WHY VEGAN?
If you've clicked this button then maybe you're already thinking about going vegan. Our advice to you is simple: go for it! Hundreds of thousands of people in this country have already taken that last step into a completely cruelty-free lifestyle. By turning vegan you'll be doing something incredibly positive for your health, your conscience and the world. What's more, we guarantee you that making the transition won't be as difficult as you think. Being vegan doesn't mean becoming a freak; it doesn't mean giving up on the pleasure of good food and it certainly doesn't mean you have to become a self-righteous bore. It won't make you a different person � only a happier one!
There are many reasons for going vegan � just as there are for going vegetarian. Being vegetarian helps immeasurably in reducing animal suffering, environmental damage, hunger in the developing world and risks to our own health. Veganism takes all those advantages just a little further. For very many people concerned about any or all of these problems, it seems the natural step to take from vegetarianism.
Going Vegan: 4 Great Reasons
1. Saving Animals
Cattle reared for milk production are
exploited and made to suffer, just like animals
reared for meat. They suffer from lameness, mastitis
(inflammation of the udders) and other illnesses and �
worst of all � they are forcibly separated from their
calves just days after they are born so that humans
can drink their milk. Cows are not some kind of
special animal that produces milk automatically: just like
every other animal, including us, they only produce milk to
nurse their young. Male dairy calves, meanwhile, are
useless to the dairy industry and are usually shot at birth.
Meanwhile, egg-laying hens may be crammed into battery cages
or disgusting, disease ridden percheries and forced to
produce twenty times the number of eggs as are natural to
them. Even free range and organic layers face disease and
parasites � and are slaughtered for cheap meat as soon as
their productivity falls below the level that the egg
business will accept. Male chicks are as useless to the
industry as male dairy calves and all are killed � including
those on free-range and organic systems.
Like leather, wool is a vital
part of the profitability of the meat business � and
animals suffer to produce it. Over 90% of British sheep flocks
have problems with lameness and almost 1 in 5 lambs die before
getting to market. Even honey bees are prone to infectious diseases and
the ill-effects of intensive production. All animals kept for
profit are exploited in one way or another: the only
way to ensure that animals are not harmed is to ensure
they are not farmed at all.Find out more from Viva!`s online Guides: Murder She Wrote about the suffering inflicted on farmed animals; and Justice for All, presenting the case for animal rights.
2. Saving the Planet
Dairy cattle and laying
hens consume land, water and resources just like other
farmed animals. They eat pesticide-soaked fodder, produce
polluting slurry, consume chemicals and drugs produced at
environmental cost and generate greenhouse gases. They are a drain
on our resources that this planet cannot afford. Find out more about how animal agriculture is ravaging the environment from Viva!`s online Guide, Planet on a Plate
3. Saving Others
Again, dairy cattle and
laying hens are consuming resources that could go to
feeding human beings. As the developing world increasingly
industrialises its animal agriculture, farming animals in
order to generate revenues instead of food that problem will
get worse � and as more dairy and egg produce is consumed in the
developing world, so its people are at risk of falling prey to the
diet-induced illnesses of Western society. Find out more about how animal agriculture contributes to poverty and hunger from Viva!`s online Guide, Food for the Future
4. Saving Yourself
Human beings are the only
animals which consume milk after infancy � and the
milk of another species at that. It is neither natural nor
healthy. A study published in 2003 found that a vegan diet could
reduce the most harmful form of cholesterol by 29%. The American
Dietetic Association has declared that a vegan diet can provide
all the nutrition that human beings need � from cradle to grave.
Veganism is infinitely closer to the diet human beings evolved to
thrive on than a normal, animal fat-soaked western diet � and
the health benefits of a well-balanced vegan diet reflect
that. Find out more about the health benefits of veganism from Viva!`s online guides, The Healthiest Diet of All and a guide produced by the Vegetarian and Vegan Foundation, Kids Go Veggie, which explains how veganism is an ideal diet for children.