The multimillionaire green
entrepreneur and vegan, Dale Vince, says he wants to speak to the government
about banning schools from supplying meat and dairy products to children in
their school meals. He also wants to ban the farming of animals which he
believes is one of the biggest threats to the environment. He says that a
plant-based diet is much healthier for children and much better for the
environment.
Vince shouldn't find it much of a
problem talking to the Labour government about this issue or gaining access to
government ministers, because he's one of Labour's biggest financial donors,
having given the Labour Party £5m out of the profits he's made from selling
vegan meals to primary schools. His business interests include 'Devil's Kitchen', which already
provides a quarter of vegan meals to English primary schools. He also owns the
green energy firm Ecotricity and a green football club, Forest Green Rovers.
Although the law currently requires
schools in England to serve a "portion
of meat and poultry on three or more days each week", guidance on a
healthy diet for children, also recommends plenty of fruit and vegetables and
dairy products. Most doctors would recommend that their patients eat a balanced
diet which includes meat, poultry, and dairy products, in order to remain
healthy. Some medical professionals do argue that a vegan or vegetarian diet
can lead to vitamin and nutritional deficiency. Nevertheless, Dale Vance wants
the Labour government to change the law so schools are not required to provide
meat, poultry and dairy products, to primary school children.
Personally, I wouldn't want this kind
of vegan plant-based diet foisted on myself or my children, nor do I believe
that a vegan diet, is healthier for young children or adults. A vegan or
vegetarian diet is not much use to an Eskimo or anybody who lives in a cold
climate. Dale Vince has a vested interest in promoting the take up of vegan
meals and green technologies because he's made himself a very rich man by doing
so.
I suspect that Dale Vince is another
one of those vegetarian cranks, who would tell us that man didn't evolve to eat
meat but crawled about on all fours eating acorns and berries in a state of
nature. If this was true, which I don't accept for a moment, then he should
explain why most human beings eat meat and are equipped with 32 teeth and a
bite force of 162 pounds per square inch, which is very useful when it comes to
eating meat.
Archaeologist have discovered flint
arrowheads in the skulls of woolly mammoths and Clovis points have been found
across Ice Age sites in America, lodged in mammoth skeletons. They've also
found pig bones at Neolithic sites like Stonehenge. There's little doubt that
early man was a hunter, carnivore, and scavenger, who would eat anything he
could lay his hands on to sustain himself. We know that when humans are faced
with starvation and hunger, they will eat almost anything including other human
beings.
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