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Why Heifer International is Rolling in Dung

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forwarded from speciesism_will_end list:

 

What Happens to Bill Gates' Dairy Cows?

 

Why Heifer International is Rolling in Dung

By MARTHA ROSENBERG

 

It almost sounds like a joke. Set up dairy enterprises in rural African villages

with no refrigeration, electricity, veterinary care or passable roads for a

population that can't drink milk because it's 90% lactose intolerant.

 

But the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation didn't think it was a joke when it

announced the gift of $42 million to Heifer International at the World Economic

Forum in Davos, Switzerland in January--the biggest gift the Little Rock,

AR-based Christian charity which sends live animals to poor countries has ever

received.

 

Using cherubic, 4-H/Unicef style advertising-- kids hugging the animal " gifts "

they will also dispatch--Heifer pledges to stamp out world hunger in poor

countries using the grain, water and grazing land they don't have to raise

animals.

 

To get around the lack of rural electricity for the proposed dairy operations in

Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda, Heifer will create " chilling plants " with their own

backup power generators according to a press release where the milk will be

stored for pickup by " refrigerated commercial dairy delivery trucks " -- both of

them.

 

Farmers will artificially inseminate cows, perhaps by candlelight, with

" high-production dairy animal semen " --more backup generators required to keep it

frozen?--and increase milk quality through providing " improved animal nutrition "

to the cows with the food they don't have.

 

Got that?

 

Because of children's natural love of animals, Heifer International is a popular

charity project in elementary schools--though it stresses it cannot reveal the

fate of individual animals it sends overseas so don't ask.

 

But teachers who go on Heifer sponsored junkets to recipient nations can come

back with disturbing stories.

 

Like Donna Sosnowski, a fourth-grade teacher at Virginia Palmer Elementary

School in Sun Valley, NV who discovered children were sleeping with their Heifer

animals to keep them from being stolen on a tour of Honduras this summer,

according to the Reno Gazette Journal.

 

And Amy Carrington, a teacher in White County, Arkansas who also toured Honduras

where " villagers shared their hardships with her, such as when a disease killed

off all the chickens in a particular village, " reported the Daily Citizen in

Searcy, AK.

 

Then there’s Heifer International's Global Village program in Perryville, AK

where school kids who vote that they want meat for dinner will witness the

teacher break a rabbit's neck, chop off its head, skin it and cook it.

 

Last year one unidentified mother emailed Arkansas' Fox 16 TV station to say her

son still talks about hearing the rabbit scream as its neck was broken when he

attended a Global Village as a 5th grader.

 

Heifer also has the nation's top columnist, the New York Times' Nicholas

Kristof, in its thrall.

 

" The tale begins in the rolling hills of western Uganda, where Beatrice was born

and raised, " begins a PR wire style piece this month about Heifer poster child

and star of the children's book Beatrice's Goat, Beatrice Biira. " As a girl, she

desperately yearned (sic.) for an education, but it seemed hopeless: Her parents

were peasants who couldn't afford to send her to school. "

 

PR story short, Beatrice grew up, went to college and plans to work against

African poverty all because some children at the Niantic Community Church in

Niantic, CN " decided to buy goats for African villagers through Heifer

International, a venerable aid group based in Arkansas that helps impoverished

farming families, " writes Kristof in the irony-free column titled The Luckiest

Girl.

 

" A dairy goat in Heifer's online gift catalog costs $120; a flock of chicks or

ducklings costs just $20, " he adds, in case you want to donate too.

 

Since the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced its grant, Heifer has

received an unprecedented $126.5 million in matching donations which funds a lot

of Noah's Arks--or death ships as animal advocates might say.

 

Despite gender dressing--Heifer claims most dairy operations are run by

women--experts say animal based agriculture misuses land and resources, promotes

high fat Western diets and jeopardizes human and animal health by inviting

zoonotic diseases like Avian flu.

 

Programs like Heifer also betray a " Caucasian bias " by ignoring lactose

intolerance Dr. Hetal Karsan, a gastroenterologist at Atlanta's Emory

University, told the Associated Press. Maybe pharma will send Lactaid

supplements.

 

Martha Rosenberg is staff cartoonist on the Evanston Roundtable. She can be

reached at mrosenberg

 

 

 

http://counterpunch.org/rosenberg07122008.html

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