Drought And Wildfires: The Myth Exposed
- By Jeff Popick
- Published 10/29/2007
If you live in
Water is the elixir of life, so what happens when it’s gone? Well, the good news is there is a real solution, but first you have to understand the real problem and how you contribute to it.
If you want to do nothing other than wish these problems would go away, or if you just want to continue pretending they don’t exist, then stop reading this right now. Still reading? Good, I am about to show you one of the chief culprits of our water problems and, in so doing, offer the real solution.
In my book, The Real Forbidden Fruit (www.TheRealForbiddenFruit.com) I cite some statistics originally published by John Robbins in his book, Diet For A New America, showing where all the water is going. While it takes about 23 gallons of water to grow one pound of tomatoes and 25 gallons of water to produce one pound of wheat, it takes over 5,200 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef.
The world’s fresh water is getting sucked up by “meatism” i.e., the production and consumption of meat and dairy. What’s worse, of the water that’s left, virtually all of it is being contaminated in the process. It is a blatant myth that fire, desertification (dust bowls) and drought are caused (or would be helped) by short showers and dirty cars. We would have no water problems if we were all vegan and took long showers
That is certainly not to say that anybody should be wasteful of our resources, but let’s understand the real problem. Also understand that it doesn’t take an action on the part of the government to fix our water woes, because this is one problem the government didn’t cause (at least not at this level). Look on your breakfast, lunch and dinner plate and if you see anything related to meatism, you are contributing to the problem. Abundant clean water and meatism are mutually exclusive.
The terrific and all-empowering news is if we all turned to a plant-based diet, a vegan diet, the ever-increasing parched earth would once again have plentiful water.
