by Dr. Joseph Mercola
May 05, 2023
from
Mercola Website
Story at-a-glance
-
Meat
has been a celebrated food staple since the dawn of
mankind. Never has anyone needed to justify the eating
of animal protein - until now
-
According to the global cabal that is working toward a
complete monopoly of the food supply, the eating of meat
is at the core of manmade climate change and has to stop
-
In
addition to calls for an outright ban on meat
consumption, other coercive strategies have also been
proposed, such as changing agricultural subsidies and
trade laws, changing diets in hospitals and schools,
adding warning labels, education (read, propaganda) and
various taxes, including specific taxes on meat and more
generalized carbon taxes
-
According to researchers at Oxford University, meat and
dairy production are responsible for 60% of the
greenhouse gas emissions produced by the agricultural
sector. They also claim cattle use 83% of available
farmland while delivering only 18% of calories and 37%
of dietary protein
-
But
environmental concerns cannot be the only consideration.
Human health must also be considered, and researchers
warn we know virtually nothing about the long-term
health effects of cultured and plant-based meat
alternatives. One recent investigation discovered that
plant-based meats contain high amounts of antinutrients
that prevent your body's absorption of minerals such as
iron and zinc, which could result in problematic
nutritional deficiencies
Will Meat
Be Banned?
A prominent legal figure in the UK
is calling for a
ban on meat consumption,
but some critics
argue that this is just
the first step
in a larger plan
to control the
food supply.
As the debate
heats up,
the question
remains:
Will eating meat
become illegal?
Meat has been a
celebrated food staple since the dawn of mankind. 1
Never has anyone needed
to justify the eating of animal protein - until now...
According to
the globalist cabal that is working toward a complete monopoly of
the food supply, the eating of meat is at the core of
manmade
climate change and must stop in order to "save the planet."
Back in September 2019, a British barrister (trial attorney) went so
far as to call for new laws to ban the eating of meat to protect the
environment, and as time goes on, this kind of insanity will likely
only intensify.
As reported by The Guardian at the time: 2
"The barrister
Michael Mansfield has suggested that we should have
new laws against ecocide - practices that destroy the planet - and
that under them, meat could be targeted.
'I think when we look at
the damage eating meat is doing to the planet, it is not
preposterous to think that one day it will become illegal,' he
said."
Aside from an outright ban on meat consumption, a number of other
coercive strategies have also been proposed, such as changing
agricultural subsidies and trade laws, changing diets in hospitals
and schools, adding warning labels, education (read, propaganda) and
implementing various taxes, including specific taxes on meat and
more generalized carbon taxes. 3
Human Health
To Be Sacrificed for the Environment
The Guardian cited research 4,5,6 from Oxford University, published
in the summer of 2018, which claimed,
meat and dairy production are
responsible for 60% of the greenhouse gas emissions produced by the
agricultural sector, and that cattle use 83% of available farmland
while delivering only 18% of calories and 37% of dietary protein.
Environmental concerns cannot be the only consideration.
Human
health must also be taken into account, and researchers warn we know
virtually nothing about the long-term health effects of cultured and
plant-based meat alternatives.
But are environmental concerns the only valid factor in this
equation?
What about human health?
Is it reasonable to intentionally
doom all of humanity to poor health and low cognition just because a
small power-hungry cabal claims food production has a detrimental
climate impact?
Many of the activities pursued by these globalists have detrimental
impacts on the environment, but you don't see them addressing those.
Instead, they're going after food!
The most infuriating part of this debate is the fact that human and
environmental health can be simultaneously optimized.
If the global
cabal really had 'good intentions', they'd incentivize farmers to
transition to regenerative farming practices and holistic livestock
management.
Problem solved...
We'd have healthier, more nutrient-dense food and
the environment would rapidly regenerate.
Climate normalization
would soon follow.
To learn more, see "Regenerative Food and
Farming - Survival and Revival."
But no, regenerative farming is not even part of the discussion.
It's being intentionally ignored, and that's how you know the
globalists have no intention of solving an actual problem...
Their
intention is to control the food supply by making sure all foods are
patentable and owned by them.
Study Warns - Meat Ban Would Harm Human Health
On the other side of this debate, we have research 7
showing that removing meat and dairy from the human diet would
result in significant harm to health.
As reported by Nutrition
Insight in mid-April 2023: 8
"Among a growing body of research linking decreased meat consumption
to various health benefits, a new study concludes that removing or
reducing meat consumption from diets is risky as meat is a
nutrient-dense food that,
'continues to have a key role in human
health and development.'
The researchers explain that meat offers a source of high-quality
protein and nutrients that are not always easily obtained with
meat-free diets and are often suboptimal or deficient in global
populations.
'Animal-sourced foods are superior to plant-sourced foods at
simultaneously supplying several bioavailable micronutrients and
high-quality macronutrients critical for growth and cognitive
development,' notes co-author Dr. Adegbola Adesogan, director of the
University of Florida's Global Food Systems Institute.
Dietary
recommendations to eliminate animal-source foods from diets ignore
their importance... "
Indeed, as noted in this paper, 9 human anatomy, digestion and
metabolism indicates that the human race is not only compatible with
but also reliant upon relatively substantial meat intake, and
disconnecting the entire population from our evolutionary dietary
patterns raises rather than lowers the risk for nutrient
deficiencies and chronic diseases.
Meat Is More
Than the Sum of Individual Nutrients
We already know that the preponderance of processed food in the
Western diet is responsible for our current disease burden and
removing one of the few remaining whole foods - meat - will
undoubtedly only worsen the situation.
Specific nutrients found in meat that are not easily obtained in
meat-free diets include,
B vitamins, especially vitamin B12, retinol,
long-chain omega-3 fatty acids, iron and zinc in bioavailable forms,
taurine, creatine and carnosine,
...all of which have important health
functions.
As noted by the authors: 10
"As a food matrix, meat is more than the sum of its individual
nutrients.
Moreover, within the diet matrix, it can serve as a
keystone food in food-based dietary interventions to improve
nutritional status, especially in regions that rely heavily on
cereal staples.
Efforts to lower global meat intake for environmental or other
reasons beyond a critical threshold may hinder progress towards
reducing undernutrition and the effects this has on both physical
and cognitive outcomes, and thereby stifle economic
development...
Leaving aside the degree of negative impact that meat may have on a
variety of factors that relate to human and planetary health... the
purpose of the present article is to summarize the positive
nutritional aspects of meat consumption.
The outlining, understanding, and weighing of such parameters will
be required to enable a proper cost-benefit analysis of any food
system transformation, and particularly those that wish to strongly
reduce or even eliminate meat intake."
We Have a
Manmade Problem Alright
We do have a manmade problem, but it's not climate change per se.
The problem is that food production has been bastardized...
In an
April 24, 2023, article in The Scotsman, 11 columnist
Philip Lymbery
shares memories of a trip through Italy's agricultural valley.
While touring "pretty villages," "endless pastures and crop fields,"
he quickly realized that something was missing:
Livestock...!
Not once
did he see a farm animal anywhere.
The picturesque pastures were all
empty.
"Where were the cows producing milk for world-famous Parmesan or
Grana Padano?
Or the pigs renowned for Parma ham?
Or the chickens
producing eggs for Carbonara?
What I discovered is that farmers in
Italy's richest agricultural region had forgotten how to keep
animals outside.
They simply had a blind spot. They couldn't see why it wasn't right
to keep them cooped up indoors all day, every day.
They couldn't see
the irony of grass being grown then mowed and packed into bales to
feed incarcerated cows," he writes.
"They had lost sight of the fact that cows, pigs, and chickens like
to feel fresh air and sunshine as much as we do.
It put me in mind
of something else Locatelli once said:
'It is better to have
fantastic meat once a week than fill ourselves up every day with
cheap, carelessly reared meat.
We all have to get used to quality,
not quantity'."
Even foods advertised as being made from "grass fed" cows, such as
Italy's famous Parmigiano Reggiano Parmesan cheese, were raised
indoors, Lymbery discovered.
Instead of letting the cows graze
freely on all those pastures, cut grass is shoveled into darkened
factories where hundreds of cows are cramped together.
According to Lymbery, less than 1% of Italian farms that supply
dairy for the production of Parmesan allowed cows to graze freely
outdoors in 2016. (He asked the consortium that governs Parmesan
manufacturing for updated 2023 statistics but received no reply.)
Instead, "zero grazing" is the norm...
This is where cows are
permanently kept indoors.
Another fact Lymbery discovered during his travels through Italy was
that crop fields are primarily dedicated to growing animal feed, not
human food.
These kinds of practices are what's having a detrimental
effect on the environment.
It's factory farming that is the problem,
not farming or food production in general...
As mentioned earlier, the
solution is regenerative farming and holistic husbandry, not more
processed fake foods...!
Fake Meats Are
Not a Viable Replacement for Real Meat
Source
As detailed in "Red Meat Is Not a Health Risk," research has
demonstrated that unprocessed red meat poses a very low risk for
adverse health effects, if any.
On the other hand, cultured meat
operations are significant producers of CO2 emissions and
plant-based meats have been shown to inhibit mineral absorption in
humans.
Both of these
meat alternatives are also ultraprocessed,
12 and may
therefore cause the same kind of health deterioration as other
processed foods.
Obesity, 13 Type 2 diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, cancer and depression are but a few examples
of conditions known to be promoted and exacerbated by a processed
food diet. 14,15,16,17,18
In December 2022, Swedish researchers warned that plant-based meat
alternatives have very high phytate levels - antinutrients that
inhibit the absorption of minerals in the human body.
As a result,
while the meat substitute may appear to contain many of the
necessary nutrients, such as iron, your body cannot absorb them.
That plant-based meat alternatives may therefore result in
health-robbing nutrient deficiencies is wholly predictable.
As reported by Nutrition
Insight: 19
"The study, published in Nutrients, analyzed 44 meat substitutes
sold in Swedish supermarkets, mainly made of soy and pea proteins.
It also included fermented soy products of
tempeh and mycoproteins -
fungi.
'All products were high in iron and zinc content but low in
bioavailability (except the tempeh and mycoprotein-based products).
This means that the minerals pass through the gastrointestinal tract
without being absorbed,' Ann-Sofie Sandberg, co-author of the study
and professor of food and nutrition science at Chalmers University,
tells NutritionInsight.
Sandberg details that the
mycoproteins did not contain iron but
relatively high amounts of zinc.
Zinc absorption might be negatively
influenced by the fungi cell walls, although it's yet unknown.
'Among these products, we saw a wide variation in nutritional
content and how sustainable they can be from a health perspective.
In general, the estimated absorption of iron and zinc from the
products was extremely low,' says Cecilia Mayer Labba, lead
author of the study...
Sandberg explains that the most available iron for absorption comes
from meat and fish containing heme iron, which is very easily
absorbed.
'Meat and fish also contain what is called 'the meat
factor' - muscle tissues or amino acids - which stimulate the
absorption of nonheme iron in the whole meal.
Thus, there are two
reasons for animal protein being superior for iron absorption.
Also,
zinc absorption is stimulated by animal protein'."
Executive
Order Lays Foundation for Lab-Created Foods
Government leaders, however, appear wholly ignorant of the risks
involved with a wholesale transition from real, whole food to
processed and synthetic alternatives.
In September 2022, U.S. President
Joe Biden signed an "Executive
Order on Advancing Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing Innovation for
a Sustainable, Safe and Secure American Bioeconomy," 20 which paves
the way for biotechnology to take over food production.
In late March 2023, Biden further expanded on this premise in a
"Bold Goals for U.S. Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing" report.
21
According to this plan, the food industry is to be led
by biotech, and the "improvements" we can look forward to are more
lab-grown meats and bioengineered plant foods.
A similar plan is
also detailed in the U.K.'s Genetic Technology and Precision
Breeding Act of 2023. 22
Specific goals highlighted in Biden's "Bold Goals" report
23 include
reducing methane emissions from agriculture by 30% by 2030, in part
by reducing methane emissions from ruminant livestock.
While
Bill Gates is investing to develop methane-capturing
'face
masks for cattle,' 24 the easiest way to reduce emissions from
livestock is to simply eliminate the animals altogether, and this,
of course, means less real food.
Among the many problems with this plan is the fact that taxpayers
will now be paying for government's funding of private corporations
involved in the fake food industry...
The end result is highly
predictable.
What we'll have is a repeat of what happened with farm
subsidies.
Rather than subsidizing the most nutritious foods, government farm
subsidies go almost exclusively to large monoculture farms growing
genetically engineered corn, soy and other basic ingredients used in
processed foods.
As a result, the processed food industry has grown
on our dime while public health has deteriorated.
The same thing will happen here. Instead of investing in
regenerative agriculture, the government is backing a whole new
industry of fake foods, from lab-grown meats to large-scale insect
production.
Meanwhile, safety data for plant-based meats, synthetic
cultured meats and insect proteins are sorely lacking.
As just one example, a March 2023 Food Hazards Identification
report 25 by the British Food standards Agency (FSA) and
Food
Standards Scotland stresses that there are "considerable gaps in
knowledge" when it comes to cell-based meat production.
There's
either little or no data at all on the toxicology, nutrition
profiles, product stability, allergy risks, contamination risks and
adverse effects of these products when consumed by humans.
Examples of
Potential Hazards
Potential problem areas identified by the FSA include:
26,27
-
Contaminated reagents, air or water baths
-
Poorly cleaned or maintained equipment
-
Failing to follow cleaning protocols when culturing cells
-
Failing to follow good laboratory practices (GLP) and/or good
manufacturing practices (GMP)
-
Use of antibiotics, fungicides and/or chemicals that are toxic to
humans in the production
-
Consumption of viruses used in the manufacturing process
-
Cross-contamination of one cell line into another due to concomitant
use of multiple cell lines
-
Other cross-contamination risks, such as "poor maintenance of
equipment, poor cleaning regimes, incorrect storage of cells,
working with multiple cell lines in one area, using the wrong cells
and incorrect labeling"
-
New diseases and/or allergic reactions to new proteins due to using
cell lines of animals not common in the local diet
-
Nutritional deficiencies, "as the nutrition profile could be
different from what it is replacing"
As noted in the Food Hazards Identification report: 28
"There are many stages of development for producing cultured meat... from taking a cell line from a small vial or biopsy and
increasing the culture volume stepwise in stages (proliferation),
until a commercial sized bioreactor can be seeded, to
differentiating the cells to final desired cell type.
Then [they are] maturing them, usually on a scaffold, to increase
the protein content, and then detaching/grinding the cells with/from
their scaffold to produce a final product that can be used to make
meat like cells.
At each stage, different chemicals, biologics,
media formulations, additives and supplements are used to ensure a
successful culture."
Contamination can occur at any of these steps.
Each additive also
poses potential risks, both known and unknown, as various byproducts
are created in the process.
In the video above, I review some of the
many potential dangers associated with fake meats.
Considering the multistep processing cultivated meats undergo, it's
simply not possible for it to be as safe as conventional meat, where
the primary contamination risks are limited to slaughter,
processing, packaging, distribution and storage.
With fake meats,
hazardous contamination can occur at any point during manufacturing,
in addition to these conventional "weak points."
Ultraprocessed
Foods Are Anything But 'Green'
Ultraprocessed foods are also completely counterproductive to
environmentally "green" and sustainable goals.
For example, ultraprocessed foods already account for 17% to 39% of total
diet-related energy use, 36% to 45% of total diet-related
biodiversity loss and up to one-third of total diet-related
greenhouse gas emissions. 29
So, how is expanding the manufacturing and consumption of even more
ultraprocessed foods going to lower greenhouse gas emissions?
As
noted in a September 2022 Journal of Cleaner Production paper:
30
"Ultraprocessed foods are fundamentally unsustainable products:
-
they
have been associated with poor health and social outcomes and
require finite environmental resources for their production...
-
are
responsible for significant diet-related energy, [and] greenhouse
gas emissions."
And, for all the lip service paid to "equity," increasing
consumption of processed foods will worsen economic inequalities, as
it redirects money away from small farmers and independent
homesteaders to transnational corporations that rely on underpaid
workers.
Will Beef Be
Banned?
Crazy as it seems, there's every reason to suspect that a meat ban
will eventually become reality.
Personally, I don't think this will
be done through laws banning the consumption of meat.
Rather, meat will simply be phased out as farmers are forced to
limit herd sizes to comply with various restrictions on fertilizer
use and limits on carbon emissions.
Fake alternatives will then take
their place, and over time, people will forget how to raise their
own food.
At that point, humanity will be wholly captured and
enslaved...
Be Part of the
Solution
Ultimately, if we want to be free, and if we want food safety and
food security, we must focus our efforts on building a decentralized
system that connects communities with farmers who grow real food in
sustainable ways and distribute that food locally.
Strategies that can get us there were covered in the Children's
Health Defense's March 4, 2023, Attack on Food symposium (video
above).
For example, Dr. John Day and Beverly Johannson shared tips
on how to grow your own food and preserve the food you grow.
Other
helpful strategies include buying food from local farmers and
farmers markets and creating independent food hubs that cut out the
middlemen.
The final session of the symposium dealt with larger societal
solutions to fight back against the war on food.
U.S. Rep. Thomas
Massie highlighted core vulnerabilities in the U.S. food supply,
which fell apart during the pandemic when farmers had to euthanize
animals because they couldn't get them processed.
Four meatpackers control 85% of the meat that's processed in the
U.S.
One of them is owned by China, one by Brazil and the other two
are multinational corporations.
Food prices are going up while
farmers are going broke.
In 2017, Massie introduced the Processing
Revival and Intrastate Meat Exemption (PRIME) Act, 31 but the bill
hasn't moved since its introduction in the House.
The PRIME Act would allow farmers to sell meat processed at smaller
slaughtering facilities and allow states to set their own meat
processing standards.
Because small slaughterhouses do not have an
inspector on staff - a requirement that only large facilities can
easily fulfill - they're banned from selling their meat.
The PRIME
Act would lift this regulation without sacrificing safety, as random
USDA inspections could still occur.
"If a farmer wants to sell pork, beef or lamb to a consumer, as long
as that consumer and that farmer and that processor are all in the
same state, they're not crossing state lines, they keep the federal
government out of that transaction," he said.
Massie has also introduced legislation to protect access to raw milk
(HR 4835, the Interstate Milk Freedom Act of 2021 32).
33
The bill was
introduced at the end of July 2021, as an amendment to the 2018 Farm
bill...
Contact your representatives and urge them to support these
bills.
Sources and
References
1, 7, 9, 10 Animal
Frontiers April 15, 2023
2, 3 The
Guardian September 23, 2019
4 Science
June 1, 2018; 360: 987-992
5 Science
Erratum February 22, 2019
6 The
Guardian May 31, 2018
8 Nutrition
Insight April 17, 2023
11 The
Scotsman April 24, 2023
12 Friends
of the Earth, From Lab to Fork, June 2018 (PDF)
13 Cell
Metabolism, 2019; doi: 0.1016/j.cmet.2019.05.008
14 JAMA
Internal Medicine February 11, 2019;179(4):490-498
15 BMJ
February 14, 2018; 360
16 JAMA
2017;317(9):912-924
17 BMJ,
2019;365:I1451
18 BMJ,
2019;365:l1949
19 Nutrition
Insight December 9, 2022
20 White
House Executive Order on Advancing Biotechnology
September 12, 2022
21, 23 Bold
Goals for US Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing March
2023
22 Genetic
Technology (Precision Breeding) Act 2023
24 Cowboy
State Daily March 23, 2023
25, 26 Food
standards Agency Hazards Identification Report November
2022
27 Food
Safety News March 24, 2023
28 Food
standards Agency Hazards Identification Report November
2022, Page 8
29, 30 Journal
of Cleaner Production September 25, 2022; 368: 133155
31 HR
2657 PRIME Act
32 HR4835
Interstate Milk Freedom Act 2021
33 Thomas
Massie Press Release July 30, 2021
|