Sunday, January 08, 2006

Why not try vegan ? It could change your life for the better

Just about everyone I meet asks me about why I became a vegan? Or what I eat? For some people they have an issue with it some people don't most people have not tried going vegan or veggie for even a couple of weeks and I encourage them to try for a couple of weeks and see how they feel or what they thought.... For me I have been a veggie for the last 14 odd years and a vegan for the last 10 or so of them the reasons I have area varied but focus on the main three being Animal compassion, Personal health, and caring for the environment. I would also throw into that a belilef that any good Christian would also conceder a vegan diet rembering that the garden of Eden was vegan and heaven is vegan and if we are to pray that gods will be done on earth as it is in heaven then that would mean praying for a vegan society would it not (ok maybe I am pushing it with that statement..Giggles)
so anyway here is something I would ask you to read with an open mind and ask me any questions on being vegan you might have......

When it comes to vegetarianism, the number one question on most meat-eaters' minds is, "What do you eat?" The answer: Anything we want! There are vegetarian alternatives to almost any animal food, from soy sausages and "Fib Ribs" to Tofurky jerky and mock lobster. Vegetarian-friendly menus are sprouting up everywhere—even Burger King offers veggie burgers—and more and more eateries are focusing exclusively on vegetarian and vegan foods. There are fantastic alternatives to every dairy product you can imagine, including Soy Delicious ice cream, Silk chocolate soy milk, Tofutti cream cheese, and more.

Every year in the U.S., more than 27 billion animals are slaughtered for food. Raising animals on factory farms is cruel and ecologically devastating. Eating animals is bad for our health, leading directly to many diseases and illnesses, including heart attacks, strokes, cancer, diabetes, and obesity. In response to animal welfare, health, and ecological concerns, compassionate people everywhere are adopting a vegetarian diet.

For Animals Animals on factory farms are treated like meat, milk, and egg machines. Chickens have their beaks seared off with a hot blade, and male cows and pigs are castrated without painkillers. All farmed chickens, turkeys, and pigs spend their brief lives in dark and crowded warehouses, many of them so cramped that they can't even turn around or spread a single wing. They are mired in their own waste, and the stench of ammonia fills the air. Animals raised for food are bred and drugged to grow as large as possible as quickly as possible—many are so heavy that they become crippled under their own weight and die within inches of their water supply. Animals on factory farms do not see the sun or get a breath of fresh air until they are prodded and crammed onto trucks for a nightmarish ride to the slaughterhouse, often through weather extremes and always without food or water. Many die during transport, and others are too sick or weak to walk off the truck after they reach the slaughterhouse. The animals who survive this hellish ordeal are hung upside-down and their throats are slit, often while they're completely conscious. Many are still alive while they are skinned, hacked into pieces, or scalded in the defeathering tanks. Learn more about the factory-farming industry.

For Your HealthSome of the leading killers in America today, including heart disease, cancer, obesity, and strokes, are directly linked to meat-based diets. Heart disease is the number one cause of death in America today, and it is caused by the build-up of cholesterol and saturated fat from animal products in our arteries. The only two doctors in human history who have successfully reversed heart disease have included an exclusively vegetarian diet as a part of their programs. The average vegan cholesterol level is 133 (compared to 210 for meat-eaters); there are no documented cases of heart attacks in individuals with cholesterol under 150. Other health problems tied to clogged arteries, like poor circulation and atherosclerotic strokes, can be virtually eliminated with a vegan diet

Vegans are approximately one-ninth as likely to be obese as meat-eaters and have a cancer rate that is only 40 percent that of meat-eaters. People who consume animal products are also at increased risk for many other illnesses, including strokes, obesity, osteoporosis, arthritis, Alzheimer's, multiple allergies, diabetes, and food poisoning. Learn more about the health benefits of a vegetarian diet.

For the EnvironmentAmerica's meat addiction is poisoning and depleting our potable water, arable land, and clean air. More than half of the water used in the United States today goes to animal agriculture, and since farmed animals produce 130 times more excrement than the human population, the run-off from their waste is fouling our waterways. Animal excrement emits gases, such as hydrogen sulfide and ammonia, that poison the air around farms, as well as methane and nitrous oxide, which are major contributors to global warming. Forests are being bulldozed to make more room for factory farms and feed crops to feed farmed animals, and this destruction causes soil erosion and contributes to species extinction and habitat loss. Raising animals for food also requires massive amounts of food and raw materials: Farmed animals consume 70 percent of the corn, wheat, and other grains that we grow, and one-third of all the raw materials and fossil fuels used in the U.S. go to raising animals for food. In short, our country's meat addiction is wrecking the earth. Read more about factory farming and the environment

Thanks for taking the time to read that guys i love you all so much
Hugz from Sarah XOXOXOXO

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

I don't get meat from a "meat factory." I grew up in a small farming community. We raised our own cattle, grew our own vegetables, etc. You can blame commerce all you like, but it's nothing more than a generalization. We've been over this many times, and I know you disagree. But just because someone eats meat doesn't make them evil. And as for the Bible comment, the Hebrews were commanded to slaughter a lamb and cook it a certain way to consume on Passover. If eating meat was evil then there's no way they would have been commanded to do it. ;)

Sarah said...

Did i say anywhere there that someone eatting meat makes them evil? Killing is by the very nature a violent act you are taking a life! While factory farming is a the worst thing i can think of i dont see how any type of cattle farming is much better and in eviromental terms its not Raising animals is an unproductive use of global resorces and contributets to golbal hunger!Note farmed animals consume 70 percent of all corn, wheat, and other grains that we grow, and one-third of all the raw materials and fossil fuels
As with everything you should read the bible with an overview approch and not just pull verses out of context.Jesus' message is one of love and compassion, yet there is nothing loving or compassionate about factory farms and slaughterhouses, where billions of animals live miserable lives and die violent, bloody deaths. Jesus mandates kindness, mercy, compassion, and love for all God's creation. He would be appalled by the degree of suffering we inflict on animals to indulge our acquired taste for their flesh.
Personaly you can eat whatever you like I just asked that you concider what i bloged and think about things that you maybe have not thought about...... thats all.

Anonymous said...

Like I have told you before Sarah, I wish I were as passionate as you. OK, call me hardheaded, stupid, or stubborn, but I dont quite get all of the killing thing. I have hunted before, and I ate what I killed, I guess the Texas boy in me doesnt quite see whats wrong with that. However, I do think that there is a good point about the health issues, especially of eating meat all the time.

OK for all to see I will try something for a week, but really a day at a time. If our DFAC has the variety, I will eat all veggies and fruit, but once in a while I will have some fish, after all if a resurrected Jesus can eat it, it's good enough for me, ....gimme that ole time religion...oh, uh, hahaha!!! You may not even know that old song. Maybe one of your readers does. I forget my age is showing. So anyways, (I say that too much) one week, if I make that, then another, but I dont have that killing conviction thing, like I said, a health issue, and ... well just for you.

Sarah said...

Yea for you bear and yea for the animals ... i think alot of people could do with increasing there fruit and veggie in take ... i eat on avarge 15 difrent types of fruit and veggies a day and its not hard to do ....
Also there is a group of people that only eat animals that are wild and they hunt and kill they are against factory farming but not against eatting animals as long as the animal has had a somewhat normal life ..... a quick net search should bring up some info on them

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