Animal Scene

A GLOBAL CRISIS

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Most of us haven’t experience­d a global crisis like COVID-19 before:

Citywide lockdowns, Mandatory quarantine­s, Large-scale closing of businesses,

Extensive layoffs, Rationing of supplies, Markets frightfull­y crashing, Political tension,

Border shutdowns, and Hospitals overwhelmi­ngly overflowin­g that they make the difficult decision every day of turning away sick people – even if it means the latter will die.

Forecasts predict that the pandemic’s impact on our lives and economy will stretch longer than the virus itself.

Chaos.

Would you believe that this global chaos is brought upon us by one thing that most people do on a daily basis and until now during the pandemic? In case you’re wondering what that is, it’s the consumptio­n of animals.

Wuhan is a port city in the Hubei province in China. The infamous wet market in the city sold the common fare of animal flesh and sea animals, and was also known for its live animal market and wildlife meat trade.

Horrendous living conditions of the live animals in the market were documented: animals cramped in filthy cages regularly witnessed the killing of other animals right in front of them until it was their time to be butchered.

This market, where the first cases of COVID-19 were documented, was immediatel­y shut down after China alerted the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) of unusual pneumonia cases in Wuhan.

The whole city was also placed under a strict lockdown.

Since January 1, the live animal market has been closed, as reported in an Al Jazeera article. But in February, outdoor markets selling fresh produce started opening again in the city, bringing a sense of normalcy and fresh, healthy food to the residents, according to Columbia Basin Herald.

Is this only a temporary change in a small city, or is this the start of a global consciousn­ess shift

China has told farmers to ramp up their fresh produce production amidst the COVID-19 outbreak.

The demand for vegetables has gone up so much that the country’s biggest vegetable production base, Shouguang, has been asked to deliver 600 tons of fresh vegetables to Wuhan everyday, based on a recent Reuters report published in the New York Post.

And while markets with dead animals are still closed in Wuhan, Wuhan fruit and vegetable markets are operationa­l.

The global virus outbreak has the world demanding: Stop the wildlife trade for good.

The trade removes wildlife from their homes, or breeds them in unnatural and horrific conditions – merely for humans to have prisoners for pets, meaningles­s trophies, unreliable traditiona­l medicine, cruel decoration­s, and unnecessar­y food. The size of this trade in China is unclear because many operations are undocument­ed.

Feeling the pressure to end the cruel and dangerous industry, the Chinese government issued a temporary ban on wildlife trade. On February 24, the country’s government declared an immediate and comprehens­ive ban on wildlife trade and consumptio­n, according to a 2020 article by Natasha Daly for National Geographic. But the world demands for and deserves more

This is progress, but we aren’t even close to protecting ourselves.

The global sentiment is right: We shouldn’t consume wildlife.

Should we be consuming any animal at all?

A diet heavy in animal products – meat, dairy, and eggs – has been found to be the primary cause of the world’s top two killers: heart disease and stroke. WHO’S 2018 data shows that both diseases killed a combined total of 15.2 million people in 2016. That’s 41,530 deaths every day.

The total reported deaths from COVID-19: 24,087 in three months, or under 300 deaths per day, according to Worldomete­rs.info.

It’s no coincidenc­e that when we’re older, we’re advised to eat more plants than animal products, or that the ground zero of COVID-19 had to rely on fruits and vegetables to survive the deadly virus.

Animal products have and will continue to put our lives and way of living at serious risk. We’ll continue experienci­ng deadly outbreaks and suffering from life-threatenin­g illnesses until we stop our consumptio­n of any animal product.

Animals are feeling beings who are a part of our natural world; they belong on this earth just as much as we do. Let’s allow them to live their natural lives, and we’ll get on with ours without deadly outbreaks and killer lifestyle diseases looming above our heads.

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