A stomach churning look at where our meat comes from, and what toll it takes on the air we breathe and our natural world. Directed by Johan Renck, this scatological take on the environment gives us a very up-close and personal look at how the waste produced by livestock affects the ozone, climate, and natural resources in more profound ways than other pollutants, including cars and trucks. One of the only films that is as grimy as the pollution it describes -- not for the weak-stomached environmentalist.
Evey time I see this I get so hungry
farm1868 1 week ago
Okay i had to stop the video as soon as it zoomed into the cows ass.... and i just skimmed it..fucking disgusting!!.
1) Plants breathe Co2 and cows have been giving it off for thousands upon thousands of years
2) no record of global warming in 1100A.D was ever found
3) Ice melts naturally in the wild and breaks off in huge chunks
Why?? BECAUSE IT'S ICE AND YOU NEED MORE SCIENCE TO BACK UP GLOBAL WARMING
Scientists were paid off to tell bullshit on national television such as NatGEO
mercanaries3 3 weeks ago
(Part two) Quit your bitching and take action instead. Any rich yuppy can sit around whining about the sad state of modern life, while they play with their Wii. If you really care, then why don't you all shut the fuck up and DO something about it?
CrazyBear65 2 months ago
Stop eating hormone & antibiotic injected beef, eat bison instead. Stop herding livestock, hunt for yourselves. The "modern/civilized" human is the most destructive animal that has ever existed. If you want to do something beneficial, don't go vegan, (unless, of course, if that is your thing) get off the corporate titty and go self sufficient. Grow your own food. Hunt your own meat. Make your own clothes. Generate your own electricity. Distill your own alcohol for automotive fuel. (continued)
CrazyBear65 2 months ago
@mixel777 By one person :/
xannmax 6 months ago
@xannmax If you don't eat meat you reduce the demand.
mixel777 6 months ago
@Skoda130 In traditional farming, most of the manure from livestock returned to enrich the soil. Today, huge numbers of animals are concentrated in feedlots and confinement buildings, there is no economically feasible way to return the animals' wastes to the land. Deprived of the manure and continually doused with chemicals, our soils are losing their texture and ability to retain topsoil, the rich layer without which food production becomes seriously endangered.
mjodoin58 6 months ago
i know a women who can do big jobbys
skodas 6 months ago
@meringandan But so do humans. Besides: We need animal dung to fertilize our soil, or els it would get exhausted whitin a few years.
Skoda130 6 months ago
@tybash they fart huge ammounts
meringandan 10 months ago