Factory farmed meat is shot full of hormones, antibiotics, and steroids which affect the quality when it is consumed. The animals are fed at CAFOS (centralized animal feeding operations) where they are often standing belly deep in their own waste. The waste produced by these animals is stored in massive lagoons that leak into ground water, escape into streams, or is used as fertilizer for vegetables and fruits (where ecoli is a danger). Those are the health costs.
Many meat production plants keep costs low by hiring illegal immigrants. Illegal immigrants cost the towns and cities where they live enormous amounts of money visa vi schools, hospitals, jails, and social services. Not to mention that many factory workers are treated very poorly. Those are the human costs.
Finally, factory farmed meat depends on corn. Corn requires enormous amounts of nitrogen based fertilizer to grown. Nitrogen based fertilizer requires heat, and heat produces carbon (and cows produce methane!) There are some environmental costs.
As for the Native Americans, the animals they hunted were free-range, not penned up in horrible ,illness producing conditions that would make the average person vomit were they to see (and smell) them.
Again: I am not advocating that vegetarianism is more moral than ominvorism. I am not a vegetarian. I am, however, aware that how much of our food is made is not in line with my values as a disciple of Jesus. I am not condemning or judging anyone in this conversation. I am merely suggesting that you look into it and judge for yourself. As the Pope said, food is a moral issue. I couldn’t agree more.
(And, as the last poster said, there is a lot of hyperbole and misinformation out there. People lie about things to make them seem more dramatic. We have fed more people in this country than any other nation on earth, which is a record I am proud of.)
Hard to know where to begin. I don’t doubt that there are CAFOs that are at least in ways similar to what you are describing. But I have been in poultry and hog CAFOs, and they are not like what you describe. I have never seen an animal standing belly deep in its own waste. Poultry are raised on beds of wood shavings or rice hulls and the liquid waste is instantly absorbed. They clean the whole thing out after every flock and replace it.
The hog CAFOs I have seen are all on concrete, slanted so the waste will run off when sprayed down, which happens often. Hog waste is, indeed, collected into lagoons. Poultry waste is not. It’s composted and (usually) pelletized. That pelletized fertilizer is largely bacteria free due to the heat of the composting.
There are, indeed, illegals working in a lot of meat processing plants. That’s because the plants are not allowed by law to look behind “facially valid” ID, which they pretty much all have. The government, not the processors, is the cause of that. I am not sure how people are treated in all food processing plants, but in the ones I have been in, they are not mistreated. I know a lot of people who work in them and their complaints are the same kinds of complaints you’ll hear in any factory.
I will agree that poultry factory farms are, indeed, corn-dependent. There really isn’t a full substitute. With hogs, I’m less sure because I have not been in one of them since corn prices climbed so high. But with hogs, I suspect one can make substitutes, but I don’t know that.
Production of grass-eaters like cattle, sheep and goats, is totally different. Very low energy use. Driving a pickup around to tend to them is about it, and you don’t do a whole lot of that unless you just want to. Hormones and steroids are not widely used on beef cattle because hormones will ruin them for breeding. Veterinary care pretty much consists in vaccination against diseases. If you vaccinate, you don’t need antibiotics except for an occasional (rare) infection. Very little environmental threat. In fact, most ranches I have been on are very, very attractive from an environmental standpoint. Most cattle are “free range”, at least within the confines of a particular ranch. It varies from place to place, but around here it takes from two to four acres per cow/calf unit, year round, and you rotate from one pasture to another, to another, and so on. Sheep and goats are pretty much the same, but they are usually penned closer because they’re so vulnerable to predators. Cattle can protect themselves.
Farther west, the acreage increases. In some places, it’s 40 or 80 acres or even more per cow/calf unit. That’s pretty “free range” in my book.
Most cattle do not end up in feed lots. Only the “highest quality” animals do…beef breed steers and surplus heifers, and then its for 80 to 120 days. Nowadays, it’s more often the shorter period than the longer. Because of grain costs, feed lot operators “upstream” most of the weight building onto the rancher who, again, relies on grass.
If it was up to me, we wouldn’t feed grain to beef cattle at all. It isn’t necessary, and the only purpose it serves is to induce that lacing of fat into the meat that we refer to as “marbling”. As I mentioned before, Aussies prefer all grass fed. So do I.
Milk production comes closer to what you describe as CAFO conditions.