Worcester
"In City Times"
ON THE ROAD WITH HOWARD LYMAN:
The "Mad Cowboy" barnstorms across Massachusetts
educating people about Mad Cow Disease in the United States and the
benefits of sustainable farming
By Steven Baer
Howard Lyman rolled into the Worcester area as the Labor Day Weekend
was winding down. With a thirty six minute DVD in hand and years
of first-hand global knowledge at his recall, Lyman engaged and
motivated audiences of people ranging from animal advocates and
organic farmers to students and legislators. He left most empowered
with a realization of their ability-- their power, to make choices
that will encourage sustainable agriculture, empathy for others,
and ensure a healthful human self.
Howard Lyman, a fourth-generation dairy farmer and cattle rancher
from Montana knows intimately how cattle are raised and how meat
is produced in this country. Howard, having served for 5 years in
Washington, DC for the National Farmers Union is keenly aware of
how D.C. is not serving the public interests that our founding fathers
had envisioned.
"We the People," begins the Constitution, but somehow
our government has become entwined in the special concerns of protecting
the commercial interests of the meat and dairy industry rather than
the concerns of the people.
With the travesty in plain sight of the federal government's lackluster
preparation for a hurricane like Katrina in New Orleans, despite
a study sitting in D.C. that cites the spending necessary for infrastructural
repairs and public security, Howard Lyman likened the calamity of
Katrina to the impending calamity of our unsustainable agricultural
system. Lyman has stated that with our present agricultural system
we are riding on a freight train that is running at 200 mph toward
a cliff, the federal government is standing at the bottom of that
cliff offering support to the few who may survive the fall over
the cliff rather than being up at the top of the cliff redirecting
the train.
The federal government has studied and knows the disastrous health
effects and the personal financial burdens of the standard American
diet--a diet which consists of excessive protein, excessive cholesterol,
excessive fat, and low fiber, yet it has done little to improve
that diet. The government knows the disastrous environmental effects
of the widespread use of pesticides, pharmaceuticals and chemicals
used in factory farming--effects which result in poisonous water,
unhealthy air, topsoil loss, and carcinogens, yet has done nothing
to limit or reverse those effects.
Howard Lyman began his series of presentations in Massachusetts
on Monday afternoon at the Peace Abbey in Sherborn. Howard had some
former familiarity with the Peace Abbey. When he was last there
he spent time with many of the animals at Peace Abbey, including
Emily the cow. Both had up-beat, friendly personalities, so it was
not surprising that Emily and Howard would form a friendship. Emily
was a unique cow in that she truly enjoyed human company as much
as she enjoyed the company of her barnyard buddies. She liked having
her picture taken; greeting small children with her big, slimy-rough
tongue; and greeting people when they came to visit the sanctuary.
Emily had come to the Peace Abbey after escaping from a slaughterhouse
at the young age of two by jumping over a gate and escaping into
the woods where she befriended a herd of deer and survived the cold
days of November and December by learning to eat what the deer ate.
Lewis and Meg Randa of the Peace Abbey befriended Emily in the wild
and eventually encouraged Emily to come with them to the safety
of the Peace Abbey on Christmas Eve. Emily flourished at the Peace
Abbey. In time, however, the disease that had probably caused her
to be sent to the slaughterhouse at the young age of two (the onset
of ovarian cancer most likely prevented her from being able to produce
milk) eventually overcame her and caused her to die.
Upon
Howard's return to the Peace Abbey after so many years, he was greeted
by the life-sized bronze statue of Emily that stands over her gravesite
on a granite pedestal. Encircling the Statue of Emily are granite
stone markers upon which are mounted bronze plaques that hold the
quotes of individuals who have recognized and been outspoken about
the rights and justice owed to animals. Among the plaques, immortalized,
is one upon which is written the words of Howard Lyman.
Despite the passing of his friend Emily, Howard seemed enthusiastic
after seeing Emily's legacy--the Peace Abbey's Animal Rights Memorial.
He was also grateful that he was considered as part of it.
Pumped up by the crowd that gathered to welcome him to Massachusetts
and by the extra-ordinarily good vegan feast provided by the members
and friends of the Boston Vegetarian Society, Howard presented the
36-minute version of his longer Mad Cowboy DVD inside the overflowing
auditorium of the Peace Abbey. After the showing, everyone moved
outside to a gloriously sunny day and gathered around the Statue
of Emily in the Animal Rights Memorial to hear the rest of Howard
Lyman's presentation. Howard spoke about the need for people to
be a "billboard not a loudspeaker." He said we must live
our lives as a model of what we want to promote in life rather than
tell others how they should be living their lives compassionately,
environmentally, healthfully, or peacefully.
Howard spoke about sustainable agriculture, the environment, animal
cruelty, and how people unknowingly support cruelty, environmental
degradation, and unsustainable agriculture through their daily purchases.
He raised awareness about Mad Cow Disease and other brain-wasting
diseases among people and animals in the United States.
Mildly chastising the vegetarian community, Howard spoke of poor
health habits among junk-food vegetarians, about needing to help
the environmental community to see the big picture with regard to
meat consumption, and about the great strides he sees the animal
community and peace community making together to create a more peaceful
and sustainable future for all creatures.
The morning of the next day, Tuesday morning, Howard Lyman was
in the Worcester Cable Access studio chatting with Lynn Simonds
on her "Flip-Side" show. In conversation, Howard relayed
to the "Flip-Side" audience how Mad Cow Disease is in
this country. He spoke about cows that are fine the night-before
and downers or dead the next morning. On the subject, he cited research
by Richard Marsh who in the State of Wisconsin had transferred brain
tissue from mink who had acted erratically, and were confirmed infected
with a brain disease, into the brain tissue of cows. Those cows,
about two years later, were fine one evening but were downers or
dead the next morning. Lyman stated that downer cows happen in the
USA at the rate of about 100,000 cows per year. He expressed his
concern that we in the USA have a different version of Mad Cow disease
than the British, whereas our cows do not display the typical erratic
behavior that the British cows do. Our Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
(BSE) afflicted cows just fall over dead in the USA just like what
Marsh observed in his laboratory when his infected cows just fell
over dead without experiencing any erratic behavior.
Lyman revealed that our government has allowed these downed cows
to be ground up and fed back to other cows. Many farmers are still
not aware that they have fed the slaughterhouse floor remains of
cows to their cows. They aren‚t aware that when the bag of feed
lists ingredients such as "by-pass protein" on the label
they are feeding ground up cows to their cows and barnyard animals.
Further, Lyman pointed out that euthanized dogs and cats, along
with roadkill, are being ground up and put into livestock feed and
pet food. He cited that in the city of Los Angeles tons of rendered
pets are processed into pet food regularly.
As an aside, Lyman mentioned how some hunters had made a feast
of a deer who unbeknown to them was found to have chronic wasting
disease (CWD)--a spongiform encephalopathy that affects deer like
Mad Cow Disease affects cows. It is anticipated that all of those
hunters are not believed to be long in this world. One of the greater
dangers of CWD, Lyman points out, is that CWD is so contagious among
deer that they need only touch noses or lick the same salt block
to pass the disease on. Can you imagine if Cruetzfeld-Jacob Disease
(CJD)--the human form of Mad Cow Disease--was passed on like CWD
by the mere act of kissing.
With regard to the amount of infected material required to infect
a person, Lyman pointed out that it takes about a sand-grain sized
amount of Mad Cow infected meat to infect a human with CJD. He also
mentioned that in a typical hamburger resides the DNA from some
2000 plus cows all mixed together. If any one of those cows was
harboring BSE, can you image how many burgers that cow might be
in.
Unfortunately, the USDA does not look for BSE in cows younger
than 30 months old because they tend not to exhibit the disease,
although they may be carriers. Moreover, the USDA has been inefficient
in detecting infected cows. This fact has made the USA the laughing
stock of many European countries and Japan.
Lyman reflected about his years in Washington, D.C. stating that
the federal government runs by the "golden rule." Says
Lyman, "Those that have the gold make the rules." Not
pleased by what he found in Washington, D.C., Lyman said he has
taken his message to the people. No matter the issue, said Lyman,
"if the people lead, the leaders will follow."
Lyman asks every person to take control of their own health care
by putting down the #1 implement in the arsenal of human destruction
--the fork, and to start choosing to eat foods such as organic vegetables,
organic fruits, organic nuts, and organic grains. These foods promote
personal health and environmental health. Meat, fish, and dairy
do not contribute to sustainable health. Lyman drove the issue home
by stating that the savings in your health costs from eating organic
vegan food will outweigh the cost of health care. Furthermore, people
who can no longer afford the cost of health care are best insured
against exposure to health problems by an organic vegan diet. Additionally,
Lyman feels that the upsurge in organic consumers will create more
local jobs and cause the price of organic foods to drop.
Next Howard Lyman gave a lunchtime address to the future veterinarians
studying at Tufts College of Veterinarian Science in North Grafton.
The school received a pep talk from Howard on prion diseases the
students would have to deal with in the future. He told students
about the transmission of Chronic Wasting Disease in deer and the
populations it is affecting between Colorado and upper state New
York. He relayed the futility of the plan that is now underway to
exterminate all the deer in Wisconsin in the attempt to contain
the disease. He also told the students to be aware of the connections
between the different varieties of prion diseases mentioning that
Cruetzfeld-Jacob Disease in humans has been misdiagnosed as Alzheimer's
Disease in an average of ten percent of patients according to two
studies--one of which was performed at Yale University.
Howard Lyman's last presentation of the day was in the Barre Town
Hall. Sponsoring the presentation were EQUA--the East Quabbin Alliance,
NOFA--Northeast Organic Farming Association, and Earthlands. Present
were people from the medical community, organic farmers, and environmental
advocates.
Howard showed the 36 minute version of his DVD which explained
his origins on the farm, his unintended destruction of the land
through the chemicals he was trained to use in agricultural college,
the transition in perspective he went through as a result of a spinal
tumor that almost left him paralyzed, and his promise to bring the
land back to health.
In the process of his transition he came to the realization that
it was not just the environment that caused his malady, but equally
so was his buying into the lies the government had fed him about
meat and dairy consumption.
After extensive research, Lyman explains, he learned that a vegan
diet--a diet of vegetables, fruits, nuts, and grains was the most
healthful diet he could consume. Many of his medical problems disappeared
as a result.
Lyman documented the impending disaster that is presently being
magnified in this country by the government's lack of openness about
Mad Cow Disease, and their negligence in taking steps to do much
about protecting the consumer. Lyman firmly iterated the need for
people to support their local organic Community Sponsored Agriculture
or CSA's.
Following Lyman's talk an organic pig farmer asked a question
about organic meat. Lyman agreed that if you are going to eat meat
and animal products, organic is better. But Lyman continued by stating
that organic meat and dairy products suffer the same problem as
conventionally produced meat and dairy--excessive protein, excessive
cholesterol, excessive fat, and zero fiber. Lyman followed up mentioning
excessive protein leads to kidney disease, osteoporosis, and the
build-up of plaques in arteries; excessive cholesterol leads to
clogged arteries and heart disease, and low fiber contributes to
the build-up of cancers in the body.
A woman from Worcester approached Howard after his talk and stated
that her mom had CJD. The woman said she had a tough time determining
that her mom had died of CJD because doctors were evasive about
performing the autopsy and the CDC had lost the spinal fluid. For
the sake of her children, she persisted and eventually got the death
record changed from dementia to CJD in order reflect the correct
cause of death.
The next morning, Wednesday morning, Howard Lyman was presenting
his background and research in the Massachusetts State House to
legislators, their aides, and the public. Lyman encouraged the legislature
to take a leadership role in wrestling back control of the State's
public health from the economic forces that are short-changing the
public. Lyman proposed that the legislature consider encouraging
a local organic agriculture as a mean of creating jobs, reducing
health care costs, and protecting the environment. He outlined how
the federal government was being held hostage by big money interests
that were hiding the amplification of the Mad Cow Disease epidemic.
He noted that sporadic CJD supposedly affects only 1 in 100,000
people --which translates into 300 people nationwide, yet according
to autopsies performed on a portion of the 450,000 people who supposedly
died of Alzheimer's Disease, roughly 10% died of CJD. That implies
that roughly 45,000 people have died of CJD. Moreover, Lyman states
that before the 1900's, incidences of Alzheimer's Disease did not
exist, but that presently we have hundreds of thousands of cases
in this country. "Something has gone terribly wrong,"
Says Lyman.
Lyman encouraged the people of Massachusetts to do their own research.
He likened the present situation to a freight train traveling at
200 miles per hour toward a cliff. He urged legislators to understand
the warning signs of a disaster that was becoming more evident,
but harkened to them to take action before the "train had gone
over the cliff." He paraphrased the President by saying let's
not tell people to "just hang in there." He urged legislators
and the public to act now to "redirect the train before it
goes over the cliff."
During a period of questions after Lyman's talk, Lyman was asked
about his understanding of the upcoming "Foie Gras Bill"
and the "Sow Crate Bill."
Lyman plainly and directly responded by stating that the idiotic
concept of forcing a pipe down the throat of a goose in order to
feed a goose till his liver would explode and then make a profit
off the serving of bits of that liver as an hors d‚oeuvre is pure
stupidity.
Lyman also lambasted the concept of depriving female pigs, sows,
animals which possess a higher intelligence than dogs, of their
desire to tend to their young and of the movement they need to keep
their joints free from arthritic inducing conditions as when they
are left immobilized as they are on the hard concrete floor. Lyman
also mentioned that the air in factory farms is so acrid and unhealthful
to the pigs that they commonly incubate and contract respiratory
diseases. Those diseases are being passed onto humans.
After the State House Howard Lyman spoke with students who were
searching for answers to questions that centered around how students
can talk to their parents about healthy eating, and questions about
how students could relay information safely to their friends who
just don't seem to understand why the organic vegan lifestyle is
socially just, environmentally sustainable, and personally healthful.
Howard did not leave a stone unturned with the students.
With one more TV station interview and a computer podcast interview
rounding out Howard Lyman's time in the area, Howard Lyman may very
well have inched the run-away train of life away from brink of destruction.
The next move ultimately is up to each one of us. Buy organic. Eat
vegan.
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