return to GoVeg.com
 Vegetarian 101  Spacer  Recipes  Spacer  Videos  Spacer  FREE Vegetarian Starter Kit  Spacer  Donate Now 
 
Subscribe to E-News
Search
Why Vegetarian?
Cruelty to Animals Cruelty to Animals
Amazing Animals Amazing Animals
Health Issues Health Issues
The Environment The Environment
More »
Meet the Animals
Meet the Animals: Chickens Chickens
Meet the Animals: Cows Cows
Meet the Animals: Fish Fish
Meet the Animals: Pigs Pigs
Meet the Animals: Turkeys Turkeys
Meet the Animals: Ducks and Geese Ducks and Geese
More »
Resources
Resources: Get Active Get Active
Resources: Recipes Recipes
Resources: 'Meet Your Meat' 'Meet Your Meat' PETA TV
Resources: Take the 30-Day Veg Pledge Take the 30-Day Veg Pledge
Resources: Famous Vegetarians Famous Vegetarians
Resources: Books and Web Sites Books and Web Sites
Resources: Literature and Merchandise Literature and Merchandise
Resources: In the News In the News
Resources: Investigations Investigations
Resources: Photo Gallery Photo Gallery
Free Vegetarian Starter Kit
Sign Up For PETA E-News
Support Our Work
Work For PETA
peta2
PETA Kids
 
Health Issues // The Natural Human Diet

Humans Invent Factory Farming

During the past 50 years, traditional small-scale farms have been replaced by massive, mechanized agricultural operations. Technological advances have allowed factory farmers to produce huge quantities of food and ship it anywhere in the world, and agribusiness entrepreneurs soon bought out and consolidated smaller agrarian operations. When America was founded, roughly 90 percent of Americans lived on farms.18

Today, the percentage of Americans who farm for a living has fallen to less than 2 percent.19 The "family farm" is now practically extinct.

The industrialization of animal production has led to huge factory farms that raise thousands of animals in cramped, filthy warehouses. This crowding, combined with other cost-cutting practices (like grinding up the scraps from dead animals and feeding them back to the survivors) and huge agricultural subsidies (corporate welfare) has made meat cheap and readily available. In addition, our natural aversion to killing animals for food is bypassed by the modern farming system-immigrants and poor, rural Americans do the dangerous dirty work in the slaughterhouses, and the rest of us are never confronted with the task of killing the animals ourselves (or even having to watch it happen). Read more about factory farming.

Since 1950, the per capita consumption of meat has almost doubled; now that animal flesh has become relatively cheap and easily available, deadly ailments like heart disease, strokes, cancer, and obesity have spread to people across the socio-economic spectrum.20 And as the Western lifestyle spills over into less developed areas in Asia and Africa, they, too, have started to die from the diseases associated with meat-based diets.

Read more.


18 Education Orchard, "Challenges and Changes in Education," 1997.
19 Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service, "Extension," 3 Nov. 2004.
20 Jim Motavalli, "The Trouble With Meat," E Magazine, May/Jun. 1998.

Heart Disease
Cancer
Strokes
Impotence
Obesity and Weight Loss
Alzheimer's and Brain Health
Diabetes
Animalborne Diseases
Raising Healthy Kids
Meat Contamination
Is Eating Meat Natural?
Human Physiology
Meat: Delicious or Disgusting?
Early Human Evolution
Humans Invent Factory Farming
A Healthy Human Diet
Optimal Vegan Nutrition
FREE Vegetarian Starter Kit
Vegetarian 101
'Meet Your Meat'
Organic and Free-Range: Better for Your Health?
   l    * Printer-Friendly    l    E-Mail This Site    l    Subscribe to E-News    
About PETA      Donate Now      Privacy Policy      Disclaimer      PETA Web Sites     
Click here to return to PETA.org