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conscious food consumption



Conscious Food Consumption


Dave and I have often focused on conscious food consumption and production - interviewing alternative and biodynamic farmers, passionate conservationists, and wildlife rehabilitators... written numerous articles and have brought it up in the Trash Talk book series as well our blog posts. As such when we were invited to share this announcement below, we were very happy to do so. This comes from www.centerforfoodsafety.org 
​- Center for Food Safety (CFS) is a national nonprofit environmental and consumer advocacy organization that empowers people, supports farmers, and protects the earth from the harmful impacts of industrial agriculture. Through groundbreaking legal, scientific, and grassroots action, CFS protects and promotes the public’s right to safe food and the environment.and the wording is all theirs, although it was gleaned from several sources - a note of appreciation to Joey Lee (Digital Manager) who gave us permission to publish this here today about their new website:
Also - please don't take this campaign to the other extreme... this not an anti-food production, anti-farmer or anti-meat, but more of a health campaign for people, the environment and economically as well as support for conscious farmers. 


EndIndustrialMeat.org


...to help you combat climate change, reduce your ecological footprint, and fight back against animal cruelty by opting out of meat produced on factory farms. Since we’re all in this together, we’re asking CFS members (like you!) to combat climate change by pledging to opt out of industrial meat by replacing half the meat you’re eating with humane, sustainably-raised, grass-fed meats and the other half with plant-based sources of protein like beans, lentils, chickpeas, nuts, seeds, and quinoa. EndIndustrialMeat.org also shines a spotlight on the farms raising poultry and livestock using sustainable, humane methods that you can patronize knowing you’re supporting eco-friendly and humane farming methods.

The Center for Food Safety (CFS) launched a groundbreaking new report and website to address the environmental, social, health, and economic consequences of factory farmed meat. The U.S. produces nearly 100 billion pounds of beef, pork, chicken, and turkey each year, the vast majority of which comes from animals raised in intensive factories. By opting out of industrial meat, consumers can choose a more eco-friendly diet which emits fewer greenhouse gases, sequesters carbon in soils, protects our rapidly dwindling pollinator populations, and conserves natural resources like water and trees. EndIndustrialMeat.org highlights how reducing overall consumption of meat and poultry proteins; sourcing certified humane, organic, and pasture-raised meats; and increasing portions of plant-based proteins in consumers' diets can play a critical role in stopping and reversing climate change.

Food animal production is responsible for 18 percent of global greenhouse gas production and 7 percent of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. In creating these new resources, CFS aims to disrupt the dominance of factory farmed meat by connecting consumers with humane, eco-friendly meat producers and by encouraging them to add more plant-based sources of protein to their diets. With sections including "Ten Reasons to Opt Out," and "How to Opt Out of Industrial Meat," EndIndustrialMeat.org outlines the "why's" and "how's" of keeping factory-raised meat and poultry off your plate. As 37 percent of methane emissions come from grain-fed animals, the site also has a section profiling farmers and ranchers that are producing sustainably and humanely raised meats from grass-fed animals.

"More than 95 percent of food animals are raised in a factory, so unless you're actively sourcing alternatives, odds are extremely high that the meat and poultry you're eating came from a CAFO," said Cameron Harsh, organic and animal programs director at Center for Food Safety."EndIndustrialMeat.org helps consumers find meat from humane, ecological farmers and offers several strategies to incorporate those food choices into any lifestyle."

Industrial beef systems produce 250 times more greenhouse gas emissions than legumes, so EndIndustrialMeat.org urges consumers to pledge to replace half the meat they used to eat with plant proteins such as beans, lentils, peas, chickpeas, nuts, seeds, and quinoa in addition to smaller amounts of humane, sustainably-produced meat. This strategy helps to keep food budgets balanced by offsetting the higher price of sustainably-produced meat with increased consumption of plant-based proteins that tend to be lower in cost than even conventionally-raised meats.

Industrial meat and poultry production have significant costs despite their lower prices, including detrimental impacts on personal health, natural resources, wildlife, animals, climate, the economy, community health, farmers, and food workers. Conventionally raised meat consumption increases the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria on meats and in the environment; leads to a higher rate of trauma-related injuries for workers; tortures animals by raising them in cruel, painful environments; and emits toxic air pollutants. Animal factory operators rely on intensive production of soy and grains like corn to feed confined livestock, which consumes large amounts of fossil fuel and depletes soils. The synthetic fertilizers used for livestock feed crops contribute 65 percent of nitrous oxide and 30 million tons of ammonia annually. Monocultures of corn and soybeans also hinder soil's ability to sequester carbon from the atmosphere, which could otherwise capture 5-15 percent of the yearly global fossil fuel emissions.

Conversely, if everyone in the U.S. went without meat for even a single day, it would prevent 1.2 million tons of carbon dioxide from being emitted through greenhouse gases—the same amount of greenhouse gases that are emitted by France.

For years, CFS has advocated for policies that establish baseline standards for food safety, animal welfare, and waste management and has employed legal, grassroots, and policy strategies to hold producers for failing to meet those standards. EndIndustrialMeat.org aims to build on this work by supporting the growth of alternative producers that meet a high bar of welfare and environmental stewardship. The website also features CFS' online petitions which make it easy for consumers to write companies and regulatory agencies to support more eco-friendly, equitable food production practices and policies.

Make a difference through what you eat. Pledge to opt out of industrial meat.


Together, we can make build a sustainable food system; Find out more here: 
https://endindustrialmeat.org/resources-for-more-information/


We’ve got to get everyone on board if we’re going to transform the U.S. food system for the better. Invite your friends to pledge to opt out of industrial meat on Facebook or Twitter or just forward this email to a few friends! If you share the post on Twitter, please tag @CFSTrueFood in the tweet. We're using the hashtag #EndIndustrialMeat for the campaign.


Did you Know? 


  • Overconsumption of meat is linked to increased risk of heart disease, obesity, stroke, certain cancers, type-2 diabetes, and shorter life span. The meat industry’s practice of dousing healthy food animals is making those antibiotics less effective where we need them: treating bacterial infections in humans.


  • The production of feed crops for industrial meat production, like corn and soy, threatens pollinators by subjecting them to high rates of toxic pesticides, destroying their habitat, and exposing them to animal drugs and feed additives found in industrial animal manure that is applied to crops.

  • Animal factories are responsible for 18 percent of global GHG production and over 7 percent of GHG emissions in the U.S. Grain-based livestock feeds are grown with synthetic fertilizers, which contribute 65 percent of nitrous oxide and 30 million tons of ammonia emissions annually.



  • One pound of industrial beef requires 1,799 gallons of water. One pound of industrial pork: 576 gallons. Industrial chicken: 468 gallons. The United Nations declared animal factories major contributors to increasing water depletion.




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