Animal, Vegetable, or E. O. Wilson

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Buoyed by the equal parts of derision and support I received for writing in “I am So Tired Of Malthus” about how humans are better fed than at any time in history, I am foolishly but bravely venturing once again into the question of how we feed ourselves.

In a book excerpt in the February 2002 Scientific American entitled “The Bottleneck”, the noted ant entomologist Professor Edward O. Wilson put forward the familiar Malthusian argument that humans are about to run out of food. He said that we are currently getting wedged into a “bottleneck” of population versus resources. He warned of the dangers of “exponential growth” in population, and he averred that we will be squeezed mightily before the population levels off.

His solution? In part his solution was that everyone should become a vegivore.

Wilson: “If everyone agreed to become vegetarian, the present 1.4 billion hectares of arable land would support about 10 billion people.

Figure 1. Vegans are not aliens from the star Vega. They are humans who are strict vegivores, as the food chart above shows. They are known for their barbaric habit of boiling and eating the unborn fetuses of rice and wheat. And don’t get me started on what they do to the poor baby carrots, with their so-called … but I digress …

Is this correct? Would we have a net gain in carrying capacity if all the human carnetarians agreed to become vegivores?

Wilson gets his figure of 10 billion people by taking the total amount of the grain that is being fed to animals, and then figuring how many people that grain would feed. In 1999, about 655 billion tons of grain were fed to animals. That’s a lot of grain. At the world average of about 150 kg of grain per person per year, he’s right, that’s an increase of 4 billion more people who would have enough grain. There were 6 billion on the planet in the year 2000, so that makes a total of about 10 billion people.

So up to there, he is correct. But wait. Although he stops the calculation at that point, there’s a few things he is leaving out of the calculation.

First, that’s just grain, which is not enough to keep a person alive. The extra 4 billion people would need additional nuts, seafood, fruits, vegetables, cotton, root crops, and all the other varieties of food and fiber. So the increase would have to be less than 4 billion people.

Second, people have a number of misunderstandings about where animals fit in on the farm. They believe that animals eat lots and lots of food that could be eaten by humans. Their claim is that if we just ate what the animals eat, we could eliminate the inefficiency, and feed many more people than we are feeding now. In other words, their claim is that having animals on the farms reduces the amount of food coming from the farm.

This is what Wilson is repeating here (although he has gone further than others by claiming that this would increase the carrying capacity of the earth by 2/3 again as much as the current population).

I grew up on a ranch where we had both animals (cattle, pigs, chickens) and field crops (hay, alfalfa). I can assure you that anyone who thinks animals reduce available food on the farm is what in my youth we would call a “city slicker”. Farmers around the planet keep animals for meat and milk. What, are farmers all stupid around the planet and only E. O. Wilson and his fellow vegetactivists are smart? Farmers would not keep animals if it were not a net gain.

While in some industrialized countries the cattle get up to 15% of their lifetime nutrition from grain, the vast majority of animals on farms worldwide live on a variety of things that will not or cannot be eaten by humans. Pigs eat garbage, hens eat bugs and grass and kitchen scraps, goats eat leaves, and cows have four stomachs, so they can turn cellulose, which humans cannot eat, into nutritious milk and meat.

If we got rid of all of our chickens worldwide, would we have more food available for humans? Not unless you like bugs and kitchen scraps better than you like eggs. Chickens are the poor woman’s Rumplestiltskin, spinning insects and weeds and melon rinds into golden eggs and tasty meat … I’ll let E. O. Wilson tell her she’s ruining the planet, not me.

If we call the goats down off the steep hillsides where they are grazing around the world, will we be able to put vegetable farms up there? Not unless you can farm sideways without water.

Cattle in the US eat thousands and thousands of tons of cottonseed meal annually, turning it into meat and milk. Would you prefer to eat the cottonseed meal yourself? Sorry, you can’t, it’s mostly cellulose.

The presence of livestock in a mixed farming economy does not decrease the amount of food that a farm can produce. That is a city slicker’s professorial fantasy. Animals increase the amount of food the farm can produce, otherwise farmers wouldn’t have them. Millions of tons of agricultural and processing leftovers, which would otherwise be wasted, are fed to animals. The animals in turn produce milk and eggs and meat, and then go on to enrich the soil through their urine and manure, just like they were perfected to do on the plains of Africa so long ago … what an amazing planet.

Which is why farmers everywhere around the world keep animals — farmers are not dumb, and they haven’t had the benefit of a college education, so they haven’t forgotten that goats eat leaves, pigs eat garbage, cows eat cellulose, and chickens eat bugs. They know the value of chicken manure and pig manure.

With that introduction, let’s see how we might best estimate the change if everyone became vegetarian. We can do it by looking at the land involved. Here’s the numbers: according to the FAO, out of all the land cultivated by humans, about a quarter of the land is used to grow food for animal consumption. This can be further broken down by the type of animal feed grown:

Figure 2. Area of arable land used for human crops, and for animal crops. Image is Van Gogh, “Ploughed Fields”.

Now if we all became vegivores tomorrow, and we converted all that quarter of the cultivated land to growing food and fiber for human use, what is the possible increase in the number of humans?

Looking at the chart, you would think that humans could increase by about a third of the current number. The land used for animals is about a third of the land used for humans. That would be about two billion more people, not the increase of four billion claimed by Wilson. However, the number cannot even be that large, because we have only looked at one side of the equation. We also have to consider the losses involved. By becoming vegivores, we have freed up the 23% of our cropland used to produce animal food, but we have lost the food coming from the animals. Now how much do we have to give back just to maintain the status quo, to make up for our dietary and other losses? These losses include:

•  We would have to replace the loss of the dietary protein provided by the 200 million tons of meat we eat each year, along with 275 million tons of milk, 7 million tons of butter and 47 million tons of eggs. Vegetarians say, “You don’t need animals, you can get enough protein from a vegetarian diet”, which is certainly true.

However, to do it, you need to eat more grains to get this protein, and in a twist of fate, to replace the total amount of meat protein in our diet with protein from grains would require about 50% more grain than we are currently feeding to animals. This is because animals eat many things other than grain, and we need to replace all that lost other-source protein with grain-source protein as well.

So immediately we have to devote about 18% of the total land to replacing lost protein for the existing world population. Subtracting this 18% from our original 23% of freed up land leaves us with only a 5% possible gain. Remember, this is all just to keep the world even, to maintain the world food status quo. We’re not talking at this point of feeding anyone extra. We’re just maintaining the current nutritional supplies of protein for the current population.

• We would also need to replace the amount of fat provided by the aforementioned animal products. While too much fat is a bad thing, dietary fat is an essential necessity of human nutrition.

The weight of dietary fat provided by animals is about a third of the weight of protein provided by animals. In addition, it takes much less land to produce vegetable replacements for the animal fat than for the animal protein. This is because there are vegetable products (oils) which are pure fat, while vegetable products are generally low in protein.

In the event, in order grow the oils to replace animal fat in our diet, we’d have to plant about 3% more  of our arable land to sunflowers or the equivalent. Deducting that from our 5% gain in available land, we are down to a 2% gain.

• Next, the land worldwide would be less productive because in many areas, animal manure and urine is the only fertilizer. We could easily lose more than a couple of percent that way, especially in developing nations. And once we do so, we are at zero gain, meaning we couldn’t add one single person to the world by voluntarily becoming vegivores. But there are several further losses yet.

• There is also a giant hidden loss of food in the change to vegevorianism, as tens of millions of tons of agricultural waste would have to be disposed of, instead of being converted by animals into millions of tons of human food. In many cases (e.g. oilseed residue meal) these wastes are not directly consumable by humans.

• In addition to losing the food animals make from waste, without animals to eat the waste we add the resulting problem of disposal of the agricultural waste, which is expensive in terms of time, energy, and money.

• We’d have to do without leather, hide, hair, horn, wool, and feathers. Especially in the developing world, these products are often extremely important to the health, warmth, clothing, and well-being of the local people, and there often are no local substitutes. This would be a huge cost of foregoing animals. In places where jackets are made of local sheepskins to keep out the frozen wind, explaining to some poor shepherd why he should go vegivore and trade his sheep for soybeans could be a tough sell …

• Finally, about half the land currently used for growing animal food is being used to grow grasses for animals. In practice, this land will mainly be the poorest and steepest of each country’s croplands (or else it would be planted to a field crop), and thus is not likely to be suitable for growing much more than grasses.

All up?

You’d lose by not having animals in the world’s farmyards. I don’t think you’d even come near breaking even — and neither do the farmers all around the world. They know what the numbers have just shown — we can support more people in a planet, a region, a country, or a farm if animals are part of our agricultural and dietary mix.

[UPDATE] Twelve years after I wrote this, science is finally catching up with what every kid on a cattle ranch knows … see “Going Vegan Isn’t the Most Sustainable Option for Humanity“.


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Steve Fitzpatrick
September 12, 2010 7:12 am

Willis,
Very nice post. Clear and well written.
But really, how dare you? Do you not understand that plants are morally good, as are wild animals, but domesticated animals are morally bad. And the most domesticated animal of all is simply morally repugnant, so most of this species should be ‘humanely’ destroyed…… for the good of Gaia. Gee, where does that word ‘humanely’ come from? Oh well, who cares?
You need to work on your morals Willis.

Dagfinn
September 12, 2010 7:17 am

Wade says:

Synthetic vitamins are hard for the body to process; most of those vitamins go out of your body when you go to the bathroom.

This is mostly a myth that has been perpetuated by nutritionists. Synthetic vitamins typically have the same chemical structure as natural ones. The fact that some vitamins are excreted unchanged in urine does not mean that they do nothing useful while they are still in your body (this is true of water also, by the way). Vitamins typically catalyze important biochemical reactions and remain unchanged (as catalysts do), but need to be present in a certain concentration and to be replenished since they are excreted.

Dave Springer
September 12, 2010 7:23 am

I’m so embarrassed. I didn’t mean to say my human anatomy prof gave the class a disease (pneumonic). I meant to say he gave us a learning aid (mnemonic). On the other hand I can’t categorically say he didn’t give us any pneumonics, just none that I’m aware of… 🙂

renminbi
September 12, 2010 7:34 am

655 Billion tons of grain fed to animals. That must be kilograms,no?
Very good article,thanks.

DirkH
September 12, 2010 7:42 am

Where do vegans get their B12 from? Found this on a German vegan site:
“Cyanocobalamin wird normalerweise direkt aus Bakterienkulturen gewonnen, ist also normalerweise vegan; Hydroxocobalamin ist allerdings meist ein Leberextrakt und daher in der Regel nicht als vegan zu bezeichnen.”
Engl.:
“Cyanocobalamin is typically obtained directly from bacterial cultures, and is therefore usually vegan, however hydroxocobalamin is usually a liver extract, and therefore generally not be described as a vegan.”
IOW, if you want to be a true vegan (and healthy), you have to add B12 gained from bacterial cultures to your diet.
Source (German):
http://www.vegan.at/warumvegan/gesundheit/vitamin_b12.html

DirkH
September 12, 2010 7:47 am

This is really interesting. Only some species of bacteria can synthesize B12, says the wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_B12
So all higher animals depend on bacteria to survive. I’ll never say a bad word about bacteria again! 😉

September 12, 2010 7:56 am

That E. O. Wilson sounds like he could be a Public Intellectual.
Public Intellectuals write books about something bad that’s going to happen by a certain date if everyone keeps doing what they’re doing. The main problem they have is when the date comes round and there are still copies of the book lingering in remainder bins, in amongst the copies of The Road Ahead and Queensland Pineapple Recipes.
Apart from that, there is very little risk or exertion involved in being a Public Intellectual.

Dave Springer
September 12, 2010 8:13 am

I’m not a vegetarian but soybeans are a regular part of my diet and they are a complete protein source. I prefer them still in the pod boiled in saltwater for about 8 minutes and served hot or cold in a bowl along with beer as you would a bowl of peanuts in the shell. Way better for you than the usual bowls of salty gubers served up with beer and quite tasty too.

Douglas DC
September 12, 2010 8:30 am

My wife and I have a lot of native American blood. We eat a largely low-carb, “Caveman”
diet. She tried a Vegan diet years ago and it damn near killed her, The practitioner who prescribed it was a nationally known Doctor.
When your ancestors hunted bison and ate Salmon, with nuts and berries, (the Indian
side) and rowed longboats (the Viking in the woodpile) Or chased George the 3rd’s troops to outside London (the Highlanders on both sides of the family) hard, physical labor is in my opinion is nearly impossible on a vegan diet.

John F. Hultquist
September 12, 2010 8:36 am

DirkH says 7:47 am
“I’ll never say a bad word about bacteria again!”
The devil is in the details. For the second time in 15 months my wife is in the middle of a daily dose of antibiotic (each day at 3 pm for 5 weeks) to rid her blood of bacteria. The first weeks there were two drugs – took and hour via a PICC line. Now just one drug in 30 minutes – not counting travel time and set up time. Those little buggers on your heart’s valves can ruin your day!

Gail Combs
September 12, 2010 8:47 am

Brad says:
September 11, 2010 at 6:40 pm
No one on any USDA approved, large chicken farm (read egg) serves there chickens scraps…..
_________________________________________
You left out the WHY. Industrial chicken raising squashes the animals in a small area where disease is rampant if it gets a foot hold. A US chicken farmer will not let you set foot on his property or visit another farm with chicken for this reason…. and because of GOVERNMENT REGULATION.
The rest of the world is not as regulated as the first world although the World Trade Organization is doing their darnedest. And even in the USA chickens free range and eat bugs and what ever else they can find.
Also up until the 1970’s or later pigs were fed human garbage. The supervisor of our plant’s maintenance shop used to do a “garbage run” for his Dad’s pig farm and Fort Jackson NC sold the waste food from the base to pig farmers when my hubby was stationed there.
One other comment to add to Willis’s fine article. When a crop field is worn out it is often turned into pasture to revitalize it. I have added 4″ of topsoil to a worn out crop farm by doing just that. Pastures also act as much needed filter strips to prevent topsoil and fertilizer run off into waterways. If a area is not grazed/mowed it often turns into woods and trees do not do as good a job of filtration as grass does.

Patrice
September 12, 2010 8:52 am

Hexe,
I will prove you wrong quickly on this, being vegetarian (not vegan anyway, but I do prefer vegan meals except for cheese) myself:
Vegetarians say, “You don’t need animals, you can get enough protein from a vegetarian diet”, which is certainly true.”
Only if don’t mind eating many times more carbs than you need whilst you’re getting the proteins you need. (this is what often causes diabetes in later lafe)

Now, I will admit first that finding proteins is not very easy. Netheless, you can get enough proteins using soy products (tofu, soy proteins) and combine them with other vegan source of proteins (grain, nuts – note that pure soy proteins are not enough since they lack some of essential amino acids). But yes, it can be done, although it really takes some more time.
If somebody is lacto* vegetarian like myself , things get a little bit easier, since whey is even one of the best protein source (according to many body builders/fitness experts sites). And I am very much sure that my diet is healthier than ordinary hamburger and fries diet. But having a good quality vegan diet is really hard to accomplish on daily base – mostly, because if you are busy person, you have to eat outside and in restaurants it is hard to get a decent meal which is not just meat, eggs and milk removed, which is a diet you don’t want to have.
*Lacto vegetarians use milk + all allowed things vegan diet, but are avoiding eggs.

davidmhoffer
September 12, 2010 9:00 am

GM
You once again demonstrate just how over your head you are, on this topic at least. Consider your assertion that goats denude the mountain and hill sides of vegetation to the point of massive errosion because the farmer controls the predators that would have otherwise limited their numbers. The problem here is that you only seem to understand half of what the farmer does to manage his livestock. S/he doesn’t simply protect the goats from predators, good farming practices also protect the slopes from the goats. Just as grain producers rotate their crops and in some years leave them fallow to ensure that the quality of the soil is not just maintained, but improved, livestock producers are well aware that they must move their herds from time to time so that the vegetation doesn’t get denuded. In some cases this may include reseeding areas that have been inadvertantly damaged or other steps to ensure that not only does the hillside not erode, but that a continued source of fodder be available upon which to raise goats. The notion that control of predators exposes us to an errosion problem over which we have no control isn’t just missing half the equation, it is downright silly.
The fact of the matter is that even if there were no human beings at all, the biosphere itself would arrive at a balance between animals and vegetation. There are processes carried out by animals that are beneficial to plants and vice versa. Remove one and the other withers, humans or no humans. Farming is nothing more than maximizing the production of those aspects of the biosphere that are beneficial to humans. The notion that we can, for example, control predation of goats but can’t control the goats themselves is either intentionaly misleading or the result of ignorance.
When I was a young lad on the farm we were visited by some of those proverbial “city slickers” one of whom was a body builder. I was perhaps 160 pounds and this guy topped me by at least 6 inches and had biceps as thick as my leg. When it came time to feed the cattle he volunteered to help. I warned him we were talking 60 pound bales and an eight foot fence which earned me a smirk and a condescending laugh.
So along he came and I began pitching bales over the fence. He pitched in and within 10 minutes I had three times as many bales over the fence as he did. In thirty minutes he had to take a break because he was winded. I finaly took pity on him and showed him how to hoist the bale just a few inches, get your knee under it, and then push the bale into the air with your knee and lower thigh while guiding it over the fence with your hands.
You GM, could learn something from this. When you see the possible negative consequences of a particular action, farming or otherwise, ask how those consequences might be mitigated. You may be surprised at just how many solutions to what you see as impending disaster already exist and are known to those who deal with them in practice every day. That city slicker body builder could see that a youth with a fraction of his strength was working him into the ground, but he was too proud to ask how I was doing it. If I had told him I was stronger than I looked he might even have bought it. Instead I tought him the simplist of techniques that almost any farm boy knows and makes what looks like a back breaking task a simple exercise.
So I suggest GM that you cease pontificating on that which you know little about and ask a question or two. Every farming practice has a consequence, and for each consequence, another farming practice must be considered to manage it. It is just a process, not looming disaster.

Gail Combs
September 12, 2010 9:14 am

BernardP says:
September 11, 2010 at 7:10 pm
Eating lots of bread, rice and pasta (carbohydrates) makes people fat and is the source of numerous health problems. A lot of the nutrition “truths” (cholesterol, fat, calories, salt…) with which we are bombarded daily by the media rest on nothing or are false….
________________________________________
I did the experiment.
Eating only meat and veggies without starch/high carbs for six months. I dropped 20 pounds and my blood pressure dropped from 178/144 to 116/63. The lower number Diastolic dropped a lot slower than the Systolic. This was backed up by blood work showing a drastic drop in the “bad” cholesterol. The Doctor said “What ever the heck you are doing, keep it up.” It got rid of the nightly reflux problem too.
I find now if I eat grains I get sick.

DirkH
September 12, 2010 9:24 am

John F. Hultquist says:
September 12, 2010 at 8:36 am
“[…]Those little buggers on your heart’s valves can ruin your day!”
I suffered from the same condition a few years back; antibiotica helped me to a full recovery. I hope the same for your wife; all the best to the both of you!
Let’s just say i will not overgeneralize again when it comes to bacteria 😉

bubbagyro
September 12, 2010 9:24 am

Lowell says:
September 11, 2010 at 10:44 pm
I can’t believe how behind the curve you are on the corn to ethanol folly (nay, crime!). Here is one of the myriad of articles on this topic:
Feeding Cars and Starving the Poor
On March 29, 2007, Cuban leader Fidel Castro berated Bush’s economic initiatives for ethanol production in the Cuban Communist party newspaper Granma, stating that using corn, or any food source, to produce ethanol could result in the “premature death” of upwards of three billion people. He explained that the drive to produce corn-based ethanol would hike up food prices around the world, adversely effecting poverty in developing countries. Castro then restated his beliefs in a second article, also published in Granma, on April 3. Although the ailing Cuban president is known for adamantly and automatically opposing U.S. foreign policy initiatives, it would be foolhardy for the U.S. to ignore his foreboding message on this subject.
As a result of the Washington-backed initiatives, an enormous volume of corn is being consumed for ethanol production. Consequently, the decreasing availability of it as a food crop and for livestock has contributed to the rise of corn futures from $2.80 to $4.38 a bushel. This recent price hike occurred over the course of several months and is said to be the sharpest increase in the past ten years. Thus, fewer low income consumers are able to purchase corn-based products, which is a very serious detriment to countries where corn is a staple of a population’s diet.
Mexico already has been significantly affected by the rising costs of corn. Because 107 million Mexicans rely on corn as their main source of sustenance, its soaring price increase has sent shockwaves throughout the country’s corn-related industries. The price of tortillas in Mexico has risen by 100%, resulting in mass protests by tens of thousands of enraged consumers last January. Recently inaugurated Mexican President Felipe Calderon stated that the price increase of corn is unjustifiable and “threatens the economy and millions of families.” In response to the strike, Calderon signed an accord that limited the price of tortillas to 8.50 pesos per kilogram, and increased the quota of duty-free corn products imported from the United States. Despite Calderon’s efforts to regulate corn prices, the situation remains unresolved, since the accord expired in May.
The rapidly changing international corn market also has affected the prices of other produce. Due to the high demand for corn, farmers in the U.S. are now planting more acres of the commodity. This has decreased the production of other crops, such as wheat, soy and rice, making them more expensive and less available. Beer prices also have risen due to the substitution of barley for corn. Even the price of meats and poultry such as turkey, chicken, pork, beef as well as eggs and dairy products are beginning to increase due to the high cost of feeding farm animals. Fidel Castro may have a point; current U.S. economic policy seems to indicate greater interest in fueling cars than feeding people.

Ref: Maize of Deception: How Corn-Based Ethanol Can Lead To Starvation and Environmental Disaster Council on Hemispheric Affairs, 12 Jun 2007.

Gail Combs
September 12, 2010 9:26 am

bubbagyro says:
September 11, 2010 at 7:17 pm
Ruminant animals are superbly equipped to convert cellulose to protein. This also in poorly arable dry land capable of supporting only grasses which ruminants thrive on. In developing countries, cattle sheep and goat raising is compromised by parasites—if these are controlled….
_________________________________________
If you can get rid of the blasted internal parasites you do not have to feed grain. The only reason for feeding grain is to bring the animals to market weight quickly and because tax payer susidized grain is cheaper than feeding grass.
Just for those who think animals are eating human food here is a list of ingredients from a bag of feed I just bought.
All stock sweet mix in order of quantity:
Processed grain by-products – the junk left over after milling and fermination processes
Roughage products – Stuff like beet pulp left over from making sugar
Grain products
molasses
vitamins and minerals.

Kum Dollison
September 12, 2010 9:30 am

The “FIRST” Mistake is, always, the “WORST” Mistake.
We could, easily, double the amount of land in “production,” worldwide.
Second Mistake: Not accounting for modern science/technology. We’ve doubled corn yields in less than 50 Years. Next, we turn our attention to Wheat, Soybeans, and Sorghum.
We have problems on the horizon, but “being able to grow enough food” isn’t one of them.

Gail Combs
September 12, 2010 9:34 am

John F. Hultquist says:
September 11, 2010 at 7:54 pm
“— farmers are not dumb, and they haven’t had the benefit of a college education,”
I’m unable to recall a measure of farmer-dumbness but think it might exhibit a somewhat normal distribution if one exists or is developed….
__________________________________________________
The USDA in a much despised pamphlet tell staff to address US farmers at the sixth grade level. That really ticked off the farmers
http://www.dailyyonder.com/speak-your-piece-tag-every-animal

Kum Dollison
September 12, 2010 9:36 am

Bubbygyro, don’t you even read your own links. The answer to the Mexican Tortilla “Crisis” was to IMPORT CHEAP NORTH AMERICAN CORN.
Since they started doing that you haven’t heard another peep out of’em.

Tristram
September 12, 2010 10:14 am

I would second the recommendation of the very informative site by Barry Groves: second-opinions.co.uk. His books, especially his mostnrecent, Trick and Treat…., do an excellent job of adressing many of the nutrition issues raised this article.
The one point that os missing is the value of animal fats in terms of both energy and the processing of fat soluble vitamins. Animal fat is both high in energy content, and you can’t eat too much because it will make you sick when you reach the limit. Groves addresses these matters in great detail on his site and in his books.
I would add, look at what recent arctic and Antarctic Trekkers are using for food. Not vegetarian, and very high in fat. Look at the story of Endurance when a group of explorers were trapped on the ice flows for merely two years. They returned healthy without eating a single vegetable for more than a year. Would they have been as lucky on a vegetarian or vegan diet? Not likely.
I eat a meat and high fat diet, animal fats, and avoid vegetable oils at all costs. I have never been stronger, more fit, retained and built muscle more easily, and been less sick (virtually never) than now. Vegans and vegetarians provide me with endless evidence of the efficacy of my dietary approach and the fallacy of theirs.

September 12, 2010 10:26 am

Vegetarians: The Scourge of the Earth
By Charles E. Kay Ph.D., Utah State Univ.
From Mule Deer Foundation Magazine No.30:42-47, April 2009. Posted by permission here:
http://westinstenv.org/wildpeop/2010/05/23/vegetarians-the-scourge-of-the-earth/

In debates over the future of hunting in the United States and around the world, animal-rights groups claim that they have the moral high-ground because they are vegetarians. Hunters are portrayed as a lower lifeform because they kill and eat animals, while vegetarians are depicted as harmless because all they eat are plants. Unfortunately, the general public and the national media have accepted these assertions without careful study or reasoned thought. They have done so, in part, because most people have a poor understanding of basic ecology or human evolution. Hunters it turns out are the epitome of civilization, while vegetarians are the scourge of the Earth. Virtually all the world’s environmental problems, from the loss of biodiversity to carbon dioxide emissions, can be traced to vegetarians, not hunters. …
There are few environmental problems around the globe that cannot be laid at the feet of vegetarians. …
Vegetarian’s hands are also covered in blood, lots of blood. There is not much biodiversity or wildlife in a cornfield, a wheatfield, or a ricefield. More wildlife habitat has been destroyed in the name of agriculture than any other human activity. Then too animals, termed agricultural pests, have to die to keep food on our tables. Have you ever seen what elk, or elephants, can do to a cornfield? There is a reason there are no elk or other large herbivores in our, or any other country’s, agricultural heartlands. In Africa, more elephants are shot each year to protect agricultural crops than are ever killed by safari hunters. …
In the eastern United States, archaeologists have unearthed the remains of hunter-gatherers, early agriculturalists, and late agriculturalists. By careful examination and measurement of those aboriginal skeletons, physical anthropologists have amassed data on early human health and lifespan. As aboriginal peoples in the eastern woodlands went from hunting and gatherering, to early agriculture, to more intensive agriculture — that is as the people went from being hunters to vegetarians — both human health and longevity declined, often precipitously, while work effort, especially for males, increased dramatically. Why humans ever made the switch to agriculture is an interesting question, and all I will say here is that while it allowed human populations to increase, individuals would have been better off to have remained hunter-gatherers. …
People, like deer, require a diet of high quality food to produce large, robust individuals. Why are Chinese and Japanese, on average, so short-statured compared to Americans? Because people from Asia are primarily vegetarians with little high-quality animal protein and fats in their diet. Animal fats and protein that are needed to fuel human growth and development. Since World War II, the average height of adult Japanese males has steadily increased, as their culture has switched to a diet with more red meat and animal fats. The same is true of Americans. We, on average, are taller than people of earlier generations, as our diets have improved over the decades. That is to say, height, like antler growth in mule deer, can be used to determine which humans had superior diets and lifestyles. …
Furthermore, in all pre-agriculture and early agricultural societies, hunters had preferred status and were held in the highest regard. It is only during recent times that hunters have experienced a fall from grace, at least among certain members of our society. But then, what would you expect from vegetarians, who have overrun the planet and became the scourge of the Earth. THEY are the real problem, not hunters. Hunters, afterall are the ones who protect wildlife habitat, while vegetarians turn wildlife habitat into agricultural fields and ever increasing human populations. You cannot blame hunters for the world’s problems. If anyone has sinned, it has been vegetarians.

bubbagyro
September 12, 2010 10:30 am

Kum Dollison says:
September 12, 2010 at 9:36 am
A little knowledge can be dangerous…
It is only cheap by contrast. A little knowledge can be dangerous. The price of corn in Mexico is up 15% year-on-year. This will only get worse as more corn is diverted to booze production, but true, they are getting supplies now. Also, we have had good production years recently in the US and Canada, and good wheat yields in Russia. What happens when the cold comes and rain decreases? You are only considering the short-term, I’m afraid; it is short-term mentality that has gotten us in such trouble before. The people really taking it tough right now are those in sub-Sahara Africa who have had a severe reduction in corn and wheat imports and are beginning to see the pinch. No extensive famine yet, except politically caused, because of the warm cycle of the last two decades that has enabled domestic farming to at least reach subsistence.

Jaye
September 12, 2010 10:39 am

bio-fuels are madness. They increase the number of arable hectares required to feed your average human.
Smaller gut, larger brain is the result of eating cooked animal flesh.

Jaye
September 12, 2010 10:42 am

Another thing that the vegans should ponder as they consider their relative ranking on the food chain. Most humans eat the flesh of non-human vegan species.

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