iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Linda Buzzell

GET UPDATES FROM Linda Buzzell
 

Should Humans Eat Other Animals?

Posted: 03/14/2012 11:50 am

If you want to start a fight, just raise this question in a mixed group of meat eaters, vegetarians and vegans!

One of the core problems modern Western people have is that we've forgotten that the rest of nature is alive. This is why we feel free to mistreat the land, the plants and the other animals -- to the point where we're actually destroying our own life support systems and those of thousands of other creatures.

Many indigenous peoples have been trying to tell us for a long time that this arrogant attitude just doesn't work in the long run. The Lakota Sioux talk about the animals, plants and the rest of nature as "all our relatives" -- and perhaps this can give us a different perspective on the whole question of if and/or how we devour these relatives.

For of course there is no life for us if we don't do what every other creature in nature does: eat our relatives -- even if it's only our plant relatives. But it's HOW we go about doing this that's important. Do we treat them as inanimate, dead objects just here for human use or as fellow sacred beings with whom we share this fragile water planet?

It may shock hardcore vegans and vegetarians to know that growing their food involves killing or displacing other animals. Any home gardener or farmer who grows veggies and fruit must compete for that harvest with some of our "relatives" who would like to eat it before we do: the gophers, insects, rats, deer, raccoons, rabbits, moles, voles and more. In fact, merely clearing land to grow our favorite veggies and fruit destroys the habitat of many other animals and native plants -- both above and below ground. This is why there is now a growing movement in agriculture to leave a certain percentage of every farm for wildlife. Finding humane ways of removing or killing these competitors is a huge ethical and practical challenge for the farmer or edible gardener.

Organic gardeners and farmers have also learned that other animals -- the "beneficial" insects, worms, fungi and other soil creatures -- are absolutely critical for human survival and that of our favorite foods. These allies become the grower's treasured friends, and harming them with chemicals and unfriendly soil practices becomes out of the question.

The "should I eat meat or other animal products?" debate is incredibly complicated. Quite apart from the health consequences (and research is trying to get us answers to this issue but most studies don't yet distinguish between eating healthy organic, humanely raised meat, eggs and milk vs. eating factory-farmed animal products), what are the ethical considerations? Is it possible to find a way to allow animals the freedom to live as they were evolved to live and at the same time use their products or flesh to nourish ourselves? Is there such a thing as a humane kill?

And do animals have "rights"? And if so, rights to what? This is becoming a hotly-button political issue.

And what about waste? Is it ethical to kill an animal, eat part of it and throw most of it away? Studies are revealing that a shocking percentage of food in wealthy nations is thrown away -- perhaps the ultimate disrespect of the animal's sacrifice. What makes it worse is the millions of people on the planet who are starving.

Perhaps the answer to all these thorny questions lies in a renewed understanding of humans as one animal species among many. If we see ourselves once more as an integral part of nature instead of a completely different and superior entity, hopefully we can find a way to be part of the whole but in a truly "humane" way that is worthy of the great gift of consciousness we have been blessed with.

So if we do choose to eat animal products, we need to do so with the attitude some indigenous cultures recommend: recognition that cow, pig, chicken, deer, corn and worm are all sacred creatures worthy of respect as we interact with them -- and even as we kill them. In some cultures it is a traditional practice to ask permission from an animal or plant before we hunt, pick or eat it; and to express thanks for its sacrifice. Perhaps this is the least we can do before we take life or milk or eggs -- for the survival of our children and the human community.

 
 
 
If you want to start a fight, just raise this question in a mixed group of meat eaters, vegetarians and vegans! One of the core problems modern Western people have is that we've forgotten that the re...
If you want to start a fight, just raise this question in a mixed group of meat eaters, vegetarians and vegans! One of the core problems modern Western people have is that we've forgotten that the re...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 134
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
04:33 PM on 04/09/2012
Love the ideas behind this article. Have you considered becoming a vegetarian, but don't really think that eating meat is inherently wrong? Become a FARMetarian - where you only eat meat (and other products) which come from actual farms that have humane practices: www.farmetarian.com
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
03:45 PM on 03/22/2012
Another troubling issue for vegetarians who eat eggs and milk: the fact that male baby chickens and male cattle must be "disposed of" in some way. When chicks are "sexed" before selling them, where to they put the males? And of course many baby bulls become "veal." Does anyone have more on this?
09:54 PM on 03/22/2012
As a personal dietary choice, vegetarianism may be a great solution for some people. But even vegan philosophers such as Gary Francione recognize that as an ethical position, vegetarianism is "morally schizophrenic" and completely indefensible. When vegetarians try to rationalize the use of animals in agriculture, while condemning the consumption of animals in the same breath, they put themselves in a position that is impossible to defend.

By the way, I am very familiar with veganic permaculture. It's not permaculture. It has as much to do with permaculture as vegan chick'n has to do with chicken. I can honestly say that I have been genuinely amazed by how many former vegan farmers that I have encountered who went back to farming with animals, and eating animal foods, after learning the essential importance of animals in any truly sustainable system of food production. Biodiverse systems are the healthiest food systems.
08:34 PM on 03/24/2012
To answer your question: the male chicks are sorted, put onto a conveyor belt, and ground alive by the millions every day.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJ--faib7to
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
03:39 PM on 03/22/2012
Last evening at our local permaculture guild, we watched videos and had some good discussion on this topic. You might want to check out "Animals in Permaculture and Vegetarianism" and "Animals in the Permaculture System at D Farms," both at You Tube. We also went to www.veganicpermaculture.com and watched a video on growing veggies with green manure and doing pest control with help from wild animals. As I said at the beginning, this is a very complex issue!
I-US
Beware the monsters lurking in word swamps.
08:30 AM on 03/21/2012
The US is the wealthiest single nation on the planet. (Our GDP is three times the size of China's--the second wealthiest single nation--and accounts for almost 1/4 of the global GDP). The idea that simply handing over a cow, pig, or goat to a family living in abject poverty--whether in this country or one of the world's poorest countries--will solve our problems is an idea simply out of touch with reality. In the next 38 years, the world's population is supposed to increase to over 9 billion people. Many of those people will be moving into the cities in order to find work as income inequality increases. This has been the trend for centuries. Meanwhile, the factory-farming system, which continues to grow unabated, will gobble up land held by traditional agrarians and will do so because people want to continue to eat meat. These facts are understood by the world's experts on sustainability, which is why they call for a shift toward a plant-based diet.
09:04 AM on 03/21/2012
Sorry, but that is entirely misguided, and extremely ignorant of the facts. Anybody calling themselves a sustainability expert, who isn't even aware of the essential importance of biodiversity in any truly sustainable system of agriculture, doesn't know the first thing about sustainable agriculture. Animals are essential to EVERY single major form of sustainable agriculture! The world's foremost experts on sustainable agriculture know perfectly well that there is no such thing as truly sustainable agriculture without animals.

Sorry to have to burst your bubble, but virtually all of the plant foods in the world are either grown with animal inputs (organic agriculture) or toxic and completely unsustainable chemical inputs, largely derived from petrochemicals (industrial agriculture). Considering that incontrovertible fact,it is almost as sad that you are seriously trying to argue that petroleum based plant agriculture is more sustainable than every major form of sustainable ag.

Your straw-man argument about simply handing over a pig or a goat to a family living in poverty is laughably oversimplified. It won't solve all problems, but there are many cases where it means the difference between life and death for families. What has been an absolute disaster, often driving entire regions to starvation, has been the industrial ag/pseudo-environmental green revolution practice of sending bags of industrially produced monocrop grains around the world, fostering corruption and making sustainable local food systems impossible.
09:29 AM on 03/21/2012
Joel Salatin perfectly sums up the ignorance of I-US's misguided claims about agriculture without animals:

“This is perhaps one of the biggest misunderstandings people have about farming ecology. In a desire to get rid of the cow, they want to substitute plants that require tillage. No long-term example exists in which tillage is sustainable. It always requires injection of biomass from outside the system or a soil-development pasture cycle. To think that plants which require tillage can build soil like perennial pasture indicates environmental absurdity."

Since food animals are absolutely essential to every single major form of sustainable agriculture, I-US has backed herself into an unfortunately ridiculous corner, where she can only argue that either industrial agriculture is the solution to sustainability, which is a joke, or veganic gardening is, which is an even bigger joke.

Is I-US under the impression that she knows more about sustainable agriculture than Joel Salatin? Salatin has proven that he is a sustainable ag expert, beyond question. He has produced an enormous amount of food, while actually improving the health of the land in the process! Plant agriculture without animals is literally measured by how much damage it does to the land! As Salatin rightly points out, there is no such thing as plant ag without animals, actually improving the health of the land.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
07:20 PM on 03/20/2012
Some really interesting articles on this topic:

Edible Ojai & Ventura 2011 The issue of Meat
http://www.ediblecommunities.com/ojai/winter-2012/winter-2012.htm

http://www.ediblecommunities.com/ojai/winter-2012/how-animals-will-save-the-planet.htm
photo
FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
11:49 PM on 03/20/2012
Thanks for the link. I'll be sure to spend some time browsing this site.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
02:48 PM on 03/17/2012
Folks interested in this topic might enjoy the video on rice-duck farming at http://www.parfund.com/ This is an example in the Philippines of how an animal-plant polyculture can produce more food than just raising the plants alone.
photo
FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:59 AM on 03/18/2012
You might enjoy this article by Joel Salatin.
http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprints/Sept10_Salatin.pdf
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
02:17 PM on 03/18/2012
Yes, it's amazing what Joel Salatin does. I worry a little about the happiness of the caged rabbits, though, and also about the intensity of the meat production. Sometimes it seems as though they see their animals as commodity "meat" to be used rather than fellow creatures. But they do a far, far more humane job of letting most of the animals enjoy a natural, useful life before slaughter than the factory farms do. If we're going to continue raising animals for food, we need to take a careful look at the excellent ideas Salatin puts into practice
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karl Wilder
Chef Stirring The Pot Harlem
02:23 PM on 03/15/2012
If we want to end factory farming and change this system we need to support and distribute birth control worldwide.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
04:38 PM on 03/15/2012
No argument from me, Karl. Birth control is a huge environmental issue. If any other species were breeding out of control like this, we'd be appalled.
photo
FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:01 AM on 03/17/2012
The problem with homo sapiens isn't out of control breeding. The problem is that homo sapiens are the only animals with the intelligience to not only find ways to practice birth control but to also find ways to thwart our most successful predators (bacterias and viruses) and therefore lower the death rate.
10:37 AM on 03/15/2012
The article is almost entirely about the ethics of eating animals. I'm not sure why people find the need to start talking about nutrition or sustainability.

Author, I believe you have it reversed. If we see ourselves as just another species among many than we shouldn't feel the need to treat animals with any more respect than with which they treat each other. Also, animals that we throw away are not wasted. They are eventually consumed by microorganisms. Why would it be more ethical for a cow's carcass to be eaten by a homo sapien instead of some other species, albeit a much smaller one? Why is it okay for a whale to eat millions of plankton but I will get criticized for eating 1 chicken? I'd wager that the animals I consume are a very small percentage of the animals whose deaths I am responsible for simply for being on this earth.
10:08 PM on 03/14/2012
if you're looking for a way to minimize suffering, the issues are not complicated. that plant-based diets may be as healthy as animal, makes it even simpler
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
03:23 PM on 03/16/2012
Well, it isn't really as simple as that, rpv, but I have great sympathy for the "do no harm" philosophy and ethic. Even growing fruit and veggies involves taking habitat and sustenance away from other animals, especially if we're talking about huge industrial farms. Also, the vegetarian doesn't see what the farmers have to do to competing animals to prevent them from eating our veggies! Even growing our own food at home we come up against these issues. What to do with the gophers and rats and squirrels who can strip an apple tree in a few hours?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ROBB CORLESS
Singer/Songwriter
02:41 AM on 03/17/2012
Good thinking rpv...Your first fan...I like the way you keep it simple and precise...RC
06:27 PM on 03/14/2012
Great article on the dilemmas regarding human use and abuse of the earth's resources, particularly vegan diets vs meat eating.
photo
plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
03:04 PM on 03/14/2012
For me, I choose the path of what I feel amounts to the least harm. And that is a vegan diet. Yes, land must be harvested to feed me. But is it more than what would be needed to raise a cow? I don't think so. And if one were to present me with information that would guide me in how my diet can inflict the least harm, while remaining practical and affordable, I would incorporate that information into my dietary choices to the best of my abilities.

I also feel that small-scale animal farms will not be able to feed the world's current appetite for meat. Also, the small scale farms (which account for less that 1% of all meat production int he US) are not affordable for many people.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
04:37 PM on 03/15/2012
I am so in sympathy with vegan and vegetarian approaches and yet as I learn more about permaculture, I see that it is possible as we re-localize our food systems to include animals and animal products and that they add to the whole, just as they do in nature (where there are no animal-free ecosystems!). It's of course our choice whether we choose to eat these animals, or their milk, eggs etc. And it's a deep ethical issue to decide if and how to kill them - even the pests like rats and gophers. In many cases we've killed off the top predators in the ecosystem that were keeping the rodents, deer etc. in balance and now find ourselves in that position. Now what? If we kill off the "pests" like deer to protect our plants, do we have an obligation to use that meat productively ourselves or as another reader suggests, do we leave it to the microorganisms or scavengers that will return it to the soil? Understanding the whole life cycle is incredibly difficult!
photo
Issaquah79
Look mom no head!
06:14 PM on 03/15/2012
Veganic permaculture may be of interest to you. Here are some links
http://veganicpermaculture.com/
http://www.goveganic.net/spip.php?article68
http://animalplace.org/vegan-farm-internship
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mtn viking
This space for rent.
03:25 AM on 03/17/2012
I applaud your nuanced view. Don't expect to find many supporters here. We need to hear from more people that understand that there aren't simple answers to complex quesions.
12:40 AM on 03/21/2012
plantbasedpunk, there was a time, before I knew much about sustainable agriculture, when I believed as you do, but you couldn't possibly be more wrong.

Tou answer your question, lets look at the facts. A single acre of perennial grassland can be home to more than a million creatures. When that acre is plowed for rows of the shallow-rooted annuals of plant ag, the habitat for those creatures is annihilated, with many of them dying absolutely horrific deaths in the process. A tablespoon of that soil can contain more than 2 billion microorganisms, which are obliterated through oxidization in the process, killing off the soil vitality that the entire ecosystem depends on. And the root systems of those plants are too shallow to control soil erosion and water runoff, which kills the land and the creatures that depend on it.

Conversely, if a cow is pastured on that same acre, instead of destroying the land and uprooting the deep-rooted perennials that control soil erosion and distribute nutrients throughout the entire ecosystem, the health of the land actually increases, as does the soil vitality! The result is a significant net GAIN of life!

No matter how you slice it, far more living creatures have to suffer to compensate for your all-plant diet. In fact, a recent study found that per kilo of protein, at least 25 times more sentient creatures die in plant ag than in pasturing ruminants.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
02:28 PM on 03/14/2012
I think the answer is complicated. There are a number of studies linking meat and dairy consumption to an increased risk of various types of heart disease and cancer. Who knows if even organic free range animals compare to what our ancestors ate as a healthy food source. I think the health answer is if you eat animal products, eat them in small quantities. When you can get sustainably harvested, non-polluted fish, it seems like a healthy choice.

The ethic and moral issue is complex. Many domestic species would disappear if they weren't a human food source. However, much of the animal products we eat in this country come from polluted and abused animals. I think the minimal ethical requirement is that if we eat meat, it should come from ethically raised animals that are not abused. Personally, I stop on the food chain at fish. I eat no other animal product.
photo
plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
12:53 PM on 03/15/2012
If domestic species disappeared, would that really be so bad? These animals are bred as a resource for humans. And many of them are engineered in a way that is unnatural and bad for their health. For example, chickens grow so fast that their legs often can't support their weight and break. This happens with the beef cows in animal sanctuaries, too. Turkeys breasts are so big that they can't "mount" each other anymore. Every turkey in the supermarket is a product of artificial insemination.
mothergrace
If they knock you down, bite 'em on the ankle.
06:31 PM on 03/16/2012
I know what you are saying as far as animals that have been bred so relentlessly for their food qualities in lieu of all other considerations, but I still find it disturbing to talk of allowing entire species to die out. There may be undesirable lines but an entire species? Highly questionable.
09:36 PM on 03/21/2012
I have almost eliminated fish from my diet so as not to contribute to the final nail in the coffin we are building for our oceans.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
04:21 PM on 03/15/2012
I worry about the fact that we've overharvested and polluted the oceans, so that finding sustainable, clean sources of fish and other seafood is increasingly difficult. Farm-raised fish is also tricky and not always organic, sustainable or humane. As another writer said, one of the core problems is that there are way too many humans needing to be fed, and yet we don't want to talk about contraception or family planning. This whole issue is, as you say, exceedingly complex.
I-US
Beware the monsters lurking in word swamps.
01:55 PM on 03/14/2012
I don't believe we need to consume animals for food, but I understand that others will approach this piece from a different perspective. Right now, the CAFO system raises and slaughters animals for the purpose of human consumption. That system accounts for 98-99% of meat produced in the US. And Eric Schlosser's piece linked to here today notes that organic foods account for only 4% of the money spent on food in this country. The UN notes that the primary causes of land degradation throughout the world are overgrazing, clearing land for mono crops, the majority of which are fed to livestock, and logging. Considering vegetarians and vegans make up less than 5% of the US population, it seems that the bigger problem is the industrial food supply not whether the veg*n diet is sustainable.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
04:23 PM on 03/15/2012
Yes, industrial farming is a big, big problem!
09:43 PM on 03/21/2012
Yes industrial food production is a huge problem for the world. Feeding all the billions of people at affordable prices is the major issue here. You should note that not many industrial operations that DO feed grain products to animals (something that we should avoid doing completely) are actually growing and feeding whole crops to the animals. Instead they are purchasing the waste from industries such as the vegetable oil and ethanol production industries. If we could reduce consumption of vegetable oils, which are dangerous and are killing us, and STOP the environmental insanity of ethanol production, then maybe the reduction in supply of these crops would convince the industrial livestock producers to return to mainly grassfed animals. I note here that even grain finishing only applies to the last month or so of the animal's life and is not fed all throughout.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
01:25 PM on 03/14/2012
It takes less land or Earth's ecosystems to feed the vegetarian than the meat-eater. More of the Earth is devoured to raise the grains and foods required to feed the animals humans eat than the vegetarian. The vegetarian diet is also the most healthful for humans.

Yes, we need a new worldview for mankind as, if any credibility exists to the science of ecology, mankind is killing every and all reasons he exists or the Earth's ecosystems, the real, life giving body of the Earth and ecosystems' plant and animal biodiversity, the animals in the eco-nomy of life itself. Eco-scientists maintain, man is suicidal when he kills ecosystems.

Referencing the Native Americans is a great idea. They had a drastically different worldview than modern man. Modern man believes the Earth is his slave, to be used and abused without realizing, he, too, is merely a plain member of the community of all life and is so stupid as to kill his only home, his house, his eco, Earth's ecosystems, providing mankind with life itself.

How did the Native Americans survive on this continent for 20,000 years without grease, energy, cars, jobs, bosses, paper monies and dead concrete jungles while experiencing 80% more free, leisure time and played and lived in paradise?
photo
FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
11:34 PM on 03/14/2012
The claim that it takes less land to feed vegetarians is bogus in part because it ignores the fact that most farm land can only be used to support livestock. It also ignores the fact that any sustainable crop production must work livestock into the rotation (i.e., allow lands to rest and rejuvenate as pastures from time to time while still generating an income for the farmer).

It is possible to raise livestock (especially ruminants) in ways that rebuild topsoil, recharge watersheds and increases biodiversity. It is not possible to raise crops without destroying habitat.

You might enjoy browsing this site.
http://www.soilcarbon.com.au/case_studies/pdf/08TL_SCCPPP_En.pdf
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
11:09 AM on 03/15/2012
I just read an article, that the agriculture belt of America or California's central valley is a major cancer cluster, caused from pesticides used for agriculture, and the cow dung is also contributing to this elevated cancer rate.

How possibly could the "hooved locust" increase plant and animal biodiversity while they literally devour the Earth and the ecosystem, the home/habitats, food, shelter, cover and nurseries of the strands in the web of all life. Everywhere cattle range, they disturb the soil so violently and devour so much of the plant biodiversity, an ecosystem quickly devolves into a dead field of weeds. The weeds, like cheat grass, left their ecological checks and balances back in Europe, thus quickly taking over the ecosystem. These weeds are annuals that die out just in time for fire season, causing hotter, faster and more frequent fires while they push out the plant biodiversity.

California's hills and mountains were green before the introduction of the hooved locust. Today our hills are yellow with straw or brown, as life giving and supporting as the dead tumble of rocks on Mars.

And, an ecosystem has only so much energy and food to expend. Without checks and balances on cattle, like the wolf and coyote, ecosystems crash and become dead fields of lifeless straw. Always, because an invasive specie has no ecosystem checks and balances, they always take over the system, killing the biodiversity. Invasives are a top agent of extinction.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
04:31 PM on 03/15/2012
I don't believe this has to be an either/or equation. This is where permaculture can guide us to a different way of thinking about land use and resources. Conventional livestock monoculture farming/grazing can be pretty destructive, but including animals in a polyculture can actually be regenerative for land and provide fertilizer for grasslands and veggie/grain farms.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
04:26 PM on 03/15/2012
Although I am deeply in sympathy with many indigenous philosophies and practices, it's important not to idealize them. Life wasn't necessarily easy or even comfortable for many people - but most native peoples did (and many still do) live more or less in harmony and balance with their life support systems, which is more than can be said for industrialized people.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
01:46 PM on 03/16/2012
Only the California Native Americans were scientifically researched because the white man was only interested in stealing their land and genociding them.

The Native Californians were small scale hunters and gatherers. A few desert tribes grew a few crops in the floodplains of rivers, and they resorted to fires to flush out game and insects. Other than that, they survived on the continent for up to 20,000 years without intensive agriculture, cars, energy, concrete, jobs, slaves to the job and enjoyed 80% more free, leisure time and do so in paradise. They thought the white man was insane because he was filthying their water and chopping down 1,000 year old oak trees, whose trunks were as wide as a car.

Today, social scientists maintain small scale hunting and gathering was the most successful lifestyle for mankind as he didn't have to work so long and so hard for the basics of food and shelter. The Californians did not war, and when the white invaders began genociding them, they had no war weapons to defend themselves! Shell mounds in CA. indicate many thousands of years went by without one major event, like famines, wars or epidemics.

The first European explorers to CA. wrote in their journals, though they had traveled the world, they had never met a people who loved each other like they. Wealth was judged by one's ability to help others.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
elcerritan
My bio is not micro
03:04 AM on 03/22/2012
But then there was the whole potlatch thing, which raised conspicuous consumption to a fine art.

One of the main reasons so many indigenous people were able to live "in harmony and balance with their life support system" is that there just weren't too damn many of them and they didn't exceed the "carrying capacity" of their land. But we're now victims of our own success, and many people, particularly in developing countries (which is where all the wild population growth is taking place) haven't yet caught on to the the idea that you no longer need to have 8 kids because 6 of them are going to die in infancy.
12:49 PM on 03/14/2012
Tribal wisdom is great, But does it scale to 7 billion. People on all sides fail to see that no food lifestyle is sustainable on this planet with a population growing as it is now. Vegans and vegetarians seem to have no idea just how much plant mater is Undigestible by humans. They fail to add that into the calculation of how much more farms we would need. or how much water it would take to grow the plant. Meat eaters fail to understand that the current system is just as damaging.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
02:36 PM on 03/14/2012
Good points, Gabriel. The sheer numbers of human animals (and our farms and cattle) on the planet is causing untold suffering both to humans and our "relatives." We humans seem to feel that we have the right to all the remaining water and growing land, even though we are utterly dependent on the rest of nature for our survival. One of the reasons I like permaculture is that its core ethics - care for the earth, care for the people, share the surplus - encourage practices that help us grow as much of our food as possible near home, leaving open space for the rest of nature.
But as controversial as the meat-eating issue is, the population issue is even more controversial. As we've seen in the news lately (Rush Limbaugh), merely providing contraception to women who want it is still an unacceptable idea for many people.
mothergrace
If they knock you down, bite 'em on the ankle.
02:57 PM on 03/14/2012
If we were really able to get people to have the kind of respect for all life and the planet, we might not have the pressures that lead to 7 billion on the planet either.

Almost seems irrelevant, since I do not see any big changes in the way people approach things on the way, but still, all good ideas are worth putting out there. You never know.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Linda Buzzell
Ecotherapist, co-editor "Ecotherapy: Healing with
02:37 PM on 03/18/2012
mothergrace, my own feeling is that one way or another, nature will bring the numbers of humans on the planet back into balance with the rest of nature. I'd just prefer that it be by benign methods like contraception and sensible family planning rather than by epidemics or resource wars. But if we don't control ourselves, nature will do it for us.