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Reasons You Should Stop
Drinking Milk Now
Living the dairy-free life is
a very, very green choice


By
Mickey Z.
Astoria, NY, USA | Wed Sep 30 16:00:00 GMT 2009

Hulton Archive/Getty Images
READ MORE ABOUT:
Dairy |
Health |
Healthy Foods |
Vegan
What could be more American than a glass of milk?
Cow's milk, that is. In light of this common perception, the time is long
overdue to add the
milk mustache to that ever-growing list of American myths. Human beings are
not designed to drink any milk except human milk (only during infancy, of
course). As you'll see below, consuming dairy products—milk, cheese, yogurt,
sour cream, ice cream, etc.—is not green and it's not healthy.
It's also a nightmare for the cows themselves.
Here's a little of how
the folks at GoVeg describe it: "The 9 million cows living on dairy farms in
the United States spend most of their lives in large sheds or on feces-caked mud
lots, where disease is rampant. Cows raised for their milk are repeatedly
impregnated. Their babies are taken away so that humans can drink the milk
intended for the calves. When their exhausted bodies can no longer provide
enough milk, they are sent to slaughter and ground up for hamburgers."
*Living
dairy-free has never been easier...so here's a little motivation to get you
on the greener, cruelty-free,
not-milk track.

Environmental Reasons to Avoid Milk
1. Dairy cows produce waste.
Lots of waste. In fact, your average dairy cow produces
120 pounds of waste every day—equal to that of more than two dozen people,
but without toilets, sewers, or treatment plants.
2. Let me repeat: Dairy cows produce lots
and lots of waste (and greenhouse gases).
California produces one-fifth of the country's total milk supply. According to
MilkSucks.com, "in the Central Valley of California, the cows produce as
much excrement as a city of 21 million people, and even a smallish farm of 200
cows will produce as much nitrogen as in the sewage from a community of 5,000 to
10,000 people, according to a U.S. Senate report on animal waste."
3. Milk production ultimately leads to
climate change.
The dairy industry is an extension of the beef industry (used-up dairy cows are
sent to the slaughterhouse after an average of four years, one-fifth their
normal life expectancy) which means it
plays a major role in creating climate change. Here's the equation: The
dairy industry uses cows before passing them on to be slaughtered by the beef
industry which is now recognized as an
environmental nightmare. "According to a UN report,"
writes Brian Merchant, "cows are leading contributors to climate change ...
Accounting for putting out 18% of the world's carbon dioxide, cows emit more
greenhouse gases than cars, planes, and all other forms of transportation
combined." That means the industry of exploiting all cows—including
dairy cows—involves destructive practices like
deforestation and polluting offshoots like
runoff.
4. Milk often contains unwanted
ingredients.
Under current industrial methods, cow's milk is often a
toxic bovine brew of man-made ingredients like bio-engineered hormones,
antibiotics (55% of U.S. antibiotics are fed to livestock), and pesticides—all
of which are bad for us and the
environment. For example, unintentional
pesticide poisonings kill an estimated 355,000 people globally each year. In
addition the drugs pumped into livestock often
re-visit us in our water supply.
Which brings us to...
Health Reasons to Avoid Milk
5. Cow's milk is for cows.
The biochemical make-up of cow's milk is
perfectly suited
to turn a 65-pound newborn calf into a 400-pound cow in one year. It contains,
for example, three times more protein and seven times more mineral content while
human milk has 10 times as much essential fatty acids, three times as much
selenium, and half the calcium. Some may like cow's milk but drinking it is both
unnecessary and potentially
harmful.
6.
Milk is actually a poor source for dietary calcium.
Humans, like cows, get all the calcium they need from a plant-based diet.
7. Contrary to popular belief, milk may increase
the likelihood of osteoporosis.
It is still widely accepted that the calcium in dairy products will strengthen
our bones and help prevent osteoporosis, but studies show that foods originating
from animal sources (like milk) make the blood acidic. When this occurs, the
blood leeches calcium from the bones to increase alkalinity. While this works
wonders for the pH balance of your blood, it sets your calcium-depleted bones up
for osteoporosis. As explained by
John Robbins, "The only research that even begins to suggest that the
consumption of dairy products might be helpful [in preventing osteoporosis] has
been paid for by the National Dairy Council itself."

8. Milk makes you fat.
In 2005, the
Harvard School of Public Health had this to say on the consumption of dairy
products: "Three glasses of low-fat milk add more than 300 calories a day. This
is a real issue for the millions of Americans who are trying to control their
weight. What's more, millions of Americans are lactose intolerant, and even
small amounts of milk or dairy products give them stomach aches, gas, or other
problems."
It's easy to
go dairy-free. Here are 7
easy vegan recipes to set you off on the right path.
*Editor's Note: If you aren't ready to take the
dairy-free plunge, cutting back is a significant step in the greener direction,
as is cutting back on meat if not cutting it out entirely.
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