If we are what we eat, we are in trouble
From a book review in the Financial Times, covering “Eating Animals,” by Jonathan Safran Foer, “The End of Overeating: Taking Control of our Insatiable Appetite,” by David A Kessler, and “An Edible History of Humanity,” by Tom Standage.
Suppose that you and your partner go out for dinner tonight. You order steak and salad while your partner has chicken with rice. Now inspect your plates. Your cow spent almost all its life in a shed, burping methane that heats the planet. It was then slaughtered, often incompetently: it may have been still alive when its head was skinned and its legs cut off. Your “salad”, doused in dressing, is really “fat with a little lettuce”.
Your partner’s chicken lived for six weeks, diseased and crammed so closely with other birds that it cracked several bones. After torture, came slaughter: the bird was shoved into a truck, taken to the slaughterhouse, and shackled upside down. It died screaming and excreting on itself in terror. The rice comes from plants bred by scientists in the 1960s. Both your meals are lathered in the extra fat, sugar, salt and chemicals to which you have become addicted. Enjoy your meal.
You can read the rest of the review here…
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You’re currently reading “If we are what we eat, we are in trouble,” an entry on Bodhipaksa's blog, bodhi tree swaying
Published: Apr 10 2010




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