
New York, NY 10010

Cystic Fibrosis Foundation 6931 Arlington Road

Bethesda, MD 20814

Epilepsy Foundation of America 4351 Garden City Drive

Landover, MD 20785

The Foundation Fighting Blindness 1401 Mt. Royal Avenue

Baltimore, MD 21217

Joslin Diabetes Center One Joslin Place

Boston, MA 02215

Leukemia Society of America 600 Third Avenue

New York, NY 10016

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue

White Plains, NY 10605

Muscular Dystrophy Association 3561 East Sunrise Drive

Tucson, AZ 85718

National Foundation for Cancer Research 7315 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 332W

Bethesda, MD 20814

National Kidney Foundation
30 E. 33rd Street
New York, NY 10016

National Multiple Sclerosis Society 733 Third Avenue

New York, NY 10017-3288

National Parkinson Foundation
1501 9th Avenue
Miami, FL 33136

National Psoriasis Foundation
660 SW 92nd Avenue
Portland, OR 97223-7195

Nina Hyde Center for Breast Cancer 3800 Reservoir Road, NW

Washington, DC 20007

Parkinson’s Disease Foundation
650 West 168th Street
New York, NY 10032-9982

Shriner’s Burn Institute 51 Blossom Street

Boston, MA 02114

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital 1 St. Jude Place Bldg, P.O. Box 3704

Memphis, TN 38173-0704

Top A Case of Misleading Propaganda
Below is a information bulletin published by Procter & Gamble, Inc., Consumer Relations.

Products Not Containing Animal Ingredients

The following is a list of products that currently do not contain any animal products or by-products. Since formulations may vary, this list is subject to change. In any product containing ingredients derived from animal sources, the ingredient has been chemically altered and no longer resembles it’s original state.

Laundry Detergents:

Tide Cheer

Ultra Ivory Snow

Oral Care Products:

Crest Regular Toothpaste Crest Cool Mint Gel Crest Icy Fresh Gel Crest for Kids Fixodent Fasteeth

Food & Beverages:

Crisco Oil Crisco Shortening Pringles Potato Chips Folgers Coffee Jif Peanut Butter Duncan Hines Cake Mixes*

Duncan Hines Frosting *

Household Cleaners:

Mr. Clean Spic & Span

Comet

Dish Detergents:

Ivory Cascade

Cascade Rinse Agents

Gastro-Intestinal Products:

Pepto Bismol Liquid
Metamucil

Paper Products:

Royale Dove Bounty Always Pampers

Attends

Deodorants:

Secret

* Some of these products may contain dairy

Pay attention to the words. They do not give any guarantee that the package you pick from your store would be vegetarian. Even after that, they may use chemically altered animal ingredients, if they do not resemble the original state. For example, gelatin does not resemble original bones and hides from which it was derived. If as a compassionate consumer you do not want even a fractional slaughtered product, you have to stay away from all these products. Especially when there are hundreds of small companies manufacturing truly vegetarian products, we should support them by buying only those compassionate products.

And then there is also another issue of animal testing, that they did not mention in above pamphlet.

50,000 animals suffer and die each year at the hands of Procter & Gamble. Toxic chemicals are force-fed to fully conscious dogs. Burning chemicals are forced into the eyes of rabbits, and toxic chemicals are placed on the shaved and raw skin of rabbits and guinea pigs. These tests are all conducted without any sedation or painkillers. In 1987, P & G fought a shareholders’ resolution that would have eliminated product testing where it is not required by law.

Procter & Gamble says it shares our goal of eliminating the use of animals in product testing. But if they truly shared our goal, they would not have spent over $ 17.5 million to convince our legislators, school children and the public that tests designed to poison, blind, burn, mutilate and kill thousands of defenseless animals are absolutely necessary and humane. The fact is, P & G says one thing and does another. It is the driving force behind a major campaign to perpetuate corporate animal abuse into the next century. What drives them to do this? They want to try to protect themselves legally in the event that one of the toxic chemicals they put in their products harms you or your child. They’re only trying to protect themselves. Even though they know that many of these products are toxic and harmful, they do not take them off the market.

Boycott Procter & Gamble. Boycott all companies that do not meet our standard of cruelty-free. Support the ones which have stopped animal-testing long time ago, and agreed never to resume them. Please refer to our Handbook for Compassionate Living, “Jainism and Animal Issues.” We listed over a hundred companies that neither use any animal ingredients, nor test them on animals. You may also call PETA at 757-622-PETA or AAVS at 215-887-0816, or your local AR&V group for a current list of these companies. Animals will thank you.

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“Beauty Without Cruelty” Becomes Law in England
Merritt Clifton — “Animal People”, December 1998

Cosmetic product testing on animals was banned in Britain, effective November 16, 1998.

The British government, explained London Times political correspondent James Landale, “banned using animals to test final products such as lipsticks and mascara a year ago. At the same time it said there would be no new licenses for the testing of ingredients. But three firms which already held licenses were allowed to continue using animals.”

That ended when the Home Office brokered a deal with the three companies to end all animal use in cosmetics testing.

The agreement somewhat resembles those that the late Animal Rights International founder Henry Spira won with Avon and Revlon in 1980, which many other U.S. cosmetics makers have since ratified.

As Associated Press noted, “The ban will not block animal testing for drugs and scientific research.”

The British anti-vivisection movement, the world’s oldest, commenced early in the 19th century. The longtime leader of the cause was Frances Moore Cobbe (1822-1904), who was obliged by financial distress to work as a vivisector’s assistant while still in her teens, and devoted the rest of her life to crusading for abolition of the cruelty she had witnessed. Cobbe secured passage of the 1876 Cruelty to Animals Act, which required vivisectors to register with the government and to use anesthesia when possible. Though the strongest regulation of vivisection on the books anywhere at the time, and for many years afterward, the act fell well short of actually stopping experiments.

Cobbe had no cause to concern herself with cosmetics testing, because then, before the rise of consumer protection law, little if any was done. By the mid-1950s, however, the cosmetics industry had become one of the largest users of animals in laboratories. Muriel, the Lady Dowding (1908-1993), a lifelong humane crusader, formed Beauty Without Cruelty in 1959 specifically to oppose cosmetics testing. The British Union Against Vivisection did make cosmetic testing a priority after helping to secure passage of an update of Cobbe’s Cruelty to Animals Act, the 1986 Scientific Procedures Act.

At least two other BWC spin-offs are prominent — Beauty Without Cruelty-India, among the most militant and effective Indian animal rights organizations under Diana Ratnagar of Pune, and the American Fund for Alternatives to Animal Research, directed by Ethel Thurston of New York City, who also heads the U.S. chapter of BWC.

European Union

The British ban will have global resonance.

“The government will also be pressing its policy of ending animal testing for cosmetics at the European Union level, where EU policy on cosmetics testing is currently under review,” Janice Cox and Wim de Kok of World Animal Net predicted.

BWC and AFAAR will ask the EU to accept a procedure which Thurston in an October 31 letter termed “a fully scientific replacement for the LD50 test, which can be used right away.”

The traditional LD50 test involves feeding substances to groups of 100 animals until half the animals die. For most uses, it is superceded by LD10 — but these tests do still use animals.

Funded for seven years by AFAAR, cytotoxicologist Bjorn Ekwall of Sweden has now developed human cell culture tests which in a combination of two, “predict human lethal concentrations with 71% precision,” and in a combination of three, achieve 77% precision, Thurston said. “By the same multi variate analyses,” Thurston continued, “the rat and mouse LD50s predict human lethal doses at only 65% precision.”

Home Office secretary George Howarth said the Labour government would continue to seek reduction of animal use in laboratories in other directions, as well. Already it has increased funding for investigation of alternatives to animal research; banned animal use in testing alcohol and tobacco products; banned the use of gorillas, orangutans, chimpanzees, and bonobos; and increased the Home Office laboratory inspection staff.

April – September October – December

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maximios March 24, 2007
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Inside This Issue

October 2: Compassionate Festivities
Animal Rights Festival Sets Example for Jains

From October 6-8, the Tenth Annual International Compassionate Living Festival held in the Holiday Inn in Raleigh, NC brought together distinguished speakers from different backgrounds, such as Australia and Hawaii, old and young activists, and a compassionate audience. The diversity of topics presented, the literature displayed for public knowledge with the delicious vegan food served during dinner and lunch, not only added to the festive mood, but added a new dimension to the animal rights movement.

Speakers, such as Roberta Kalechofsky, who spoke about the illusions of animal testing and the understanding of the “animal model”, and Michael Klaper, who gave a physician’s view on the necessity for a vegan diet, delivered speeches that broke the boundaries of ignorance on such issues. Amazingly, each speaker was able to keep my attention with their vast amounts of knowledge, different speaking styles, and their ability to present themselves objectively on such emotional issues. Though speaking on a specific issue, every speaker realized the holistic effects that veganism had on humans, animals, and the environment. On a whole, the compassion that streamed from their souls seemed limitless. It was very refreshing to be surrounded by people who sought knowledge not only from the mind, but from the heart.

Likewise, when people found out I was Jain, I saw an excitement in their eyes and soon enough the questions poured in. Almost every person that I came in contact with had a considerable amount of admiration for the faith. The word Ahimsa came up quite often. Though I was flattered by their interest, I could help but think how we always compromise the philosophy of Ahimsa, which in its totality encompasses other philosophies such as Aparigraha, or simplicity. Living in America, many of us try to live the materialistic life style, while adding in a bit of Jain values here and there. Thus, the profound nature of this festival was due to the amount of people who lived simple and compassionate lives (many have made room in their own homes for an animal shelter), and living up to the central Jain philosophies without even knowing it.

My wish is to station these people in front of my friends, family and community to serve as role models as compassionate humans. In reality, I know this can not happen, but I do know that people, both Jain and Non-Jain, have the potential to do the same.

– Lynna Dhanani, Raleigh, NC

Vegetarian Food Fair – San Diego’s Fall Fest ’99

This event is a cornucopia of live music, entertainment and information about healthy living, healthy eating, and healthy alternatives for people, animals, and our planet… a harvest of sights, sounds, and flavors of the season… a cruelty-free feast promoting an Earth-friendly, people-friendly, and animal-friendly lifestyle.

Among the many great things happening that day, John Robbins will be there!

John Robbins, the author of the best-selling Pulitzer prize nominated book Diet for a New America takes us on a journey into the great American food machine. In his early twenties, in an effort to regain his own health, John turned away from the family owned Baskin-Robbins ice-cream business and began extensive research into nutrition and food production. After ten years of investigation and a thorough inside look at the American food production system, John has a whole new story to tell.

In simple and startling words, Robbins connects the dots and reveals his theories on the environmental and personal health consequences of a diet based on animal products. According to him, our current American diet is a recipe for disaster. He strongly recommends plant based (strictly vegetarian) diet as the only solution.

If you like to contribute to this and other future events, please send your checks to address next page.

– Organized by Compassionate Living

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Compassionate Activism
Sangeeta Kumar — Compassionate Living, San Diego, CA

From the depths of our hearts we can hear the cry of countless animals being slaughtered we can feel the hands of starving children reaching out. In our own dwellings we can taste the toxins in the water, and in our own cities we can smell the pollution in the air.The animals, the children and the earth are calling for us.

How will we answer their calls?

There are so many things that you can do to answer this call. The following are some of the things that we here at Compassionate Living are doing to raise awareness in the community.

Educational Program

Teaching kids is one of our favorite projects. This is very rewarding work because many children after our presentation are inspired to make lifestyle changes and go vegetarian!

Ongoing Protests

We often are approached by national and local groups to organize protests on various issues. Usually a month does not go by where we have not organized several protests. These are very important because in one protest we can get on two or three TV stations and get the message out to the public. For example we were interviewed by several TV stations on our protest against animals for experimentation. They gave us some time to talk about why we think it is wrong. That one protest therefore reached over 100,000 people who were not physically there, but saw the report on the news, or newspaper, or heard it on the radio.

What you can do

Here are a few ideas for you to help spread the word for the animals. If you would like some advice please email us at [email protected] or call us at 619-495-1723.

Write Right… alright?

If you see an article against animals in the paper write a letter to the editor to your local paper, make it short and to the point, and your letter has a good chance of being published. You can reach thousands this way!

“Check Out Wildlife Groups. Before you support a “wildlife” or “conservation” group, ask if it supports hunting. Such groups as the National Wildlife Federation, the National Audubon Society, the Sierra Club, the Izaak Walton League, the Wilderness Society, the World Wildlife Fund, and many others are pro-hunting.

“Speak Up. When you see cruelly produced clothing and accessories in stores, please let the clerks and managers know you object to the sale of animal parts.

“Contact Your Newspaper. Ask your local paper to write a story on the advantages of a vegetarian diet or the cruelties of the factory farm, or write a letter to the editor on the subject.

“Act on Principle. When bus driver Bruce Anderson stuck to his vegetarian principles and refused to give riders coupons for free hamburgers, he was fired by the Orange County (California) Transit Authority (OCTA). Anderson was reinstated when he won a lawsuit ruling that all vegetarians and vegans are entitled to protect their beliefs and rights.

“Write Letters to the Editor. Write letters to the editors of your local papers telling them why you won’t attend a circus that forces animals to perform tricks.”

“Enter Competitions. Enter your vegan recipes into cooking competitions and bake sales, and make it clear that no animal ingredients were used. Dan Handley, a chef at the Virginia Beach Hilton Hotel, won a barbecue cookoff contest with his vegan recipe!”

Compassionate Living 4867 Mercury Street

San Diego, CA 92111-2104

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The Blackest of All the Black Crimes
Slavery * Ethnic Cleansing * Nazi Human Experiments

VIVISECTION

The great Indian pacifist and political leader, Mahatma Gandhi, had a profound influence on my life and on the lives of many other peace-loving people. Through his writings, Gandhi was the first person to challenge me to justify eating meat. His ghost was the first person to whom I had to admit, through my writings, that I could not meet the challenge.

Tom Regan — The AV Magazine, Winter 1998

Anyone guided by the Gandhian principle of Ahimsa — anyone who aspires to live a life that “does the least harm” — in time, must put an end to consuming corpses. In addition to his vegetarian teachings, Gandhi was a staunch anti-vivisectionist, once referring to vivisection as “the blackest of all the black crimes.” When I first read these words, I didn’t give them much thought. It was only some years later that I stopped to ask what Gandhi might mean by this graphic statement and how he could possibly believe what he said.

As for what he means, the words leave little room for doubt. Consider the most evil things in the world. Slavery. Ethnic cleansing. Human experiments conducted by Nazi doctors. All these (and many more, alas) belong in the column headed “Worst Moral Crimes Humans Commit.” But the worst of the worst, according to Gandhi, is not any of those I have listed. The worst of all the worst crimes is: vivisection. I don’t think there is any question but that, when he describes vivisection as “the blackest of all the black crimes,” this is what Gandhi means.

Gandhi was not a foolish man. Far from it. But even people of wisdom sometimes believe foolish things. “Isn’t this a case in point?” I asked myself. I mean “how could any sane, sensible person think that vivi-section is a worse moral crime than slavery or the human experiments conducted by Nazi doctors?” I think I know how Gandhi would answer. First, he would explain that moral crimes belong in the “Worst Moral Crimes Humans Commit” column when committing them is perfectly legal. That’s part of what slavery, ethnic cleansing and vivisection have in common. Where they are practiced, there are no laws prohibiting them.

Still, there are important differences between these great evils. In the case of slavery, for example, while it was legal in most of the United States throughout most of the nation’s history, being a slave owner was not a profession people prepared for by attending colleges or universities, not something for which those who “showed real promise” were rewarded by receiving scholarships or fellowships. And vivisectors do compete for and some of them win, prestigious prizes and awards. How, then, can there be a worse moral crime than vivisection, enmeshed as the practice is in social institutions that not only permit, they train people to commit evil, then reward them for doing it?

I think this gets close to what Gandhi believes. I also think we can get closer by considering the suggestion that vivisectors are just like the Nazi doctors: both trained professionals, both performing morally evil acts that are perfectly legal. If this is true, vivisection is a very bad moral crime. Isn’t that enough? Why go as far as Gandhi and judge it to be the worst of the worst?

Though initially plausible, equating vivisectors and Nazi experimenters overlooks an important difference. Those Nazi doctors who performed experimenters on unconsenting, defenseless human beings, committed an evil no doubt. But unlike what is true of vivisectors, these doctors, after being trained to do good, chose to do evil. Not so in the case of vivisectors. In their case, vivisectors choose to do evil after they have been professionally trained to do it.

Is there a worse moral crime than that? It’s possible that not all anti-vivisectionists will agree in the answer they give. What’s certain is what Gandhi meant and why he believed what he did. Right about so much, is the Mahatma (the great-souled one) right about this, too? Now, there’s a question to ponder — the sort of food for thought even Gandhi would approve of.

Tom Regan is Professor of Philosophy and Head of the Department of Philosophy & Religion at North Carolina State University. President of The Culture & Animals Foundation, his many books include The Case for Animal Rights and The Thee Generation: Reflections on the Coming Revolution.

10 Super Foods You Should Eat

The Center for Science in the Public Interest’s Nutrition Action health letter provides the following list of “superfoods” we all should eat.

[Bay Area Vegetarian News — (415) 273-LIV-1]

  1. Sweet Potatoes — Loaded with vitamin A, carotenoids, vitamin C and fiber. (However, the believers in Jainism don’t have to eat this one.)

  2. Whole Grain Bread — Higher in fiber and about 12 vitamins and minerals than refined breads.

  3. Broccoli — Lots of vitamin C, carotenoids and folic acid.

  4. Strawberries — Excellent source of vitamin C.

  5. Beans – Inexpensive, low in fat, rich in protein, iron, B-vitamins, folic acid and fiber. Garbanzo, pinto, black, navy, kidney, lentils…. your choice.

  6. Cantaloup — A quarter melon provides most people’s entire daily requirement for vitamins A and C.

  7. Spinach, Kale, Collards — High in vitamin C, carotenoids, calcium, iron and folic acid.

  8. Oranges — Vitamin C, folic acid and fiber.

  9. Oatmeal — Whole grain cereal that is fat free, sugar free and inexpensive.

  10. Skim or Low-fat Milk — Excellent source of Calcium, vitamins and protein with little or no artery – clogging fat or cholesterol.

(We recommend the substitution of a rice, soy or nut milk which, as part of a balanced diet, would offer many of the same benefits without any cholesterol, animal proteins or toxins.) It is refreshingly pleasant to note that all above items are strictly vegetarian (in fact Jain and vegan too, after applying the recommendations)! — Editor Top

WHOSE SCIENCE IS IT ANYWAY?
A Feminist Exploration

We have to begin by asking: what exactly is this idea of “science” that undergirds the methodology of scientific experimentation?

by Carol J. Adams — The AV Magazine, Winter 1998

Lives begin in community. We learn through community. We exist interdependently. Our culture is structured so that learning and even living can occur almost “invisibly.” We can come to see ourselves as born into relationships rather than as atomistic, self-made individuals. This allows for an important shift in beliefs — no longer do we see humans as radically other than nonhuman life forms, no longer erecting a boundary between the presumably “self-made human” and the presumably “nature-made animals.”

Feelings matter. This rather obvious statement has one context in which it is greatly contested: the debate over experimentation on animals. In this context, feelings are thought to get in the way of science. Protesters who object to experimenting on animals for scientific knowledge are often accused of being sentimental — of letting feelings, rather than intellect — determine our positions. The underlying presumption in this charge is that doing science and being sentimental are exclusive of each other.

Feminist philosophy offers a way for us to think about why feelings matter and why doing science and being sentimental are not exclusive of each other. The insights of feminist philosophy into the construction of science as supposedly “objective” and “rational” equips us to critique the use of animals’ bodies for scientific knowledge in a new and exciting way. We have to begin by asking: What exactly is this idea of “science” that undergirds the methodology of scientific experimentation? Science, like the culture of which it is a part, is not a given, something delivered from a mountaintop; science is constructed. Who constructed “Science” as we know it? Whose science is it? Science is not value-free; we just believe it is.

Although it is valorized as the only appropriate way of “doing science,” the methodology of science arises from and has been limited by male experience of previous centuries. Animal experimentation is part of a patriarchal culture in which science, like masculinity, is “tough, rigorous, rational, impersonal, competitive and unemotional” as Sandra Harding describes it in The Science Question in Feminism.

Science “happens” through a subject-object relationship. Domination allows for the construction of “knowledge” based on the observations of the object by the subject. Gender notions infuse the ideas we hold about the way a scientist “discovers” knowledge, by which a “knower” studies an object — the “known.” The relationship that is dictated for this gaining of knowledge is one of distance and separation between the knower and the known. The subject who experiments is radically separate from the object upon whom she or he experiments.

Animal advocates not only face the overwhelming problem of power in this culture in which the tendency is to identify with the knower, the subject who is creating knowledge, rather than the “known,” the material being studied (who are often animals). We also face the problem that what science claims for itself — objectivity — yet a value-free science is not possible. Before we debate the efficacy of “animal models” we need to step back and ask “Whose science are we talking about?” Science arose from a Western patriarchal colonial culture. Attitudes about gender, race, class and nonhuman animals, have everything to do with the way “science” is conceptualized. It has been by and large Euro-American middle-class and upper-class men who have created scientific theorems, ethics and the ground rules for animal experimentation. They have created these out of the perspective by which they approach the world: as subjects surveying an object.

The notion of the objective scientist — one who is and should be a disinterested human observer — is central to modern science. Science has been created in the image of the “man of reason” — nonemotional, rational, separate from and over others. We might come to believe that one can transcend the body, personal and cultural history and thereby acquire “pure knowledge.” As a result, the scientific concept of objectivity remains unexamined and science is thought to be value-free. But knowledge can never be pure and the scientific concept of objectivity is itself a value — a value derived from the dominant perspective on reason, the body, feelings, gender and animals.

We have inherited a Western philosophic tradition that values differences rather than connections: men are different from (and above) women; humans are different from (and above) animals; whites are different from (and above) people of color; the mind is different from (and above) the body. Presumptions of human difference and superiority become intertwined with attitudes toward our own very animal-like bodies, which we must somehow disown to successfully use our minds. Discussions about morality, decision-making, feelings and science occur within this culture of differentiation.

The emphasis on differences between humans and animals established fierce definitions about what constitutes “humanness,” even though we humans are animals too and are not the only animals with social needs or group memories. Yet we are conceptualized as “not animals.” The qualities attributed to humans become the most cherished ones. So, for instance, reasoning is seen as a capacity possessed only by humans and it is valued over other activities. According to this tradition that values separation, the body is an untrustworthy source of knowledge. That which traditionally differentiated humans from animals — qualities such as reason and rationality — have been used to differentiate men from women, whites from people of color and the ruling class from the working class.

In earlier centuries, it was believed that men could transcend their bodies with their minds, but women, like animals, could not. While we have progressed from this theoretical equation of women with animals, we have not eliminated the mind/body dualism that undergirded it. We have simply removed the human species from this debate. Equated with man, reasoning is still seen as a process that occurs when one transcends the body. Suspicious attitudes toward the body are carried over to suspicious attitudes toward feelings: they are untrustworthy, not reliable, not what good science is. We end up with a science constructed after the Western philosophical idea of the “Man of the Reason.” As a result, gender notions are insinuated within the methodology of how a scientist “knows.” This has impoverished our understanding of reasoning, emotion and science. Within the philosophical framework of our culture, hostility exists toward the body and the feelings we experience through our body. This hostility deprives us of knowledge by viewing the body as something that stands in the way of knowledge rather than as an avenue for knowledge. And it excludes ways of learning, restricting how and what we can know. In fact, we can think through the body, not despite it.

The science that would arise from an acknowledgment that we are all situated bodies existing in relationship would begin at a radically different place. No one would object that we have feelings about what happens in scientific experiments; this would be a given. Of course, we all have feelings and, of course, appropriate emotions can contribute to knowledge! Once that became a given, perhaps there would be no debate about animal experimentation at all, because once we honor emotions and the bodies from which they arise, all bodies might be cherished. We would not see some bodies as objects for experimentation because we would know — know fully — that there are no objects and no objectivity.

Carol J. Adams is the author of The Sexual Politics of Meat. She explores the ideas of feminist philosophy and ecofeminism in her more recent Neither Man nor Beast: Feminism and the Defense of Animals.

website: www.triroc.com/caroladams/

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Inside the Turkey Butchery
Behind the Scenes of a Festivity
Laura A. Moretti — Farm Sanctuary News, Fall 1998
P.O. Box 150 * Watkins Glen, NY 14891-0150 * 1-607-583-2225 * www.farmsanctuary.org

If I had been looking for home-grown peaches or rolled oats, I would have had the help of the entire community, but finding a turkey farm was another matter. On a trip from fellow activists, I learned there was one right in the heart of northern California’s picturesque wine country — but no one, not even activists, could tell me exactly where.

“Turkey farm?” the woman behind a deli counter mused. “Just what is a turkey farm?”

“A place where turkeys are grown for, like, Thanksgiving,” I told her.

I could see the flash in her eyes: turkeys came from the supermarket — and those could be found anywhere, so what was my complaint?

The animal feed supply stores didn’t help much, either, but I’m certain it was because they didn’t want to. The process of animal rearing is a well-kept secret — and for good reason. If most Americans knew how the animals were treated and killed to adorn their dining tables, they’d have second thoughts about eating them — and that isn’t good for an industry that makes its billions off the bodies of slaughtered animals.

Half a billion turkeys are raised in the United States each year. They’re killed at the rate of 1.4 million birds a day, 58,000 an hour, nearly 1,000 per minute, 16 a second — and yet I couldn’t find a live one anywhere in sight. And it wasn’t for lack of trying.

I drove miles and miles of scenic and not-so-scenic back roads. I crept up the driveways of many a ranch. I talked to numerous grain and fruit and grape farmers. I peeked into seemingly abandoned warehouses. But I couldn’t find even a feather.

They say a watched pot never boils. I had just given up looking when the birds, it seemed, flocked to me. On a return road trip from Calistoga to Santa Rosa — and on a highway, mind you, that I frequently traveled — I was enjoying the late night drive, the way the moonlight cast black shadows across the asphalt, when the smell of putrefying flesh suddenly invaded my nostrils.

My first thought was I had just passed road kill. Having lived in the northeast where such odors are common because road kill is so common, and having lived in La Paz, Bolivia, where the rotting carcasses of dogs and livestock could be found all along the river banks and roadways, I knew that smell all too well. It was the overpowering smell of something dead. It’s not like the awful odor of rotting cantaloup. Or moldy kidney beans. It’s the unmistakable smell of death and decay.

This time it didn’t pass. It stayed with me on that lone country road around every bend and dip — for miles. It was the strangest thing because I was the only one on the highway. I was driving through pristine wilderness. Had I happened upon road kill, I would have left the odor with the carcass on that black, moonlit asphalt behind me. Perhaps, then, I had picked up something on the tries. The smell was strong, strong enough for me to believe it would be in my clothes and in my hair until I bathed — the way the smell of blood in a slaughterhouse has often stayed with me.

It’s a steep drop into the Santa Rosa valley from Calistoga Road. Where it leveled is where the answer lay. Just pulling off the road ahead of me into a gravel parkway, was a huge livestock truck — packed full of white, living turkeys, stacked like dead sardines in a tin can, four-levels high in putrid-smelling crates, on their way to slaughter.

I wasn’t prepared for the emotion I felt. The truck had been ahead of me all along, unseen by the bends in the highway. To see so many birds, trucked in ways most Americans would outlaw if they were parakeets or macaws, wreaking of death even before they had died, broke my heart.

The turkey farm on Calistoga Road was nearly empty when I arrived there later that week. Its product had been sent to market. Harvested — like so much corn. But, unlike grain farms, I wasn’t welcome at this one. What the turkey farmers — and the pig and cow and chicken farmers — don’t want you to know is that animal agriculture is a cruel and bloody business, and its cruelties begin long before the animals are born or hatched.

Genetically altered, turkeys, for example, are forced to grow twice as fast and twice as large as any wild turkey. They are so breast-heavy, in fact, they cannot fly. They can’t even mate. Every neatly packaged turkey in America’s supermarkets was brought into this world by grown men who have milked male turkeys for their semen and wrestled turkey hens in order to open their legs and their vents to inseminate them.

Turkeys have the ends of their beaks and their toes clipped — without anesthesia — in order to prevent them from injuring each other in the tightly packed warehouses in which they are raised. Inside these factories, packed by the hundreds with no more than three square feet per bird, they die from heat prostration, infectious disease, and cancer. Turkeys also suffer from heart disease — caused by their bodies trying to keep pace with their excessive rate of growth. They die, often and simply, from heart attacks.

After being trucked to slaughter, turkeys are pulled from the creates into which they’ve been crammed for transport, and hung upside down by their legs onto a rotating rail. Their heads are submerged in an electrified water bath which immobilizes them for the killing blade. They can still feel pain and many of them emerge from stunning fully conscious. If the blade misses killing them, the birds are also fully conscious when they are submerged in scalding, boiling water. The industry calls these birds “red skins” — and it happens to millions of them because turkeys are not federally protected.

The ironic part is that, after all this cruelty and killing, death and dying, Americans have symbolized the carcass of this domestically mutilated and mutated bird with a national day of gratitude.

Get in the Holiday Spirit!
Party Till The Turkeys Come Home

Help your local animal rights group or vegetarian society host a vegetarian Thanksgiving dinner. Whether it’s potluck or catered, you’re sure to make vegetarian advocates happy for the holidays (and educate their friends and family too!). Call or write us for our Vegetarian Thanksgiving Resource brochure with mail-order videos, books, photographs, literature, recipes, and other materials to help you provide “food for thought” for the Thanksgiving holiday.

And remember… `tis the season for holiday dinner parties! So don’t let the holidays go by without showing your friends and family how delicious and nutritious Thanksgiving dinner can be.

Turkeys in the News

Let your local newspapers know that you are starting a new Thanksgiving tradition by adopting a turkey! Call your paper, ask for the features editor, and then inform him or her that you have a unique Thanksgiving story — you’re participating in a national ADOPT-A-TURKEY Project because you wanted to save a turkey, rather than serve a turkey this year!

Of course, it helps to have a photograph of your adopted turkey, and we can also provide sample press releases and information literature. Our ADOPT-A-TURKEY Project Coordinator is happy to help — just call (607) 583-2225, ext. 69.

And don’t forget to write a letter to the editor too! It’s a great way to educate people about the compelling health, environmental, and ethical reasons to have a vegetarian Thanksgiving dinner. Feel free to write or call us for a sample Thanksgiving theme “letter to the editor.”

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Abraham’s Choice Dr Ranjit Konkar — Compassionate Friend, Monsoon-Winter 1997 —

Beauty Without Cruelty India

Bakr-Id is the day for commemorating the spirit of sacrifice. The memory is of the courage displayed by the Prophet Abraham centuries ago in being willing to sacrifice to God the life of his only child upon being commanded by God to do so to demonstrate his dedication to Him. Upon seeing the unshaken resolve he displays in obeying God’s word, it is said that God, very pleased with his dedication, intervenes through his angel just as Abraham is about to take his child’s life and relieves him of the burden by asking him not to go ahead. He then causes a ram (a kind of sheep) to appear near the sacrificial alter. Abraham sacrifices the ram instead to complete the ritual. Today, this act of courage is sought to be remembered by millions of households the world over by taking the life of a goat or a sheep or even larger animals on that day.

On this occasion, I wish to raise the issue of the ethics of animal sacrifice. This is no way directed only toward the observers of Bakr-Id — majority religion, Hinduism has a far greater incidence of this practice of killing animals for religious purposes than the other religions. Therefore, we all have something to ask ourselves in this regard.

What is Sacrifice?

Sacrifice should mean the giving up of something that belongs to oneself. Does my child’s life belong to me? Does the life of any animal belong to me? That life is wholly and solely owned by the being (human or non-human) that is its holder. Religious thought goes a step further and doesn’t grant ownership of the life even to its holder — the holder is merely the custodian of that life and cannot decide to shed it when he/she desires, by committing suicide. Legal thought has made suicide a punishable offence on that very basis. God, the creator, is the only entity given universal ownership of all life. Only God can take life, just like only God can create life.

Seen in this light, it should seem outrageous that one can consider the taking of another’s life as one’s own sacrifice. When we are trained to think, on one hand, that the taking of even our own life is a social and moral crime, how do we allow ourselves to not only take the life of another being but call it our sacrifice, on top of that? Would Abraham have looked favorably upon our wilful destruction of life? Would Goddess Kali or Lord Shiva, if they could take form and communicate with us, condone the barbaric bloodshed taking place in their names?

The Danger of Rituals

The ritual, mechanistic repetition of a historic act in order to display one’s reverence for the act or for its original perpetrator is fundamentally an act fraught with dangerous possibilities. Suppose that God had not intervened to substitute a ram for Abraham’s child, and that instead accepted his sacrifice and decided to reward him later by bringing his child back to life. Would the followers of Abraham then have dared to commemorate that act by sacrificing their children, knowing fully well that they can’t bring them back to life? A less shocking and offensive analogy too is worth pondering over: imagine that God has substituted not a ram but tree in place of Abraham’s son. Would we then, to commemorate the great sacrifice, be cutting down trees on this day? In these days of environmental consciousness, this would produce a public outrage. Why, then, is animal life, which is so much higher than plant life, in feeling pain and in possessing six senses versus the plants’ one, held so cheaply? Why do we think nothing of slitting the throat of a fully conscious and frightened animal like goat when cutting down a tree is socially castigable? And harming a human being is unthinkable? Do these animals deserve no mercy from us? They put their trust in us only to find that we deceive them and belie their trust by taking their life. Is this how we, the supposedly superior species, should behave?

How many of us who so willingly sacrifice a goat’s life, whether at Kali’s feet or in Abraham’s memory, would make actual sacrifices of one’s possessions when called upon to do so? Is it that sacrificing the goat’s life equips us in any way with a greater moral readiness to do so? If not, then why this disrespect towards the life of another, the life that is held so dear by its owner? How can we take away what we cannot give back?

If we think that by killing a goat, we are replaying the situation that Abraham found himself in, we are mistaken. Not one of us can claim that God has asked us to sacrifice our dearest possession to Him. Even if we can, then can we, with any self-respect, claim that the goat that we purchase in the market for so many rupees and paise is our dearest possession? Would any of us dare to do what Abraham showed courage to do? What is this fascination with replaying historical events anyway?

Questioning Abraham’s Choice

At this point, let me commit the blasphemy of questioning the propriety of Abraham’s actions. I hope rational minds will not condemn me for doing so. If the relevant section of the Bible (Genesis 22:01-22:13, reproduced below) is read carefully then one sees nowhere that God asked Abraham to sacrifice a ram instead. He just relieves Abraham of his command to sacrifice his child (Genesis 22:12). It is Abraham’s own choice to go ahead and kill the ram (Genesis 22:13). Why was that justified? It is not that some sacrifice or the other had to be performed. Was it right of Abraham then to unnecessarily take the ram’s life?

One is reminded of the story of Yudhishthira and the dog, in Yudhishthira’s last days, in the epic Mahabharata. The Pandavas renounce their kingdom and the worldly life to spend the twilight of their lives roaming around in the forest. Sahadeva, Nakula, Arjuna, and finally Bheema fall dead one by one. A dog joins Yudhishthira to keep him company in his wanderings. At the gates of heaven, Yudhishthira is asked to enter but without the dog, who is not allowed inside. Yudhishthira refuses the offer to enter alone, his conscience not allowing him to accept the prize of heaven at the cost of abandoning his faithful companion. Seeing his fidelity even to such a mute and non-human companion, and his sacrifice in refusing what a lifetime of walking the right path had earned him, God is pleased and reveals the true identity of the dog — it is none other than Dharma, come to subject Yudhishthira to his final test of character. Yudhishthira is allowed inside.

How devoutly it is to be wished that Abraham would have replied similarly. I do not think that the all-merciful and just God would have found his refusal objectionable at all. Millions of innocent animals the world over would have been spared the slaying at the hands of man; children would have been more sensitized to the sanctity of life; and less blood would have been split in the name of religion.

For my own part, I must say that if anyone were to ask me to sacrifice another’s life to prove my dedication to God, I would refuse. I would commit the sin of not proving my dedication to God sooner than committing the sin of taking away another’s life and thus showing total disrespect to the giver of life Himself. My children’s lives may be more dear to me than my own, but they are not mine to take away. I should give up my life to protect theirs, not take theirs away to demonstrate my devotion to anybody, even God. There I differ with Abraham in the choice he made five thousand years ago — I would consider it a transgression of my privileges if I were to agree to offer my son’s life. However, Abraham’s choice was different and presumably dictated by his times.

The Golden Principle

At the risk of sounding like an atheist, I would like to propound the stand that the true test of the rightness of one’s actions is in probing deep into our own

consciences for approval rather than reposing belief in what God supposedly want us to do. No surer guide to morally right actions exists than the Golden Principle: Do not do to others that which you would not like done to you. One can never go wrong with this lamp showing the way.

Consider the following hypothetical situation: the earth is invaded by an alien species from another planet, a species that is far superior to us in physical and mental capabilities. They decide to use us for their food, their leather, their religious sacrifices, their entertainment, etc.: all the things that we do to our less-evolved animal brethren on this planet. How would we face that day? We would be begging for mercy from them, pleading with them to see reason and logic, the very things that we refuse to grant to our own animals. How can we do to others what we would not like done to us?

Need of the Age

Five millennia have passed since the time of Abraham. Sacrificing animals might have been a socially acceptable practice then. But does it mean that it must be practiced in this day and age? The practice of performing animal sacrifices to atone our sins (never justifiable, in my opinion) was asked to be stopped by Jesus Christ, since he had come to this world to sacrifice his own life for our sins. Christians do not celebrate Abraham’s deed with animal sacrifices today. Can other communities not follow their example? After all, Christ is as much a prophet to Muslims and Jews as to Christians, hence his message should be considered with as much sanctity.

Every society or civilization has its deformities. The remnants of casteism, sexism, class-distinctions are still very much with us. But does it mean that we do not try to shed these blemishes? Similarly, should we not rise above our discriminatory attitude towards the rest of the sentient world also, and include animals in our circle of compassion? We should stop considering them commodities for us to treat as we like, to butcher them for our taste, to sacrifice them for our religious ends, to hunt them for our pleasure. Let us strive to constantly live up to the adjective for kindness that is named after our species: humane.

Excerpt from: BOOK 1: GENESIS

22:01 And it came to pass after these things, that God did tempt Abraham, and said unto him, Abraham: and he said, Behold, here I am.

22:02 And he said, Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.

22:03 And Abraham rose up early in the morning, and saddled his ass, and took two of his young men with him, and Isaac his son, and clave the wood for the burnt offering, and rose up, and went unto the place which God had told him.

22:04 Then on the third day Abraham lifted up his eyes, and saw the place afar off.

22:05 And Abraham said unto his young men, Abide ye here with the ass; and I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to you.

22:06 And Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering, and laid it upon Isaac his son; and took the fire in his hand, and a knife; and they went both of them together.

22:07 And Isaac spoke unto Abraham his father, and said, My father: and he said, Here am I, my son. And he said, Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?

22:08 And Abraham said, My son. God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering: so they went both of them together.

22:09 And they came to the place which God had told him of; and Abraham built an altar there, and laid the wood in order, and bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar upon the wood.

22:10 And Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son.

22:11 And the angel of the LORD called unto him out of heaven, and said, Abraham, Abraham: and he said, Here am I.

22:12 And he said, Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do thou any thing unto him: for now I know that thou fearest God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from me.

22:13 And Abraham lifted up his eyes, and looked, and behold behind him a ram caught in a ticket by his horns: and Abraham went and took the ram, and offered him up for a burnt offering in the stead of his son.

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Is Your Mithai Vegetarian?
Maya Mukhi — Compassionate Friend, Monsoon-Winter 1997 — Beauty Without Cruelty India

If you look beyond the glitter of varkh, into the sheds where it is produced, and at the lives that are sacrificed to make this possible, you’d think twice before buying that box of mithai topped with the precious foil!

Silver foil, or varkh, as it is generally known in India, adds glitter to mithai, supari, paan and fruit, and is used in Ayurvedic medicines and on deities in many Jain temples. The silver-topped mithai is even served as prasad in temples and on auspicious and religious occasions. Varkh is also used in flavored syrups as in kesar syrup.

Several years ago, as suggested by BWC, Indian Airlines instructed their caterers to stop the use of varkh on mithai served on board their flights. Today, many BWC members ask for mithai without varkh, having realized the cruelty involved in its preparation.

According to a feature article in Business India, an astounding 275 tonnes of silver are beaten annually into foil for mithais and chyavanprash! That is a whopping 275,000 kg.! (At the present market rate that would cost a phenomenal Rs 165 crore).

Just how is varkh made and what is it that makes its preparation and consumption so sinful?

Varkh is not derived from an animal source. However, a crucial material of animal origin, ox-gut, is used in its manufacture. This ox-gut is obtained from the slaughterhouse.

In the bylanes of the villages of Ahmedabad and other cities, amidst filthy surroundings, placed between layers of ox-gut, small thin strips of silver are hammered to produce the glittering foil.

The intestine (ox-gut), smeared with blood and mucus, is pulled out from the slaughtered animal by the butcher for the specific purpose. It is then taken away to be cleaned and used in the manufacture of varkh.

The gut of an average cow, measuring 35 feet in length and 3 inches in diameter, is cut open into a piece measuring 420″ x 10″. From this, strips of 9″ x 11″ are cut to give approximately 60 pieces of ox-gut, which are then piled one onto another and bound to form a book of 171 leaves. Next, small thin strips of silver are placed between the sheets and the book slipped into a leather pouch (an animal product again). Artisans then hammer these bundles continuously for a day to produce extremely thin foils of silver of 3″ x 5″. The leather and ox-gut, being supple, can withstand the intense manual hammering for up to 8 hours a day till such time as the silver is beaten to the desired thickness. When ready, the foil is carefully lifted from between the leaves of ox-gut and placed between sheets of paper to be sold to the mithaiwallas. A booklet of 160 foils weighs approximately 10 gm and costs about Rs 200.

An average middle class Indian family of four consuming approximately 100 kg of mithai per year for forty years consumes silver foil produced with the gut of 3 cows and one-tenth of a cowhide!

India is not the only country where foil is made by such methods. In Germany, small specialized enterprises produce gold-leaf, which is beaten down to 1/10,000 mm thickness, for decorative and technical purposes by similar methods. The gold foil is used by the Jews for as much the same purpose, namely for food preparations, as it is in India.

In India the 275 tonnes of silver that are beaten annually into varkh utilize intestines of 516,000 cows and calf leather of 17,200 animals each year. Therefore, BWC hopes that someone, somewhere will develop through research an alternative process for the making of varkh without using ox-gut.

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Meat and Leather — Two Sides of the Same Coin
Compassionate Friend, Spring 1998 — Beauty Without Cruelty India

Goat meat or mutton, despite its poor quality, is the most popular meat in India. 95% of raising goats and sheep continues to be on traditional lines. These animals are owned by landless farmers who migrate from place to place with their herds which feed off mainly wasteland grass, also garbage. 60% of the animals, numbering over 16 million — one-third of which are kids, die due to untreated diseases and the remaining 40% are slaughtered for their meat and skins. Ailing animals or those below optimum weight and age are sold in the market to middlemen for slaughter and are subjected to the same cruelties as other slaughter animals. Lambs and young goats are also slaughtered for meat. Goat hair and the fleece of sheep is used by the wool industry; and goats’ horns are commonly utilized for making buttons.

Sensing financial reward in raising goats intensively, several company have decided to turn the unorganized shepherd-centered activity into an industrial-scale business. We request readers not to invest in the so-called lucrative goat livestock ventures. Without sufficient patronage such projects will not be taken up or flourish.

The Central Institute for Research on Goats has organized seminars for making this ‘poor mans’s cow’ into ‘rich man’s kamdhenu’ in spite of the mortality rate in farms being almost double than what it is in free-grazing conditions. Under new technology plans, training will be imparted for higher productivity, crossbreeds and broiler goats (like broiler chickens) will be created, and eventually goat producers’ co-operatives will be established. If we do not protest now, ‘goatery’ in our country will follow in the footsteps of poultry and we will see the setting up of a National Goat Development Board.

The Nimbakar Agricultural Research Institute, Phaltan in Maharashtra, has imported South African Boer goats with whose semen Indian goats are artificially inseminated. The result is a creature with a goat’s head and a cow’s body — the aim being to ‘grow’ more meat.

Those who care do not eat meat, nor use leather. Footwear is the most common application for leather. It is also the only use of leather that is often defined as a need by vegetarians. The average leather footwear utilizes several animals’ skins: tough cattle hide for the sole, thinner and differently tanned and processed calf leather for the upper, still thinner goat skin for the inside lining and machine pressed leather fining made into a leather board for giving appropriate strength and flexibility placed in between the outer and inner soles.

Leather, hide and skin are also used in garments, belts, gloves, handbags, wallets, purses, watch and other straps, linings, trimmings. Most of it is from slaughtered cows and bulls although 20% of the world’s goat skin is from India. About eighteen square feet of leather is obtained from an average sized cow or bull in India. For example, a leather jacket is made from approximately ten square feet representing 55% hide of a single cow or bull and if also lined with leather, the skin of two medium-sized goats; and a leather briefcase from five and a half square feet representing 30% hide of a single cow or bull together with the entire skin of approximately three small goats used for the inside lining and the compartments.

If ever you are tempted to eat meat or use leather, remember Dr Albert Schweitzer’s words:”I am life, which wills to live, in the midst of life, which wills to live.”

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WHAT CAN WE DO?
By Hope Sawyer Buyukmihci — The AV, January 1994

When I talk with children they know what I mean. Most of them have not yet become indoctrinated with the virus of superstition: Wild animals are dangerous; wild animals are varmints or game; toads are ugly; snakes are slimy. Children are ready to love every living creature, and to take action on all fronts to see that justice is done. Children gladly cooperate in projects to help animals. What makes them change?

One humane education teacher told me sadly, “We can’t have a group of humane minded children until we have humane teachers.” If the teacher (or parent) is not humane, he soon inoculates the young with his own illness, symptoms of which are a deviation from the children’s natural compassion and a hardening of the arteries of love. Wounds occur, and are covered over by scabs of hostility or indifference, under which the infection spreads throughout the whole character.

Humane education is the tried and true remedy, but prevention is better than cure. Let’s not leave the work to professional teachers alone. Let’s volunteer with our local humane society to help reach more people; offer our services to schools and churches; and write letters to newspapers to alert readers to animal problems and solutions. Let’s get a supply of the humane education materials now collecting dust on shelves, and see that it circulates in our particular area.

The question most asked of me by children is: What can I do to help?

I don’t know the answer. The above suggestions are ideas that can be put into action with each person’s unique talents and individual flare. What must be done is dictated by time and materials available and by the specific situation in which one finds one’s self. I do know that there is momentum in action, and if we make a first step, others will follow, and a path will open up.

Humane education is a work that must be done in faith, and carried forward with no thought of reward save the work itself. It is challenge of the highest order, and meeting challenge head-on is one of life’s greatest delights.

There is heartache, but it does not compare with the heartache of doing nothing. There are more failures than successes, but still we will try — and try again. We will work on, though all seems hopeless. And once in a while someone whose life we have influenced without even knowing it will rise up and call us blessed.

What can we do?

All that we can… on and on and on. No person can do more.

Charlotte Baker Montgomery, author of children’s books and a leader in humane education work in her area of Texas, says: “The more I see of life, the more I realize the value of persistence. It is the person who keeps hammering away who wins. You see this in politics. The lobbies for race tracks and liquor-by-the-drink keep coming back after every defeat, exerting constant pressure, and finally they open a crack, and they keep on pushing, the crack widens, and at last the public begins to wonder, ‘Well, what’s so bad about it, anyway?’ It works the same for better causes, too.”

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The Vegan Sourcebook Author: Joanne Stepaniak, M.S. Ed. Publisher: Lowell House, Los Angeles, CA

A Review by Stanley M. Sapon, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus of Psycholinguistics — University of Rochester (NY) — Director, the Maimonides Project

Joanne Stepaniak has produced an extraordinarily ambitious work that sends a fresh, invigorating breath of life to the vegan movement, a work that stands as a milestone in the history of efforts to inform, support, strengthen, and light the way for those who have already committed to a vegan lifestyle, as well as for those who stand near the threshold. It is a “sourcebook” in the literal sense of the word — not a dry, encyclopedic compilation of facts, but a spiritually refreshing exploration of the sources of veganism, as well as an immensely useful compendium of resources …ideas, strategies, and solutions.

 This is a happy book — a book on veganism that makes no attempt to scare us with nightmare visions of heart attacks, strokes, cancer or mad cow disease. It points the way to veganism through love and understanding, not fear. It characterizes veganism as “living with conscience, conviction and compassion,” and talks about why and how to live and grow and thrive as a vegan, and feel good about yourself. It shows how, in a culture that often seems either unknowing, uncaring, uninterested, or sometimes downright hostile, you can have a sense of personal achievement, influence and effectiveness.

After 20 years as a vegan, I felt that there was little about the vegan lifestyle I had neither confronted nor thought about. Yet I found The Vegan Sourcebook to be a “page-turner” … absorbing, thought provoking, enlightening and, literally, fascinating.

The author has done a superb job of illumination, making visible a broad spectrum of all the whys and wherefores of vegan living. She makes it beautifully clear that a vegan lifestyle is a joyful, rewarding and fulfilling way of life, and not at all an ongoing penance of self-denial. And she succeeds brilliantly in dispelling the myths that vegans consider themselves a morally superior lot — “holier than thou” — or that veganism is a case of vegetarianism carried to extreme, immoderate lengths.

Virginia Messina, the widely known and respected nutritionist, addresses the needs of a healthy, well-nourished vegan. Her chapter on nutritional benefits of veganism maintains the level of balance and scrupulous accuracy for which she is noted. She provides a welcome antidote to the exaggerated and extravagant promises of “Instant Health” all-too-commonly claimed for a vegan diet.

The pages on food continue with nutrition-charts, a new vegan pyramid for menu planning, a week of sample meals (plus menus for toddlers, preschoolers and teens), all crowned by an exciting assortment of Joanne Stepaniak’s recipes (61 of them!) for breakfast, snacks, lunch, dinner and desserts.

Stepaniak keeps the compass on course, reminding us that although a plant-based diet is an essential part of veganism, it certainly is not the only defining property. One of the most vital themes she develops is that although vegan living may be patently concerned with what goes into one’s mouth, it is equally concerned with what comes out of one’s mouth. If we were to treat every animal in the world with gentle regard and respect, but address our fellow humans with anger, contempt or violence, we would deny vegan principles. The core of vegan values involves not only what we eat, but a global view of our behavior — the way we think, feel and speak, the way we respond to a whole spectrum of issues that touches our mind, our conscience and our spirit.

The Vegan Sourcebook is outstanding in its forthrightness; it uncompromisingly identifies the power of compassion as the driving force of a vegan lifestyle. Our choice of foods does not determine or direct our ethical values. Our ethical values determine and direct our choice of foods.

January – March April – September

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maximios March 19, 2007
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Vegan

April-September, 1999 Vol. 3, No. 2-3

January – March October – December

Inside This Issue

Vegetarianism: A Corollary of Animal Rights
ISAR (International Society for Animal Rights) 1-717-586-2200

What is a vegetarian? A vegetarian is a person who abstains from consuming animal flesh, including that from mammals, fish and fowl. Some vegetarians choose to follow a vegan diet. Vegans avoid all foods and products derived by harming animals, including meat, eggs, dairy, leather and wool.

Ethical, Health and Ecological Reasons for Vegetarianism

Ethical Concerns

Americans consume more than nine billion animals each year. The suffering, abuse and slaying of these innocent animals raises serious ethical concerns for many people. What gives humans the right to raise animals for the sole purpose of killing them and then dining on their carcasses?

The vast majority of food animals are raised in deplorable and overcrowded conditions on factory farms where they suffer from routine abuse and neglect.

Health Reasons

There are many health reasons for choosing a vegetarian diet, perhaps most important is the estimate that approximately 60% of all deaths in the United States can be attributed to a meat-based diet. Consumption of animal products increases a person’s likelihood of developing many illnesses, including cancer, diabetes, kidney diseases, and heart disease, which is the leading cause of death in the United States. The American Medical Association states, “a vegetarian diet can prevent 90-97% of heart disease.” A vegetarian male has only 4% chance of suffering a heart attack, compared to the average American male’s risk of 50%.

Another health consideration stems from the farmer’s widespread use of chemicals in the animals’ feed. Farm animals consume vast amounts of hormones, artificial colors and other chemical additives. More than half of all antibiotics in the United States are administered to farm animals to stimulate growth and combat the diseases naturally occurring from living in substandard conditions. These chemicals are then passed on to consumers.

People who eat animal products are also at increased risk for food poisoning. Incredibly, guidelines established by the USDA last year, permit salmonella contamination of 49.9% of ground turkey and 44.6% of ground chicken. The USDA found these criteria reflect the national average found in meat processing plants.

Ecological Effects

The ecological effects of a meat-based diet are far-reaching. Meat production causes environmental destruction, extensive pollution and devastation of natural resources.

The alarming disappearance of America’s forests is often over attributed to urban expansion. For each acre cleared for highways and shopping centers, seven acres are destroyed to provide land for livestock production. Additionally, more than 30 acres of tropical rainforest are destroyed every minute for the specific purpose of grazing cattle, contributing to the extinction of 1,000 rainforest species each year. Current farming methods have resulted in a loss of more than 75% of America’s topsoil.

Farm animals produce more than 20 billion tons of waste each day. This waste, along with the diseased bodies of dead animals and an array of chemical fertilizers and pesticides are released into the environment every day, polluting our land, air and water. Not surprisingly, the livestock industry is the principle cause of water pollution and accounts for half of all water used in the United States. Factory farming’s inefficient use of natural resources also contributes to world hunger. The amount of grain it takes to raise meat for just one person could provide enough food for 12 people.

The inhumane and unhealthy consequences of eating meat are entirely avoidable.

Vegetarianism — a corollary of animal rights — is a choice one can make to help prevent animal suffering. By adopting a vegetarian lifestyle, one can amply meet all nutritional needs while affording him or herself the comfort of knowing that no animals suffered to provide the meal. For more information, please request ISAR’s “Vegetarianism” fact sheet.

We encourage our supporters to purchase one of the many fine vegetarian cookbooks available and adopt healthy, humane, and responsible eating habits.

ISAR offers the following cookbooks available for purchase: #041 The Cookbook For People Who Love Animals PB 192PG $9.95; #141 Food For The Spirit HC 120PG $9.95; #267 The Compassionate Cook PB 244PG $8.99; #276 Eat More Weigh Less PB 425PG $14,00; #294 Famous Vegetarians’ Recipes PB 267PG $14.95.

Factory Farming: A Violation of Animal Rights

The information which follows will be sickening to those like we at ISAR who believe that animals have rights and thus must not be exploited for human ends. We present it here in the hope that the raw facts of factory farming will cause some readers to forego eating animals “produced” in that manner.

The vast majority of animals killed for food were raised on “factory farms.” Factory farming derives its name from the intensive, production-line nature of raising billions of animals at the lowest possible cost. The conditions are overcrowded and filthy. Denied the privilege of breathing fresh air, these animals with an acute sense of smell must endure the ammonia, methane and hydrogen sulfide produced by their waste while the farmers who enter the buildings wear respirators. The overcrowded and filthy conditions lead to stress behavior and disease. Abuse and neglect are routine.

CHICKENS Farmers burn off the beaks of chickens to prevent them from pecking one another, a reaction to their extreme confinement. Their faces are often burned in the process. As many as five egg-laying chickens are crammed into a single “battery cage” measuring only one square foot. At egg production facilities, newborn male chicks are discarded into plastic garbage bags. Most suffocate before they are later ground up for chicken feed and fertilizer.

PIGS Female pigs, called sows, are bred constantly. They must be strapped to the floor of their cages during birth and while nursing to prevent them from crushing their piglets in the tiny enclosure. Young pigs are raised in warehouses until ready for slaughter. Their tails are cut off to prevent “tail-biting,” a stress behavior exhibited due to the overcrowding.

BEEF CATTLE Beef cattle suffer from abusive handling in cramped feedlots. Their horns are removed to prevent damage to other cattle that could stem from the overcrowded conditions. This, as well as male castration, is performed without anesthetic.

MILK COWS Milk cows are kept almost constantly pregnant; the natural bond between mother and baby is shattered at birth so humans may drink the milk intended for calves. Female calves are raised for milking while males are generally sold for veal. Milk cows are slaughtered for human consumption when their milk production drops, usually after four or five years.

VEAL CALVES Veal calves’ brief lives are especially tragic. For four months they are confined to stalls only two feet wide and are fed only a liquid diet. They receive no water or bedding. They live in almost complete darkness to discourage movement which would develop muscle and toughen their flesh.

INHUMANE HAULING PRACTICES

En route to auctions and slaughterhouses, animals are subjected to overcrowding, thirst, hunger and temperature extremes. They are denied food and water during transport, which sometimes takes several days. Many die from heat exhaustion in the summer and freeze to sides of trucks in the winter.

Following transport, exhausted and frightened animals are hit, kicked and shocked with electric prods (to unload from trucks). The immobile and dead are dragged, sometimes by tractors, to “dead piles.” Those surviving to the slaughterhouses are prodded through their terror into their final steps amidst the ominous odor of blood and the screams of those before them.

Some are rendered unconscious before they are suspended upside down and their throats are cut. Others are fully conscious for this process, as dictated by Kosher slaughter requirements.

Animals raised on factory farms suffer from birth to death.

“While we ourselves are the living graves of murdered beasts, how can we expect any ideal conditions on this earth?” — George Bernard Shaw

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INTERNATIONAL CHARTER FOR HEALTH AND HUMANE RESEARCH
International Association Against Painful Experiments on Animals
P.O. Box 215 — St. Albans — Hertfordshire — AL3 4RD — England
Tel: 44 1727 835386 Fax: 864356

Introduction

Every year millions of animals suffer and die in the world’s laboratories. Yet many people are convinced that it is unjust to expose any sentient and unconsenting individual to suffering, or the risk of suffering, when the only potential benefit would be to others. Such ethical considerations are strongly reinforced by mounting evidence that animal research is an unreliable means of studying, treating and curing human illness, and — as history shows — can prove dangerously misleading as well. This is vividly illustrated by the serious unforeseen side-effects associated with many animal-tested medicines. The problems arise because animals are different to people both in the way their bodies work and in their reaction to drugs. All too often experiments on animals not only produce the wrong answers but divert attention from more reliable sources of information based on the study of humans.

For all these reasons we believe that medical research should concentrate its resources on methods of more direct relevance to people. In the urgent interests of both humans and animals we therefore propose the following programme for health and humane research. This programme, summarized in the seven points below, sets out a positive framework on which to build a new approach to health which would lead to an end to the current obsession with animal research.

  • Emphasis to be directed towards the prevention of ill health.

  • An essential drugs policy restricting new medicines to therapeutic areas of real need, thus avoiding the production of duplicate “me too” drugs for which there is no medical justification.

  • Medical research to rely on methods of direct relevance to people.

  • Medical training to concentrate on the study of human beings.

  • A switch to non-animal test systems to improve the safety of medicines.

  • Vaccines to be produced from human rather than animal cells.

  • Governments to ensure the rapid development, validation and utilization of alternative systems.

Preventing Ill Health

History shows that the dramatic increase in life-expectancy experienced by many countries over the past 100 years is chiefly due to improvements in nutrition, living and working conditions, hygiene and sanitation, with specific medical measures such as drugs and vaccines having a comparatively marginal effect. The vital contribution of public health measures in preventing disease is clearly seen by comparing the higher death rates not only in Third World countries but within poorer sections of affluent nations.

The improvements in public health were based on human epidemiological studies. These revealed that people who lived in dirty, overcrowded and unsanitary conditions with little food or clean water were much more likely to die of infectious disease. Today, the main killers in Western society are heart disease, cancer and stroke, conditions which are often difficult or impossible to cure. However, by monitoring different groups of people, epidemiologists have again identified the chief risks and shown that these diseases are also largely preventable.

In the case of heart disease, the results have been dramatic. Since the 1960s when the United States had one of the highest death rates for coronary disease in the world, mortality has fallen sharply, in line with changes in diet and lifestyle. Specific medical measures had only a small impact, at best. Similar results could be achieved with cancer where 80-90% of fatal cases are potentially preventable. The culprits include poor diet, smoking, alcohol, radiation, pollution and occupational hazards such as asbestos.

The evidence suggests that the main influences on our health — diet, lifestyle and the environment — are outside the scope of laboratory experimentation. It follows that major advances in health can only be achieved by putting the greatest emphasis on prevention.

Essential Drugs Policy

The fact that animal tests are an unsafe guide to drug safety ought to be a strong incentive to restrict new medicines to those for which there is a clinical need, so that hazards can be minimized. Yet an analysis of new medicines introduced onto the world market over a recent ten year period reveals that over 70% offered no therapeutic improvement over existing products.

Medicines which offer little or no improvement are referred to as “me too” drugs and are usually developed because they are a good financial investment. They are considered to have no major advantages over existing products. They also keep drug prices high and confuse doctors faced with a choice of many drugs all doing the same thing. Britains’s prestigious Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin states that “the existence of many apparently similar preparations seldom increases therapeutic options but greatly increases the risk of unwanted effects”. The Bulletin concludes that the use of a smaller number of medicines should increase knowledge of their reals benefits and hazards so leading to safer prescribing.

The adoption of a national medicines policy based on the World Health Organization’s concept of essential drugs could bring a dramatic reduction in drug-increased disease whilst the financial savings could be used more productively to increase the proportion spent on disease prevention. The WHO has issued a list of around 250 basic drugs to treat the majority of the world’s diseases.

Medical Research

Critics of animal experiments argue that vivisection is bad science because it tells us about animals when we need to know about people. This is because human disease can take an entirely different form in animals due to physiological and biochemical differences between the species. For instance, although rats and mice constitute 98% of the animals used for cancer research, it is acknowledged that they have a poor track record in predicting clinically useful treatments. One survey found that for every 30-40 drugs effective in treating mouse cancers, only one will work in people. Another example is the failure to induce AIDS in laboratory animals by inoculating them with HIV.

In view of the differences between species, it would indeed be surprising if animal research had contributed greatly to our health. In fact most major advances derive from human studies, methods that are directly relevant to people. These include epidemiology, where clues about disease and its prevention come from comparing the health of different groups or communities; clinical observation of patients who are ill or who have died, an approach vital to the discovery of new treatments; and studies with healthy volunteers which are essential for understanding how the body works.

Much research can be carried out in the test tube and almost any useful drug effect can be identified in this way using cells, tissues and enzymes from the body. Whilst these often originate from animals killed for the purpose, human material could be used to advantage. Tissues can be obtained from volunteers, biopsies, surgical waste and post-mortems. An example is the development of anti-cancer drugs using tumor tissue from patients. Computer simulation of biological systems can also aid drug discovery: based on the idea that medicines must be the correct shape to trigger their effects on the tissues, scientists are employing computer graphics to design new treatments.

Medical Education

The basic rationale behind animal experiments is that lives can only be saved by sacrificing others. The use of animals in medical training inevitably reinforces this primitive view with the danger that doctors may become desensitized to suffering in their human patients. It is reported that Canadian neurologists who chose to spend a year of their training experimenting on animals, had so hardened themselves to animal suffering that they were incapable of recognizing suffering in their patients for quite a while after returning to clinical work.

The use of animals is not only undesirable but unnecessary, and in the United States, animal laboratories are no longer required by any civilian medical school for teaching purposes. In some of these medical schools the use of animals is optional; in others the procedures have been discarded altogether: Surgeons traditionally learn their basic skills by work with human bodies in the mortuary, then by observing senior surgeons at work, and finally by operating under the close supervision of experienced colleagues.

In the case of microsurgery, pioneering work at Britain’s Frenchay Hospital in Bristol has led to the development of the normally discarded human placenta as an alternative to animals. The placenta contains tiny vessels which can be sewn together as a means of practice.

Animals are sometimes used to illustrate the effects of drugs but there are many sophisticated video recordings and computer simulations which can be used instead. Such alternatives can give a higher standard of learning performance than work with animal tissues. Ultimately whatever “alternatives” are available, medical students will acquire far more relevant information by the careful observation of human patients, as Hippocrates taught.

Safety of Medicines

Comparisons between human and animal test data show that most drug side-effects occurring in people cannot be predicted by animal experiments. Reliance on animal tests as a guide to safety can therefore be dangerously misleading. For instance, Opren and Eraldin are examples of animal-tested drugs withdrawn from the British market after serious, and in some cases fatal, side-effects in patients. The Lancet medical journal acknowledges that “animal tests are very imperfect indicators of human toxicity,” and goes on to say that “only clinical experience and careful control of the introduction of new drugs can tell us about their real dangers.

Whilst clinical trials are the most valid test of a new medicine, some preliminary testing using humane alternatives is essential to identify the most toxic substances. In fact hundreds of test tube methods have been developed for the purpose. These include bacteria to test mutagens and carcinogens, yeast to measure photo toxicity, and human tissues to predict skin and eye irritancy. Indeed, tests with human tissue promise better protection since results are directly relevant to people. For instance, chloramphenicol, phenylbuta-zone, mianserin and thalidomide are examples of medicines whose harmful effects can be identified by human tissue tests but were missed by the original animal experiments. As researchers at Britain’s Lister Hospital point out, these tests give a degree of reassurance not provided by experiments on animals.

Human tissue tests can be supplemented by advanced theoretical techniques which use computer programme to predict a new drug’s toxicity on the basis of its chemical structure. This approach compares the molecular shape of the test substance with that of drugs and chemicals whose toxic effects are already known.

Vaccine Production

Vaccines against diseases caused by viruses have traditionally been made from animals. This has often proved a dangerous approach as contaminants from animal tissues have produced fatal results in people. For instance, in 1967 a previously unknown virus — the Marburg agent — killed 7 people handling monkeys or their tissues for vaccine production. In 1972 Stanford University vaccine researcher Leonard Hayflick pointed out that hundreds of thousands of people had been inoculated with SV40 virus found in polio vaccine made form monkey kidney cells. It is thought the SV40 virus can cause cancer. The preparation of vaccines using cells from dogs, chicks and ducks is also thought to be hazardous as cancer-causing viruses have been found in each case.

The cancer-causing viruses such as SV40 which contaminate tissues from primates, only become dangerous when they cross the species barrier, so the use of human cells to make human viral vaccines must be the safest approach. Today vaccines for many viral diseases including polio, rubella, measles, smallpox, rabies and diseases caused by arboviruses such as yellow fever, can all be produced more safely from test tube cultures of human cells. In Britain, Sabin’s polio vaccine is made from human cells, yet despite the dangers, most of the polio vaccine used throughout the world is still derived from African green monkeys and in some countries from rhesus monkeys. And although Salk’s polio vaccine is traditionally made from monkey kidney tissue, research by the National Bacteriological Laboratory in Stockholm shows that this too can be produced from human cells.

Incentives for Reform

Those who defend vivisection claim that without animal experiments, research would grind to a halt. Yet experience shows this is not the case because scientists quickly devise new techniques to achieve their objectives. For instance, Britain’s former prohibition on the use of animals to practice microsurgery led to the development of human placental tissue as a viable substitute.

Developing humane technologies depends very much on attitudes prevalent within the scientific community, and some tests continue long after they are considered essential because scientists do not feel strongly about the unnecessary loss of life. Although public pressure has been partially successful in persuading companies to adopt alternative strategies, there is much that governments can do to stimulate positive attitudes. Even if unwilling to immediately prohibit animal experiments, they can set target dates after which specific tests would no longer be permitted; they can mandate a continuing and substantial annual decline in the use of animals; and they can insist that drug companies improve safety profiles by always subjecting new products to human tissue tests. At the same time government funding agencies can provide incentives by giving priority to grant applications featuring methods of direct relevance to people, such as clinical, epidemiological and human tissue studies. And by establishing national, co-ordinated networks of tissue banks, they can overcome the shortage of human material for research and testing.

But the alternative to many experiments is simply not to embark on the research in the first place. The development of genetically engineered (transgenic) animals, for instance to improve farm animal productivity, is unwarranted because health studies stress we should be reducing our intake of animal products. And the use of pig or monkey organs for human transplant operations should be halted to avoid the possibility of animal viruses producing deadly new plagues.

It is clearly in the interests of humans and animals that vivisection is stopped so the energy and skill of scientific investigation is directed into better and safer channels. Only then can we expect medical science to achieve its full potential.

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Sharing Vegetarianism With Family and Friends
Carol M. Coughlin, R.D. — Vegetarian Journal — May/June 1997

We are vegetarians. It is not just our diet, but a way of life for us. How can we share our enthusiasm without turning people off? Let everyone know you are a vegetarian. Be specific. Simply state: “We do not eat meat, fish, chicken, milk, eggs, gelatin, gravy, broth.” Then tell them what you do eat. This eliminates embarrassing situations.

Have you ever been invited to dinner only to be served fish? Has someone brought a dish of Rice Krispie treats as a snack for your child’s playgroup and then not understood why you will not eat any? Most people do not realize that gelatin, chicken broth, and other foods are animal derived.

Focus on what you have in common. Everyone should strive to eat a plant-based diet. Look at the food pyramid. The base of it is grains. The next largest portion is vegetables and fruits. Animal products are supposed to play a minimal role. This is the best place to start. I always do a fruit and vegetable themed talk for pre-school and lower elementary kids. If someone says their child likes macaroni and cheese or pizza, share that you eat those foods too only slightly different. Then invite them over to try some cheeseless pizza or nutritional yeast macaroni and “cheese.”

Whenever the neighborhood children come over, feed them vegetarian foods such as soyamilk, tofu hot dogs, veggie burgers, and pasta with veggie sauce, etc. You may find that other parents will purchase these items because their kids started asking for them.

Talk About What You Eat

When you bring a lunch to work, offer to share some. Or put a dish of vegan cookies next to the coffee pot with a stack of recipe cards. If parents enjoy vegetarian dishes, they’re more likely to serve them to their own children.

Consider giving gift subscriptions of vegetarian publications to your school’s or town’s library. Donating vegetarian books helps too. Most libraries have limited budgets. Imagine if every vegetarian family donated one book or journal to their library!

Keep in mind that if someone is on the defensive, his or her mind is closed and he/she will not hear you or learn a thing. Look for the teachable moment. The day after a news story on an E coli outbreak from eating burgers might be a good day for a veggie burger BBQ. But it might not be a good day to approach the subject if a family member was affected by the outbreak. The middle of Thanksgiving dinner is probably not the best time to discuss turkey production, unless you are specifically asked why you do not eat turkey. Use your best judgement.

Some people become vegetarian all at once. Others move toward the goal one recipe at a time. And we have to admit that some will never change their way of eating. I lived in a cooperative housing situation at college with a guy whose philosophy was “If it is warm and not moving, I will eat it.” Move on. Use your positive energy where it will do some good.

Be active. Take the scout troop to a health food store, tofu factory, or other veggie food maker for a field trip. Do cooking classes at your child’s school.

If you read a review of a restaurant that has some veggie dishes on the menu, write a letter to the editor stating that the review was right on target because the vegetarian chili there is first rate!

Becky Turner edits her family cookbook. She includes vegan versions of some of the meat dishes. It can be as easy as changing a written recipe to “1 cup soy or skim milk.” Many people always use the first choice, or would not have thought to try a non-dairy alternative.

Nothing succeeds like success. People will see that you thrive on a vegetarian diet and that you do not have to scrub your kitchen with antibacterial soap to kill the bacteria in the “juice” from the meat thawing on the counter. They will see that you do not have to wash out greasy pans. They may just notice that you are not on a first name basis with the pharmacist. Your healthy and happy family is a living testament to the vegetarian way of living. You share the vegetarian lifestyle just by being an example.

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The Vegetarian Athletes
Adapted from “Diet for a New America” by John Robbins

Numerous studies, published in the most reputable scientific and medical journals, have compared the strength and stamina of people eating different diet-styles. According to these studies, all of them rigorous, the common prejudice that meat gives strength and endurance, though plastered on thousands of billboards, and drummed into us since childhood, has absolutely no foundation in fact.

THE LAB RESULTS SPEAK

At Yale, Professor Irving Fisher designed a series of tests to compare the stamina and strength of meat-eaters against that of vegetarians. He selected men from three groups: meat-eating athletes, vegetarian athletes, and vegetarian sedentary subjects. Fisher reported the results of his study in the Yale Medical Journal. His findings do not seem to lend a great deal of credibility to the popular prejudices that hold meat to be a builder of strength.

“Of the three groups compared, the . . . flesh-eaters showed far less endurance than the abstainers (vegetarians), even when the latter were leading a sedentary life.”

Overall, the average score of the vegetarians was over double the average score of meat-eaters, even though half of the vegetarians were sedentary people, while all of the meat-eaters tested were athletes. After analyzing all the factors that might have been involved in the results, Fisher concluded that:

“. . . the difference in endurance between the flesh-eaters and the abstainers (was due) entirely to the difference in their diet . . . There is strong evidence that a . . . non-flesh . . . diet is conducive to endurance.”

A comparable study was done by Dr. J. Ioteyko of the Academie de Medicine of Paris. Dr. Ioteyko compared the endurance of vegetarians and meat-eaters from all walks of life in a variety of tests. The vegetarians averaged two to three times more stamina than the meat-eaters. Even more remarkably, they took only one-fifth the time to recover from exhaustion compared to their meat-eating rivals.

In 1968, a Danish team of researchers tested a group of men on a variety of diets, using a stationary bicycle to measure their strength and endurance. The men were fed a mixed diet of meat and vegetables for a period of time, and then tested on the bicycle. The average time they could pedal before muscle failure was 114 minutes. These same men at a later date were fed a diet high in meat, milk and eggs for a similar period and then re-tested on the bicycles. On the high meat diet, their pedaling time before muscle failure dropped dramatically — to an average of only 57 minutes. Later, these same men were switched to a strictly vegetarian diet, composed of grains, vegetables and fruits, and then tested on the bicycles. The lack of animal products didn’t seem to hurt their performance — they peddled an average of 167 minutes.

Wherever and whenever tests of this nature have been done, the results have been similar. This does not lend a lot of support to the supposed association of meat with strength and stamina.

Doctors in Belgium systematically compared the number of times vegetarians and meat-eaters could squeeze a grip-meter. The vegetarians won handily with an average of 69, whist the meat-eaters averaged only 38. As in all other studies which have measured muscle recovery time, here, too, the vegetarians bounced back from fatigue far more rapidly than did the meat-eaters.

I know of many other studies in the medical literature which report similar findings. But I know of not a single one that has arrived at different results. As a result, I confess, it has gotten rather difficult for me to listen seriously to the meat industry proudly proclaiming “meat gives strength” in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

WORLD RECORDS

On the athletic field, as in the laboratory, the endurance and accomplishments of vegetarians makes me question whether we need animal products for fitness. The achievements of vegetarian athletes are particularly noteworthy considering the relatively small percentage of vegetarian entrants. Athletes after all, are not immune from the cultural conditioning that meat alone gives the required strength and stamina. Yet some have adopted vegetarian diets and the results invite scrutiny.

Dave Scott, of Davis, California is a scholar-athlete who is well acquainted with the scientific literature on diet and health. He is also universally recognized as the greatest triathlete in the world. He has won Hawaii’s legendary Ironman Triathlon a record four times, including three years in a row, while no one else has ever won it more than once. In three consecutive years, Dave has broken his own world’s record for the event, which consists, in succession, of a 2.4 mile ocean swim, a 112 mile cycle, and then a 26.2 mile run. Dave’s college major was exercise physiology, and he says he keeps up on the latest developments in the field by reading “an incredible amount” of books and journals. He calls the idea that people, and especially athletes, need animal protein a “ridiculous fallacy.” There are many people who consider Dave Scott the fittest man who ever lived. Dave Scott is a vegetarian.

I don’t know how you might determine the world’s fittest man. But if it isn’t Dave Scott it might well be Sixto Linares. This remarkable fellow tells of the time:

“. . . when I became a vegetarian in high school, my parents were very very upset that I wouldn’t eat meat . . . After fourteen years, they are finally accepting that it’s good for me. They know it’s not going to kill me.”

During the fourteen years that Sixto’s parents begrudgingly came to accept that his diet wasn’t killing him, they watched their son set the world’s record for the longest single day triathlon, and display his astounding endurance, speed and strength in benefits for the American Heart Association, United Way, the Special Children’s Charity, the Leukemia Society of America, and the Muscular Dystrophy Association. So deeply ingrained, however, is the prejudice against vegetarianism that even as their son was showing himself possibly to be the fittest human being alive, his parents only reluctantly came to accept his diet. Sixto says he experimented for awhile with a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet (no meat, but some dairy products and eggs), but now eats no eggs or dairy products and feels better for it.

It doesn’t seem to be weakening him too much. In June, 1985, at a benefit for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, Sixto broke the world record for the one day triathlon by swimming 4.8 miles, cycling 185 miles, and then running 52.4 miles.

Robert Sweetgall, of Newark, Delaware, is another fellow who doesn’t just sit around all day. He is world’s premier ultra-distance walker. In the last three years, Robert has walked a distance greater than the 24,900 mile equatorial circumference of the earth. He says he is a:

“. . . vegetarian for moral reasons; there’s enough food on earth for us not to have to kill animals to eat.”

Though not chosen for its health value alone, Sweetgall’s vegetarian diet doesn’t seem to put him at too much of a disadvantage. After walking a 10,600 mile perimeter around the United States, he set out on a loop that would take him, via about 20 million footsteps, through parts of all 50 states within a year.

Then there is Edwin Moses. No man in sports history has ever dominated an event as Edwin Moses has dominated the 400 meter hurdles. The Olympic Gold Medalist went eight years without losing a race, and when Sports Illustrated gave him their 1984 “Sportsman of the Year” award, the magazine said:

“No athlete in any sport is so respected by his peers as Moses is in track and field.”

Edwin Moses is a vegetarian.

Paavo Nurmi, the “Flying Finn,” set twenty world records in distance running, and won nine Olympic medals. He was a vegetarian.

Bill Pickering of Great Britain set the world record for swimming the English channel, but that performance of his pales beside the fact that at the age of 48 he set a new world record for swimming the Bristol Channel. Bill Pickering is a vegetarian.

Murray Rose was only 17 when he won three gold medals in the 1956 Olympic games in Melbourne, Australia. Four years later, at the 1960 Olympiad, he became the first man in history to retain his 400 meter freestyle title, and later he broke both his 400 meter and 1500 meter freestyle world records. Considered by many to be the greatest swimmer of all time, Rose has been a vegetarian since he was two.

You might not expect to find a vegetarian in world championship body-building competitions. But Andreas Cahling, the Swedish body builder who won the 1980 Mr. International title, is a vegetarian, and has been for over ten years of highest level international competition. One magazine reported that Cahling’s:

“…showings at the ‘Mr. Universe’ competitions, and at the professional body-building world championships, give insiders the feeling he may be the next Arnold Schwarzenegger.”

Another fellow who is not exactly a weakling is Stan Price. He holds the world record for the bench press in his weight class. Stan Price is a vegetarian. Roy Hilligan is another gentlemen in whose face you probably wouldn’t want to kick sand. Among his many titles is the coveted “Mr. America” crown. Roy Hilligan is a vegetarian.

Pierreo Verot holds the world’s record for downhill endurance skiing. He is a vegetarian.

Estelle Gray and Cheryl Marek hold the world’s record for cross-country tandem cycling. They are complete vegetarians, not even consuming eggs or dairy products.

The world’s record for distance butterfly stroke swimming is held jointly by James and Jonathan deDonato. They are both vegetarians.

If you wanted to be an evangelist for the “meat gives strength” cult, and were looking for a 97-pound vegetarian weakling to pick on, you’d probably be better off staying away from Ridgely Abele. He recently won the United States Karate Association World Championship, taking both the Master Division Title for fifth degree black belt, and the overall Grand Championship. Abele, who has won eight national championships, is a complete vegetarian, who eats no meat, eggs, or dairy products.

The list goes on and on. Toronto, Canada, is the home of a national fitness institute that tests all the top athletes in that country. For a number of years tennis pro Peter Burwash consistently ranked between 50th and 60th. Then as an experiment, he switched to a vegetarian diet, though he thought at the time that vegetarians were emaciated, unhealthy creatures. Now, however, he knows better. One year after making the switch, Peter Burwash was tested at the institute and found to have the highest fitness index of any athlete in any sport in the entire country of Canada.

Another man you might have a hard time convincing that a meat diet-style yields superior physical performance is Marine Captain Alan Jones of Quantico, Virginia. I would never have believed that one could be a vegetarian Marine, but Jones is managing to do it, and his health doesn’t seem to be suffering too much for his efforts.

Although crippled by polio when he was five years old, Jones is another candidate for world’s fittest man and has amassed a record of physical accomplishments unmatched by any human being that ever lived. Not only does he hold the world record for continuous situps (17,003), but in one particular 15-month period he accomplished possibly the most remarkably array of physical achievements ever attained by a human being:

September, 1974 — Lifted a 75-pound barbell over his head 1,600 times in 19 hours

February, 1975 — Made 3,802 basketball free throws in 12 hours, including 96 out of 100

June, 1975 — Swam 500 miles in 11 days through the Snake and Columbia Rivers, from Lewiston, Idaho to the Pacific Ocean

September, 1975 — Skipped rope 43,000 times in five hours

October, 1975 — Skipped rope 100,00 times in 23 hours

November, 1975 — Swam over 68 miles in the University of Oregon swimming pool, without a sleeping break

December, 1975 — Swam one-half mile in 32F (0C) water, without a wet suit, in the Missouri River near Sioux City, Iowa

January, 1976 — Performed 51,000 situps in 76 hours

Meanwhile, across the Pacific Ocean, the Japanese are every bit as serious and fanatic about baseball as are Americans. So, in October 1981, when Tatsuro Hirooka took over as manager of a professional team who had finished in last place the previous season, he knew some changes had to be made. But the changes he made were not the ones most of us would expect. He told the players on the Siebu Lions that meat and other animal foods increase athletes’ susceptibility to injury, and decrease their ability to perform. Therefore, said the new manager, like it or not, they were all going on a vegetarian diet.

The Lions took quite a ribbing during the 1982 season. One rival manager sneered they were “only eating weeds,” and made some rather derogatory remarks about their masculinity. But the sneerer had to eat his words when the Lions beat his team for the Pacific League Championship, and then went on to defeat the Chunichi Dragons in the equivalent of our World Series. Lest anyone think this was a fluke, the vegetarian Lions came back the next year, and once again trounced the opposition, winning again both the League and National Championship.

Please note that I have not provided this listing of athletic accomplishments of some vegetarians because I think this in itself proves the vegetarian diet superior. It doesn’t. It proves only that for these given individuals, with their specific biochemical individualities, a vegetarian diet worked superbly at a particular time.

But when we couple the experiences of Dave Scott, Edwin Moses, Murray Rose, Alan Jones and all the rest, with the data from systematic laboratory research published in reputable scientific journals, then, perhaps, we might have serious grounds to doubt the widely held prejudice that assumes greater weakness as an inevitable consequence of a vegetarian diet.

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What’s the Beef & Who Pays?
How livestock are Threatening our Planet
EarthSave International 1-800-362-3648
444 NE Ravenna Blvd, # 205; Seattle, WA 98115

[email protected] http://www.earthsave.org

EarthSave International educates, inspires and empowers people to shift toward a diet centered on fruits, vegetables, grains and legumes — food choices that are healthy for people and the planet.

Despite growing alarm over the enormous and grave problems we face on the global level, scant attention has been paid to one of the prime causes of these problems: the fundamental shift in world agriculture during this century from food grains to feed grains. This shift is caused by the change in Western eating habits to ever-increasing animal product consumption — a shift enabled by the industrialization and mechanization of farming practices.

Few people understand the extensive and devastating ramifications of this dietary shift. In fact, many of the world’s problems are directly related to the heavy toll of modern animal agriculture on the planet.

The data here are a sampling of the growing body of literature based on current research which documents the pivotal role that livestock production plays in a number of global crises.

Not included here is further data about livestock’s detrimental effects such as: the economic suffering of small farmers whose livelihoods have been replaced by multinational corporations, the unsanitary and unsafe working conditions of most slaughterhouses, the diseased meats processed by these houses, the inhumane treatment of all the animals, the mechanisms of disease caused by over-consumption of animal products, the shaping of our history by our appetite for animal foods, and other social and economic imbalances.

Our relationship to livestock goes back thousands of years: For example, the root meaning of the Sanskrit and Vedic words for war is “desire for more cows.”

Land Usage & Grain Consumption

5.4 billion humans inhabit the Earth along with 1.28 billion cows, whose number has been doubled in the past 40 years. Cattle now outweigh humans by 2 to 1 in terms of total biomass.

There are a total of 4 billion cattle, pigs, sheep, goats, horses, buffaloes and camels and 11 billion fowl. The fowl population has grown from 3 billion to nearly 11 billion since mid-century.

All these animals graze on one-half of the total land mass.

Grain consumption by livestock is growing twice as fast as grain consumption by people.

Cattle and other livestock consume over 70% of all the grain produced in the United States.

About 1/3 of the world’s total grain harvest is fed to livestock while 1.3 billion people suffer from chronic hunger and malnutrition, and 40-60 million people die each year from hunger and related diseases.

66% of US grain exports goes to feed livestock rather than hungry people.

Millions of acres of land in poor, non-industrialized countries are being used solely for grain production for European livestock consumption.

In 1984 when thousands of people there were dying daily from famine, Ethiopia continued growing and shipping millions of dollars’ worth of livestock feed to the United Kingdom and other European nations.

To feed the world’s current population an American-style diet would require 2 ½ times as much grain as the world’s farmers produce for all purposes.

It seems disingenuous for the intellectual elite of the first world to dwell on the subject of too many babies being born in the second and third world nations while virtually ignoring the overpopulation of cattle and the realities of a food chain that robs the poor of sustenance to feed the rich a steady diet of grain-fed meat.

Health

Disease and Death from Malnutrition or Over-consumption

While millions of human beings go hungry, millions more in the industrialized countries suffer and die from diseases caused by consuming an excess of animal foods which have a high content of protein, fat and cholesterol and absence of fiber.

Despite tremendous advances in medicine and hygiene, Western nations, which consume most of the world’s livestock and dairy products (the average American consumes the meat of seven 1100 pound steers in his or her life), have ever-escalating medical costs and much higher incidences of the following diseases than predominantly vegetarian nations:

Arthritis Gallstones Obesity

Asthma Heart Disease Osteoporosis

Breast Cancer Hemorrhoids Peptic Ulcers

Colon Cancer Hypertension Prostate Cancer

Constipation Hypoglycemia Salmonellosis

Diabetes Impotence Strokes

Diverticulosis Kidney Disease Trichinosis

Our present lethargy of acceptance of atherosclerosis and other chronic diseases as inevitable is no longer tolerable in light of current knowledge, which can prevent this and many other diseases of affluence. The present band-aid approach of no red meat and taking the skin off chicken, is a meaningless insult to scholars of nutritive science.

Protein Requirements

Our need for protein is greatest during infancy when our body weight doubles in 8 months. Nature’s optimum food for infants is mother’s breast milk which contains 5% of its calories as protein. Adults, who are no longer increasing their body mass like an infant, need less than 5% of their calories as protein.

No adult mammal in the wild eats food that contains more protein than its mother’s milk. The average Westerner who consumes meat, fish and dairy products gets 3 to 5 times the amount of protein that adult humans need. The human body compensates for this excess, causing physical imbalances which contribute to many of the diseases listed above.

Health Costs

The US national health bill consumes 12% of its Gross National Product and threatens the foundation of medical care as we know it today.

While the US debates about the billions of dollars needed for national health insurance, it ignores the Surgeon General’s report that 68% of all deaths are diet related and does little to recommend and support healthy food choices.

If people are falling over the edge of a cliff and sustaining injuries, the problem could be dealt with by stationing ambulances at the bottom, or erecting a fence at the top. Unfortunately, we put far too much effort into the provisioning of ambulances and far too little into the simple approach of erecting fences.

Rainforests

Since 1960 more than 25% of Central American rainforests have been cleared to create pastureland for cattle.

By the late 1970s, two thirds of all the agricultural land in Central America was utilized for livestocks, which was destined for export to North America.

Cattle ranching has destroyed more rainforest in Central America than any other activity.

For every quarter-pound hamburger that comes from a steer raised in Central or South America, approximately 165 pounds of living matter have been destroyed, including some of 20-30 different plant species, perhaps 100 insect species, and dozens of bird, mammal, and reptile species.

While peasant agriculture can often sustain a hundred people per square mile, the average rainforest cattle ranch “employs one person per 2,000 head of cattle and this…amounts at best to one person per twelve square miles.” It has been the decision to use the land to create an artificial food chain, the most inequitable in history, that has resulted in misery for hundreds of millions of human beings around the world.

Topsoil Loss

85% of US topsoil lost from cropland, pasture, rangeland and forest land is directly associated with raising live-stock.

Each pound of feedlot steak costs about 35 pounds of eroded topsoil.

An inch of topsoil takes between 200 and 1,000 years to form under natural conditions.

The direct and indirect costs of soil erosion and runoff in the US exceeds $44 billion a year.

Topsoil depletion has been the cause for the demise of many great civilizations.

Desertification

The United Nations Environmental Program defines desertification as impoverishment of arid, semiarid and subarid ecosystems by the impact of man’s activities. This process leads to reduced productivity of desirable plants, alterations in the biomass and in the diversity of life forms, accelerated soil degradation, and increased hazards for human occupancy.

Cattle production is the primary factor in all five causes of desertification: over-grazing of livestock; over-cultivation of the land; improper irrigation techniques; deforestation; and prevention of reforestation.

Each year nearly 1.5 million acres of land around the world are virtually lost to desertification. 52 million more acres become so eroded that they can no longer be grazed or cultivated.

Desertification of the world’s rangeland, forests, and fields has spawned the greatest mass migration in world history. By the turn of the century, over half of humanity will live in urban areas.

Dwindling Fresh Water Supplies

50% of all the water consumed in the US is used to grow feed and provide drinking water for cattle and other livestock.

Producing a pound of beef protein often requires up to 15 times more water than producing an equivalent amount of plant protein.

Water tables in the Midwest and Great Plains states are fast being depleted, and shortages are requiring industrial, commercial and residential sectors to fundamentally alter water-use patterns.

Reports by the General Accounting Office, the Rand Corporation, and the Water Resources Council have made it clear that current water use practices threaten to undermine the economies of 17 Western States. These states receive limited precipitation, yet their water supplies could support an economy and population twice their current size. But most of the water goes directly or indirectly to produce livestock.

Pollution

Cattle and other livestock account for twice the amount of pollutants as come from all US industrial sources.

The organic waste generated by a typical 10,000-head feedlot is equivalent to the human waste generated in a city of 110,000 people.

The nitrogen from cattle wastes is converted into ammonia and nitrates and leaches into ground and surface water, where it pollutes wells, rivers, and streams, contaminating drinking water and killing aquatic life. Nitrates can cause irreversible nervous system impairments, cancer, and “blue baby” syndrome.

Manure nitrogen also escapes into the air as gaseous ammonia, a pollutant that causes acid rain and other forms of acid deposition. The ammonia that the livestock industry discharges into the air is the single largest source of acid deposited on Dutch soils — doing more damage than the country’s cars or factories.

Energy

Oil is used in the livestock industries for fuel for transport and tractors, chemical fertilizers, and pesticides; so much, in fact, that animal products could be considered petroleum byproducts.

To produce a pound of grain-fed beef in the US takes the equivalent of one gallon of gasoline.

To produce one calorie of protein from beef takes 78 calories of fossil fuel. To produce one calorie of protein from soybeans takes two calories of fossil fuel.

Global Warming

The grain-fed cattle complex is now a significant factor in the emission of three of the four global warming gases — carbon dioxide, nitrous oxides and methane.

Carbon Dioxide: Much of the biomass burned in the world today is to support the worldwide cattle-ranching industry. Millions of acres of tropical forests are burned each year, releasing millions of tons of carbon into the atmosphere. Every fast food hamburger made of rainforest beef adds 500 pounds of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere from the burning of forests.

The yearly beef requirements of an average family of four meat-eaters requires the expenditure of more than 260 gallons of fossil fuel. When that fuel is burned it releases more than 2.5 tons of additional carbon dioxide into the atmosphere — as much CO2 as the average car emits in 6 months.

Nitrous Oxides: In the past 40 years, the use of chemical fertilizers has increased dramatically: 14 million tons in 1950; 143 million tons in 1989.

Nitrous oxide released from fertilizer and other sources now accounts for 6% of the global warming effect.

US corn fields — 80% producing live-stock feed — consume about 40% of the country’s nitrogen fertilizer.

Methane: The world’s 1.28 billion cattle emit approximately 100 million tons, or 20% of all the methane released into the atmosphere — about 3% of global warming from all gases.

Pesticides

The proportion of crops lost to pests has increased nearly 20% since chemical pesticides came on the scene after World War II.

61% of all herbicides used in the United States are sprayed on corn and soybeans, which are used primarily as feed for cattle and other livestock.

Meat is the major source of pesticide residues in the Western diet. Of the 10 foods most likely to cause cancer from herbicide residues, beef is number one.

The direct and indirect cost of pesticide use is from $2 to $4 billion per year.

Government Subsides of Livestock

Subsidies and special arrangements for livestock production prevail in many countries, often expanding the efforts to increase profits and consequently worsening the inevitable environmental impact. Subsidies take the form of guaranteed minimum prices, government storage of surpluses, feed and irrigation subsidies, import levies, and product insurance.

In 1990 government programs in the European nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development provided subsidies to animal farmers and feed grower worth $120 billion.

The World Bank lends livestock projects $100 million annually.

The US government subsidizes irrigation water to animal feed growers for $500 million to $1 billion annually. Often the market value of the feed is less than the cost incurred by federal government in providing the water to grow it.

Agriculture programs in Western nations tend to support animal and feed farms more than fruit and vegetable growers — despite the health guidelines of Western governments advising citizens to eat fewer animal products and more fruits and vegetables.

Are We Willing to make Changes?

Physicians at the First National Conference on the Elimination of Coronary Artery Disease in 1991 agreed resoundingly with nutritionist Colin Campbell, Ph.D., when he said, “Why must we be reticent about recommending a diet which we know is safe and healthy? We, as scientists, can no longer take the attitude that the public cannot benefit from information they are not ready for. I personally have great faith in the public. We must tell them that a diet of stems, seeds, flowers, fruit and leaves is the healthiest diet and the only diet we can promote, endorse and recommend!”

People everywhere can help restore animal agriculture to sustainability by changing their diets. Personal habits, just as national policies, can shift dramatically when enough people say “enough.”

Please join with other caring and committed people by making a shift in your diet now and sharing this information with others — family, friends, associates, local newspapers and radio stations and your government officials.

— “Beyond Beef, the Rise and Fall of the Cattle Culture”, “Taking Stock: Animal Farming and the Environment”, and “Diet for a New America”

“FOODS THAT FIGHT PAIN”, PCRM and Dr. Neal Barnard

An Introduction by Audrey Nickel
From The Grapevine, Summer 1998 (Triangle Vegetarian Society, Chapel Hill, NC — www.ivu.org/tvs )

“You are what you eat.” That’s what my mother always told me. I doubt even she realized just how true that statement is. Every day, it seems, we hear another report on how our food choices affect our overall health, our susceptibility to certain diseases, our longevity. Every day we come closer to the conclusion that the secret to a healthy life lies not in some far away laboratory, but right at the ends of our forks.

Renowned health activist and physician Dr. Neal Barnard has taken this conclusion one step further in his new book Foods that Fight Pain: Revolutionary New Strategies for Maximum Pain Relief (1998, Harmony Books, a division of Crown Publishers, $25). Most of you have probably heard of Dr. Barnard in his role as President and Founder of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) and editor-in-chief of its excellent periodical, Good Medicine. He is an active clinical researcher and author of numerous scientific publications. You may even have read some of his other books, such as Eat Right, Live Longer and Food For Life.

In his new book, Dr. Barnard explores how food choices can be used to fight or even prevent pain — from backaches and migraines to post-surgical pain and even cancer pain. For example, did you know that:

  • vitamin B6 can be used to treat carpal tunnel syndrome?

  • lysine can be used to prevent and treat herpes and canker sores?

  • coffee can sometimes cure migraines?

  • rice can calm your digestion?

  • sugar can make you more sensitive to pain?

The book includes a selection of vegan menus and recipes by Jennifer Raymond, designed by her to fit in with Dr. Barnard’s pain-fighting plan. The recipes sound delicious and easy to prepare, and most can be made with ingredients found in any well-stocked supermarket.

PCRM, founded in 1985, is a nationwide non-profit organization of over 5,000 physicians and 100,000 laypersons that promotes preventative medicine and addresses controversies in modern medicine. PCRM is involved in advocacy and education about the relationship between diet and health, and conducts research, including a recent breakthrough study showing a new approach to diabetes that can actually get many patients off their medication. PCRM is currently planning research on using diet to help improve survival rates in cancer patients.

As President of PCRM, Dr. Barnard has been instrumental in reforming federal dietary guidelines. In his published research, he has shown how poor diet is responsible for up to $60 billion every year in health care costs. His interest in healthy eating evolved over many years. His family background includes both doctors and cattle ranchers — two groups that are increasingly at odds over health issues. Before going to medical school, he worked as an autopsy assistant, observing first-hand the deadly effects of poor diet, including heart disease and colon cancer.

For more information about Dr. Barnard and PCRM, you can reach PCRM at 5100 Wisconsin Ave., Suit 404, Washington, D.C. 20016, (202) 686-2210, or on the web at www.pcrm.org. PCRM is a great group to join, and membership gives you a copy of their quarterly Good Medicine magazine.

Web Sites of Interest

If you are interested in the relationship between diet and health, in addition to the PCRM site, you might enjoy some of the following web sites:

Dr. Charles Attwood (well-known vegan pediatrician): www.vegsource.org/attwood
Dr. Michael Klaper (author of Pregnancy, Children and the Vegan Diet): www.vegsource.org/klaper
Dr. John McDougall (Founder of The McDougall Plan for Healthy Living): www.drmcdougall.com
Dr. Ruth Heidrich (author of A Race For Life): www.vegsource.org/heidrich

Book Review — by Dilip Barman, President, Triangle Vegetarian Society ([email protected]) Top

“FOODS THAT FIGHT PAIN”:
 
Revolutionary New Strategies for Maximum Pain Relief
by Neal Barnard, M.D., 1998, Harmony Books, ISBN 0-609-60098-2.

As mentioned above, Foods That Fight Pain provides sometimes surprising connections between pain and particular foods. The book is “based on the premise that foods have medicinal value” [p.xi]. It suggests, for example, that back pain can be alleviated by a low-fat vegetarian diet with minimum salt, Vitamin B6, exercise, and simple painkillers; oat products, because of their soluble fibers, lower cholesterol; and that vitamins B6 and B12, along with folic acid can help prevent heart attacks (beans, vegetables, and fruits are rich in folic acid and vitamin B6).

Foods that Fight Pain has short chapters, each easy to read in a single sitting, that cover back and chest pains, migraines and other headaches, joint pain, digestive problems, fibromyalgia, menstrual and breast pains, cancer pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, diabetes, herpes and shingles, sickle-cell anemia, and kidney stones. Short final chapters discuss exercise, rest, and a set of foods that most often trigger problems. This set surprised me — meat, eggs, dairy products, caffeine; but also wheat, citrus, corn, nuts, and tomatoes. None of these potentially troublesome foods was part of the diet when humans first appeared millions of years ago, it is posited, and “there is little evolutionary pressure to adapt to anything unless our ability to reproduce hangs in the balance” [p.212]. However (thankfully!), if any of these foods don’t cause problems for a person, then there is no reason for that person to avoid them.

The book concludes with menus and recipes by Jennifer Raymond, all of which are low-fat, no-cholesterol, and vegan. And that is the unifying thread behind to book — eat a low-fat diet based entirely on non-animal products.

I carefully read a bit more than the first 100 pages before I got to a chapter on fibromyalgia, which had no relevance to me. I then picked the remaining chapters that might have some pertinence. That is probably the best way to read this book — read the very short introductory material then read the chapters of specific interest to potential or real health problems you may have.

I would have enjoyed a longer introductory section focusing on the benefits of a good vegan diet, and possibly discussing topics such as eating what’s in season (and the macrobiotic approach), cooking foods (in line with the anthropological discussion, fire was discovered relatively recently in human existence; should we be cooking foods?), organic produce, and cross cultural food discussion. It would have been good to have strongly made the point for low-fat vegan diets, and then suggested that another advantage is their consistent appearance in all of the chapters as the base for pain fighting. The book would also profit from longer discussions of exercise (its chapter is 2 pages long) and rest (5 pages).

Why is it that “people are fed by the food industry which pays no attention to health, and are healed by the health industry which pays no attention to food”? Maybe this book will help bridge the communities. Foods that Fight Pain is worth referencing as preventive medicine, and is definitely a good resource for people suffering from one of the many kinds of pain covered.

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Can a Vegan Diet Cure Diabetes?
By Andrew Nicholson, M. D.
— PCRM’s “Good Medicine” — Winter, 1997

Diabetes is not necessarily a one-way street. Early studies suggest that persons with diabetes can improve and, in some cases, even cure themselves of the disease by switching to an unrefined, vegan diet. Unfortunately, none of these studies included a comparison group. So the Diabetes Action and Research Education Foundation provided a grant to PCRM to perform a carefully controlled test.

Working with Georgetown University, we compared two different diets: a high-fiber, low-fat, vegan diet and the more commonly used American Diabetes Association (ADA) diet. We invited persons with non-insulin-dependent diabetes and their spouses or partners to follow one of the two diets for three months. Caterers prepared take-home lunches and dinners so participants could simply heat up the food at home.

The vegan meals were made from unrefined vegetables, grains, beans, and fruits, with no refined ingredients, such as vegetable oil, white flour, or white pasta. These meals averaged just 10 percent fat (as a percentage of calories) and 80 percent complex carbohydrate. They also offered 60-70 grams of fiber per day and had no cholesterol at all.

The comparison (ADA) diet contained somewhat more plant-based ingredients than the average American diet, but still relied on the conventional chicken and fish recipes. That diet was 30 percent fat and 50 percent carbohydrate. It provided about 30 grams of fiber and 200 milligrams of cholesterol per day.

Participants in both groups came to the University two evenings per week for group sessions covering nutrition, cooking, and support.

There were several challenges in planning the study. Would persons with diabetes — and their partners — volunteer for the study? Would they change their eating habits and maintain the study program for the full three months? Could we find caterers who would dependably prepare and deliver attractive vegan and ADA meals?

The first of these worries was quickly dispelled. On the very first day that our advertisement appeared in the newspaper, more than 100 people responded. The participants who were accepted for the study threw themselves into it with enthusiasm. One said, “I was amazed at how powerful the vegan diet was right from the beginning. The blood sugars and weight just started falling off.”

Some subjects were pleasantly surprised at how well they adapted to the experimental diet. One said, “If anyone had told me 12 weeks ago that I would be satisfied with a totally vegetarian diet, I would not have believed it.” Another participant needed more time to adjust: “In the beginning, it’s not an easy diet. But I managed to lose, at last count, 17 pounds. I am no longer on medication for diabetes, and I am no longer on medication for blood pressure. So, actually, it’s been a very, very positive result for me.”

Some found unexpected benefits: “My asthma has really improved. I’m not taking as much asthma medicine because I can breathe better. The overall mental outlook on how I feel about myself as a diabetic is much more hopeful now, as I am self-sufficient with a diet that makes sense for me.”

Both groups did an overall great job in adhering to their prescribed diets. However, the vegan group clearly had the edge in many of the results. Fasting blood sugars decreased 59 percent more in the vegan group than in the ADA group. And, while the vegans needed less medication to control their blood sugars, the ADA group needed just as much medicine as before. The vegans were taking less medicine, but were in better control.

While the ADA group lost an impressive 8 pounds, on average, the vegans lost nearly 16 pounds. Cholesterol levels also dropped more substantially in the vegan group compared to the ADA group.

Diabetes can cause serious damage to the kidneys, resulting in protein loss in the urine. Several of our subjects already had significant protein loss at the beginning of the study, and the ADA group did not improve in this respect. In fact, their protein losses actually worsened somewhat over the 12 weeks of the study. The vegan group, on the other hand, had a large reduction in protein losses.

Encouraged by the strong results of this pilot study, we are planning a much larger study for next year. We also owe a great debt to these volunteers who generously gave their time to help us learn how to improve our treatments for diabetes.

THE LATEST IN DIABETES
More Evidence Against Milk

A new research report adds more evidence linking cow’s milk to diabetes in children. A milk protein causes an immune reaction in diabetic children, according to a study in The Lancet. It is believed that this reaction can result in the destruction of the body’s insulin-producing cells.

The protein culprit, beta-casein, also exists in human milk, but in a different molecular configuration and in much lower amounts than that in cow’s milk. Breast-fed infants have a measure of protection against diabetes.

In 1993, PCRM held a press conference to alert parents to potential risks to their children from milk consumption. Benjamin Spock, M.D.; Frank Oski, M.D., of Johns Hopkins University; and others pointed to evidence that cow’s milk could increase the risk of diabetes, iron deficiency anemia, and other serious problems.

While the dairy industry dismissed these concerns, the American Academy of Pediatrics concluded that exposure to cow’s milk protein may indeed be an important factor in the development of diabetes. Based on the more than 90 studies that have addressed the issue, an Academy panel reported that avoiding cow’s milk exposure may delay or prevent the disease in susceptible individuals.

An editorial in The Lancet stated that the new findings were particularly telling because they involved T-cells, “the key players” in the cause of diabetes.

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Milk and Breast Cancer
By Neal D. Barnard, M.D.
— PCRM’s “Good Medicine” — Winter, 1997

When researchers examine the differences in breast cancer rates in various countries, a surprising factor lurks in the background. In addition to the factors already under suspicion — dietary fat, alcohol, hormone treatments, and chemical exposures — several studies have implicated milk and other dairy products as possible contributors to breast cancer risk. It is just not the grease dripping out of a cheese pizza that is under scrutiny. Even skim milk is implicated.

Jessica Outwater of Princeton University looked into why milk might cause cancer. In her research at PCRM, she found that cow’s milk is veritable cocktail of cancer-causing chemicals. Her report, published in Medical Hypotheses in December, explains these surprising, potentially lifesaving findings.

The First Clues

Milk is designed by nature to help infants grow. Human milk brings an infant to the stage where he or she can eat solid food. Cow’s milk nurtures a baby calf until he or she is big enough to graze. Just as an old-fashioned choke adjusts the gasoline mixture to help an automobile get started, mother’s milk helps a tiny body to grow rapidly. And just as a car’s choke is harmful at highway speeds, it may be that the growth factors in milk can be risky for adults, perhaps even encouraging the growth of cancer cells.

Many human population studies have shown that dairy product use correlates with breast cancer rates. One interesting example comes from Seventh-day Adventists. Nearly all Adventists avoid tobacco, alcohol, and caffeine, and are generally health conscious. But about half are vegetarians and half are not. As you would expect, the vegetarians have much lower rates of many diseases, including some forms of cancer. But breast cancer rates are about the same for the both Adventist group — vegetarians and non-vegetarians.

These vegetarians, however, are not generally vegans. While they avoid the animal fat in burgers and fried chicken, they will get much of it back in a cheese casserole. When breast cancer rates among Adventists are compared to dairy product consumption, a pattern emerges: the more dairy a woman consumes, the higher her risk.

Most other population studies show the same pattern. The higher the dairy product consumption, the higher the breast cancer risk. In some of these studies, the higher risk remains even when the effect of fat is removed, suggesting that the animal fat in milk may not be the only problem. Rather estrogens, chemical contaminants, and a growth-promoting peptide called IGF-I are the prime suspects in breast cancer investigations.

Estrogens in Milk

Farmers impregnate dairy cattle every year because a pregnant cow produces more milk. (When the calves are born, needless to say, the females join the dairy herd; males end up on the veal counter.) A pregnant cow produces extra estrogens that end up in her milk. Farmers actually look for these estrogens in milk as a sign that the impregnation was successful.

Excess estrogen is well-known for making breast cancer cells multiply, which is why doctors avoid prescribing estrogen supplements to cancer patients. Drugs that counter estrogen’s actions, such as tamoxifen, are important in breast cancer treatment.

A liter of milk contains 4 to 14 nanograms of 17-b-estradiol. Whether these hormone traces have biological effects remain unclear. In addition, the fat in milk — like fat in any food — rapidly causes excess estrogen to be produced in a woman’s body. The effect is rapid. Within a few weeks of increasing or decreasing the fat content of the diet, the estrogen level in the blood stream is readjusted higher or lower. Milk also has no fiber at all, and fiber is part of nature’s way of eliminating excess estrogens.

IGF-I

Of even greater concern is a compound called insulin-like growth factor, IGF-I. As its name indicates, IGF-I stimulates growth in a child’s body. The amount of IGF-I declines as years go by.

Unfortunately, IGF-I not only encourages growth of normal cells; it also encourages breast cancer cells to multiply. Mixed with cancer cells in the test tube, it causes them to reproduce; IGF-I is even more potent in this regard than estrogens. A little IGF-I goes a long way. Growth-promoting effects occur at concentrations of just one microgram per liter. IGF-I may also be able to cause normal cells to transform into cancer cells.

There are about 30 micrograms of IGF-I in a liter of cow’s milk, although the amount varies with the stage of pregnancy. It is identical to human IGF-I and is not destroyed by the process of pasteurization.

Little is known as to the extent to which humans absorb IGF-I from cow’s milk. While it was once thought that protein fragments were completely broken apart during digestion, it is now known that proteins and peptides are often absorbed intact. In fact, several different proteins from cow’s milk are known to pass from the digestive tract into the blood stream and even into the breast issue of women who drink milk. Similar compounds, such as epidermal growth factor, are not destroyed by stomach acid and are apparently absorbed, suggesting that the same is true of IGF-I.

IGF-I is a normal part of mother’s milk and of infants’ diets prior to weaning. However, milk consumption after the age of weaning means prolonged intake of IGF-I.

If IGF-I is a problem, bovine growth hormone (BGH) will make it worse. BGH is used by some dairy farmers to increase milk production. BGH-treated cows produce two to four times more IGF-I, with a corresponding increase of the peptide in milk.

When the Food and Drug Administration approved BGH for use, it was aware of its tendency to increase IGF-I concentration, but approved the hormone anyway because IGF-I did not seem to cause a major effect on the body weight of rats. The experiments, however, had little relevance to humans.

As for BGH itself, traces of it are found in cow’s milk even after pasteurization. Needless to say, financial interests overwhelmed both science and good sense when BGH was approved. BGH manufacturer Monsanto made payments to the American Dietetic Association and the American Medical Association, both of which issued favorable statements about BGH on the same day.

Organochlorines

Because pesticides and industrial chemicals tend to dissolve into fat, they end up in the mammary gland’s fatty tissues and easily pass into milk. This is true for human breast milk and also for cow’s milk. When three carcinogens found in Israeli milk (DDT, a-BHC, and g-BHC) were banned in that country, breast cancer deaths dropped. While this may be a mere coincidence, evidence for a casual relationship comes from the fact that organochlorines have estrogen-like effects. Moreover, the tissues surrounding human breast cancers have been found to have higher concentrations of organochlorines than other tissues.

We have looked at the link between milk and cancer of the ovary, which appears to result form a breakdown product of the milk sugar, galactose. Other parts of dairy products may exert damaging effects to other parts of the body.

It may be that the weaning process has an important biological function — that of stopping the exposure to compounds that help during infancy but are dangerous on long-term exposure.

Healthy Calcium Balance

With all the criticism milk has earned for its artery-clogging fat and sensitizing proteins, the dairy industry rests its case on one last selling point: calcium. Yet that supposed benefit is suspect as well.

True, milk contains calcium. But only 30 percent of it is absorbed by the human body, less than for typical green leafy vegetables. In fact, green vegetables and beans provide plenty of calcium, along with vitamins, fiber, complex carbohydrates, and essential fatty acids that milk lacks.

Surprisingly, population studies show that a high calcium intake does not insure against osteoporosis. Countries with a high calcium intake, such as Sweden or Finland, tend to have much higher fracture rates than Asian countries where milk is not commonly consumed.

The most important step in maintaining calcium balance is to stop calcium losses caused by these five factors:

Animal protein. Eliminating animal proteins from your diet can cut your calcium losses in half.

Excess salt. Cutting your sodium intake in half can reduce the daily calcium requirement by about 160 milligrams.

Caffeine. If you have more than two cups of coffee per day, drink decaf.

Tobacco. Smokers increase their hip fracture risk by over 40 percent.

Lack of exercise. Sedentary people lose bone tissues.

Don’t forget vitamin D, which is important for healthy bones. Ten minutes of summer sun on the face, hands, and arms two or three times per week produces all the vitamin D you’ll need. For those who get infrequent sun exposure, any common daily multivitamin provides adequate vitamin D.

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Kosher and Vegetarianism
“Ahimsa” by American Vegan Society — Malaga, NJ — (609) 694-2887

We are occasionally asked by concerned vegetarians or vegans, about the various Kosher symbols used on packages of food, and what value they might have as reliable guides to acceptability for vegie or vegan use.

For a study of the variety of Jewish teachings of kindness to animals over several thousands of years, see Judaism and Animal Rights (edited by Roberta Kalechowski), and Judaism and Vegetarianism (by Richard H. Schwartz), or contact your nearest Jewish Vegetarian Society.

In keeping with certain injunctions there arose a system designed partly to spare food-animals unnecessary suffering, partly for human health, and partly for ritual reasons. It may be regarded as a considerable advance, given the considerable advance, given the conditions of those times. But Judaism is a living, evolving religion, and most of our Jewish vegetarian and vegan friends seem to recognize that those early teachings were made as a compromise with human failings, and do point to vegetarian or even vegan practice as a great further improvement over what people were (in some instances) merely permitted or tolerated to do at that time de to the “hardness of their hearts” or other human frailties and short-comings.

In regard to the injunction against eating meat and dairy items together, Schwartz (ibid, p19) cites three identical references, forbidding boiling “a kid [young goat] in the milk of its mother.” (Exodus 23:19, 34:26, Deuteronomy 14:21.)

Schwartz continues: “Commenting on Exodus 23:19, Rashi notes that the repetition of this prohibition in three different biblical passages implies a three-fold ban: milk and meat must not be eaten together; they must not be cooked together; and it is forbidden to benefit from food containing a mixture of milk and meat.

“Some Torah commentators saw the above law as a rejection of an ancient pagan practice. Ibn Ezra viewed boiling a kid in its mother’s milk as an example of extreme barbarism. The Rashbam (1080-1174) considered the practice as denoting gross insensitivity and cruelty.”

In their beautiful work of The Jewish Vegetarian Year Cookbook, Kalechowsky and Rasiel lament on “Modern Realities: Some Unpleasant Facts” about the complexities of modern shopping:

“…. Today many of us feel that we need an advanced degree in chemistry to go shopping. Moreover, trust in the labels — when you can decipher them — has broken down because the rules change constantly as the processing systems change, and as food becomes more technologically engineered. Trust in the foods we eat has all but evaporated. We do not know what is `safe’ and `not safe,’ much less ‘clean’ and `not clean.’ There are over a hundred different kosher labels listed by Kashrus Magazine (November, 1994). Rabbi Lipschutz’ compilation and designation of food additives is forty pages long (Kashrut: a Comprehensive Background and Reference Guide to the Principles of Kashrut).

“For Jews, living in urban centers as most people in industrialized societies do, a label of `kosher’ no longer simplifies, but adds to the complexity, for the label, particularly when it comes to meat, does not necessarily reflect any more health, safety or mercy than other labels. `Kosher’ meat reflects a technical ritual determination of how the animal was killed and whether there we certain proscribed blemishes on its lungs. A `blemish’ defined halachically, does not convey information about the hormones and pesticides that were fed to the animal, and whether or not the animal was irradiated or genetically altered. Kosher food animals, except for a few Jewish farming communities who raise their own animals, are raised the same way that all commercially raised food animals are.” (pp 11,12)

In Defining Vegetarian, Vegan, Pareve, they note that “Vegan foods may often be the same as pareve foods, but not always. They may overlap, but they are not synonymous. It is possible for a processed vegan food which has no animal products in it to have been prepared in pots that contained animal products so that it is not pareve. On the other hand, some products could be pareve, but not acceptable to a vegan.

“For instance marshmallows made from gelatin produced from animal bones which may not have been ritually slaughtered, can be considered Pareve, because the bones have been so altered in the manufacturing process that the definition of kosher no longer applies to them.” (ibid. p184)

We think it is pertinent to note in passing, that confusion among meanings is not confined to any single dietary system. The book above states that its recipes “all are vegan…” (p.16), but includes honey in some, a fairly common problem that ranks it among the many other “near-vegan” cookbooks.

It is clear that the various Kosher symbols have no specific relation to ethical vegetarianism or veganism, but are designed partly to certify that animals meet certain standards of slaughter, and largely for keeping the meat and dairy products in separate meals, not primarily from a desire to avoid them altogether.

Moreover, the degree of strictness certified by the symbols is far too lax to be dependable for vegetarian or vegan purposes. For example, in the Kosher system, fish and fish products are not considered “animal” and thus can be included where you might not expect animal products. (This may or may not also be true of egg derivatives, perhaps even chicken if birds were seen as on a par with fish; not sure about this. It would surely be as reasonable to consider the proverbial chicken soup as “meatless” — if not exactly a pharmaceutical product — as is the belief of perhaps 90% of Americans who “consider themselves vegetarian” including that legendary dietary ingredient “justalittlechickenandfish.”)

Just as bad (as Kalechowski and Rasiel do state), when an ingredient or product that is clearly of animal origin has passed through some degree of processing, it may be considered acceptable. Thus, JELL-O brand of animal gelatin is passed as “Kosher-Pareve” because it isn’t quite “meat” as such, and therefore can be eaten with meat or dairy dishes.

The manufacturer is happy to enlighten us on the reasoning:

“Source and Processing of Gelatin: Popular JELL-O Brand Gelatin is a fruit flavor gelatin product, manufactured to strict specifications in General Foods plants.

“The production of the gelatin starts with the refinement of collagen-bearing tissues of any animal that was raised and slaughtered for food purposes. The principal collagen-bearing tissue used is hide trimmings. Theses materials are carefully soaked in alkalies and/or acids and washed in clean water to remove almost all non-collagen constituents, including meat. During this soaking period the collagen is converted to gelatin. The treated materials are than cooked gently in pure water to extract the gelatin, which is further refined by filtration. The gelatin extract is then evaporated and dried to produce gelatin of the highest grade. (Contrary to common belief, gelatin is not manufactured from horns or hooves or meat of animals, for these do not contain the necessary collagen).

“It is interesting to note that during the manufacture of gelatin, chemical changes take place so that, in the final gelatin product, the composition and identity of the original material is completely eliminated. Because of this, gelatin is not considered a meat food product by the United States government. The plant is under supervision of the Federal Food and Drug Administration. If the government considered gelatin a meat food product, the plant would operate under the Meat Inspection Branch of the Department of Agriculture.

“JELL-O Brand Gelatin is certified as Kosher by a recognized orthodox Rabbi as per enclosed RESPONSUM. In addition to being kosher, JELL-O is also Pareve, and can be eaten with either a meat meal or a dairy meal.

“NOTE: The most important use of plain gelatin in the food industry is in the manufacture of gelatin desserts. It is also used by bakers in cake icings, in the manufacture of chiffon-type pies, for candies, marshmallows, and ice cream. Substantial quantities of gelatin are also used in the manufacture of medicines, for coating pills, making capsules and other preparations.”

Parenthetically, we realize that the U.S. Government is kindly disposed toward agribiz interests, though their supervision and inspections leave much to be desired; and they inspire little confidence when it comes to keeping the consumer’s best interests at heart. Regulations on labeling seem designed to permit all sorts of swill to slip in under such euphemisms as “natural flavorings,” “certified colors,” etc.

(On the other hand, the Emes Co. uses neither animal-gelatin nor bone-refined sugar in their marshmallows etc. but labels its agar-gel as simply “Kosher Gelatin” to reach a wider market. Their phone is 630-627-6204.)

When we investigated beef-bone char used to filter most refined cane sugar, a sugar-firm executive was very understanding about our concerns. Jewish himself, he assured us that bone char is accepted in the Kosher system as “non-animal” because it is sufficiently processed-animal, although he agreed it wouldn’t meet ingredient standards of strictness largely sought and practiced by vegetarians and vegans.

It is rather like the advocates of organic bone-meal tablets who, some years ago, advised with a straight face that “vegetarians can rest assured that all the meat has been removed before the bones are ground up”!

Presumably much of the arsenal of ingredients that may be processed from meat or milk (or egg) derivatives (such as the mono and diglycerides, lactates, stearates, lecithin, etc.) might slip into the “neither meat nor milk” category, and be Kosher certified as acceptable for use with meat or dairy.

Clearly, for vegie/vegan purposes, a Kosher symbol of any type, is at best a vague signpost for you that a prepared food might be non-animal, and may bear further examination. It still requires a very close reading of the ingredients, exactly what we recommend doing as a start in each instance anyway; and even this might not reveal the ultimate origin of some of the esoteric but widely-used stuff.

In that case you can simply leave it alone, or contact the individual manufacturer with your inquiry about a specific ingredient — and make sure that they understand that animal-once-removed is not the same as non-animal, for your purposes.

Is it possible to do good and do well at the same time?

The Cruelty-Free Value Fund thinks it has the answer

An Interview by David A. Kodner, Editor, Cruelty Free Investment News
with Robert J. Henrich, Jr., Managing Director of the Beacon Cruelty Free Value Fund

Starting a mutual fund from scratch is no small task. Lawyers, accountants, investors, the SEC, marketing people, brokers, and advisors all have to be kept happy. Add a restrictive screen for ethical concerns, and you’ve got a fund manager’s nightmare…

“We’re going to make money without harming animals! Who’s going to object to that?” is how Rob Henrich summarized the new fund’s approach when Cruelty Free Investment News met with him.

We don’t know if the fund is going to be successful, but that kind of attitude isn’t going to hurt. Neither is the support of Zurich Investment Management and Dreman Value Advisors, the Sub-Advisors to the fund. Zurich has been in the investment management business for 48 years and currently have $80 Billion under management.

David A. Kodner

Subscribe to Cruelty Free Investment News, and get this very valuable service regarding investment advice in companies that fulfill your desire of earning without harming animals. I myself have recently taken a hard stand on this issue, and invested in the above mutual fund.

Another such mutual fund founded on the principles of green investments I learned of from CFIN is Rocky Mountain Humane Investing Home. I will cover that Fund in a future issue, after learning more about it.

Narendra B. Sheth

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Cruelty Free Investment News:
 
What’s the primary investment objective of the fund?

Henrich: The fund’s primary objective is capital appreciation by investing in value-oriented stocks of small cap companies with market caps from $100 million to $1 billion. But we’re going to achieve that objective by investing in companies that don’t harm animals.

Q. How do you define ‘cruelty-free’?

A. At the fund’s inception, we worked with Dr. Alex Hershaft of Farm Animal Reform Movement (FARM) and David Faber of the Animal Legal Defense Fund to define the criteria for screening companies, which we list in the fund’s prospectus. However, in its simplest terms, ‘cruelty-free’ means ‘does not harm animals.’

Q: And what do you mean by ‘value’?

A: When we say ‘value’, we mean ‘value’ in a financial sense: low price-to-earnings or price-to-book ratios and/or high dividends. Bargains stocks, not high-flying growth companies.

Q: What’s the benchmark against which to measure performance of this fund?

A: We’ve been tracking to within 1/10th of a point of the Russell 2000 Index [of small company stocks].

Q: How is this fund different from other funds that screen for animal rights?

A: Most funds that say they screen for animal rights are really just screening for animal testing. We screen for that too, but our mission is much broader. Let me give you an example. We had a company we were considering. They have a subsidiary that makes binoculars. No problem there. But they also make scopes for hunting rifles. So we won’t buy them.

Q: How do you pick stocks and how do you decide which are cruelty-free? Do you start with lists of “cruelty-free” companies and decide which are good investments, or do you start with a list of “good investments” and decide which are “cruelty free”?

A: Here’s how it works. First we get a buy list from the investment advisor. We turn it over to a research analyst who’s been doing ethical stock screening for 15 years. She categorizes the companies as “unacceptable” or “possibly unacceptable.” We take a look at her recommendations and make our final decisions. If we say “no” then it doesn’t get purchased. But we’re different from other folks who say they’re doing this. We’re not just buying “animal friendly” companies. We’re buying companies that don’t harm animals. We’re committed to making money but we’re not going to limit ourselves to companies that claim to be pro-actively helping animals. If a company is not harming animals in any way, they receive a very strong endorsement from us.

Q: What size companies does the fund invest in?

A: Although we can hold some mid-sized companies, we’ll probably have 60 to 80% in small caps. We can also have some short sales, but there’s a 25% limitation on that, so we won’t do much of it.

Q: What are the risks of the fund? Is the fund more appropriate for high or low risk investors?

A: While we expect performance to continue to track the Russell 2000 Index, as a result of the value-orientation, we expect the fund to have less risk than the index. We currently have about 15% of the fund in cash, so that helps to reduce volatility as well.

Q: Where do you expect to find the best stocks? Do you focus on US-based companies?

A: We can buy ADR’s, but we expect to focus on US-based companies. At present, out holdings are pretty much evenly distributed across 33 or so companies, mostly in financial services, leisure, and technology.

Q: What are the biggest holdings?

A: As a small-cap fund, holdings are pretty evenly spread out. The complete list appeared in the semi-annual report we just published. [Some of the more recognizable names are Airborne Freight, Fedders Corporation, Haggar Corporation, Scientific Atlanta. Call the fund at 703-883-0865 for a complete copy of the Semi-Annual Report.]

Q: Does your approach tend to result in concentration in particular industries or sectors?

A: Not really, but at the moment, we probably have a little bit of an extra weighting towards financial services, in particular small regional banks. That’s just a natural by-product of the value-orientation. These banks can be purchased for a reasonable price and are prime takeover candidates. Sort of a no-brainer.

Q: What would prompt you to sell a stock?

A: Zurich can sell any stock at any time for financial reasons. They don’t even have to ask us. But if we find out that a current holding violates the cruelty-free factors, we sell it the next day, end of discussion.

Q: What’s your track record in money management?

A: We have access to one of the best minds in the business [David Dreman]. Kemper-Dreman Small Cap is a Five-Star Fund. We’re very happy with Zurich and Dreman. (Over the three year period ending December 1996, K-D Small Cap returned an average annual return of 23.6% and received the Five Star rating from Morningstar, the mutual fund rating service].

Q: What would you say are the primary advantages of your fund as opposed to holding individual stocks in cruelty-free companies, say those listed as “cruelty free” by animal rights organizations?

A: Well, we’re currently paying about five cents a share in commissions. You can’t beat that on your own. But we offer more than that. The advisor knows when to sell a stock, and when to rotate sectors, which is really the key to investment success. This is especially important when you’re following a value-style of investing. You want to be able to sell when the stock becomes fully valued. Zurich takes care of this for us by selling the stock at the right time. That’s what the fund investors are paying them for.

Q: What are the sales charges and annual expenses for the fund? Is there a minimum investment?

A: There are no sales charges and the annual expenses are capped at 1.95%, including any 12(b)-1 fees that we might pay to a fund supermarket for example. The minimum investment is $1,000, but it’s going to take a lot of $ 1,000 dollar investors to succeed.

Q: Will you hold bonds as well?

A: We’ve been talking about a cruelty-free fixed income fund, but that would be a separate fund. We really don’t want to manage a “balanced” fund.

Q: Your prospectus states that you will donate a percentage of the profits to animal rights organizations, after the fund reaches $20 million. When do you expect that to occur?

A: We don’t know when it’s going to happen but we have all the groundwork in place. We’ve established the necessary connections and have set up the foundation. All we need now is the money and it will happen.

Q: This may be stretching the point a bit, but do you think it’s possible, through your investments, to actually influence companies to act in a cruelty-free manner?

A: Well, maybe if we were a billion dollar fund we might have that kind of power, but let’s get realistic. It is our belief that the only way we’re going to influence people is through education. That’s why we’re going to donate a percentage of our management fees to fund projects that directly help animals and raise public awareness of animal related issues [after the fund reaches $20 million].

As we were wrapping up the interview, Rob mentioned that he was “off to save some tigers.” That sounded like an ambitious task for a hot July day in the nation’s capital, so I had to ask one more question, “Save some tigers?” I asked. “Well, I got this call from Tiger Rescue. They have 90 tigers on a refuge in California, which has to be moved. I thought I’d start by calling the public relations director at Exxon.” How many Managing Directors of mutual funds are trying to save anything…except maybe their jobs? When Beacon says they’re going to save the tigers, they sound convincing. Hopefully they can make a lot of money too. A great management team, a top track record, and a dedication to not harm animals along the way. Indeed, who can argue with that?

The Cruelty Free Value Fund can be reached at 1-800-662-9992, or visit website www.crueltyfree.com.

Copyright@1997 Cruelty Free Investment News, 11160-F South Lakes Drive, Suite 285, Reston, Virginia 20191. Email: [email protected]. Visit the website at http://members.aol.com/CFINews. Call (703) 401-5445.

Samir Sanghani, Sugar Land, TX, is devising an another innovative scheme for investing as a group of family and friends into such cruelty free stocks. We will cover that in a future issue. If you have any ideas, please share them with all of us. If anyone has any experience with Cruelty Free Value Fund, or Rocky Mountain Humane Investing Home, please share your experiences with all of us.

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White-Tailed Deer: Creatures or Crops?

Because of increased conflicts between deer and people, many urban and suburban communities are leaning toward hunting. This fall, we need caring people like you to speak up on behalf of the deer. Attend public meetings and tell people the truth about hunting. We hope the following information will give you the tools you need to stop your local deer hunts. “Speak for those who can’t.”

The Fund for Animals — (301) 585-2591

Q: Don’t we need hunting to keep deer from overpopulating ?

A: Hunters and wildlife agencies are not concerned with reducing deer herds, but rather with increasing or maintaining the number of targets for hunters and the number of potential hunting license dollars. Hunters and wildlife managers talk about deer overpopulation merely as a smokescreen to justify their recreation to the public. The New Jersey Division of Fish, Game and Wildlife states that “the deer resource has been managed primarily for the purpose of sport hunting,” and a Michigan hunting columnist readily admits, “deer hunters want more deer and more bucks, period.”

Q: But we need some management, don’t we?

A: The current system of wildlife mismanagement has been directly responsible for the rise in conflicts between deer and people. While some forms of nonlethal management may be appropriate, managing deer herds for the sole interest of providing enough targets for sport hunters has wreaked havoc on deer and on the animals who share their ecosystems. For example, Michigan has a “Deer Range Improvement Program” (DRIP) that earmarks $1.50 from each deer hunting license sold into a fund specifically designed to increase deer reproductivity and to maximize sport hunting opportunities. According to a 1975 Detroit Free Press report, three years after the DRIP program began, “The DAR’s Wildlife Division wants to keep clear-cutting until 1.2 million acres of forest land — more than a third of all of the state-owned forest — have been stripped . . . the wildlife division says it is necessary because a forest managed by nature, instead of by a wildlife division, can support only a fraction of the deer herd needed to provide for half a million hunters.” Since that prophetic 1975 report, the number of hunters in Michigan has doubled and the state’s deer herd has tripled.

Q: Doesn’t hunting keep deer numbers down?

A: While it is indisputable that hunting removes some animals from the population, it does not keep deer populations at a continually reduced level. While the average fall hunting season may remove 20% to 30% of the deer from a population, surviving deer will have less competition for food and increased nutritional health. Scientific studies indicate that better-nourished deer have higher productivity, lower neonatal mortality, increased conception rates, and increased pregnancy in yearlings. In hunted populations, does are more likely to have twins rather than single fawns, and are more likely to reproduce at a younger age, thus helping the population grown even faster. A Florida study even indicated that “twinning was 38% on hunted and 14% on non-hunted” deer populations. Because hunting pressure is focused on bucks, hunting skews the sex ratio of deer herds and leaves more females to reproduce (there have been reports of “does outnumbering bucks by as much as 30-1”). In these skewed sex ratios, a single buck can impregnate every doe in the population. Since hunting may cause the reproduction rates of a deer population to double or triple, hunting is not a solution to a problem, but is rather a commitment to a permanent problem.

Q: Won’t deer starve to death if they are not hunted?

A: Hunters do not search for starving animals. They either shoot animals at random, or they seek out the strongest and healthiest animals in order to bring home the biggest trophies or largest antlers. While Michigan hunters, for example, killed more than 400,000 deer during the 1995 hunting season, state officials estimated that 200,000 deer starved to death the following winter. Clearly, hunting is not stopping starvation, but may in fact be adding to the problem by triggering increased productivity in the deer population. Even a Michigan hunting columnist condemned “the risk taken to build up the state deer herds to unrealistic levels in order to satisfy hunters and to sell more hunting licenses each year.”

Q: Don’t we need hunting to stop deer from invading suburban areas?

A: Urban and suburban communities tend to lean toward bowhunting or muzzleloading weapons because they fear the use of firearms in residential areas. Yet, these two cruel and primitive methods of hunting do not effectively reduce deer populations because of their extremely high crippling rates. Dozens of scientific studies indicate that bowhunting yields more than a 50% crippling rate. For every animal dragged from the woods, at least one animal is left wounded to suffer. Muzzleloading equipment, because of the lengthy amount of time it takes to reload, also yields a high incidence of crippling. Hunter education manuals indicate that while a deer shot with a rifle may take 5-10 minutes to die, an animal shot with a muzzleloader may linger for 60-70 minutes. Bowhunting and muzzle- loading deer hunts may be psychologically soothing to landowners, but killing and wounding animals at random does little or nothing to stop conflicts between deer and people.

Q: Doesn’t hunting stop deer from eating flowers and endangered plants?

A: Killing some deer because we want to protect certain vegetation does not stop the surviving deer from eating those same plants. What we need are site-specific mitigation measures that have proven to be both humane and effective. With high-tensile wire fencing, electric fencing, and the planting of vegetation that is unpalatable to deer, nearly every deer problem can be resolved or reduced. The California Department of Fish and Game distributes “A Gardeners Guide to Preventing Deer Damage,” and the New Jersey Division of Fish, Game and Wildlife donates materials to farmers and homeowners who report deer damage — including barbed wire and high-tensile electric fencing, and repellents such as “Hinder” (a liquid) and “Deer Away” (a granulated powder.)

Q: Doesn’t hunting reduce automobile accidents?

A: While public officials tend to blame an increase in deer-vehicle collisions on an increase in the deer population, such collisions are more often the result of more roadways being built, more people driving, and roadways bisecting deer habitat. Killing some deer does absolutely nothing to prevent the surviving deer from crossing the exact same roadways at the exact same “deer hot spots.” Michigan hunters, for example, killed 330,980 deer in 1993, and Michigan drivers collided with 47,813 deer that same year. In 1994, Michigan hunters killed 362,490 deer and drivers hit 56,666 deer. Clearly, an increase in deer killing does not solve the problem of deer-vehicle collisions. In fact, there is evidence that suggests a direct correlation between higher deer-car accident statistics and the onset of hunting season. Hunting season has a disruptive effect by startling deer and putting them more “on the run.” With nonlethal and effective mitigation measures such as driver education, reduced speed limits, improved fencing techniques, lining the roads with vegetation that is unpalatable to deer, and the use of roadside reflectors to deter deer from crossing roads, some communities are actually reducing the number of deer-vehicle collisions. Several scientific studies applaud the use of Sprinter-Lite Reflectors (formerly called Swareflex Reflectors) that, when installed and maintained properly on the sides of roadways, can reflect light from a vehicle’s headlights and stop deer from crossing. The Washington State Department of Transportation recorded an 88% reduction in deer-vehicle collisions after installation, and Minnesota officials recorded a 91% decrease.

Q: Doesn’t hunting stop the spread of lyme disease?

A: Although deer are a primary carrier of the adult Ixodes scapularis tick — the “Lyme disease tick” or “black -legged tick” — many wildlife species carry the larval and nymph stages of the tick which are actually the most infectious to humans. The tick can be found on 49 bird species and is commonly carried by a variety of mammals, including white-footed mice, chipmunks, grey squirrels, voles, foxes, rabbits, and opossums. When deer numbers are reduced, ticks tend to congregate at higher densities on the remaining deer or switch to alternate hosts. Even during a study in which all the deer were eradicated from as island, the number of adult ticks actually increased. Lyme disease is easily treatable if it is caught in time, and nearly every state wildlife agency and physician’s office offers free brochures on how to protect yourself from Lyme disease ticks when spending time in the woods.

Q: Deer contraception isn’t really an option, is it?

A: With the vast surge in immunocontraceptive technology over the past few years, the deer contraceptive dart known as “porzine zona pellucida” (PZP) is a viable option. The contraceptive, when injected into female deer, stops reproduction for one to two years. The National Park Service tested PZP on Fire Island National Seashore off the coast of Long Island and reported a 95% success rate. The National Institute of Standards and Technology is now using PZP at its 575-acre campus in suburban Washington, DC. If wildlife agencies did not spend billions of dollars on hunter education, enforcement of hunting regulations, and other hunting activities, that money could be better spent on more research and implementation of contraceptive programs.

Let’s Appreciate
PETA Magazine, “Animal Times”

“Beastie Boy” Adam Horovitz-a.k.a. Ad-Rock — for wearing PETA’s “Animal liberation, Human Liberation” T-shirt on the cover of the U.S. music magazine Spin. Send thank-yous c/o Steve Martin, Nasty Little Man, 72 Spring St., 11th Fl., New York, NY 10012.

Her Royal Highness Queen Elizabeth for giving real fur the royal brush-off. A Buckingham Palace spokesperson said the Queen still wears ceremonial robes trimmed with fur, but that’s all.

Singer Olivia Newton-John for showing that crustacean liberation rocks in her recent “I honestly Love You” video. In the clip, Olivia liberates a lobster who’s about to be boiled alive. Send thank-yous c/o Jason Padgitt, Rogers & Cowan, 1888 Century Park E., Los Angeles, CA 90067-1709.

Southwest Airlines for refusing to transport animals in the cargo holds of its planes because it is “not… in the best interest of the animal.” Animals flown in airplane cargo holds are often exposed to extreme weather conditions and painful jet noises. Please send thank-yous to Herb Kelleher, CEO, Southwest Airlines Co., Love Field, P.O. Box 36611, Dallas, TX 75235-1611 — and ask other airlines to adopt similar policies…

The British army for suspending its participation in NATO’s “Danish Bacon” exercise, in which young pigs are strung upside down, shot with high velocity weapons, operated on and killed. Please ask British Armed Forces Minister John Reid to permanently end the army’s participation in this barbaric exercise. Write: MOD, Whitehall, London SW1A 2HB.

Pearl Jam basssist Jeff Ament for speaking out against the slaughter of buffalo in Yellowstone national Park. Jeff says to mass killing of buffalo to appease ranchers “affected me pretty deeply. I have a great respect for these animals.” Send thank-yous c/o Curtis Management, 1423 34th Ave., Seattle, WA 98122.

Let’s Protest

Film star Claire Danes for modeling a fox stole in Morgue, er, Vogue, magazine. Please ask Claire to be an animal friend and forgo fur. Write c/o Cari Ross, BWM, 9100 Wilshire Blvd., 6th Fl., West Tower, Beverly Hills, CA 90212.

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THE VICTIMS OF IGNORANCE

This is a message to acknowledge the victims of ignorance, the nonhuman animals. This is for the kittens who were drowned in alcohol, future specimens for Biology students. This is for the mother hamster who was thrown into a trash can because she devoured her young. This is for the puppy who was left in the car during August just a bit too long. This is for the fledgling who was beaten to death by a group of teenagers. This is for the 3 lambs, 11 cows, 45 turkeys,1,097 chickens, and 1 calf that each meat-eating American will consume in an average lifetime. This is for the 240 million male chicks who are killed annually. This is for the dog who was stolen for laboratory experimentation. This is for the 6.5 million dolphins who have been killed by tuna fishermen. This is for the rabbit who was force fed your favorite shampoo. This is for the frightened infant monkey whose “mother” was a cloth “monkey” scheduled to shock him on command. This is for the ducklings who were electrically shocked to prove that electrical shocks can immobilize. This is for the animals. The exploited nonhuman animals. There are people out there who care. There are people out there working to save you. You haven’t been forgotten.

FOR JUST ONE DAY
By Guila Manchester on Internet

I would like to be God for just one day, I’d give all my creatures a chance to play. I would bring to the suffering quick release, I’d give to the frightened comfort and peace. And those that were suffering would hunger no more, I would heal all the wounded, bleeding and sore. I’d close all the doors where sadists reign, With their tests and their knives so ready for pain. I would open the doors of the cages wide, And offer their freedom to those inside. I would throw out the traps that lie in wait, For a small furry creature, a cruel fate. I would close all the bullrings and break every spear, And the rabbit no longer the greyhound would fear. I would clean all the oil from out of the sea. I would let all the fish in the nets go free. I would throw out the arrows that pierce so deep, I would give to the tired the blessing of sleep. I’d close all the tracks where the races are won, By horses abused to make them run. I would teach little children that birds are frail, And puppies and kittens…….don’t hold by the tail. And the bunnies and chicks and ducklings so small, I would not let stores have for sale at all. I would free all the animals raised for fur, I would tear down the ranches where they were. I would open the pens that are stacked so high, So legs could run free and wings could fly. I would silence the sound of the hunters guns, I’d give speed to the legs of the fox that runs. I would break every rope by the rodeo used, I would comfort the cattle the cowboy abused. I would make all the streams run pure and sweet, I’d show mercy to animals used for meat. I would offer green grass to the worn out nag, I would throw out the snares in the hunters bag. I would break all the clubs that batter their prey, I would take all the poison and throw it away. I would close the arenas and bloody pits, Where roosters and dogs are torn to bits. I’d find homes for the homeless in cities and farms, I would gather the strays in my loving arms. I know it’s not given to mind of man The workings of God to understand, But oh how I long for the day to come Bringing help for the helpless, tortured and dumb. And I mean no irreverence because I say

I would like to be God for just one day.

January – March October – December

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maximios February 27, 2007
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Vegan

More People Trying Vegetarian Diets

January-June, 2000 Vol. 4, No. 1

June – December

Inside This Issue

Animal Protection Charities — Animal People

Each Year, we have been inundated with requests from readers for data that might help them assess not only the fiscal integrity of charities that solicit their gifts, but also the efficacy of their programs. We have often been asked to rank charities by quality.

We have always refused to do qualitative ordering, as that would require making value judgements that we’d prefer our readers make for themselves, using their own criteria. Individuals and organizations tend to have differing priorities and tactical perceptions.

For example, one party might think the best way to fight cruelty is to fight meat-eating first, because if eating animals is accepted, people tend to feel animal life in general has low moral value.

Someone else might argue that protecting dogs and cats should come first, as these are the animals with whom the most people relate. Once a certain standard of treatment of pets is established, this theory goes, better attitudes will carry over to help other species.

Others might put the emphasis on stopping hunting, trapping, and other recreational torment of animals, because such practices lack moral defense.

Many other priorities might be chosen, without any choice being “right” to the exclusion of all others — and then there is the question of how best to achieve the goal. Should one seek reform, or only abolition? Should one pursue protest, legislation, litigation, mitigation, education, reduction, refinement, replacement, or direct action? Is the object immediate redress of a grievance, or effecting long-term change in public attitudes?

Different approaches must be tried, as a way of finding out what might best resolve each issue. Further, the more diverse the voices of animal and habitat protection, the more chance there is to involve people of widely differing background and outlook.

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Vegetarian Diets: The Healthier Choice
by Sweta Shah — Harvey, LA (11th Grade Study Paper)

As the people of the world become health-conscious, they are looking for newer, un-pharmaceutical ways of preserving and treating their health. Vegetarians, people whose diets exclude all meat products, eggs, poultry, and fish, have statistically proven that their diets are healthier than non-vegetarian diets. Vegetarian diets consist of fruits, vegetables, grains, beans, and nuts. In addition, research now shows that meat is not essential for health. Many people are switching to vegetarian diets. This paper examines vegetarian diets and proves that they are healthier than meat-inclusive diets.

We know that protein is necessary in a healthy diet; however, not everyone is aware about the multitude of vegetable protein sources. Protein is needed daily to grow and repair tissues and to maintain the body’s functions. Also, many people fear vegetarian diets make people protein deficient, and then weak, sick, and anemic. Although vegetarians eat less protein than do meat-eaters, they readily get as much as they need from non-flesh sources. Even vegans, who eat only plant foods, get more than the minimum recommended level. In fact, non-vegetarian diets provide too much protein. The National Research Council has established that the average male should consume nine percent of his calories in the form of protein everyday. Inspection of published food tables reveals that most grain products, legumes, nuts, seeds, and vegetables contain more than nine percent of their calories in the form of protein. Even the recommended nine percent is actually more than double the minimum requirement established by the World Health Organization and other experts.

In addition, many people believe that more protein will make them strong and is necessary for doing strenuous work; however, sports records show that vegetarian athletes surpass meat-eating athletes in events that require strength and endurance, such as running, swimming, and tennis. For instance, Pierreo Verot, a vegetarian, holds the world record for downhill endurance skiing. The world’s record for distance butterfly stroke swimming is held by vegetarians James and Jonathan deDonato. Furthermore, vegetarians are more readily able to attain physical balance, mental clarity, and spiritual harmony — factors that are critical in maintaining optimal health.

Formerly, vegetable proteins were classified as second-class, and regarded as inferior to first-class proteins of animal origin, but this distinction has now been generally discarded. It is now seen that the excessive amount of protein found in meat products is actually hazardous to health. Two diseases caused by the over-consumption of protein are osteoporosis and kidney stones.

Researchers at Michigan State University and other universities show that osteoporosis is caused by excessive protein. The more protein (especially from animal origin) a person consumes, the more calcium his or her body loses, resulting in osteoporosis. The high-protein diets cause a gradual decrease in bone density and eventually osteoporosis. The results of the study reported that by the age of 65 in the United States, vegetarian men have an average measurable bone loss of 3%; non-vegetarian men, 7%. Vegetarian women have an average measurable bone loss of 18%; non-vegetarian women, 35%. The study also shows that by the time a non-vegetarian woman reaches the age of 65, she has lost over one-third of her skeletal structure. On the contrary, older vegetarian women tend to remain active, maintain erect postures, and are less likely to fracture or break their bones.

Another problem caused by excessive protein is the production of kidney stones. Kidney stones are caused by the crystallization of the calcium that is lost from the bones in digesting the excess protein. The excessive protein consumption also results in the destruction of kidney tissue and the deterioration of the kidney itself. This is so because the kidney has to work harder to de-aminize and excrete the excess protein out of the body.

Besides proteins, saturated fats and cholesterol play an important role in a person’s health. Although some fats are necessary in a balanced diet for body maintenance, excess saturated fats are hazardous. Animal fats are heavier and stickier, and they agglutinate blood cells, thus increasing the viscosity of blood, restricting blood flow, and raising blood pressure. When the blood stops moving, it causes a clot in the artery. These clots result in many forms of heart diseases. Similarly, cholesterol, which is found only in animal foods, deposits in artery walls and causes the arteries to clog.

Approximately thirty-eight percent of all deaths are caused by heart attacks, in the United States. Recent medical research indicates that a high-fat, low-fiber diet centered on meat is a contributing factor in cardiovascular disease. According to the American Heart Association (AHA), the three major risk factors in heart disease are high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, and smoking. In 1985, the AHA said, “We have good evidence that most people…can reduce a major risk of having a heart attack by following a cholesterol lowering plan….Foods of plant origin, such as fruits, vegetables, grains, nuts and seeds, contain no cholesterol. These foods are highly recommended.”

Although absent in plant foods, cholesterol is present in meat, poultry, seafood, dairy products, and eggs. Cholesterol is the main component of the plaque that builds up in arteries, causing atherosclerosis.” All of these foods, with the exception of seafood, are also high in saturated fat. Diets high in saturated fats and cholesterol produce atherosclerosis, which leads directly to heart diseases and strokes. Diets low in saturated fats and cholesterol decrease atherosclerosis, and lower the probability of heart diseases and strokes. The AHA recommends cutting back in foods high in saturated fats and cholesterol, which are found mainly in animal products. The AHA recommends that people use beans, lentils, tofu, and other plant foods instead of meat in their main course.

In addition, nutritional studies show that vegetarians consume less cholesterol and saturated fats and have lower levels of cholesterol. Studies also show that meat- eaters have higher rates of atherosclerosis and fatal heart diseases. For example, the average non-vegetarian runs a fifty percent risk of having a heart attack; whereas, a vegetarian runs only fifteen percent risk of having a heart attack (Jainism 11).

Vegetarian diets with a lower saturated fat content are also a method for reversing disease. A California physician became renowned worldwide for prescribing vegetarian diets to people with heart disease. A significantly lowered fat content is the key ingredient in restoring health. Dr. Dean Ornish, MD, head of heart disease reversal studies says, “If everyone in the country was eating a low-fat vegetarian diet, heart disease could be as rare as malaria.”

Recently, Harvard University and Michio Kushi completed a study to discern the effects of macrobiotics on blood and cardiovascular strength and overall condition. People who normally lived their lives on vegetarian foods were asked to change to a more standard American diet, containing meats, heavy sauces, sweets, and processed foods. After a few weeks, the results showed that the people’s cardiovascular systems and blood conditions suffered from it.

In addition to heart diseases, colon and breast cancers are also directly related to the amount of fats and cholesterol consumed. The Association for the Advancement of Science states that “populations on high-meat, high-fat diets are more likely to develop colon cancer than individuals on vegetarian…diets.” Evidence from a study conducted in Stockholm, Sweden, reports that the greater the fat intake of a person, the higher the risk he or she has of contracting colon cancer. Similarly, the more fat a woman consumes in her lifetime, the more likely she is to obtain breast cancer. In a study conducted at the National Cancer Research Institute in Tokyo by Dr. Hirayama, the results show that women who consume meat daily face an almost four times greater risk of getting breast cancer than those who eat no meat.

Cutting out fatty meats and substituting lighter plant proteins have amazing effects on general health and well-being. Not only that, but vegetarian diets can, in many cases, actually reverse diseases. Many cases of miraculous cancer remission effected by adopting a vegetarian diet have been reported. An example of this is the story of Dr. Anthony Satlilaro. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1978. The cancer then spread to his lungs as he underwent traditional medical therapy. When he had only six months left to live, he tried a vegetarian diet. Eighteen months later, a CAT scan performed on him showed that he was completely rid of both cancers.

Most non-vegetarians think that vegetarians are weak, skinny, and anemic; however, it is seen that most vegetarians experience better than average health and typically live physically active and demanding lives. People who have adopted vegetarian diets say that they experience many benefits. They say that they sleep better and for fewer hours and still wake up feeling more refreshed and energetic than they did before. Many feel “they are now able to participate in life more than they thought possible.”

In addition to these physical benefits, a person can enjoy the meals because they can be prepared many different ways, to suit various tastes. People who have adopted vegetarian diets say that they are now able to eat more foods with fewer calories, fats, and cholesterol.

Vegetarian diets should avoid some pitfalls. For example, some foods are prepared with too much salt. They cause the water to be drawn out of blood cells, creating a dehydration of tissues and causing a water retention problem in the body. Excessive sodium overburdens the kidneys and forces the heart to work twice as fast in response. This leads to dehydration, hypertension, and increased blood pressure levels. Another precaution is that you must consume dark green and leafy vegetables, which are a major source of the essential vitamins A and E. Finally, a proper combination of all food groups (grains, vegetables, beans, and fruits) should be maintained in proportion.

The foods that were once believed to be the foundations of good health are actually found to be detrimental to one’s health and the causes of degenerative diseases such as osteoporosis, kidney stones, heart disease, cancer, etc. In addition, those foods that were once looked upon as nutritionally deficient are now proven to be healthy and even helpful in reversing all above illnesses. Therefore, a vegetarian diet is the healthiest choice one can make.

References

Amato, Paul R., Ph.D., and Sonia Partridge. The New Vegetarians: Promoting Health and Protecting Life. New York: Plenum P, 1989.

Iacobbo, Karen. “Diet Clearly Linked to Leading Killer.” Vegetarian Voice: Perspectives on Healthy, Ecological, and Compassionate Living. Oct. 1993.

Jainism and Animal Issues: Handbook for Compassionate Living. “Some Winner Arguments.” Oct. 1996.

Null, Gary. The Vegetarian Handbook: Eating Right For Total Health. New York: St. Martin’s P, 1987.

Ornish, Dr. Dean. Dr. Dean Ornish’s Program for Reversing Heart Disease. New York: Random House, 1990.

Robbins, John. Diet for a New America. New Hampshire: Stillpoint Publishing, 1987.

Vegetarianism: Answers to the Most Commonly Asked Questions. Pamphlet. New York: Natl. American Vegetarian Society, 1993.

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This article originally appeared in the October 1995 FDA Consumer.
The version below is from a reprint of the original article and contains revisions made in January 1996.

Perceiving plant foods as beneficial because they are high in dietary fiber and, generally, lower in saturated fat than animal foods, many people turn to vegetarian diets.

Grain products, for instance, form the base of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Department of Health and Human Services’ Food Guide Pyramid, which recommends 6 to 11 daily servings of bread, cereal, rice, and pasta. Daily intakes advised for other foods are: 3 to 5 servings of vegetables; 2 to 4 servings of fruits; 2 to 3 servings of milk, yogurt and cheese; and 2 to 3 servings of meat, poultry, fish, dry beans, eggs, and nuts. The guide advises using fats, oils and sweets sparingly.

And, who hasn’t seen signs in their grocer’s produce section urging consumers to eat “5 a day for better health”? This slogan reflects a major government-industry campaign to help people eat more fruits and vegetables as part of a high-fiber, low-fat diet that emphasizes variety.

The campaign is consistent with the USDA-DHHS Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which states, “Most Americans of all ages eat fewer than the recommended number of servings of grain products, vegetables, and fruits, even though consumption of these foods is associated with a substantially lower risk for many chronic diseases, including certain types of cancer.” Also noted: “Most vegetarians eat milk products and eggs, and as a group, these lacto-ovo-vegetarians enjoy excellent health.”

But health benefits are not the only reason vegetarian diets attract followers.

Certain people, such as Seventh-day Adventists, choose a vegetarian diet because of religious beliefs. Others give up meat because they feel eating animals is unethical. Some believe it’s a better use of the Earth’s resources to eat low on the food chain — that is, to eat plant foods, rather than the animals that eat the plant foods. And many people eat plant foods simply because they are less expensive than animal foods.

It’s wise to take precautions, however, when adopting a diet that entirely excludes animal flesh and dairy products, called a vegan diet.

“The more you restrict your diet, the more difficult it is to get the nutrients you need,” says John Vanderveen, Ph.D., director of the Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Plant and Dairy Foods and Beverages. “To be healthful, vegetarian diets require very careful, proper planning. Nutrition counseling can help you get started on a diet that is nutritionally adequate.”

If appropriately planned, vegan diets, though restrictive, can provide adequate nutrition even for children, according to the American Dietetic Association and the Institute of Food Technologists.

Plant Food Benefits

Registered dietitian Johanna Dwyer, of Tufts University Medical School and the New England Medical Center Hospital, Boston, summarizes these plant food benefits:

“Data are strong that vegetarians are at lesser risk for obesity, atonic [reduced muscle tone] constipation, lung cancer, and alcoholism. Evidence is good that risks for hypertension, coronary artery disease, type II diabetes, and gallstones are lower. Data are only fair to poor that risks of breast cancer, diverticular disease of the colon, colonic cancer, calcium kidney stones, osteoporosis, dental erosion, and dental caries are lower among vegetarians.”

According to Dwyer, vegetarians’ longevity is similar to or greater than that of non-vegetarians, but is influenced in Western countries by vegetarians’ “adoption of many healthy lifestyle habits in addition to diet, such as not smoking, abstinence or moderation in the use of alcohol, being physically active, resting adequately, seeking ongoing health surveillance, and seeking guidance when health problems arise.”

Can Veggies Prevent Cancer?

The National Cancer Institute, in its booklet Diet, Nutrition, & Cancer Prevention: A Guide to Food Choices, states that 35 percent of cancer deaths may be related to diet. The booklet states:

  • Diets rich in beta-carotene (the plant form of vitamin A) and vitamin C may reduce the risk of certain cancers.

  • Reducing fat in the diet may reduce cancer risk and, in helping weight control, may reduce the risk of heart attacks and strokes.

  • Diets high in fiber-rich foods may reduce the risk of cancers of the colon and rectum.

  • Vegetables from the cabbage family (cruciferous vegetables) may reduce the risk of colon cancer.

FDA, in fact, authorized several health claims on food labels relating low-fat diets high in some plant-derived foods with a possibly reduced risk of cancer.

While FDA acknowledges that high intakes of fruits and vegetables rich in beta-carotene or vitamin C have been associated with reduced cancer risk, it believes the data are not sufficiently convincing that either nutrient by itself is responsible for the association. Nevertheless, since most fruits and vegetables are low-fat foods and may contain vitamin A (as beta-carotene) and vitamin C, the agency authorized a health claim relating diets low in fat and rich in these foods to a possibly reduced risk of some cancers.

Another claim may relate low-fat diets high in fiber-containing vegetables, fruits and grains to a possible reduction in cancer risk. (The National Cancer Institute recommends 20 to 30 grams of fiber a day.) Although the exact role of total dietary fiber, fiber components, and other nutrients and substances in these foods is not fully understood, many studies have shown such diets to be associated with reduced risk of some cancers.

Lowering Heart Disease Risk

FDA also notes that diets high in saturated fats and cholesterol increase blood levels of total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, and thus the risk for coronary heart disease. (The National Cholesterol Education Program recommends a diet with no more than 30 percent fat, of which no more than 10 percent comes from saturated fat.) For this reason, the agency authorized a health claim relating diets low in saturated fat and cholesterol to a possibly reduced risk of coronary heart disease.

Another claim may relate diets low in fat and high in fruits, vegetables, and grain products that contain fiber, particularly soluble fiber, to a possibly reduced risk of coronary heart disease. However, the agency recognizes that it is impossible to adequately distinguish the effects of fiber, including soluble fiber, from those of other food components.

With respect to increasing fiber in the diet, Joanne Slavin, Ph.D., R.D., of the University of Minnesota, in 1990 in Nutrition Today, gives this advice: “The current interest in dietary fiber has allowed recommendations for fiber supplementation to outdistance the scientific research base. Until we have a better understanding of how fiber works its magic, we should recommend to American consumers only a gradual increase in dietary fiber from a variety of sources.”

Precautions

The American Dietetic Association’s position paper on vegetarian diets states, “Because vegan diets tend to be high in bulk, care should be taken to ensure that caloric intakes are sufficient to meet energy needs, particularly in infancy and during weaning.” Dwyer and Suzanne Havala, also a registered dietitian, updated the paper in the 1993 issue of the association’s journal.

It’s generally agreed that to avoid intestinal discomfort from increased bulk, a person shouldn’t switch to foods with large amounts of fiber all at once. A sensible approach is to slowly increase consumption of grains, legumes, seeds, and nuts. “Some may choose to eliminate red meat but continue to eat fish and poultry occasionally, and such a diet is also to be encouraged,” Jack Zeev Yetiv, M.D., Ph.D., in his book Popular Nutritional Practices: A Scientific Appraisal.

As with any diet, it’s important for the vegetarian diet to include many different foods, since no one food contains all the nutrients required for good health. “The wider the variety, the greater the chance of getting the nutrients you need,” says FDA’s Vanderveen.

In its position paper on vegetarian diets, the American Dietetic Association states that, with a plant-based daily diet, eating a variety of foods and sufficient calories for energy needs will help ensure adequate intakes of calcium, iron and zinc.

The mixture of proteins from grains, legumes, seeds, nuts, and vegetables provides a complement of amino acids so that deficits in one food are made up by another. Not all types of plant foods need to be eaten at the same meal, since the amino acids are combined in the body’s protein pool.

“Soy protein,” the paper states, “has been shown to be nutritionally equivalent in protein value to proteins of animal origin and, thus, can serve as the sole source of protein intake if desired.”

The Institute of Food Technologists also recommends careful diet planning for vegetarians. This is especially important when the diet excludes dairy foods, to ensure adequate intake of calcium, iron, riboflavin, and vitamin D. For these vegetarians, the institute recommends calcium supplements during pregnancy, when breast-feeding, and for infants and children.

The institute and the American Dietetic Association say a vitamin D supplement may be needed if sunlight exposure is limited. (Sunlight activates a substance in the skin and converts it into vitamin D.)

They also point out that vegan diets should include a reliable source of vitamin B12, because this nutrient occurs only in animal foods. Vitamin B12 deficiency can result in irreversible nerve deterioration.

The need for vitamin B12 increases during pregnancy, breast-feeding, and periods of growth, Dwyer says. In a recent issue of Annual Review of Public Health, she writes that elderly people also should be especially cautious about adopting vegetarian diets because their bodies may absorb vitamin B12 poorly.

Unless advised otherwise by a doctor, those taking dietary supplements should limit the dose to 100 percent of the U.S. Recommended Daily Allowances.

With the array of fruits, vegetables, grains, and spices available in U.S. grocery stores and the availability of vegetarian cookbooks, it’s easy to devise tasty vegetarian dishes that even non-vegetarians can enjoy.

However, the key to any healthful diet–vegetarian or non-vegetarian–is adherence to sound nutrition principles.

Replacing Animal Sources of Nutrients

Vegetarians who eat no animal products need to be more aware of nutrient sources. Nutrients most likely to be lacking and some non-animal sources are:

  • vitamin B12 — fortified soy beverages and cereals

  • vitamin D — fortified soy beverages and sunshine

  • calcium — tofu processed with calcium, broccoli, seeds, nuts, kale, bok choy, legumes (peas and beans), greens, lime-processed tortillas, and soy beverages, grain products, and orange juice enriched with calcium

  • iron — legumes, tofu, green leafy vegetables, dried fruit, whole grains, and iron-fortified cereals and breads, especially whole-wheat. (Absorption is improved by vitamin C, found in citrus fruits and juices, tomatoes, strawberries, broccoli, peppers, dark-green leafy vegetables, and potatoes with skins.)

  • zinc — whole grains (especially the germ and bran), whole-wheat bread, legumes, nuts, and tofu

  • protein — tofu and other soy-based products, legumes, seeds, nuts, grains, and vegetables

Dixie Farley is a staff writer for FDA Consumer.

American Dietetic Association Recommendations

For people who follow vegetarian diets, the ADA has these recommendations:

  • Consult a registered dietitian or other qualified nutrition professional, especially during periods of growth, breast-feeding, pregnancy, or recovery from illness.

  • Minimize intake of less nutritious foods such as sweets and fatty foods.

  • Choose whole or unrefined grain products instead of refined products.

  • Choose a variety of nuts, seeds, legumes, fruits, and vegetables, including good sources of vitamin C to improve iron absorption.

  • Choose low-fat or nonfat varieties of dairy products, if they are included in the diet.

  • Avoid excessive cholesterol intake by limiting eggs, if they are included in the diet, to three or four egg yolks per week.

  • For infants, children and teenagers, ensure adequate intakes of calories, vitamin D, calcium, iron, and zinc. (Intakes of vitamin D, calcium, iron, and zinc are usually adequate when a variety of foods and sufficient calories are consumed.)

  • If exclusively breast-feeding premature infants or babies beyond 4 to 6 months of age, give vitamin D and iron supplements to the child from birth or at least by 4 to 6 months, as your doctor suggests.

  • Usually, take iron and folate (folic acid) supplements during pregnancy.

  • In addition, for vegans:

  • Use properly fortified food sources of vitamin B12, such as fortified soy beverages or cereals, or take a supplement.

  • If sunlight is inadequate, take a vitamin D supplement during pregnancy or while breast-feeding.

Publication No. (FDA) 96-2296

Visit FDA website for more information.

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Invest In Our Future

Buying organic products creates a bankable future for a better environment and a safer food supply for generations to come, says Wendy Gordon, co-founder of Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet.

Wendy Gordon had just given birth to her second son in the fall of 1989 when the Alar pesticide scare began. Alar, sprayed on apples, was ranked as the highest cancer risk to children by the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), which released a report called “Intolerable Risk: Pesticides in Our Children’s Food.” This frightening study examined for the first time kids’ exposure to and health risks from pesticide-laden foods. It also motivated Gordon to start lobbying for organic farming.

Publicity around the NRDC study increased when actress Meryl Streep joined the outcry demanding cleaner food for children. Streep and Gordon combined forces, and Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet, a Manhattan-based environmental education group, was born.

Gordon, 39, executive director of Mothers & Others, has two boys ages 8 and 11 and holds degrees in environmental health science. In the 1980s, as a staff member with the NRDC — which concentrates on litigation to reach environmental goals — she focused on the toxic substances in food and drink. During her tenure there she discovered her passion: studying environmental issues and how they relate to health. “We hold the power and responsibility over our future,” Gordon says. “If we are provided with challenging information, we’ll make the right choices. The right to know is essential — that’s at the heart of Mothers & Others.”

Mothers & Others’ mission is education. The group encourages safe and life-supporting consumer choices that promote a sustainable future — one that preserves the Earth’s plant and animal species and supports farming practices that produce nourishing food without damaging the environment with pesticides or exhausting the soil. Gordon believes food selection is one of the most powerful political and ecological choices we can make. And, when we refuse to buy into chemical and industrialized farming techniques, we start to solve other eco-problems, she says.

Striking an Environmental Balance

Gordon could recite a litany of environmental issues to address, but she targets sustainability as essential. “To me, sustainability is striking a balance between the extremes of taking too much and giving nothing back to the planet. Our industrialized society has over-taken the natural system,” Gordon states. “We must establish a symbiotic relationship with the Earth. If we proceed in our current direction, we’ll destroy our living systems.” Examine your habits and start asking questions, she urges. “Question our industrial, food and water systems and ask: Who benefits? What are the by products? Is there waste? Answer questions about your most fundamental choices: What foods do you eat? What clothes do you wear? What do you clean your house with? Do the answers harm the environment, the farm worker or a Third World laborer?”

If the answers don’t support ecological systems, make changes. “It’s time to take responsibility for the consequences of our actions,” Gordon says. “What we put in the air, soil and water affects us all. Our first step is to learn to appreciate the ecology of a system and how we’re going to protect it better. We’ve managed to create artificial environments, so we can separate ourselves from consequences. That way we remove ourselves from the problem — but only temporarily.”

Bottled water is a good example. According to Gordon, by purchasing bottled water we diminish our responsibility to take care of the common water supply. “Those of us who can afford it, will, and the problem goes unsolved. We need to collectively realize the reservoir provides us with more than drinking water: It also provides delicate ecosystems and open space,” Gordon points out.

Gordon remains optimistic about even the most monumental eco-problems. She encourages people to take small steps to improve the Earth, and like a single pebble dropping in the water, ever-widening ripples will result. Some of the places you can start:

1. Buy locally grown, seasonal and organic produce. The average mouthful of food travels 1,200 miles from farm to factory to warehouse to supermarket to our plates. Buying local products supports regional growers, thereby preserving farming in your area and requiring less money for transport. Become better acquainted with who grows your food and where it comes from.

2. Avoid rBGH. “This bioengineered hormone used in cows [to make them produce more milk] was an attempt by big business to say factory farming is best,” Gordon contends. “Use of rBGH has the potential to destroy small farms not to mention the animals.”

3. Buy organic cotton. Few people realize their clothes or bed linens contribute to ecological problems. Yet, conventionally grown cotton crops are heavily sprayed with pesticides — a danger to the environment and farm workers. Gordon believes consumers can change this industry by buying organic fibers.

4. Avoid plastics. Many plastics can’t be recycled and end up in landfills. Also, heating foods or storing them in plastic containers can leach out harmful estrogenic chemicals. Reassess your use of plastic containers.

5. Reduce dioxins. Form a group of concerned citizens devoted to helping eliminate dioxins, chemicals that mimic the action of hormones in the body. Dioxins can be carcinogenic and are by-products of plastic manufacturing or disposal. Contact your local hospital and voice your concern about dioxins the hospital might be emitting when it incinerates medical waste.

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Must-Eat Organic Foods
Francine Stephens and Betsy Lydon — Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet

Even if you’re not obsessed with healthy eating, it makes sense to avoid foods treated with pesticides and chemical fertilizers. The National Academy of Sciences reported in 1993 that federal pesticide standards provide too little health protection for children and infants. Citing this report, the EPA’s 1997 agenda sought to establish new child-specific standards. “Certified Organic” already applies the strictest standards, producing food without synthetic pesticides and fertilizers. There is also “Integrated Pest Management (IPM),” which restricts pesticide use, and local, in-season food, which is less likely to have been treated with post-harvest pesticides. So, where to start? Here are the 10 most important foods to start buying organic:

1. BABY FOOD In 1995, the Environmental Working Group (EWG) tested eight baby foods made by industry leaders Gerber, Heinz and Beech-Nut. Some 16 pesticides were found in more than half of the samples. Organic baby foods include Earth’s Best, Well-Fed Baby, and Gerber’s Tender Harvest, and you can make your own by cooking and pureeing organic food.

2. RICE Because rice allergies are practically nonexistent, this cereal grass is a primary ingredient in baby foods. But pesticide use on rice fields in California’s Sacramento River Valley, one major growing region, has been so heavy that it has contaminated groundwater.

3. STRAWBERRIES Strawberries are the single most pesticide-contaminated fruit or vegetable in the U.S., according to a 1995 EWG study. No surprise, in a crop that receives a dose up to 500 pounds of pesticides per acre. Strawberries and other produce bought out-of-season are the most likely to have been imported, possibly from a country with less-stringent pesticide regulations.

4. CEREAL The USDA recommends six to 11 servings of grains a day. But, in 1994, the FDA found illegal pesticide residues in a year’s worth of General Mills’ Cheerios oat-based cereal. And in 1996, the FDA found residues from at least one pesticide in 91% of wheat samples tested. Try a healthy variety of organic offerings: oats, wheat, millet, quinoa, barley, couscous, amaranth and spelt.

5. MILK Milk comprises nearly a quarter of the non-nursing infant’s diet, but many dairies inject their cows with recombinant bovine growth hormone (rBGH), a genetically engineered hormone used to boost milk production. Organic milk dairies don’t use hormones or antibiotics.

6. CORN Processed foods made with corn — cornbread, chips and popcorn — were among the top 15 foods likely to expose children to an unsafe dose of organophosphate (OP) pesticide residues, according to a 1998 report of EWG. Organic versions can readily be found.

7. BANANAS Often the first fruit offered to babies, bananas are produced using benomyl (linked to birth defects) and chlorpyrifos (a neurotoxin). In Costa Rica, a major exporter, only 5 percent of farmland grows bananas, but they account for 35% of the country’s pesticide consumption.

8. GREEN BEANS In 1992-93, contamination with pesticides illegal in the U.S. was found in 7.4% of green beans imported from Mexico. EWG’s tests found three pesticides in conventional green bean baby food samples.

9. PEACHES A recent Food & Drug Administration study found that 5% of the peach crop was contaminated. Peaches lead the EWG’s list of foods likely to contain unsafe OP exposures.

10. APPLES Apples rank second on the EWG list for OP residues, and baby food apple juice also made the top 15. Organic and IPM alternatives can be found in some supermarkets. Mothers & Others introduced its “CORE Values Northeast” label in 1996, identifying apples grown regionally by growers practicing biointensive IPM. “CORE Values” was recognized by the USDA SARE Program as an “innovative, interesting and impactful” sustainable agriculture project.

You may also want to seek out organic nectarines, grapes and raisins, and kiwi fruit, all of which made EWG’s “least wanted” list. Contact EWG at 202-667-6982, or www.ewg.org.

Contact: Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet, 40 West 20th St., New York, NY 10011; 1-888-ECO-INFO; or www.mothers.org.

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QUESTION AND ANSWERS ABOUT ORGANIC

Q: What is organic?

A: Organic refers to the way agricultural products — including foods and fibers such as cotton — are grown and processed. The word “organic” on the label stands for a commitment to an agriculture which strives for a balance with nature, using methods and materials which are of low impact to the environment. Organic production systems:

  • Replenish and maintain soil fertility

  • Eliminate the use of toxic and persistent chemical pesticides and fertilizers

  • Build a biologically diverse agriculture

Organic foods are minimally processed to maintain the integrity of the foods without artificial ingredients, preservatives or irradiation.

Q: Is there an official definition of organic ?

A: The following definition of “organic” was passed by the National Organic Standards Board in April, 1995:

“Organic agriculture is an ecological production management system that promotes and enhances biodiversity, biological cycles and soil biological activity. It is based on minimal use of off-farm inputs and on management practices that restore, maintain and enhance ecological harmony.”

Q: How large is the organic industry ?

A: The organic industry has experienced incredible growth, with sales increasing by more than 20 percent each year over the past seven years. In 1996, the organic segment of the natural food industry saw a phenomenal growth of 26.3 percent reaching total (distributor) sales of $3.5 billion. Today, approximately one percent of the U.S. food supply is grown using organic methods. By the year 2000, analysts expect that to reach 10 percent. Worldwide, there are now almost 600 organic producer associations in 70 countries. Nations like Japan and Germany are fast becoming important international organic food markets.

Q: What does certified organic mean?

A: When a grower or processor is certified organic, a public or private organization verifies that it meets or exceeds defined standards. These standards include:

  • Land on which organic food or fibers are grown must be free of prohibited substances for three years prior to certification

  • Farmers and processors must keep detailed records of methods and materials used in growing or producing organic products

  • All methods and materials are annually inspected by a third-party certifier

  • All farmers and handlers are required to maintain written Organic Plans detailing their management practices

Q: Can any type of product become certified organic?

A: While there may not yet be an organic cream-filled donut, organic foods are becoming available in an ever-increasing variety of convenience foods, such as pasta, prepared sauces, frozen juices, frozen meals, milk, ice cream and frozen novelties, cereals, breads, soups and other products. These foods, in order to be certified as organic, have all been grown and processed using organic standards and must maintain a high level of quality.

Q: Are standards for organic production the same everywhere?

A: Prior to the Organic Food Production Act (OFPA) of 1990 (Title XXI of the 1990 Farm Bill), private and state agencies had been certifying organic practices, but there was little uniformity in standards, and therefore no guarantee that organic meant the same thing from state to state, or even locally from certifier to certifier. The purpose of the 1990 bill was to establish national standards for the production and handling of foods labeled as “organic”. OFPA allows for state standards that are more restrictive than the federal standards, but they must be approved by the USDA.

Q: Who developed the National Organic Standards?

A: The OFPA authorized the formation of the National Organic Standards Board (NOSB) to advise the Secretary of Agriculture in setting the standards for the National Organic Program. The NOSB based their recommendations on industry consensus. They asked for and received an unprecedented amount of public input from farmers, businesses and consumers during every step of their decision-making process. The NOSB consists of four farmers, two handlers/processors, one retailer, one scientist, three consumer/public interest advocates and three environmentalists.

Q: Do organic farmers ever use pesticides?

A: Yes. However, only botanical and other non-persistent pesticides are permitted with restrictions as a last resort when growers are threatened with crop failure. Organic farmers’ primary strategy is “prevention.” By building healthy soils, healthy plants are better able to resist disease and insects. When pest populations get out of balance, growers will try various options like insect predators, mating disruption, traps and barriers. If these fail, permission will be granted by the certifier to apply botanical or other non-persistent pesticides under restricted conditions. Botanicals are derived from plants and are broken down quickly by oxygen and sunlight.

Q: Are all organic products “pesticide-free”?

A: The word “organic” should not be misconstrued as meaning pesticide-free. Certified organic products have been grown and handled according to strict standards without toxic and persistent chemical inputs. However, organic crops are still exposed to the agricultural chemicals that are now detected in nearly all rain and ground water due to their overuse during the last 50 years nationwide. Organic agriculture techniques strive to limit toxic inputs, and to help maintain and replenish soil fertility. It is a healthier technique for the environment and for the consumer’s long-term health.

Q: How will purchasing organic products help keep our water clean?

A: Conventional agricultural methods can cause water contamination that poses serious health problems. Beginning in May 1995, a network of environmental organizations, including the Environmental Working Group, began testing tap water for herbicides in cities across the United States’ Corn Belt, in Louisiana and Maryland. The results of these tests revealed widespread contamination of tap water with many different pesticides at levels that present serious health risks. In some cities, herbicides in tap water exceed federal lifetime health standards for weeks or months at a time. The elimination of polluting chemicals and nitrogen leaching (found in conventional fertilizers), done in combination with soil building, works to prevent contamination, protects and conserves water resources.

Q: Is organic food a higher quality?

A: The organic farmer believes that the highest quality food is grown on healthy land. In a natural ecosystem, nature constantly works to correct imbalances. Organic farmers do the same by selecting the most environmentally friendly solutions to the pest and disease problems which affect their crops:

· Alternate the types of crops grown in each field, rather than growing the same crop year after year (known as crop rotation)

· Plant cover crops such as clover to add nutrients to the soil and prevent weeds

· Release beneficial insects to prey on pests, helping to eliminate the need for chemical insecticides that can remain in the soil for years

· Add composted manure and plant wastes to help the soil retain moisture and nutrients

Q: Does organic food taste better?

A: We think so, and hundreds of gourmet chefs across the nation agree. In 1996, the National Restaurant Association (NRA) reported that organic items are offered by about 57 percent of the table service restaurants with per person checks of $25 or more and by 29 percent of restaurants in the $15-24.99 range. According to the chairman of NRA, W.W. “Biff” Naylor, “A dedication to organics is no longer an indulgence for many operators; it is a sound business move. As our customers start to believe organic products are good for their health, restaurateurs will find the benefits of organics may outweigh the costs.” It’s common sense — well balanced soils grow strong healthy plants which taste great!

Q: Is organic better, healthier?

A: Organic foods are not necessarily more nutritious; rather organic foods are spared the application of synthetic insecticides, herbicides, fungicides and fertilizers. Many EPA-approved pesticides were registered long before extensive research linked these chemicals to cancer and other diseases. Now, the EPA considers 60 percent of all herbicides, 90 percent of all fungicides, and 30 percent of all insecticides as potentially cancer-causing.

Q: Why do organic products cost more?

A: Prices for organic products reflect many of the same costs as conventional items in terms of growing, harvesting, transportation and storage. Organic products must meet stricter regulations governing all of these steps so the process is often more labor and management intensive, and farming tends to be on a smaller scale.

  • Organic Farmers don’t have the luxury of the economies of scale that a large conventional producer has. There is still limited supply of organic products, so the supply vs. demand equation is off balance.

  • Conventional crops are often subsidized by government programs, such as research, technical advice, and marketing orders.

  • Organic farmers have an added cost of compliance with organic certification standards.

  • There is mounting evidence that if all the indirect costs of conventional food production (cleanup of polluted water, replacement of eroded soils, costs of health care for farmers and their workers, etc.) were factored in to the price of food, organic foods would cost the same, or, more likely, be cheaper.

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Don’t Be Cruel To Be Clean

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

Most household cleaning products made by major manufacturers are not only tested on animals, but are ecologically antagonistic as well. Caustic ingredients — including phosphates, chlorine, dyes, and perfumes — in many laundry detergents, bleaches, spray cleaners, and other common products poison rivers, streams, and lakes, endangering fishes and aquatic plants. Lots of people are unable to tolerate these chemicals on their skin or in the air.

Many cruelty-free household cleaning products are composed of natural, environmentally friendly ingredients — like citrus oils and extracts, aloe vera, coconut oil, baking soda, and plant and herb extracts — that won’t hurt the animals or you, are fully biodegradable, and are at least as effective as their animal-tested counterparts. Look for cruelty-free products in local health food stores.

A surprising number of nontoxic, effective alternatives to commercial products are already in your cupboards. Here are some helpful household hints:

Water Softener

1/4 cup vinegar in final rinse.

Oil Stain Remover

White chalk rubbed into stain before wash.

Glass Cleaner

White vinegar and water or rubbing alcohol and water. Or whip with a damp cloth or sponge sprinkled with dry baking soda, rinse with water, and dry with a soft towel.

Copper Cleaner

Paste of lemon juice, salt, and flour, or vinegar and salt.

Household Cleaner

3 tbsp. baking soda mixed into 1 qt. warm water.

Stainless Steel Polish

Baking soda or mineral oil for shining; vinegar for removing spots.

Toilet Bowl Cleaner

Vinegar.

Coffee/Wine Stain Remover

Club Soda.

Mildew Remover

Lemon juice and salt or white vinegar and salt.

Drain Opener

Prevent clogging by flushing drain weekly with boiling water. If clogged, pour ½ cup baking soda followed by ½ cup vinegar down drain.

Furniture Polish

3 parts olive oil and 1 part vinegar or 2 parts olive oil and 1 part lemon juice. Rub with a soft cloth.

RECIPES FOR ALTERNATIVES TO TOXIC AND HAZARDOUS HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS

Earth Times — April 1996

General notes and safety precautions

The mixing of cleaning or other chemicals can be quite hazardous and is never recommended without following product label instructions. The recipes below are effective and safe when mixed in the quantities indicated.

Washing soda and T.S.P. are the most caustic of the cleaners on this list. Store them with special care in cabinets out of the reach of children. Use them only when diluted and wear latex gloves.

Label cleaning mixtures clearly. Never put them into old food containers or store them near foods.

If you do use chlorine cleaners or bleach, DO NOT mix them with ammonia, acids, or any other cleaning products. A deadly gas is produced!

Look for cleaners that do only what you want done. If you do use a laundry detergent, glass cleaner, or other cleaning product, avoid ones that say they have a “Plus,” which is usually added bleach, fabric softeners, or surfactant.

Avoid Using Use More Often

Aerosols Pump sprays

Chemical drain Plunger, or metal

Openers Snake

Gasoline Water-based

(as degreaser) degreaser

Moth balls Cedar chips or herbal sachets

No-pest strips Fly paper

Rust remover Steel wool

All-purpose Household Cleaner

Add I teaspoon liquid soap and I teaspoon T.S.P. to I quart warm water.

This solution can be used for a multitude of cleaning jobs including counter tops and walls. Look for new eco-friendly brands.

Chlorine Bleach

Use a hydrogen peroxide based

Degreaser (engine and tool)

Use a water-based cleaner, well diluted, in place of kerosene, turpentine, and commercial engine degreaser. Look for “nonflammable,” “nontoxic,” “store at temperatures above freezing” as label clues to water-based products.

Degreaser (Kitchen)

Add 2 tablespoons tsp. to 1 gallon hot water.

Use a nonchlorinated scouring powder with abrasive scouring pad or fine steel wool. Look for “BCD” the first degreasing product to receive a “Green Seal” certification.

Disinfectant

Rarely, if ever, needed in households. If you must, add l oz. chlorine bleach to 1 gallon water for inanimate surfaces. Keep out of the reach of children.

Fabric Softener

Use natural fibers to reduce your need for fabric softeners.

Floor Cleaner

Vinyl Floors: Add ½ cup vinegar to 1 gallon water.

Wood floors: Damp mop with mild liquid soap.

Furniture Polish

Not essential. Simply wipe clean with a slightly damp cloth. If you do polish, use mineral oil.

Oven cleaner

Add either 2 tablespoons of baking soda or T.S.P. or washing soda to 1 gallon of water and scrub with very fine steel wool. Wear gloves and rinse well. For very baked on spots, try scrubbing with pumice (available at hardware stores).

As a last resort, use an aerosol oven cleaner that says “No caustic fumes.”

Glass Cleaner

Add to a spray bottle: ½ teaspoon liquid soap, 3 tablespoons vinegar and 2 cups water. For very dirty windows, add more soap.

Laundry Detergents

Best: Use laundry soap in place of detergents and use ½ cup washing soda as a softener (available in laundry section). Look for new eco-friendly brands. Use detergents with no added bleaches or softeners.

Mildew cleaner

For mild cases, scrub with baking soda. In more sever cases, scrub with T.S.P. and do not rinse of except in food areas.

Scouring powder

Use baking soda or a nonchlorinated commercial scouring powder.

Spot removers

All work best when applied to fresh stains. Try one of the following solutions:

All purpose: make a paste of water and baking soda or washing soda. Soak the stain and let dry prior to washing as usual. Check for color fastness first.

Blood: Pour 3% hydrogen peroxide solution directly on the stain, before rinsing with water. Then wash as usual.

Ink: Apply a paste of lemon juice and cream of tartar; allow it to dry. Then wash as usual.

Toilet bowl cleaner

Scrub with nonchlorinated scouring powder and a stiff brush. For removal of hard water deposits, pour in vinegar or a commercial citric acid-based toilet bowl cleaner. Allow to sit several hours or overnight, then scrub.

Tub/Tile Cleaners

Use nonchlorinated scouring powder or baking soda.

Air Freshening Tips

Leave open boxes of baking soda in refrigerators, closets, and bathrooms.

Use flowers, herbs, and spices to add subtle fragrances to indoor air.

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The Truth Behind Bullfighting
SHARK (Showing Animals Respect & Kindness)

Bulls, as all bovine creatures, are gentle community-oriented animals. Prior to entering the bullring, each bull is held in an isolation box — a small structure with a tiny ventilation opening in the top. He is deprived of light, food, water and most importantly, the security of his herd. Mexican bullfights occur even during the hot summer months.

Throughout Latin America, it is common for animal torture such as bullfights, to be closely associated with the Church and many times used to celebrate religious holidays. At this Mexican bullfight, a mass is held prior to the event within the bullring itself.

Upon being released from the box, the bull enters the bullring. Here he is disoriented from the sudden light and the crowd noise.

Furthermore, when he enters the ring, the bull is already bleeding profusely. While still in the holding box, the bull is injured with a harpoon-tipped ribbon that has been jammed into his side.

The bull is quickly joined by two men on horses. The mounted men begin to circle the confused bull and stab pointed lances into his back and his sides. The lance blade cutting the bull is at least 5 inches long.

Once the bull is severely wounded, the bullfighter and his team engage their wounded, weakened, tortured and confused victim. These men take turns chasing the bull and slamming banderillas into the bull.

These banderillas, or adorned barbed darts, hang onto the bull with razor sharp tips. By this time, the bull is in extreme pain, the blood is spraying, pouring, bubbling, and oozing out of every wound. Internal bleeding is evident by the blood pouring out of his mouth and nostrils. Also, uncontrollable urination and defecation is usual. He cannot defend himself and attempts to run away.

After at least twenty minutes of this, the matador takes advantage of this weakened state and approaches the bull from the front. Armed with a long sword, the matador strikes and jams the entire sword into the top of the bull’s body. This is supposed to be a fatal strike through the heart.

Unfortunately, many times the sword goes through the lungs causing the bull’s blood to come gushing out of his mouth and nostrils–drowning the creature in his own life fluids. Still standing, the bull attempts to run away with instinct driving him to survive. The “bullfighters” continue to chase him around the ring, surrounding him and continuing this merciless attack.

Finally, exhausted and badly hemorrhaging, the bull collapses to his knees mortally wounded.. in complete submission.. begging for mercy. The sword is then removed from his back.

He lies there, clinging to life. He can no longer run and now will suffer until death.

The matador finally approaches with a short knife. The knife pierces the back of the bull’s neck and dragged from side to side to cut the spinal cord. This paralyzes but does not kill the victim. The victim is conscious as trophies are cut from his body — his ears, tail, and/or hooves. Sometimes the bull is even conscious as he is dragged to the back of the arena and butchering begins.

Why is this horror allowed to happen? Blood bullfights are illegal in the states, yet is funded by the Americans. The bullrings are crowded with American tourists who want to experience some “local color.” Also, the American company, Pepsi, is the biggest advertiser we saw at Mexican bullrings. Their banners and signs are strewn everywhere — giving their silent approval of animal torture. Also, Pepsi has pouring rights at these arenas–blood money.

WHAT CAN YOU DO:

Write to PepsiCo and let them know that you will be boycotting their products until they put an immediate stop to this support of bloody torture. Send letters to both Peter Thompson (President) and Craig Weatherup (Chairman) at

PepsiCo, Inc.

1 Pepsi Way

Somers, NY 10589

Or why spend thirty-three cents when you can charge it to Pepsi? Use their toll-free number to lodge your complaint: 1-800-433-2652.

For more information, contact SHARK at [email protected]. And, you can also visit websites, www.pepsibloodbath.com and www.sharkonline.org.

THE BULLFIGHT — An Eyewitness Report
A Bullfight is thought to be a beautiful exhibition of a struggle between man and beast.
IT IS NOT !!!

It was July, 1996 and Rhonda and I were visiting Spain. We were there almost 9 days and had planned on spending about 6 of those days in Marbella Spain. The other three were in Madrid. These notes are about the highlights of that trip. All westerners think they want to see a bullfight. We did, and I am glad I did. Particularly so I can tell others not to go.

We were staying at the Marbella Club which is one of the nicest resort hotels we could find in the South of Spain. We noticed bullfight posters all over town, but didn’t pay much attention to them. Finally the man at the hotel reception asked us if we would like to see the most famous woman bullfighter in the world. She was to fight in Puerto Banus this coming Sunday. This seemed like it would be a great topper to what had been a terrific trip. We loved Spain, it had such an international feeling. The people were modern and always nice to the tourists.

So, we bought tickets, and they weren’t cheap either, about $150.00 each. Of course we bought front row seats figuring that if we were going to see a real bullfight once, we should see it right.

The beginning of the fight was colorful and festive. Everyone paraded out. I had my telephoto lens and immediately got a good picture of the famous lady bullfighter. The procession was led by two young girls riding beautiful Andalusian horses. We particularly enjoyed this as we had owned Andalusian horses ourselves. The parade continued on for a several minutes and we got to see everyone that was going to participate in the event.

When the ring was empty, a trumpet played that familiar tune. Then door would open directly across the ring from us and a bull would come out of a dark tunnel. They must have done something to him because he was pissed. He charged around the ring as the crowd yelled and clapped. There were others dressed in Matador costumes that would jump out and taunt the bull. They would then jump behind a barrier to escape bull’s charge.

After a short time, Christina Sanchez came out and performed the traditional waving of the cape to attract the bull, then stepping aside at the last moment. This is what we always think of when we think of bullfighting. There were two different performers this Sunday, but Cristina Sanchez was definitely the favorite. Christina worked the bull for a few minutes then some other guy came out and stuck four colorful sticks in the back of the bulls neck. The program called this “quieting the bull”. The practice was not always successful and the other Matador might need to do it many times.

There was a band that would play from time to time to liven up the occasion.

A little later, two huge, heavily padded draft horses came out. As soon as the bull would see the horses, he would charge. Luckily, the rider of each horse was carrying an 8 foot pole, 1¼ inches in diameter with a silver point in the end. He would poke a huge hole in the back of the bulls neck. Usually one was not enough, so he would do it a few times. As soon as this was done, the horses would leave the ring.

Now the bull was bleeding profusely. Again the Matadors would tease him relentlessly. By this time, the bull was plenty tired and often would have to be prodded to go after the Matador’s cape. Often the bull was so weak that he would collapse. One time the bull just laid down. He would not get up so a bunch of guys ran into the ring to poke at him and bend his tail to get him up. Finally he did get up.

This seemed to be the most proud time for the Matador. With the bull completely broken down, he would show us how brave he was, by kneeling down in front of the bull.

The surround of the ring was like the sideline of a basketball game. Managers and the press took their positions there to watch the event.

At a later point in time, when the bull could hardly stand up, it was time for the kill. Proudly the Matador would stand, sword in hand, poised to make the kill.

Then the Matador would lunge at the half dead bull with a three foot long sword. Rarely would they get the sword in on the first attempt. This Sunday afternoon, they killed 6 bulls. Only once did they kill the bull without several tries.

After the bull was killed, a guy would run out and cut off one or both of the bulls ears. Patiently a team of horses waited to drag the dead bull out of the ring.

The Spaniards call this a sport. We thought it was disgusting. We couldn’t believe the barbaric nature of the event. There was no respect for the bull, and certainly no consideration for the pain the bull was in.

When the first bull came out, we both wanted to leave, but the ring was so crowded with people, it would have been impossible. So we stayed.

After it was all over, we both agreed we were glad to have come, but also agreed that we had both lost our respect for many Spanish people. Who would think that a culture so rich with art and beauty could entertain themselves in this manner.

— Gregory and Rhonda McMurry — Marina Del Rey, CA

Many famous people have quoted, that they did not enjoy, and were not entertained by the fights, but simply interested in the occurrences. In the three times I have been to Mexico, I have refused to attend such events, even though the chance was available. I too would be fascinated by the fight itself, but such an unfair slaughter deserves no glory.

Some people call this a form of art, not brutal murder. Many people for the bullfight will protest that we have boxing and fox hunts in our countries, but boxers are willing to fight, and foxes are not so brutally and immorally slaughtered. The supporters of the fights would also argue that they use this for war training, but in this day, nuclear war is prevalent, not hand to hand combat. They argue that they kill the bull young so it doesn’t have to suffer of old age, and they should be commended for that. But does that then mean a human who murders a child should get an award for taking their life at a young age? No, not a chance!

Many of the people who have tried to protest such fights have had their families killed or harmed by the Mafia surrounding such high income entertainment. The thing that we can do to try and stop the brutal and useless fights is to not go and not support advertisements that use bull fights and fighters to sell products.

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FOR CODS’ SAKE
Who’d Fight for a Fish?

Animal Times, Spring 1997 — People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
People reeled in disbelief when we declared that fish have feelings. Fish?!
Read the arguments for and against the campaign.

They say… “It’s a game.”

Pathologist John Grizzle claims that fish “enjoy the excitement and travel [of being hooked]. It may be the fish think it is a real thrill.” Another fisher wrote: “Hooked fish feel about as much pain as potatoes do when you cut off their ‘eyes.'”

Ann Lewis, spokesperson for the Bass Anglers Sportsman Society, says, “No one can prove to me that the fish doesn’t actually consider it a game. Look at pro football players who have just been injured, begging to go back onto the field.”

We Say… If fishing’s a game, get a root canal for a real hoot. Dr. Donald Broom, animal welfare advisor to the British government, agrees: “The scientific literature is quite clear. The pain system in fish is virtually the same as in birds and mammals. In animal welfare terms, you have to put fishing into the same category as hunting.” Adds Dr. Austin Williams, a U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service zoologist, fish “are sentient organisms, so of course they feel pain.”

Fish also experience fear. An Australian study found that when fish are confined or otherwise threatened, they react as humans do to stress: with increased heart rate and breathing rate and a burst of adrenalin.

They say… “What’s next? Worm rights?”

We say… Well, perhaps. We don’t know about you, but we doubt the average night crawler is eager for an encounter with the “Worm Blower,” a plastic squeeze bottle with a syringe-type needle on the end that anglers use to “puff up” worms for bait.

Other animals you might find cowering inside a tackle box of terrors include frogs (now sold live in U.S. vending machines just like sodas), mice (according to fishing lore, one of the “best” bassers in the States used live mice to lure the big ones), rabbits and roosters (artificial flies are often made from rabbit fur or the colorful neck feathers of specially bred roosters who are killed when only months old) and, of course, other fish.

They say… “Anglers are angels compared to commercial fishers.”

We say… Didn’t your mama ever teach you that two wrongs don’t make a right? Factory trawlers are vacuuming the oceans clean of sea life, but the ordinary angler is hardly animal-friendly!

Countless animals and water birds like ospreys and blue herons become entangled in lost or discarded fishing line — some lose limbs, some their lives. Other animals fall victim to “impregnated baits” (plastic worms with scents inside them), which can look and smell like a swimming smorgasbord. One veterinarian in Florida discovered that some sick otters’ intestines were full of undigested plastic worms.

And anglers raised a ruckus over the call for a ban on lead sinkers, which poison birds, saying that it would inflict “unnecessary hardship.”

They say… “without anglers, rivers and lakes would be nothing but open sewers.”

We say… Right now, they’re just anglers’ trash cans. A study of one lake in Wales revealed that 64 percent of the litter left by visitors was found along the 18 percent of the shoreline predominantly used by anglers. Discarded bait containers accounted for 48 percent of the total trash!

They Say… “Anglers are great conservationists.”

We say… Well, with friends like that… Did you know that government agencies often “reclaim” lakes for anglers by poisoning the waters with pesticides (fish pesticides) — to kill off unwanted “trash fish” like carp — and then restock them with “game fish” like bass and trout? Eco-friendly or what?

Artificially introducing “Game Fish” into local ecosystems goes against Mother Nature! The number of frogs in Yosemite National Park has declined dramatically since the early 1900s. One culprit: Trout, introduced into the lakes for sport fishers, gobble up frog eggs, tadpoles and even adult frogs like guppy food.

Until 30 years ago, Glacier National Park stocked its lakes with trout for anglers; the fish have all but wiped out some microscopic animals, changing the entire food chain.

And in Colorado, things have totally spun out of control. In the late 1980s, hatchery trout infected with whirling disease, a fatal cartilage disorder, were introduced into the Colorado River for the benefit of anglers. Since then, 90 percent of the wild rainbow trout in some parts of the river have died of the disease.

They Say… “Nothing could be more P.C. than catch-and-release fishing.”

We say… If by P.C. you mean “painful and cruel,” we agree. Although some “experts” like John Grizzle claim that hooked-and-released fish are unaffected by their ordeal, others aren’t so sure. The German government has even banned this practice, citing the prolonged suffering it causes fish.

Common injuries to hooked fish include ruptured swim bladders (resulting in internal bleeding) and toxic buildups of lactic acid in their muscles (thanks to anglers who “play” fish to exhaustion). Fish can also suffer from the loss of their protective outer coating if anglers handle them, which often leads to dangerous bacterial infections.

They say… “fishing keeps kids off drugs.”

We say… Actually, fishing just hooks `em on cruelty, whether or not they’re taking drugs.

At the night “tournaments” sponsored by The Bowfishing Association of Michigan (BAM), hunters armed with bows and arrows and bright lights kill as many “trash fish” as possible. Hundreds of fish can be killed in one night; then their bodies are dumped into the local landfill. BAM spokesperson Rick Sanders sounds as if he’s been sniffing the bait when he claims these shoots are “a family activity. We encourage anglers to bring their kids.” Adds Sanders, BAM promotes “ethical shooting.” Sounds like another fish story to us!

“There are three prerequisites for angling — a hook, a line, and a stinker” — John Bryant, “Fettered Kingdoms”

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CHILDREN AND PETS

A boy and his dog, at least in America, is a symbol of friendship and of healthy psychological development. People sometimes say that giving children pets to love helps children develop universal love. But we can easily see that it doesn’t work. Children love their dogs, cats, hamsters, and lizards, yes, but they eat cows, pigs, fish, sheep, and chickens. Some children on farms even learn to arrange for the slaughter of animals they pampered as pets.

Both pampering and slaughtering stem from a desire to please one-self, or, more accurately, from a desire to please to senses and mind with which one falsely identifies. So teaching a child to love a pet because the pet is cute or loyal or cuddly simply binds the child to valuing bodily pleasure instead of spiritual pleasure.

Finally we need to train our children in specific guidelines about animals. Carnivorous animal such as dogs and cats should never be allowed in a house. While a carnivorous animal freely living outside can catch and eat other animals without sin, if we buy pet food made from meat, fish, or eggs we contribute to the slaughter of innocent creatures.

Let us teach our children to show spiritually equal vision by giving all creatures the opportunity to engage in Krishna’s service. Let us not allow our children to develop material attachments for an animal body.

Urmila Devi Dasi

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WATER CONSERVATION for Jiv Daya
Dr. Hasmukh & Nalini Shah — New Philadelphia, OH

Ahimsa is the cardinal principle of all religions, and especially Jainism. Very strong emphasis is given to “Jiv Daya,” that is avoiding any kind of suffering or killing of even one sensed living beings (Ekendriya Jivas). Let us raise our awareness and apply it in our daily life, this simple measure of ‘water conservation.’

Water contains innumerable number of microscopic lives in each drop, and water by itself also is composed of innumerable number of water body particles, the Ekendriya Jivas. By conserving or minimizing the use of even one drop of water, we will be instrumental in saving billions & billions of lives. On the other hand, with little negligence, we will also be responsible for killing them. Let us focus on a few facts and figures about our daily water usage and how we can minimize violence to microscopic and water bodied life.

On the average, water use in typical single family home in USA, without any water conservation is about 74 gallons per person per day. Large bulk of water volume (about 43%) is used for flushing toilets. Showers, dish washing, bathing, laundry, etc. consume another 48%. Remaining 8 to 10% is used for drinking, cooking, and minor uses.

Old toilet tanks use 3.6 gallons per flush, and simply replacing them by new more efficient toilet-tanks, which use 1.6 gallons per flush, we can save 56% of water per flush. Just imagine how much water can be saved by a family of four in a single day.

Many shower heads put out about 5.3 gallons of water per minute. Average shower consumes 25 to 50 gallons of water per person. In this modern society, very few people take old fashioned bath with a bucket full of water. However, simply by replacing old shower heads with new low volume shower heads (most of them give out only 2.5 gallons per minute, without any noticeable loss of force), we will be conserving more than 50% of water. Each shower could save 10 to 30 gallons.

Simple acts like brushing teeth with running tap uses about 2 gallons of water, and this wastage can be minimized by simply using glass of water instead of the tap water.

There are many more ways to cut down use of water, and the readers can always come up with their intuition. Let us adopt them in our day-to-day life, and give “Pran-Daan” to innumerable one-sensed lives.

Live and Let Live.

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Children Mortgaged for Money

Some more hidden cruelties behind closed doors in silk industry
Purnima Toolsidass — Compassionate Friend, Monsoon-Winter 1997 — Beauty Without Cruelty India

When Sargunam needed Rs 5,000 to pay for an operation to remove her uterus, she did what people in her village near the town of Kancheepuram had been doing for generations — she mortgaged her eleven-year-old son Ravi Kumar to raise the money.

Similarly, Chinakuzhantha, thirty-eight years old, pledged her twelve-year-old daughter Ramani to pay her husband’s medical bills. Earlier, she had mortgaged her elder son to clear other debts.

Leela borrowed Rs 2,000 to carry out urgent repairs to her house two years ago. As collateral, she offered her ten-year-old son Muthu and committed him to work for twelve hours a day in one of the local silk handloom units to pay off the debt. His tasks included stretching the warps for the looms and manually feeding the threads for the intricate designs of silk saris for which he earned a paltry sum of Rs 10 per day.

‘Advance’ money for child labour is easily available in the flourishing silk industry of Kancheepuram in Tamil Nadu. As the quantum offered — ranging from Rs 2,000 to Rs 15,000 — is the highest than in any other industry, parents are inclined to succumb and lease out their children as a matter of routine.

Although the majority of families providing child labour for bondage belong to the “below-poverty-line” category, in many cases the lust of parents for money rather than their poverty is the main reason behind the ongoing anachronism. The mothers in each case express remorse and regret, but they do it anyway.

“My husband earns so little and I have two smaller children to feed,” was Kannimma’s explanation for pledging her daughter Satya, aged twelve, for a sum of Rs 2,000.

A new dimension to the silk industry has been unfolded courtesy the Asian Age newspaper. Added to which The Times of India has reported that it is a practice for contractors to fleece farmers in Jammu and Kashmir by purchasing silk cocoons for as little as Rs 150 per kilogram.

Those with vested interests will, undoubtedly argue that if we stop buying silk, it will only add to the poverty of these people. Think hard: had such patronage (over generations) improved their lot, would these poor people have continued to mortgage their twelve-year-olds to twelve hours of labour Rs 2,000? Even if you do not have a 12-year-old child, but you have a heart and a conscience, do please, stop using silk, be it Kancheepuram or Kashmir silk, or any other. By using an alternative material, you will be helping one of the smallest of God’s creatures — the silk-worm, the unfortunate children of the most evolved — man, and most of all yourself!

If you do not wish to use Silk… because you’d be indirectly supporting child-labour, or simply because to produce a single gram of woven silk, fifteen silk-worms in their cocoons are boiled alive, Beauty Without Cruelty can help you with an informative new leaflet The Silk Moths Undoing which explains the untold killing in silk production. The leaflet lists the varieties and different materials and things which contain and do not contain silk. For those who would like to have a free copy, please send a Rs 2 postage stamp. Please also indicate if you would like it in English or Hindi.

Beauty Without Cruelty, India 4 Prince of Wales’ Drive

Wanowrie, Pune 411-040

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EVOLUTION, A Higher Vision of the Human Species

By Liam Brophy, Ph.D. — American Anti Vivisection Society
(The AV Magazine, January 1994)

We have it on the highest authority that evolution is still an on-going process. Here, in elegant prose, are the final words of Darwin’s masterpiece, On the Origin of Species, first published in 1859: “There is a grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.” Fearing that some of his views would shock the religious feelings of some, he waited until 1871 to publish his conclusions concerning our species in The Descent of Man.

The thought that evolution is still at work prompted a contemporary naturalist to pose the question: if evolution produced offshoots of Super Man, would they be justified in using us lesser mortals as laboratory animals? Left to the normal and leisurely processes of nature it has taken our species some two million years to get where we are. But now, for the first time in our long history, humankind is able, with the help of science, to take evolution into its own hands, and decide its direction and rate of development. It is a dizzying and daunting prospect.

The earliest traces we have of our species were found in the savanna country of North Kenya and in southwest Ethiopia near Lake Turkana. Other human remains of two million years vintage have been found at Taung, just south of the equator. They are distinguished from the remains of other hominids by the position of the foramen magnum, the hole in the skull through which the spinal cord contacts the brain. This is positioned in an upright position in humans, while in apes and monkeys the aperture is positioned to allow the head to hang forward. There were other clues to distinguish humans from other hominids — small square teeth unlike those of fighting canines such as apes and the proximity of the remains of primitive flint tools to those distant members of our kind to whom was given the formidable name, Zinjanthropus Homo Habilis.

It is believed that humankind lived up in the trees with other swinging hominids until a serious drought crossed Africa. Lakes shrank and forests were compelled to retreat, and humans were forced from their perch to drop down on the savannas.

From the time that our very remote ancestors parted company with the lemurs and other tree-faring companions, they spread out from the open plains of East Africa, increased and multiplied, and filled all the earth.

W hen the Romans invented the census of population at the very beginning of the Christian era, as we know from the Bethlehem story, the world population registered between 300 and 400 million people. By the year 1700 it had risen to some 500 million. It accelerated to reach some two billion in our time according to World Health Organization statistics. By the year 2000 it is estimated the number will reach five billion. The rapid increase from near constancy for almost two thousand years to a multiplication by ten in three centuries shows an astounding increase in our species unmatched by our fellow creatures, thereby steadily diminishing their living space and food resources. Meanwhile evolution has been — is still — at work, and it is strange that we speak so persistently of past evolution, and so little of what is going on all the while.

This is perhaps understandable seeing that humankind’s span and field of observation is so brief in comparison with the hundreds of million years during which evolution has been at work. Humankind must be considered in the light of evolution as the outcome of an age-long process since it is in humans that nature finds its chief significance. “He is the agent of the evolutionary process on this planet,” says Sir Julian Huxley. “This is so whether he knows it or not, whether he wants it or not; but will he do the job better if he does know it and does consciously want to do it?”

In writing of biology and human progress another eminent naturalist, Arthur Thomas, writes: “Part of the momentum of Organic Evolution works in Man today, and while we always hope that the ape and tiger may die within us, we are in line with our best endeavors.” Maybe this is what the poet had in mind when he wrote of man toiling upward, working out the beast.

A less pejorative meaning can be attached to the term “speciesism” if we take it to mean that the human is the dominant species of our world, still evolving through the constant development of his or her superior brain and mind. Humans can improve the lot of all living things, and stave off the catastrophe which their active brains have devised. We are the clever keepers of our brothers and sisters through land, sea and sky. So while pessimists talk of the dethronement of our species, and refer to it as a random twig on the tree of life, “an item of history, not an embodiment of general principles,” the more intelligent teachers of our time are urging us to take up humankind’s burden through the maximum use of mind and brain. Thinkers like Koestler and Attenborough are not quite so optimistic, but we prefer to believe the scientists who hold that:

The best is yet to be, The last of life, for which the first was made: Our times are in His hand

Who said “A whole I planned…”

T hat eminent French naturalist and palaeontologist, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, shared with Julian Huxley an enthusiasm for evolutionary studies, and an intuitive sense of direction toward a higher vision of our species — the welfare of all creation. They agree with Nietzsche’s view that humankind is unfinished and must be surpassed or completed. The French thinker showed what steps he considered necessary in order for us to take our evolution into our own hands. These are set forth with Gallic clarity in his fine study, The Phenomenon of Man (Fontana Books), to which Huxley contributed an enthusiastic introduction. In is not an easy book to peruse because of the vastness of the world prospect it opens before us, and because the author had to coin words and phrases at times to describe the new world to be brought about by intensified human awareness, heightened intelligence and love for all life. It should be read along with the author’s kindred book, The Future of man, and Bergson’s Evolution Creatrice.

We are convinced that the inspiring evolutionary process in humankind will progress in proportion to the diminishment of cruelty in mind and heart, and believe that all who promote the cause of kindness to animals are helping human evolution. We are invited to participate in this, the highest form of Speciesism.

Buddhist VANDANA

Whatever living beings there may be without exception, weak or strong, long, large, middling, short, subtle, or gross, visible or invisible, living near or far, born or coming to birth — May all beings have happy minds! Let no one deceive another nor despise anyone anywhere. Neither in anger nor ill will should anyone wish harm to another. As a mother would risk her own life to protect her only child, even so towards all living beings one should cultivate aboundless heart. One should cultivate for all the world a heart of boundless kindness, above, below, and across, unobstructed, without hate or enmity.  Whether standing, walking, or sitting, lying down or whenever awake, he should develop this mindfulness; this is called divinely dwelling here.

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Animal Violence, Youth Violence and Domestic Violence:
A Deadly Progression
by Representative Connie Morella (R-8th District, Maryland)

Animal Guardian, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1998 – Doris Day Animal League

A 15-year-old Oregon student slaughtered his parents and a classmate and left 23 students injured in a shoot-out at his high school. He had a history of abusing and torturing animals.

A 16 year-old from Mississippi stabbed his mother to death, then shot and killed two classmates and injured seven others. In his diary, he confessed to burning and torturing his dog, Sparkle, to death. Two Arkansas elementary school boys shot and killed four fellow students and a teacher during a faked fire drill at their school. Classmates reported that one of the boys shot dogs with a .22 all the time.

Increasingly, women in battered women’s shelters report that their abusers victimize the family pet in order to control their behavior or their children’s behavior. The abusers either threaten to harm or kill the animals. Not surprisingly, children raised in such homes often learn that cruelty to animals is acceptable behavior. In turn, this behavior becomes the first step in repeating a legacy of violence toward family members.

These are all reasons why I joined with Congressman Tom Lantos in introducing a resolution in the House of Representatives to raise awareness of the link between cruelty to animals and domestic violence, child abuse, and other forms of violent behavior. The bill urges social workers, teachers, mental health professionals, and others to be aware of the connection between animal cruelty, and the evaluate and closely monitor individuals who have a history of animal abuse.

The legislation also urges federal research concerning the connection between animal and human violence in order that appropriate intervention methods be developed and that local law enforcement officials take seriously all incidences of animal cruelty.

The legislation reflects growing awareness — and growing concern — that violence perpetrated on animals is a symptom of violence that will escalate in time to violence against humans. This spring, at a congressional briefing, Kim Roberts, who is with The Humane Society of the United States’ “First Strike Campaign,” so called because that violent first strike is frequently against the family pet, spoke about how such violence is “often used to control, manipulate, or terrorize family members. It is a ‘warning sign’ that the violence is escalating. Taking animal cruelty seriously offers an opportunity to intervene in violent households and with violent individuals. Cross-reporting and cross-training of humane investigators and those charged with investigating child abuse and domestic violence are also valuable tools in the identification of current and possible victims of violence, both human and animal.”

But there are some in our society who dismiss animal cruelty as inconsequential or as “boys being boys.” FBI Special Agent Allan Brantley, who also spoke at the briefing, strongly disagrees. “Violence against animals is violence and when it is present it is considered by the people I work with to be synonymous with a history of violence. In many cases we have seen examples whereby violence against animals is a prelude to violence against humans. Some offenders kill animals as a rehearsal for targeting human victims and may kill or torture animals because to them the animals symbolically represent people.”

Agent Brantley continued, “Animal violence does not occur in a vacuum. It is highly predictive in identifying children at risk for committing future acts of violence but also in identifying children being abused and cases of spousal abuse.”

Whether we live in cities, small towns, suburbs or in rural areas, whether we are parents, teachers, neighbors, whether we are young or old, we must all work together to confront such violence in our homes, in our schools, and in our communities.

But what can the average person do to help?

  • Write to your member of Congress and ask that he or she recognizes the link between animal cruelty and violence against humans. We need this important tool for anti-violence advocates.

  • Become an advocate for strong, anti-cruelty to animal laws and for strong enforcement of these laws in your state. These laws should include stiff penalties, fines, and jail sentences, require restitution and reimbursement, and provide for psychological examination and counseling, and offer intervention strategies for offenders.

  • Always report incidents of animal cruelty to your local humane society or to your local police department. Intentional cruelty to animals is always serious. If the perpetrator is a child, contact the child’s parents, school teacher or principal as well.

  • Contact the ASPCA’s Family VISION Program (Violence, Information Sharing, Intervention, and Observation Network), the Humane Society of the United States First Strike Campaign for information about these programs.

  • Get Involved with your local antiviolence coalition.

There are many ways you can contribute your time and talent to raise awareness about the connection between animal cruelty to animals and violence against humans.

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Ally Walker Spotlights Animal Abuse
Investigating the Cruelty Connection
PETA’s Animal Times, Winter 1998

In July 1998, Russell Eugene Weston walked into the U.S. Capitol, pulled out a gun and started shooting. When he was done, two police officers were dead and a bystander was wounded. Hours earlier, Weston had been involved in another shooting. That time his targets were cats, more than a dozen strays cared for by his father.

Ally Walker, star of U.S. TV’s The Profiler, knows these two events were not unrelated and that Russell Eugene Weston is not a lone statistic. In a new public service announcement for PETA, she hopes to spread the word that violence toward animals is linked to violence toward humans.

“According to the FBI, 80 percent of violent criminals start off abusing animals,” says Ally in the PSA.

Among that 80 percent are Albert De Salvo, the “Boston Strangler” who killed 13 women in 1962-63 and reported that, in his youth, he trapped dogs and cats in crates and then shot arrows through the crates. Carroll Edward Cole, executed in 1985 for five of the 35 murders of which he was accused, said his first act of violence was the strangulation of a puppy. Serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer confessed to the childhood killings of neighbors’ dogs and cats. Richard Allen Davis, the man charged with abducting a California girl from her bedroom and murdering her, reportedly set cats on fire and used dogs as targets to practice knife-throwing. More recently, a rash of deadly school shootings had one thing in common: They were preceded by acts of violence toward animals.

Alert animal control officers are aware of this trend. In San Francisco, officers are trained to recognize child abuse because of the parallel between animal abuse and child abuse. According to the San Francisco Child Abuse Council, people are often quicker to report animal abuse because it is more visible and because people “do not wonder what the animal has done to provoke [it].”

“Animal abuse is a serious crime with serious consequences for all of us,” says Ally Walker.

School Shootings Linked by Animal Cruelty

May 1998/Springfield, Ore.: Kip Kinkel killed his parents and two classmates and injured 22 others. He had a history of animal abuse and torture, having boasted about blowing up a cow and killing cats, squirrels and others by putting firecrackers in their mouths.

March 1998/Jonesboro, Ark.: Mitchell Johnson and Andrew Golden shot and killed four students and a teacher. A friend says Andrew “shoots dogs all the time wit a .22.”

December 1997/West Paducah, Ky.: Michael Carneal shot and killed three classmates at a prayer meeting. Carneal had talked about throwing a cat into a bonfire.

October 1997/Pearl, Miss.: Luke Woodham stabbed his mother to death, then shot and killed two classmates and injured seven others. In his diary, Woodham wrote that he and a friend beat, burned and tortured his dog, Sparkle, to death.

Most serial killers have a known history of killing animals. Jeffrey Dahmer killed and strangled neighborhood dogs and cats. Ted Bunty tortured animals as a teenager. Carroll Edward Cole strangled a puppy. David Berkowitz “Son of Sam” shot a neighbor’s dog.

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In Defense of Protesters at The Ringling Brothers Circus

Many people never lift a finger to do anything that does not somehow benefit themselves. But not Ms. Miyun Park. After she comes home from her 10 hour-a-day job for a non-profit group, she dedicates her evenings and weekends, 52 weeks a year, tirelessly striving for a day when non-human animals are not seen as mere things, chattel to be used and abused in every imaginable way.

Amanda Moeckel is 20 years old and currently in her third year at American University, majoring in Political Science and Art. Her extracurricular activities include AUARE (American University Animal Rights Effort (President)), and Food Not Bombs (serves vegetarian meals to the homeless). She has done this while maintaining a GPA of 3.72. Like Ms. Park, Ms. Moeckel devotes her life to doing things that do not benefit herself, except fighting for peace, compassion, and humanity. It is my honor to represent two such good people and good friends.

Now, about this case. This prosecution epitomizes many of our social ills. D.C. Code º 22-801 makes it a crime for anyone to cause or procure an animal to be tortured, tormented, or cruelly killed, or to deprive them of necessary sustenance. So on some level we know that mistreatment of animals is wrong. But the statutes just sit there.

For instance, the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus causes families of elephants and other animals to be brutally killed right before their children, so that the children can be stolen from their home without incident. Or, they are born into captivity for the use and abuse of another. The baby elephants’ lives and free will are beaten out of them, and under force and threat of force they are forced to perform unnatural acts. Every day, for the rest of their lives, they are taken from a cage, to a rail car, to another cage, to a stage, and back to a cage. They never know what it’s like to have the open earth in front of them without having a chain around their feet, or without a small cage around them, they never taste what it’s like to romp around, to run free. It’s the same despicable story for other circus animals as well. When they are weary, old, and no longer able to perform, they are killed, many being sold for canned hunts. Animals are treated without mercy, all so that people, shielded from the truth about what goes on behind the big top, can pay money to see these animals perform.

But the United States Attorney’s Office doesn’t bring the executives before the court on charges of cruelty to animals. Why not? The answer is simple — because there’s money being made,$200 million per year in profit. In As an attorney who has taken an oath to justice, and a person who has taken an oath to compassion, it makes me sick.

Attorney Sean Day

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Rise of Slaughter in India

It may be hard to believe, but “Independent” Hindu India now kills more animals than ever before!
Even more than the enslaved India under Christian British rule, or even the very ruthless Moslem emperors . . .

More animals have been butchered in the last decade than any previous decade in India’s history!!

After independence, we have tried to catch up with the industrialization of the 20th century. For that we needed foreign machinery, for which we needed foreign exchange, for which we had to export many of our resources — even the ones scarce to our poor masses or important to our future generations. Most lately we have resorted to exporting meat. The government has issued licenses to huge slaughterhouses with an eye on the market in Arab countries. We have ignored that ours is a culture of nonviolence and this business does not fit in it at all. This has raised a big cry in the animal-loving community of Hindus and Jains. Here are some of their thought-provoking views.

The first one is from “Jain Mitra,” dated 15-Oct-98, pages 375-376. It describes “Alkabir,” a major slaughterhouse in Andhra Pradesh. Maneka Gandhi also has talked about this one, at our Chicago Convention.

Killer Alkabir: Inhumane Tyrannies on Helpless Animals

This mechanized slaughterhouse is located 15 miles from Hyderabad, the capital city of Andhra Pradesh, on 300 acre land. This efficient modern plant can process up to 10,000 animals a day.

The central and state governments have issued licence for ‘useless’ 500 buffalos and 2000 sheep and goats, of which 50% have been canceled by the supreme court; but who is counting all these animals, and who is there to judge their ‘uselessness?’ There is no supervision of that. That is why in reality, thousands of healthy animals are annihilated there daily. This also is a murder of law.

Tyranny: Don’t think that these animals are killed easily and painlessly. Their agonies start long before they are dead. They are brought to Alkabir in trucks, from far away distances. For economy, 20-25 huge buffalos are stacked up in each truck. Nobody cares to feed them food, or even water while in transit. They are packed so tightly in the truck, that they are hurt by each other. By the time they arrive, they are no more capable of standing on their own feet! They are moved with force of whips . . .

They are brought into the final ground, where at least a thousand animals are stored. This is their last open air. They are kept here for four days, hungry and thirsty. Then their legs are broken and eyes poked, so that a ‘certificate’ can be obtained about their uselessness. The hunger and thirst of four days cause the hemoglobin to move from blood in to fat. The meat with higher hemoglobin fetches better prices.

Now these animals are pushed into washing showers. Extremely hot water (200 degrees!) is sprayed on them for five minutes, to soften their skins, so they will be easy to remove. The animal faints at this point, but it is not dead yet.

Now it is hung upside down with one leg, on a chain-pulley conveyor. Then half of the neck is slit. This drains the blood, but does not kill the animal. After death, the skin swells thick, which sells for a poor price. But the skin of a live animal is still thin, which has better economic value. On one side the blood is dripping from the neck, and on the other side a hole is made in stomach, from which air is pumped inside. This causes the body to swell, making it easier to peel the skin. After removing the leather, the animal is cut into four pieces: head, legs, body, and tail. The machines remove bones, and pack small pieces of meat into cans for shipping to Alkabir’s headquarters in Hyderabad. From there it is shipped to Mumbai for exporting to its final destination.

Personnel? Most of the people working here are Hindus. The Director, Subhash Sabarwal, is an NRI in Dubai, and his brother, Satish Sabarwal, manages the plant. The other principals are Ghulam Mohammed Sheikh (Dubai), Dilip Himmat Kothari, B.N. Raman, etc. Even though the main workers on cutting machines are from Kerala and Muslims from Mumbai, the administration, security, etc. consists mainly of Hindus. There are several other equally large (or larger) plants in India, owned and operated similarly by NRI’s and Arab citizens in cooperation.

The people working here are paid very handsomely. This is a big attraction. A monthly salary of Rs. 50,000 to 75,000 is common. At the site, there are many veterinarians, but their job is not to save healthy lives. Their only concern is to see that the meat does not carry any germs which may hurt the customers. In fact, there is a small army of government veterinarians, whose job is to see that healthy and useful animals do not get butchered. But these corrupt officials write false certificates according to wishes of Alkabir.

You cannot easily enter Alkabir, because outside people are not allowed in there. Even the local veterinarians and police cannot go inside, so there is no question about the other local poor people even coming close to its boundaries . . . Security is tightened at nights with hunting dogs. Now the neighboring people do not even come close to it.

Depleting our Animal Wealth?

Alkabir alone holds permits to export 15,000 tonnes of meat a year. The other permit-holders are even bigger: Frigorico Alanali (Aurangabad) has permits for 24,000 tonnes, Hind Industries (Aligadh) has permits for 25,000 tonnes, and Alana Sons (Delhi, Andhra and Maharashtra) have permits for 45,000 tonnes. These are just legal numbers. Illegal business is even bigger. Alkabir, even though originally licensed only for export, now sells meat in India too.

Besides all these authorized establishments, there are many smaller unauthorized butcher houses. In addition, animals are butchered on certain rituals too, by various religions, on certain days, by millions. Again, let us make some estimates.

Right now, there are 36,000 slaughterhouses, of which 10 are highly automated, where daily 250,000 animals are hacked. One estimate is that annually 300,000 tonnes of meat are eaten by the flesh-eaters, for which 10 million cows-buffalos and 40 million sheep-goats are killed. At this time the population of buffalos in the country is only 75 millions, and cows 200 millions. The situation of sheep-goats is even worse. Their population is depleting the fastest. Alkabir alone is licensed to kill 600,000 a year, but Deonar (Mumbai) is licensed to kill 2,500,000 a year, in addition to 120,000 cows and 60,000 buffalos. Calcutta located slaughterhouse kills 1,200,000 cows and buffalos per year. These are just official numbers for a few large facilities. There is no count for thousands of smaller unmechanized facilities. But one thing is very clear: The sheep and goats will not survive the next century. We may see the end of our animal wealth in early part of the next century.

Strange – But True!!

  • India is the only country in world that provides in its Constitution for mercy and care of the animals.
  • According to its laws, only those animals can be slain, which are older than 16 years of age, and are useless. However, now meat of young healthy buffalos between 4 months and one year is allowed for exports.

  • Meat of one cow/buffalo is worth Rs. 20,000. However, the same animal may produce, in its 18 years of life span, goods (milk, butter, and manure) worth Rs. 300,000. Thus, the country has to suffer a loss of Rs. 280,000 for each animal slaughtered.

  • We get foreign exchange for meat. However, we also pay foreign exchange for chemical fertilizers, manure, urea, milk powders, etc. which cost several times the price of meats. Then why export meat?

  • The government encourages certain businesses-industries with financial supports. The government has announced 100% supports for opening new slaughterhouses, and the agriculture department has already approved several slaughterhouses. The Indian meat fetches only 40% of international prices. Then what is the meaning of supporting this industry?

  • The government argues that if we don’t kill the animals, their population will go on increasing. However, according to the same statistics, the number of animals per capita is rapidly decreasing.

  • The world trend is towards vegetarianism. The developed countries are learning the dangers of meat-eating. Britain has not opened any new slaughterhouse since 1980, whereas the Indian government is opening new slaughterhouses and modernizing the older ones.

  • According to laws enacted to prevent cruelty to animals, it is considered a crime to treat any animal with cruelty (beating, over-burdening, inflicting pain, etc.). At the same time, however, butchering them is permitted! Does this make any sense?

  • Central Food & Technological Research Institute (Mysore Government) has concocted a concentrated meat, with an objective to alleviate the shortage of ‘quality’ protein for masses. The government still thinks that meat provides superior proteins…

Message from Acharya Shree Vidhyasagarji

Slaughterhouses don’t kill animals only; they also murder ‘humanity.’ The government of this Ahimsak country, by murdering animals and selling its meat, is converting this country’s face forever. India has always been a country of playgrounds, farmers, agriculture, and shepherds taking care of their animals with love; never a country of butchers and butchery. Bloodbath is foreign to Indian culture.

The country can never prosper by selling meat, wine, eggs, fish, etc. because there is gross violence involved in all these businesses. The wealth produced by this violence, this bloodbath, will bring many disorders of mind, and all the money will be spent in repairing these disorders. So how will there be any real prosperity?

Industry of violence will spread only violence in the country, not nonviolence. The government wants nonviolence, but condones the violence! Can we establish nonviolence with violence? Today, we need peace not cruelty, because we can not live without peace.

And, what kind of economic policy is this, that we kill milk-producing animals to export their blood and meat to other countries, and then import milk powder and manure from other countries? Rulers of this nation need to change this ‘economic’ policy, because in reality it is an ‘uneconomical’ policy.

The nation that used to export gold, silver and diamonds, is now exporting bones, blood and meat. Our Bharat will never thrive with wealth in this way. We need sanctuaries, not slaughterhouses. It is so absurd that we kill our cows to feed foreigners, when our own people don’t get enough to eat, and we have to use artificial milk! These artificial foods also bring their own killer diseases. We should provide for pure and healthy food for our masses, and for that, we must save our cattle.

Freedom means giving right to live to all lives. What kind of freedom have we achieved, in which we talk about human rights, but define animals as ‘useless’ and annihilate them? Humans have no right to attack other species and take their lives. Everyone has a born right to live, and the death sentence is given only to those who have done big crimes. But these animals are innocent. Those who have done no crime, why are they being killed? There should be a penalty for this atrocity.

Religion is not ringing bells in temples. Religion is compassion and kindness. Protect the animals that are being packed in trucks for sending to slaughterhouses. Saving their lives is true religion.

Our literature has always focused on nonviolence, our culture has always professed nonviolence, then why is our government now moving to violence? This butchery and bloodbath are a big shame to our nation. We can never feel proud for such activities. There is no prestige in such businesses. World peace can never be achieved on foundation of animal massacre.

There was a time when we did not even sell milk – we just gave it free. Where is that Bharat gone? Today we have arrived at selling blood and flesh!

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