Does It Really Matter If I Become A
Vegetarian?
As a prospective vegetarian, you probably question whether
or not it really matters if you stop eating meat. You might
ponder the idea of how much of a difference one additional
vegetarian can make.
And while it might be true that one vegetarian won't make a
huge statistical difference in a world of
meateaters, and while it is also true that one
more vegetarian probably isn't going to turn the tide in the
movement, you can do a lot as an individual that will be good
for you and good for hundreds of animals.
Take a look, for instance, the number
one cause of death in the U.S.A and A lot of other countries
with meat-centered diets: heart disease.
If it weren’t specifically for meat, eggs, and dairy
products, which are the three largest sources of cholesterol,
heart attacks and other heart and circulatory problems would be
far less prevalent. According to EarthSave,
the average vegetarian has about 1/4 the chance of having a
heart attack as the average nonvegetarian. As for people who
are pure vegans, it gets even lower, they have less than 1/10
the chance of having a heart attack as nonvegetarians.
In addition to the health of your heart, you will get a
number of other health benefits as a vegetarian. For instance,
you won't be exposed to nearly as many preservatives, which are
common in meat and are also linked to cancer. You won't be
exposed to various hormones (that are concentrated into animal
feed), which often disrupt normal hormonal processes in the
body. And you won't consume as much lactose, which most people
cannot digest properly, and which some dietitians have
suggested is a cause of digestive problems.
In addition to health benefits you will receive as an
individual, you will also reduce your personal share of the
suffering human beings inflict on the world's animals.
According to veganoutreach.org, the average
American consumes 2,714 land animals in their lifetime. If you
quit eating meat now, you could literally prevent the suffering
and death of hundreds of animals of the course of a couple
decades.
In addition to this, if you stop eating eggs and drinking
milk, you will also reduce your share in the suffering and
death of battery hens and their offspring, as well as dairy
cows and their offspring, too.
So the answer is yes!, it does matter whether or not you
become a vegetarian. It matters to the thousands of animals you
could potentially save and it matters to you as an individual
because you can greatly reduce your chances of getting cancer
and heart disease.
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