Guest guest Posted April 23, 2001 Report Share Posted April 23, 2001 " We are primates, and primates are vegetarians with only rare meat consumption by certain species. All the proteins, minerals, and vitamins the human body needs are easily obtained from plant sources. The taste for meats is like a substance abuse to which we are addicted early in life. While we have been struggling- and failing- to cure heart diseases and cancer, their primary causes are right under our noses on the dinner table. " -Dr. Neal Barnard, President, Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine The fact is that our bodies are designed to be vegetarian and vegan. We are not properly adapted to the consumption of flesh or the milk of other animals. I once watched a rotund botanist on a t.v. chat show spouting the typical meat-eater's diatribe... stating that vegetarians and vegans have it all wrong and that anyone can see that a horse's and cow's gutts are far different from ours and one could not eat in a healthy manner without meat and/or dairy. This was gross misinformation from one who ought to know better and it is the typical brain-washing that happens far too regularly. The meat and dairy myths are strong indeed when a scientist, watched by millions, can get away with such rubbish. It is true, however, that we are not like the herbivors.... as anyone can see without having to slit one open to observe its copious entrails, developed mainly for dealing with cellulose. Human beings were not meant to live on a diet of grass. But far from being akin to nature's carnivors, the pattern of organs in the human body and the composition of our blood are identical to the larger tail-less primates such as the chimpanzees and gorillas. The origins of humanity have been brought up in these conversations, so I feel that I should address that issue (briefly) here as well. It is far more likely that we developed as frugivorous creatures and took to flesh- eating only as the result of a migration to an inhospitable climate, or a catastrophe like the ice age which would have removed plant cover. Or perhaps it was the stress of territorial threat from other species which made the early humans turn to violence and flesh-eating... as has been observed with our cousins the chimpanzees who in rare instances (like encroaching human settlements) have been found to kill to eat. In any event- and for whatever reason early humans " broke the ancient primate habit of vegetarianism " (J. Bronowski, 'The Ascent of Man' BBC Publications 1973). And in light of what is known as comparative physiology, and about early societies, the widely held assumptions about our origins as being hunters is coming more and more into question. From teeth, jaws, and saliva right through to the alimentary canal, our bodies are very different from carnivors. We loosely call ourselves " omnivors " , but that is through our own choice... NOT design. Actually, our bodies more closely resemble frugivorous apes. We are quite different from nature's true omnivors that eat a diet of meat, carrion, and plants. After digestion in the intestines of humans, meat becomes infested with putractive bacteria in the bowel; carnivors have a short and smooth bowel for quick release of toxic wastes.... unlike the longer bowel found in humans. Links have also been made in scientific studies carried out in Europe in 1991 by the Imperial Cancer Research fund that directly linked a diet high in meat and dairy consumption to hightened risks for cancer... and found that a diet high in fruit and vegetables to be very helpful in reducing risk factors for cancer. Some of the most recent evidence of the dangers of a diet that includes meat and dairy comes from work done by the researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California (reported in New Scientist, 20 March 1993). Scientists have been able to adapt an accelerator mass spectrometer, normally used by geochemists and archeologists to date rocks, in order to measure genetic damage done by chemcials and very low concentrations. Thus they have been able to measure the effect of the powerful animal carcinogen methylimidazoquinoxaline as it binds to the cells' of DNA material and causes lesions, which are the beginnings of most mutations and tumours. Methylimidazoquinoxaline is formed in tiny amounts during the cooking of meat; this new research shows that its effect is potent in much smaller amounts than had previously been measurable. Other dangers of over-consumption of animal based protein have been suspect for decades, though such unwelcome knowledge has been slow to filter through. But by now, with the hight of meat consumption in the post-World War Two world... it is becoming obvious that we are getting something very wrong. The miraculous cleansing powers of our livers help to deal with the poisonous substances formed in the intestines of meat-eaters (skatole, indole, tryamine, phenylethylaline and deoxycholic acid) and an active life in the fresh air helps too, but by the time that we reach middle age most people are suffering to varying degrees from some chronic ailment. Obviously many more factors than diet affect our health, and the quality of the food in terms of soil fertility, chemical pollution, and factory processing is very important as well as the type of diet itself. But why work against the way our bodies were engineered? I hold the belief that nature usually knows best. And of course there are the arguments for the hormones and anti-biotics that are pumped into the animals. It has been shown scientifically that those who eat meat have more anti-biotic resistant bacteria in their systems than do vegetarians and vegans. The 1986 report of the BMA's Board of Science and Education states that " vegetarians have lower rates of obesity, coronary heart disease, high blood pressure, large bowel disorders, cancers, and gallstones. " Many other studies have confirmed the health risks of a meat based diet; the largest survey ever undertaken into the links between diet and health is the first report of the Chinese and American teams, published in 1990/1991. This study found that some " degenerative " diseases, particularly heart disease and some forms of cancer, are largely unheard of in vegetarian societies ('Diet, Lifestyle, and Mortality in China' reviewed in the New Scientist, January 1991. The survey also shows that vegetarians and vegans show no sign of aneamia, that vegans have average rates of osteoporosis and that a high fiber diet does not inhibit iron intake). And as for the consumption of milk, milk is primarily an infant food in humans. Human beings are the only adult animal (apart from the DOMESTIC cat) to take it. Milk, like blood, is a substance which in nature is meant to be kept inside the body entirely. Milk is only naturally meant to pass in airtight conditions from mother to baby. Outside the body it is subject to immediate decay and contamination, as with meat, so that extreme processes like pasteurisation have to be employed to keep it " safe. " Properly speaking, an animal's milk should not really be seen... let alone sold in bottles by the million. After infancy, our bodies no longer manufacture the enzymes necessary to digest milk sugar (lactose) and in fact the majority of the world's population, who have been weened onto cow's milk, cannot really tolerate it. " Four reports suggest that 20%-40% of patients aged 5-17 years with repeated abdominal pains in childhood suffered from lactose-intolerance, which can often be relieved by excluding dairy milk and derivatives from the diet " (Gill Langley, 'Vegan Nutrition', Vegan Society 1988). Sir Douglas Black, then president of the British Medical Association, is quoted in The Times of 12 June 1984 as saying " Milk is a major killer. It is nonsense to give it to children in schools. " And incredibly, medics who have made the link between cow's milk and jeuvenile diatetes.. rather than discouraging the consumption of milk, are working on a vaccine! (New Scientist August 1992) I hope this sheds a bit more light on where I am coming from and why a diet that contains meat and dairy is in fact quite unhealthy... no matter what your blood type. =), Anne-Louise. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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