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Bellying up to environmentalism
So it's hard to avoid concluding that eating cannot be personal. What I eat influences you. What you eat influences me. Our diets are deeply, intimately and necessarily political.

This realization changes everything for those who avoid meat. As a vegetarian I've always felt the perverse need to apologize for my dietary choice. It inconveniences people. It smacks of self-righteousness. It makes us pariahs at dinner parties. But the more I learn about the negative impact of meat production, the more I feel that it's the consumers of meat who should be making apologies.

But I wonder -- are we ready to do what must be done? Sure, we've been inundated with ideas: eat local, vote with your fork, buy organic, support fair trade, etc. But these proposals all lack something that every successful environmental movement has always placed at its core: genuine sacrifice.

Until we make that leap, until we create a culinary culture in which the meat-eaters must do the apologizing, the current proposals will be nothing more than gestures that turn the fork into an empty symbol rather than a real tool for environmental change.
You think you're a pariah now, Mr./Ms Op-Ed Writer? Just wait. And how do you plan to address the needs of those for whom eating meat is a health issue? When my father was deathly ill as a child, his physician wrote a prescription for pork consomme'. Daddy's ultra-orthodox Jewish grandmother prepared it with her own hands in her own, previously kosher kitchen.

Posted by: KBK 2009-11-19
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=283716