Looking for the Smoking Pig

News articles abound about the probable source of the swine fever, sorry, influenza A (H1N1), (the Grumpy Vegan likes “Mad Swine Disease),” including Huffington Post and today’s Graun, which can’t help itself to call the op ed, “The Pig’s Revenge.” It is, of course, more like retribution than revenge. We wanted cheap food, which turned out to be expensive in more ways than one: protein conversion, environmental degradation and the lives of billions of animals.

The new swine flu could have emerged in a myriad number of ways, passing between any number of birds and pigs and people, at locations across North America, during its evolutionary journey. It may well prove impossible to pinpoint exactly where it first emerged or became infectious to people. But most of its genes are almost certainly part of a North American industrial virus lineage long expected to produce pandemic variants like this one.

“We haven’t found evidence of infected pigs,” said Ian Lipkin, a Columbia University epidemiologist and member of the World Health Organization’s surveillance network. “But even if we never find that smoking pig, we can surmise that this is probably where it came from.”

Wired reports.

What the Grumpy Vegan wants to know is when are agribusiness interests going to be held accountable? If a bunch of vegans had caused mad swine disease we’d be all listed on FBI’s Most Wanted by now. Wait for us to be blamed because the public and the media didn’t pay us enough attention. Not that the Grumpy Vegan wants to see anyone sick (and having just recovered from a bout of the virus veganitius insanitus) himself, it is somewhat gratifying seeing society catch up with what folks like Rachel Carson and Ruth Harrison and thousands of other animal advocates have been saying for more than 40 years about factory farming and its negative impact on human health, animal welfare and environmental degradation.

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New Scientific Study on Meat Eating

Now a new study of more than 500,000 Americans has provided the best evidence yet that our affinity for red meat has exacted a hefty price on our health and limited our longevity. The study found that, other things being equal, the men and women who consumed the most red and processed meat were likely to die sooner, especially from one of our two leading killers, heart disease and cancer, than people who consumed much smaller amounts of these foods.
[…]
In place of red meat, nonvegetarians might consider poultry and fish. In the study, the largest consumers of “white” meat from poultry and fish had a slight survival advantage. Likewise, those who ate the most fruits and vegetables also tended to live longer.

Paying a Price for Loving Red Meat

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Stallwood Animal Rights Archive Update #19

This is the first update in 2009 of my archive. There are now more than 1,940 books catalogued on the Library Thing Web site. The vast majority of these books are animal related. The remaining books to be catalogued are fiction, including some that include animals as principal characters. More than 100 tags are now making it possible to search the library by category (e.g. Animals and literature, Henry Salt, Wildlife, politics). Comments on the tags given to the books are welcome. Given that cataloguing is almost complete, I will start a series on Grumpy Vegan to feature an aspect of the collection, for example, an author or a topic. Also, I wish to initiate a section in the archive to identify those books I’d like to acquire for the collection. This way anyone who has a copy and wishes to kindly donate it can do so! My eventual ambition is to find a university with an academic program in animal rights to acquire the archive so that it can be used as part of the research. Please contact if this is of interest to you. Finally, I am open to receiving donations of materials to the archive. Generally, this material should be older rather than younger, and unique rather than general. Again, please contact me with any questions or comments.

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Book Review: “Where’s the Beef ?”

Where’s the Beef?

Beef: How Milk, Meat and Muscle Shaped the World by Andrew Rimas and Evan D.G. Fraser. Mainstream Publishing. 250 pp. £12.99.

“I am a great eater of beef,” pleads Sir Andrew Aguecheek in William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, “and I believe that does harm to my wit.” Wit isn’t the only thing harmed by the consumption of beef and other meats and dairy products. But you wouldn’t know it from reading Beef: How Milk, Meat and Muscle Shaped the World by Andrew Rimas and Evan D.G. Fraser. Like skimming off the unwanted fat from the surface of simmering beef stock, the authors discard what they don’t want to spoil the taste of their tale of how beef built civilisation. A more appropriate title for a less romantic book may have been Beef: How Fat and Flatulence Put at Risk Our Health and the Planet. But, I suspect, this Beef is targeted for an audience of readers who wish to continue savouring the social and cultural delights of meat without wanting to spend too much time thinking about the political and environmental consequences. Reality forces the authors to talk seriously at the end but this diversionary discursion from the pro-meat perspective left this reader with a bitter after taste as too little too late. No doubt, our intimate relationship with the animals, including those we eat, plays a significant role in shaping the world we live in. The question is how we chose to see and write about it as well as where do we go from here. Whose story are we telling, anyway? As the authors unwittingly ask, “Imagine our world without cattle, and you’re not imagining our world. Cattle, second only to the ingenuity of humanity itself, built this astounding complexity of fields and cities, letters and money, banks and kings. And, indeed, of gods.” (p.33)

The authors, a freelance journalist with extensive international travel now based in Boston and a lecturer on farming and the environment at the University of Leeds in England, tell the “story of cattle and of the people who made them what they are.” (p.23). Beef is a collection of creative non-fiction essays arranged in the linear narrative theme of humanity and its development over the ages. So, we start with “From Horn to Hoof” (prehistory to 8000 BC) and end on “The $300 Sirloin” (twentieth and twenty-first centuries). The authors skip anecdotally through the millennia from pre-historic times in Africa and nomadic tribes and their herds of cattle to contemporary Japan and Wagyu raw meat at $300 per pound.

This should’ve been a road less travelled as with the passing of each chapter there is a growing sense that what we’re reading is an arbitrary collection of a bit of this and a bit of that. Functioning as some overarching theme connecting us with the dawn of civilisation (read: real men killing cows) and the unknown fate of our futures (the consumer’s choice: “walk the meat aisle with an eye for qualities like provenance, ecological impact and sustainability, or look to canned beans” [p.220]), the authors weave in and out of their narrative account visits to Africa and the Masai. They end up at Nairobi’s Carnivore Restaurant.

We chewed for an hour, commenting solely on the food. Chicken livers, ostrich balls, Chinese spare ribs and roasts of every barnyard denizen except for the cat. A waiter carved a beef rump at swordpoint, about half an inch thick. Then came lamb. And sausage. And turkey. And more beef. No storied gluttons – not Lucullus, not Henry VIII, not even Elvis – had ever swamped themselves with so many pounds of flesh. We ate our way past satiety and into hazy tracts of stupor. (p.187)

No sooner do the authors put down their knives and forks after this celebration of unrestrained excess, they wag their fingers and call upon consumers to “learn restraint” in their consumption of meat but even this is problematic. (p. 203)

Restraint has been the mantra of environmentalists since the dying days of the passenger pigeon, but the most effective tool for forcing consumers to rethink their habits is to raise prices. With lower beef production, this will happen anyway. The real question is how to remodel the industry itself so that it’s profitable, sustainable and capable of filling the millions of hamburger buns left vacant by the shuttered feedlots. (p.203)

Vegetarianism, not even a “meat-free” diet of part-time vegetarianism, is a serious consideration fort these authors. They reveal their bias with such ill-informed observations as these.

To be meaty means to possess merit and conviction. To be vegetal means to be practically dead. (p. 15)

Spartan in simplicity, yes, but the result should debauch the staunchest vegan. [referring to a recipe for rib-eye steak] (p. 18).

Beef is like one of those cheap but attractive cookbooks that dare you to impulse buy them at the local supermarket checkout. You just know, however, when you get home there won’t be a recipe worth trying. Indeed, Beef does include recipes, well, what are called “Culinary Interludes.” But who’s going to want them in the age of cancer and heart disease, saturated fat and E. coli outbreaks, factory farming and mad cow disease and water wars and global warming?

Suggested alternative titles to consider include

Meat by Nick Fiddes
Meat Market by Erik Marcus
The Meat You Eat by Ken Midriff
Beyond Beef by Jeremy Rifkin
Beef and Liberty by Ben Rogers
Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser
Livestock’s Long Shadow: Environmental Issues and Options by Henning Steinfield
Cow by Hannah Velten

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What’s In a Name?

Agricultural interests lobby to change what we call Swine Flu to H1N1 virus.

“We want to say to consumers here and abroad that there is no risk to you, there is no scientific evidence whatsoever that there is any link between consuming pork, prepared pork products, and the H1N1 virus,” Kirk added.

With Eye on Industry, Ag Secretary Stops Calling Outbreak ‘Swine Flu’

See also.

As there is no evidence that the virus is transmitted by food, and the virus hasn’t been isolated in any animal, “it is not justified to name this disease swine influenza,” he wrote.

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