Professor Melissa Santos
ENG102-037
30 March 2018
Are You Contributing To a Healthy or Unhealthy World?
In Charleston Newspapers article “EARTH
TALK; Eating Less Meat Good for Environment?”, the article discusses the
decisions that we make by consuming meat. The sad statistics in these articles
really open the readers’ mind to thinking about how our food decisions can
impact more than just ourselves. As said in the article, too much consumption
of meat is “linked to increasing rates of heart disease, cancer, and obesity.”
Due to the constant demand of meats, the livestock is often crammed in small
areas, causing around the same amount of sewage as a small city. Special antibiotics
are used to keep the animals “healthy”. “Healthy” meaning, that’s what people
believe it does because it can bulk them up and keep them alive until they are
ready to be processed for slaughter. People don’t realize that what these animals
are consuming also affects us too.
Like in Braiding Sweetgrass and Eating the Landscape, the article “Healthy
Futures Farm’s Core Mission: Making Healthy, Local Produce Affordable and
Accessible makes similar connections between the stories. The owners of Healthy
Futures Farm’s, Averyl and Nathan Andrade discuss their various ways in which
they use their crops to assist others. For example, they enjoy going to
Buttonwood Park Zoo, which they are able to donate their fresh produce to the
animals to enjoy. Taking from the article, “…all just working together, trading
products, bringing people back together…Knowing who your neighbors are.” is a
great connection between the stories because they discuss how people wouldn’t
even need to use money if we all chipped in and did our part to support each
other.
“…farming out of
season is becoming more and more popular all the time.” (Fukuoka 86) A quote from Masanobu Fukuoka's novel The One-Straw
Revolution goes along with our discussion on Monday about how the demand for
all of these fruits and veggies that we want don’t actually grow in the season
and we demand them because we like them and want them, not because that is what
comes natural to nature. Just like how the meat is taking a toll on nature, so
is the production and selling of fruits off-season.
I feel that what I
have discussed in my blogpost can open peoples’ eyes to the decisions that they
make and may make them think twice the next time they go to the grocery store or
get food. Are you contributing to a negative environment unknowingly? What choices
could you make to create a healthy environment?
Thank you for sharing this post. As consumers, I do believe that we have a lot of power to create trends in the market and world.
ReplyDeleteYour post is a great source of knowledge for those who care about what they eat and how it was processed.
ReplyDelete