Miami Vegan Blog
Friday, May 25, 2007
E. coli should convince you to go vegan
Here’s yet another reason to eat veggie burgers instead of hamburgers: PM Beef Holdings recently recalled 117,000 pounds of E. coli-contaminated beef that was sent to distributors and retailers in Illinois, Arizona, Iowa, Michigan, Ohio, Virginia, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Studies have shown that when contaminated meat is recalled, only about half of it is actually recovered — the rest remains in grocery stores.
You can protect yourself and your loved ones from E. coli, campylobacter, listeria and other bacteria that live in animal intestinal tracts and feces by always leaving meat and animal products at the grocery store.
Most farmed animals are crammed into filthy sheds and slaughtered on killing floors that are contaminated with feces, vomit and other bodily fluids. These unsanitary conditions have led to a rise in foodborne bacteria.
Plant-based foods, on the other hand, don’t normally harbor E. coli or other fecal bacteria. In fact, according to the USDA, 70 percent of food poisoning is caused by contaminated animal flesh. When fruits or vegetables do become contaminated with E. coli, it is because animal manure was used to fertilize crops or leaked into waterways. Cross-contamination can also occur when fruits and vegetables are placed on the same surface as meat.
As more and more people adopt a vegan diet, our dependence on cows and other farmed animals will diminish, therefore lessening the threat of E. coli contamination — and saving human and animal lives.
For more information, veggie burger recommendations and vegan recipes, see www.GoVeg.com.
[Source]
You can protect yourself and your loved ones from E. coli, campylobacter, listeria and other bacteria that live in animal intestinal tracts and feces by always leaving meat and animal products at the grocery store.
Most farmed animals are crammed into filthy sheds and slaughtered on killing floors that are contaminated with feces, vomit and other bodily fluids. These unsanitary conditions have led to a rise in foodborne bacteria.
Plant-based foods, on the other hand, don’t normally harbor E. coli or other fecal bacteria. In fact, according to the USDA, 70 percent of food poisoning is caused by contaminated animal flesh. When fruits or vegetables do become contaminated with E. coli, it is because animal manure was used to fertilize crops or leaked into waterways. Cross-contamination can also occur when fruits and vegetables are placed on the same surface as meat.
As more and more people adopt a vegan diet, our dependence on cows and other farmed animals will diminish, therefore lessening the threat of E. coli contamination — and saving human and animal lives.
For more information, veggie burger recommendations and vegan recipes, see www.GoVeg.com.
[Source]
Labels: beef, contamination, e coli, vegan, veganism


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