Factory Farming Is Polluting America’s Water and Nobody’s Stopping It | Ep22
EPISODE SUMMARY
Factory farming produces 98% of the meat Americans eat, and its environmental damage runs far deeper than most people realize. Ken Swensen, founder of Inside Animal Ag, breaks down how industrial animal agriculture has become the primary driver of water pollution in the United States, contaminating drinking wells, killing aquatic life, and creating dead zones in our oceans.
IN THIS EPISODE
- Why 98% of animal products in the U.S. come from factory farms, despite misleading packaging
- How concentrated manure and fertilizer runoff cause nutrient pollution in waterways
- The link between factory farming and the Gulf of Mexico dead zone
- Nitrate contamination in private wells and why 1.5 million Americans drink unsafe water
- Health effects of nitrate exposure, including blue baby syndrome, cancer, and birth defects
- Agricultural exceptionalism and why regulators look the other way
- How meat labels deceive consumers into thinking they're buying humane products
KEY TAKEAWAYS
1. Factory farming is the primary cause of water pollution in the United States, driven by excess manure and fertilizer from feed crops.
2. Even nitrate levels at half the EPA's legal limit can cause serious health problems, including cancer and birth defects.
3. Most consumers believe they're avoiding factory farm products, but deceptive labeling keeps them in the dark.
4. Aquatic species are the most threatened animals in the U.S., largely because of nutrient pollution from industrial agriculture.
5. The health and environmental costs of factory farming are quietly transferred from corporations to rural communities who never agreed to bear them.
KEYWORDS
Ken Swensen, Inside Animal Ag, factory farming, industrial animal agriculture, water pollution, nutrient pollution, nitrates in drinking water, Gulf of Mexico dead zone, manure runoff, feed crops, agricultural exceptionalism, food labeling, public health, environmental health, rural communities
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Puppies, Pandemics, and Public Health!