Swine flu. Bird flu. Mad cow disease. SARS. These diseases have all spread
from animals to humans in one form or another.

But animals aren’t to blame for outbreaks of animal-borne diseases – humans
are.

Our demand for meat means pigs, turkeys, chickens, cows and other animals
must be mass produced in crowded, feces-ridden factory farms like the one in
Mexico that is suspected of starting the current swine flu outbreak. These
farms are incubators for disease.

Precautions such as stockpiling antiviral drugs, closing schools, suspending
travel and practicing good hygiene are necessary to help stop the spread of
swine flu, but we need to take one more significant measure to prevent
future epidemics of animal-borne diseases: Stop raising animals for food.

The meat industry’s cost-cutting practices-cramming tens of thousands of
animals into filthy sheds and slaughtering them on killing floors that are
contaminated with feces, vomit and other bodily fluids-allow diseases such
as swine flu, mad cow disease and avian flu to flourish.

Authorities believe one of Mexico’s largest pork producers, Granjas Carroll,
which is a subsidiary of U.S.-based Smithfield Foods (the largest pork
producer in the world), may be the source of the swine flu outbreak.

Swarms of flies hover above the lagoons where Granjas Carroll discharges hog
feces, and area residents have long complained the waste is tainting the
water, polluting the air and causing respiratory infections.

In April, residents told reporters that more than half of the town’s
population was sick and three children under the age of 2 had died.

While it’s easy to point fingers at Granjas Carroll and Mexico,
disease-ridden animal factories can be found all over the world.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, studies have
shown that 30 to 50 percent of pigs raised for food in the U.S. have been
infected with some strain of swine flu.

Hans-Gerhard Wagner, a senior officer with the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture
Organization, has called the “intensive industrial farming of livestock” an
“opportunity for emerging disease.”

Other harmful organisms, including salmonella, campylobacter, listeria and
E. coli, also spread from animals to people. E. coli is found in the feces
of farmed animals and often sprays in every direction when animals are
eviscerated at slaughterhouses.

A study published in the journal Nature revealed that not only are U.S. meat
and dairy products more commonly contaminated with E. coli than other foods
are, they also contain a substance that can raise the risk of E. coli
infection.

Although health officials have been quick to point out people can’t get
swine flu from eating pork, they have failed to hammer home one significant
detail: Raising pigs for pork is what puts us at risk for swine flu in the
first place.

The fewer pigs, chickens and other animals we raise for food, the fewer
animal-borne diseases there will be.

It’s that simple.

And since meat is high in saturated fat and cholesterol and can cause heart
disease, diabetes, certain cancers and a host of other health problems.

We would all be better off if we stopped eating it today.

-- 
*SUDESH KUMAR*
*sudeshkumar.org* <http://www.sudeshkumar.org/>

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