A meat-inclusive diet often comes with a side of environmental caveats, including livestock’s contribution to global warming, its contribution to deforestation, and the stress it places on a bevy of increasingly precious resources, from water to land. Now, a group of researchers want to add another concern to the meat-eater’s plate: worldwide species extinction.
According to a recent study published in Science of the Total Environment by researchers at Florida International University in Miami, livestock production’s impact on land use is “likely the leading cause of modern species extinctions” — a problem the researchers think will only get worse as population growth increases the global demand for meat. (emphasis added)
The study is particularly interesting to scientists because research linking livestock’s relationship to biodiversity loss has been lacking, Gidon Eshel, a geophysicist at Bard College who was not involved in the study, told Science.
“Now we can say, only slightly fancifully: You eat a steak, you kill a lemur in Madagascar. You eat a chicken, you kill […]
Meat eaters are not hurting the world at all. In fact, we need the cow manure. Monoculture is killing agriculture with its chemicals, animal cruelty, huge monster machines that also gobble up petrofuel.
Radiation from Fuchushima, trash dumping in the oceans, and chemtrail spraying are ruining our air and waters.
Tens of thousands of elephants have been killed only to find that the manure of the animals as they roamed the savannas kept them fertile and green. Permaculture farming, no reckless nuclear energy (better design and thorium instead of uranium), hydro, solar, wind energy generation, and uncommon sense might mitigate the damage, but not eating meat will only make us weak and more stupid.
I am sorry Betty, but I must disagree with you. You must not realize that the water for raising meat (of any kind) and the processing of that meat is exponentially higher (hundreds or thousands of times at least) than if people would eat vegetables and fruit only. That is the ignorance which makes your stance unscientific, although you do make some good points about permaculture verses monoculture. Water is the source of all life and should be our first concern, and should not be ignored if we want to make wise choices. May God bless you and your family.