True Cost of Beef - Part 2

February 26th, 2008

I’m not sure if this is a blogger’s faux pas, but I felt compelled to write an addendum to the first True Cost of Beef post. Initially I kept out the following details with the hope of keeping the original post short but alas I’m having to expand on it after all. I hope this bit of information can give greater context as to why I wrote the original post.

The mother of the first post was a conversation I had with a good friend of mine during a green/sustainability event in December 2007 at the law firm of Hansen and Bridgett in San Francisco where Taylor Francis a student of Al Gore was giving a presentation on global warming. The conversation with my friend, who happens to be a sustainability consultant, centered around eating meat and it’s impact on global warming. His contention was that we needed to decrease or even eliminate our consumption of meat in order to reduce the CO2 emissions (Methane given off by cows and deforestation of land for cow pastures). He felt that changing our diet would be no issue given that many people today are happy and healthy being vegan. In fact Taylor Francis, during his presentation which was created by Al Gore and his team, included a suggestion for everyone to cut down on their meat consumption. After the story about the recalled beef hit the news, I not only felt absolute sadness for the animals that were miss-treated and needlessly slaughtered but I also felt that this bit of news may further increase the anti-cow farming sentiment from some in the green/sustainability movement.

Knowing how unhealthy most beef in the world is raised and farmed it comes as no surprise to me that it is also not the most environmentally sustainable. In order to have a sound judgment about meat consumption, we need to look at this practice both universally and holistically. I feel CO2 reduction is not a justification for people to go out and stop consuming animal food. To look at this issue consciously we can’t unleash blanket statement such as the ones that I heard that evening. If in our discourse, we continue to bundle together all cows, all cow farmers, all cow farming practices, and all our collective bad eating habits and diets, then we are surely going to come up with conclusions that are at best erroneous, and at worst counter-productive. Can reducing our consumption of meats reduce the impact on atmospheric CO2, absolutely. Is it not a more conscious act to reduce our consumption based on our understanding of our body and soul’s needs and genuine and heartfelt respect for animals vs. through fears of global warming? Specially if both routes have the potential to bring about the same desired effect of reducing CO2 emissions?

True Cost of Beef

February 18th, 2008

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This week Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Co. of Chino, Calif. recalled 143 million pounds of beef, only a half a months shipment, enough to feed 2 burgers to every single man, women and child in the United states. They got busted when the humane society shot videos(link to videos) of how their cows were being mistreated. How lucrative is the business of cattle raising that a company can recall that much hamburger and still have a healthy business(no pun intended given that their cows are the ones that are not healthy?).  I’m sure there are many in the vegan/vegetarian camp, or those who’d prefer we all did not consume meat so that we’d reduce our Co2 emissions, all  who are ready to point out how this latest tragedy is a reason why we all must stop or reduce our consumption of meat. I’m not a vegetarian or a vegan, though I appreciate the benefits that such a diet can bring to those that need it or that feel good in it, however I don’t think this is the event that should be used to have us kick the meat habit cold turkey (pun intended). The main reason being that I have seen how a diet complimented with the right amount of animal products(see the book Nourishing Traditions in my book list) can be very healthy. We have the analysis of some of the healthiest populations in the world to point to this findings.(see history of Dr. Weston Price).  Lastly we shouldn’t lump all beef/meat together when we are looking to make conclusions about this industry.

Today is a more fitting occasion to truly rethink the real cost of meat/beef. Beef that is most healthy for human consumption must possess the following qualities. First and foremost the cows must be humanely treated and humanely slaughtered. We know far too well the effect of our own psyche and spirit on our health and body, and that concept applies equally to the bodies of the pets we keep in our homes to the bodies and the flesh of farm animals that we raise. Secondly cows must be grass fed, not corn fed, not vitamin fed, not organic-feed fed, but simply allowed to graze freely on organically maintained grass pastures (to find out more about the benefits of grass fed beef and milk check out the Weston Price foundation’s website). Lastly they must not be treated by pharmaceutical interventions such as antibiotics and certainly not fed any hormones. What is the impact of this form of animal husbandry? My sense is that it will mean an increase in the cost of beef. We recognize this phenomena full well at the meat counter at our health food store or farmer’s market where grass-fed beef is a premium. Once beef is produced in this fashion, we wouldn’t be able to buy 99 cents Whoppers or 50 cents cans of chili. This reality alone will drive down the consumption of meat. The “slow food” movement is already creating a new market for locally and sustainably farmed animal meats.  Some may feel this is an elitist viewpoint and that I am proposing that only those who can afford to go to store such as Wholefoods should be able to buy beef. What I am putting out there is a belief that the meat supply at its current low price in the US is unhealthy by design. Unhealthy in how it is farmed, unhealthy in how it is pushed by fast food chains as a cheap caloric source and ultimately unhealthy in the final product we introduce into our bodies. The current glut of beef in the market is not providing our bodies with healthy food calories. A reduction of beef by volume yet available at a higher quality will ultimately mean healthier citizens, reduction in green-house gases, and a happier healthier world for both people and animals. This shift of course will not happen overnight. Most people are not going to quit their daily McDonald’s run for a bi-weekly run to Wholefoods for organic grass-fed beef. It will require education at all levels. Side note: as humanity collectively begins to raise its consciousness and our bodies reach higher and higher vibrational levels, much like some of the gurus in the east and the west who must maintain a vegan diet, it may well become necessary to reduce our consumption of highly energy-dense foods such as beef or other animal-foods but till that time, and till we can formulate a “completely” healthy vegan diet that does not include soy, some of us may still need nourishment from this preferably humanely derived food-source.

This valentine’s day, lets intend to go beyond chocolate

February 14th, 2008


Our intentions, positive or negative, can play a major role in all that we do and create in this world so it is fitting now to see a product such as chocolate being infused with positive intentions and its efficacy put to scientific rigor. These chocolates which have been mediated on have been scientifically shown(With the help of IONS) to bring about positive mental state in those who consume them. Imagine everything else that we have the ability to change by imbuing them with our positive energy, the products we make, the food we cook or grow, and clearly the gifts we give. The sky is the limit. If you’re wondering if I’m going to be doing that with everything that I do, the answer is no.. but I hope to do more tomorrow than I do today. I hope you enjoy this video, and if you’re in the market, the products from www.intentionalchocolate.com .. I’m curious to know how they taste.

Dolphins … teachers, healers or food?

February 12th, 2008

I came across this amazing video about dolphins a while back and have been meaning to share it with you. To me it represented what is whole and sacred in our world, those which we all have so much to learn from and who we still know very little about. Yesterday I came across the news of the mass killings of dolphins off the coast of Taiji in Japon as part of a seasonal slaughter of dolphins both as meat and as a way to reduce overeating of fish by the dolphins. I was contemplating whether or not to combine the two trains of thoughts. This video is so empowering and beautiful yet this latest story is so tragic and sad. Needless to say I decided that these two threads must go hand in hand if truly we are to chance our consciousness around these magnificent beings.

First, the good: If you only have a cursory understanding of dolphins then this video will blow your mind. This video depicts the amazing capabilities of dolphins, from their ability to clearly communicate with humans through language and art, to their ability to help children recover from paralysis due to strokes. What really blew my mind was seeing the amazing hydrodynamic capabilities of dolphins exemplified by how they blow these bubble-rings (it’s worth waiting through most of the video to see this). This capability showed me how we humans have much to learn from these dolphins. I am reminded of the work by Janine Benyus around biomimicry and how we can harness the intelligence of all beings(plants, animals, minerals, etc.) in nature to create new products. After watching this video, I can’t help but believe and trust that we have teachers in Dolphins.

Now the ugly: This latest news out of Jaiji Japan is another chapter in the already wagging battle with Japan over Whaling. Today many westerners are in Taiji to help halt/curb the killing of thousand of dolphins. I’ve included the link to the CNN article out Feb. 11,2008 with a link to the video of what is happening at Taiji(I have to warn you that it is both graphic and saddening). Here is where consciousness of the past (alive with this particular group of Japanese fishermen) and the consciousness of the now are going head to head. Who is right in this argument? The Japanese claim that they have been doing this for 400 years. From the video it is at least clear that the dolphins are not being killed humanely, which is how any animal that is being killed in the name of food must be treated.

Now the questions: If dolphins were killed humanely(ie. for food) does that make it right? should dolphins as a species be killed for food? Positive videos like the one attached and the negative ones can be instructive and give us the mental paradigm, but at the end of the day the heart knows if it right or wrong. Clearly this is an issue that is ripe for re-evaluation and a shift in consciousness. Sitting with these two ideas/concepts, one of light and the other of darkness, and by shifting and ever modifying our perspective can we begin to bring about the necessary change within ourselves. The change necessary to work towards true preservation of our oceans for the animals that call it home or perhaps the change necessary to finally pay a fraction more for dolphin safe tuna at the supermarket.

See the CNN LINK to the Dolphin video here.

Embedded Social Ventures… Honest-Tea inside Coca Cola?

February 5th, 2008

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You’ve heard it here first, the term “Embedded Social Venture” that is.

Today, Coca Cola announced that they are taking a 40% stake in Honest Tea. The founder of Honest tea was quoted as saying “You partner with the whole organization, but we’re marketing the part that’s the solution. This isn’t us selling out - this is them buying into what we’re doing.”

I wanted to point out that partnerships such as this or the likes of Burts Bees being acquired by Clorox that I blogged about represent a new bread of “embedded social ventures” that will begin to create “right” within the walls of corporations with less than stellar reputations. By being purchased these “Good/Green” companies can act as agents of change at an unprecedented rate and scale never before attainable by anyone outside these corporations. The positive impact that one Honest Tea executive or team-member, one with the sensibility of what it means to run a company with the belief-set that corn-syrup does not belong in a beverage, and that all the ingredients should be organic and fair trade, can perhaps go much further than I myself blogging about it or even an NGO screaming publicly that they should do things differently. So I hope!

Coca Cola still has the option to purchase Honest Tea after 3 years. We’ll have to wait and see how it all shapes up… If this social experiment fails(If I may be able to call it that) then we’ll just have to find the next honest tea brand that matches our values. I’ll keep hoping that one day Coca Cola goes back to using healthier ingredients so that I can go back to drinking it they way I used to as a child before Corn Syrup and GMOs ..

Self-Sourcing?

January 29th, 2008

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Yesterday, on a local SF bay area radio station, I heard an interview with Martha E. Gimenez, a retired professor of Sociology at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The interview centered around her essay in the December 2007 issue of the Monthly Review magazine titled “Self-Sourcing: How Corporations Get Us to Work Without Pay!”. I’d like to preface that I am not endorsing this particular magazine, the radio program on which this interview aired or for that matter the author. I say this because I wouldn’t want the left leaning, pro-labor ideologies that may surround this person or this magazine distract you from the point that I’m wanting to make or for that matter the key points that she tries to make(not to mention that I know very little about this magazine).

We’ve all used self-checkout systems at grocery stores, Homedepot, even airline counters by newcomers like Virgin America. We’ve fumbled through the learning process of Read the rest of this entry »

A touching act by two individuals…

January 24th, 2008

… helping to bring greater awareness in their own unique way about wind-energy.. I just wanted to help spread the word and the warmth..

Capitalism at its best

January 23rd, 2008

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Adam smith’s notion of the “invisible hand” has been quoted and misquoted many time in popular media and by many of our dear friends who wish to hold on to the belief that “capitalism” is the best institution in the world and that “market forces” are natural and necessary for a healthy society.  In cases where a specific industry is in a dire need of government regulation, opponents are quick to say that businesses must be left alone to self-regulate because the tenants of capitalism, supply and demand will fix all quarks in the system.  Those of us who don’t buy the text-book ideology are often ridiculed , but today on the heals of an “economic stimulus package”, we can once again point to how we do not, nor can we fully practice capitalism in the truest sense of the word. What is about to happen in the congress and with the help of the president and the Fed is an artificial manipulation of the markets in order to satisfy the status quo of wealth, consumerism and ultimately unfettered greed. Sure the package will have various ramifications, short term, long term, some positive and some perhaps negative, some intended and some unintended. None-the-less, we are once gain reminded that what we’ve been led to believe about our financial systems for years is in fact an illusion. Institutional economic collapse has happened before the reality of “globalisation” and it is happening again today with the complexities of globalisation… We don’t need a PHD in economics or listen to CNN to figure this out. The underlying human suffering and the desire to backfill happiness with wealth and power in an unprecedented rate globally I feel is closer to the truth of our current situation, and only once we are able to truly internalize this can we create solutions that will bring prosperity for everyone.

Spend our way out…NOT!

January 22nd, 2008

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Its another fitting occasion today after the meltdown of global financial institutions that we are once again reminded that the way to get us out of the mess caused by the sub-prime loan fiasco is to increase our individual spending.. Is it me or everyone who has their fingers on the monetary policy of this nation(an other global financial partners) are out of sync with reality. It was greed and the desire for consumers to want more “stuff” that got them into trouble in the first place. How quickly we forget the true reasons behind the sub-prime meltdown..it wasn’t people with bad credit but people who had eyes bigger than their stomach… Somehow we are told that the way to fix the current problem is with a solution that caused the problem in the first place… What are we going to hear next from the Fed : “we must relax lending policies so that we can bring back more sub-prime loans?” We are ripe for a change in how we consume, how we measure health of our societies, how we take care of everyone so that artificial financial situations don’t devastate us? Remember the time in human history where the only societal crisis was a natural disaster like a volcanic eruption or a flood? I think we all know how we got ourselves into this current mess…

ConsciousCurrents.com goes live today!

January 21st, 2008

Hello everyone,

ConsciousCurrents officially goes live today. What a more fitting day to usher in this blog than the eve of the full moon in Aquarius. Full-moon being a time of heightened energy and Aquarius representing the ushering in of the new age. I have been told that astrologically Aquarius represents the sign of friendship, brotherhood and community. I can only wish this upon this blog.

Hooman

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