Anonymous wrote:We know that the meat industry is inherently bad and more expensive. Why are we spending all of this money on school lunches (in a normal year) promoting bad eating habits?
Frankly I wouldn’t mind straight vegan but I know there would be some objections to that one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe because only approximately 1 in 200 children in the US are vegetarian.![]()
Okay I’m vegan and not vegetarian but she has a point. We know a meat free or less meat diet is healthier. We can change this numbers so more kids will grow up vegetarian. We need to model healthy behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Americans, along with Australians, have the highest per capita meat consumption in the world, it's three times the global average, and Americans don't look particularly healthy ...
unless you are prone to kidney stones, then a Mediterranean diet is better.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans, along with Australians, have the highest per capita meat consumption in the world, it's three times the global average, and Americans don't look particularly healthy ...
American health issues don’t come from eating meat. They come from eating too many processed carbs and sugar. A high protein, high fat diet is perfectly healthy and is consistent with what humans have eaten for tens of thousands of years. A diet full of sugar and processed carbohydrates is not.
Anonymous wrote:Americans, along with Australians, have the highest per capita meat consumption in the world, it's three times the global average, and Americans don't look particularly healthy ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should not be allowed to.
You vegetarians really need to go and start your own colony somewhere and leave the majority alone. You are welcome to choose not to eat meat. Stop trying to force your choices on others, especially kids. Like everyone else, they can choose to eat vegetarian, and I'll all for having vegetarian options for them, but stop trying to force others to adhere to your diet. Many of us disagree with you and think that including some animal based proteins are better for growing children, so you do you and leave the rest of us alone.
Anonymous wrote:They should not be allowed to.
Anonymous wrote:Americans, along with Australians, have the highest per capita meat consumption in the world, it's three times the global average, and Americans don't look particularly healthy ...
Anonymous wrote:Americans, along with Australians, have the highest per capita meat consumption in the world, it's three times the global average, and Americans don't look particularly healthy ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think OP has a good point, if only for environmental reasons.
Do you know how many rabbits are murdered for crop fields?
How much gas is burned shipping coconut oil and almond milk and avocados?
The most environmentally sound thing would be to feed the children local pastured chicken, pork and beef along with locally grown corn, peaches, apples, tomatoes, zucchini and other things that grow well here.
The best thing to do would be to have the chickens and a fresh vegetable garden on site so that the chickens could eat breakfast and lunch scraps and their manure could be composted for use at the garden.
FCPS could have a magnet school for regenerative agriculture, natural health and homesteading with the high school children learning how to manage animals, market products and preserve the harvest.