WHY AVOID HIDDEN ANIMAL INGREDIENTS?
Decades ago, going vegetarian was viewed by
many as somewhat weird behavior. Today, as our
society is finally starting to recognize the benefits
of vegetarianism, proclaiming that one is giving
up meat may actually be met with approval. But
what if we start scrutinizing the labels of everyday
products for hidden animal-derived inqredients?
You might be asked, "Why worry about a minuscule
amount of lipase? [an enzyme from the
stomachs and tongue glands of calves, kids and
lambs which is used in cheese-making and in
digestive aids] It isn't going to kill youl"
Well yes, it's probably true that a tiny bit of
animal enzyme won't cause bodily harm (no harm
to the human's body, that is!). So why would any-
one bother to avoid it?
Many vegans would probably answer that
question with the same words they might use to
explain why they do not eat, meat: it is cruel to
use animals for our consumption when we can
easily get by without them. Given the facts about
the animal production industry, many (non-vegan)
vegetarians are likely to want to start reducing
their consumption of less obvious animal
ingredients.
Surprisingly, some people who consider
themselves vegetarian continue to consume
products that contain remains of slaughtered animals
such as gelatin (made from ground-up skin and
bones, found in Jell-O, supplement capsules, and
photographic film) and rennet (made from the
lining of calves'stomachs, used to coagulate hard
cheese). Some of these people may be unaware
that these hidden animal ingredients even exist.
Others know about them but feel that they are just
minor components of a product, and that their
presence is therefore not important.
So, how important are hidden animal
ingredients? To the meat industry, they are extremely
important! Every ounce of marketable product -
from hooves to urine - contributes to the profit
margin of the industry as a whole. For example,
elastin, a protein found in the neck ligaments and
aortas of cows, is purchased by companies that
manufacture skin-care products; Hyaluronic
a protein found in umbilical cords and in fluids
around joints, is used as a cosmetic oil. According
to the National Rendering Association, the sale of
animal by-products grossed more than two billion
dollars last year. Purchasing goods that contain
animal ingredients supports the meat industry just
as much as buying foods that contain meat, eggs,
and milk. Plus, as consumers, each of our purchases
is a vote of approval. As experience has
proven, if enough of us are willing to purchase
veggie burgers (for example), then companies will
strive to meet this demand. Likewise, if we buy
products free of animal ingredients (especially
from companies that intentionally avoid them) we
help to ensure their availability and profitability.
Many people who do not eat meat for ethical
reasons do use animal by-products that are
obtained while the animals are still alive. Dairy is
a good example, as many vegetarians who consume it
rationalize their behavior by pointing out
that cows are not killed in order to provide humans
with this particular by-product. These vegetarians
may not realize that dairy cows spend their entire
lives in a cycle of imposed pregnancies to maintain
lactation, and that within 24 hours of birth,
nearly all of their calves are taken away. Not only
are they deprived of their mothers' milk, but the
male calves born out of this process are also
forced into the veal industry. Some of them are
killed immediately for veal; others are chained by
their necks for 16 weeks in tiny wooden crates
prior to slaughter. Their mothers (the dairy cows)
are killed for fast-food hamburgers and other
cheap ground-meat products once their milk flow
is no longer economically advantageous. Because
of these and other production methods many
people believe that the dairy industry involves
more cruelty than that of the meat business.
There are other animals beside dairy cows
that are used for by-products while they are still
alive. Musk oil, a secretion painfully obtained from
musk deer, beavers, muskrats, civet cats and
otter genitals is used in perfumes. Also, captive
wild cats, caged in horrible conditions are
whipped around the genitals to produce this scent.
On farms in North Dakota and Canada, female
horses are impregnated and then confined from
the fourth month through the end of their 11 -month
pregnancies so their urine can be gathered for
Premarin, a brand of estrogen. After the mares
give birth, they are reimpregnated and their foals
are usually slaughtered for meat. When the bodies of
animals raised for their by-products cease to
be productive, they too are slaughtered.
Some vegetarians who purchase items containing
animal by-products believe that it is okay to
do so because animals are not specifically raised
for their by-products. Their rationale is that using
items such as pepsin and lard (both originate
from pigs' stomachs) is not unethical, because the
animals are going to die anyway for their flesh
Others believe that the ultimate destination of
each part of an animals' bodv is irrelevant; what
matters is that their lives are filled with suffering.
To illustrate this on a human level, consider
the wigs manufactured during World War II made
with hair cut from the heads of concentration camp
prisoners. Although the people were not specifically
imprisoned for the output of hair for wigs;
their lives were filled with immeasurable suffering,
they were eventually killed, and the camps profited by
selling their hair. Many people share the
belief that all beings, human and non-human, are
capable of feeling emotions and sensing pain,
and refuse to be part of a system that treats animals
as means to an end, rather than as ends in
themselves who exist for their own reasons.