Klar: Ireland joins the climate campaign to kill cows

By John Klar

Ireland has announced plans to cull hundreds of thousands of cows to comply with European Union climate policy. Similar initiatives in Belgium and the Netherlands ensure that beef prices will rise, but these proposals offer little environmental benefit.  Indeed, cows are the heroes, not the villains, in rescuing the climate.

Ireland’s push to eliminate 200,000 cows demonstrates the persistent folly of climate alarmism, while contrasting the shortcomings of renewable energy products. The fundamental premise of the targeting of benevolent bovines is faulty: that cow burps cause damage to the environment.  Interestingly, the alternatives propounded—for humans to obtain protein instead from insects, or soy-based synthetic meat substitutes—will profit industries who are key partners in the globalist effort to eradicate cows.

John Klar for Vermont

John Klar with his cattle

The attacks on cows are premised on data for beef and dairy cows that are managed in Concentrated Animal Feed Operations (CAFOs), in which the animals are fed a diet rich in grains; manure is collected in lagoons or massive piles that must then be spread back onto the fields. It is the fossil fuels and chemicals involved in producing grains and other feed, and moving them (and the resultant manure) mechanically, that creates the lion’s share of cow pollution.

But cows raised on pasture, and rotated regularly, do not depend on GMO grains for their food, nor on diesel-powered equipment to discharge their fecal by-products. More, their manure then replaces synthetic fertilizers, including urea manufactured from natural gas.

That fake meat that Bill Gates wants Americans to eat in place of cows is made from soy and other plant inputs.  GMO soy and corn are produced using massive quantities of synthetic fertilizers, round-up and other herbicides, fossil fuels for tractors and harvesters, and more fuel to process and transport the food for human consumption.  Also, in many areas these crops are irrigated with precious underground aquifer resources.  How is replacing grass-fed cows with fertilizer-fed and glyphosate-saturated soy an improvement to the environment?

Cows have been chewing cud to convert grass to steak for humans for thousands of years.  In Ireland, the government has for years paid farmers to increase their herds and production, and many of those dairies are grass-fed.  Ireland has built a niche market in that very field:

Until recently, the government had encouraged dairy farmers to expand to exploit the end of EU milk quotas. Farmers invested in new equipment and the dairy herd grew by almost half in the past decade. Irish butter, cheese and other produce – 90% is exported – filled supermarket shelves around the world.

In contrast, consider the production of solar panels in China, made from quartz heated with coal, and spewing enormous amounts of pollution.  Those will be funded, while cows are slaughtered as polluters?  How much more toxic chemical pollution is released into the atmosphere when an EV car is manufactured, than a cow ever belches?  And how much water is saved, and soil rebuilt, in the United States when new windmills are shipped out, versus properly stewarded cows?

The push to eliminate cows is a scam.  One of the clearest proofs is that there is no attack on pigs or chickens.  Ireland produces 70 million chickens a year: why aren’t they being culled?  Chickens and pigs cannot be raised on grass, but are almost wholly dependent on grain crops.  A genuine effort to curtail pollution from tilling and monoculture cropping would favor cows and sheep over pigs and chickens!  (Ireland has 1.6 million pigs).  Instead, Ireland follows AOC and the WEF in the bullying of cattle.

Reducing dairy and beef production in Ireland will undermine its economy, as these make up about two-thirds of the nation’s agriculture output, with 90% being exported.  It will also drive up food prices, and create environmental pressures in other nations that fill the production void.  This is called “carbon leakage”: when production is moved to countries with an even higher carbon footprint.

Rewarding farmers for releasing confined animals back onto grass would sequester more carbon over time than EVs or solar panels, while improving soil health, reducing fertilizer use, and saving water (healthy soils retain more water).  Also, when cows die they rot back into the earth as healthy compost, unlike the inevitable future of solar panels and EVs, foisted on consumers by government edict in the name of climate rescue.

Eliminating cows increases food domination, and profits for global corporations. It does not profit the environment much at all.

John Klar is an attorney and farmer residing in Brookfield. Reprinted with permission from the Small Farm Republic blog.

 

Images courtesy of Public domain and John Klar for Vermont

6 thoughts on “Klar: Ireland joins the climate campaign to kill cows

  1. Across the world, people who think there is climate change and cows are one of the causes, ought to be prohibited from buying milk and beef. Forever.

  2. Why stop there? Wildlife all over the world, including endangered species, all burp and pass gas. Let’s kill them all for the sake of climate change. And what about fat people and beer drinkers. They are both very gassy also, so, put a weight limit on every person on the planet and euthanize those who don’t comply. You might also want to stop all beer brewing. Has any of those climate change activists looked to the sea for any co2 producing fish or mammals? What a bunch of MORONIC IDIOTIC ALARMISTS!!!

  3. Idiots is all I can say. It must be all the Irish with any common sense left during the potato famine. As for the rest of the Euro brain dead trust WHY? It’s now common knowledge their not going to meet their co2 elimination and move to zero emissions so why continue with the cascade of .01% of co2 in the atmosphere is a bad thing.
    It now is at 0.04 which is one tenth more then the 0.03 needed to sustain gowning plants which make the oxygen we survive on. I suggest all the climate nazis put a plastic bag over their head and tie it off. I’ll gladly contribute my stockpile of bags I scrounged before the ban.

  4. I saw a scientist say there is approx .04% of co2 in our atmosphere, the air we breathe,,,and the air that all plants need for life. Co2 alos occurs naturally,,,so,,,what actual PERCENTAGE does MAN contribute??? This is all a huge scam designed to put fear in our hearts and drive the costs of food through the roof, all the while under the guise of “saving the planet” what a crock.

  5. John, this make so much sense! Thank you. And my comments are coming from a person who, at the moment, is not eating meat. I have always said a cow on a green field does NOT make the level of pollution that a big commercial feedlot does. All you have to do is compare pictures of the two. There is an unspoken undercurrent behind this cow pollution narrative. On this side of the narrative, what they are doing defies logic. Perhaps if we knew what they are really trying to do I might be able to say I get it but I disagree with what you want to do. I did NOT regain my health to now start eating fake meat grown in one of Bill Gates labs. If I am going to eat meat … it will be a happy grass fed cow.

    I can not wait to read your new book!

  6. Like the Netherlands, Ireland needs to speak with their vote. It is very unlikely that the Netherlands will eliminate the cow herds now because of the success of the “farmer-citizen movement” in that country. That government will not be able to pass legislation allowing the elimination of farms because of the new make-up of the senate. Ireland, it seems, has been taken over by extremists of the Sinn Fein democratic/socialist party. They are as lethal there as they are here.

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