Sunday, May 4, 2014

What to do about meat?

There are so many disgusting things going on in our meat packing plants and animal holding pens, that I really don't know where to start this post...

Let's see.  Well, were you aware that just last fall, the USDA decided to allow chickens raised and killed in the US to be shipped overseas to be processed by China?  Those chickens will then be loaded back up and returned to the US to be sold in our super markets.  If you were aware of this, did you happen to know that this is already happening with some of our seafood?  What is wrong with this picture?  Personally, I don't have that much faith in our own processing plants but I have zero in China's (China's track record of pollution and appalling lack of human rights gives me goose bumps, now they're processing our food...).  From a business stand point, I don't see how this makes financial sense, but it must or it wouldn't even be an option.  And exactly how old will these chickens be by the time they finally make it to the grocery store shelves?  Let's face facts, those chickens will be heading over the Pacific via ships, not airplanes, because that will be the most economical mode of transport...so we are talking weeks, at least.  Finally, why would the USDA want this to happen?  I read somewhere that the USDA approved this asinine plan because otherwise, China would not allow US beef sales in their country - however, I cannot find an article to verify that, so take it with a grain of salt.

http://www.collective-evolution.com/2013/08/16/fda-finally-admits-chicken-meat-contains-cancer-causing-arsenic/

http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2014/03/chicken-from-china-your-seafood-is-already-being-processed-there/#.U2O_nFfLfIs

But, that's not all.  Were you aware that back in 2000, the FDA approved meat from diseased animals as fit for human consumption?  Personally, I find this absolutely disgusting.  I understand that eating a diseased or tumor-riddled cow is unlikely to make me ill, but it would seem that eating a healthy animals versus a sick one is probably better for my own health.

http://rense.com/general2/bf.htm

http://www.snopes.com/photos/food/diseasedmeat.asp

Did you know that chicken farmers are feeding arsenic-laced food to the chickens you are eating?  Arsenic is in the feed in order to keep the chickens free from intestinal parasites.  Now, I learned back in high school that because arsenic builds up in the system, it was sometimes used to slowly poison people in power hundreds of years ago, but the FDA only recently admitted that the arsenic is not passed in the chicken feces?   Yum, arsenic...

http://www.collective-evolution.com/2013/08/16/fda-finally-admits-chicken-meat-contains-cancer-causing-arsenic/

So, what can you do?  You could go vegetarian or... 

Find a local butcher shop and ask if they know farmers who sell their animals.  Working with a local butcher, I was able to purchase a half a pig, and a half a side of beef.  Both were cut and wrapped to my specifications.  As a bonus, I helped support two local farmers and a small, family-owned business, and I even got to ask the farmers exactly what my meat ate and how it was raised.  How many times have you talked to the person who raised the animal you grilled up for dinner?  Generally, you aren't going to save any money doing this, but the rewards are worth the few extra dollars in my eyes.

Learn to hunt and fish.  I honestly have gotten to the point that I feel if you want to eat meat, you should have a hand in the ugly part of it's acquisition at least some of the time.  I feel that the experience makes people more appreciative and less wasteful of what's on their plate.  How many times have you seen someone throw away extra pork chops or the like?  When you stop to think that an animal died so you could cook it up and throw it away, you may be more likely to take precautions against waste.  Be a good steward.  Eventually I would like to get to the point that my own family is either raising, hunting, or fishing for most of the meat served on our table. 

Keep quail or doves on your balcony.  Quail and dove are small, quiet birds that are perfectly suited for apartment and other urban dwellers.  Quail are more prolific at producing eggs than are chickens, and much less messy.  Either can be butchered with nothing more than sharp kitchen shears and a bucket, if you have the stomach for it.  All that being said, take the time to find a healthy and natural feed for them or raising them will be a wasted effort.

Learn to eat mostly veggies. This is my main plan: buy what I can't grow from small, local farmers and get most of the meat out of our diet.  Buy produce that's in season and purchase enough to put up and last through the year.  Eat meat only if/when you can catch or raise it. 

It's not going to be as easy as getting take out or buying boxed dinners.  It's going to require planning, forethought, and extra effort and supplies.  Is your health and peace of mind worth it?

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