David Bean: Imposing a vegetarian diet on...
This article was originally published by The Herald on Wednesday 15 March, 2023. David Bean is...
about this blogRead moreAnimal rights activists in Scotland have been accused of launching an attempt to "ravage personal freedom" after they demanded that the Royal Highland Show goes vegan.
According to the Daily Telegraph, PETA is demanding the prestigious event, one of Europe's largest celebrations of agriculture held outside Edinburgh, only promotes plant-based produce.
More than 4,500 animal are exhibited at the event every year. The group has condemned the "outdated parades, cruel sheep shearing, and food cut or expelled from an animal's body".
Writing to the Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, PETA's vice-president, Dawn Carr, suggested the event be renamed the "Royal Highland Grow".
" The new Royal Highland Grow can celebrate Scotland's hard-working plant-based farmers and delicious, locally produced vegan fare" she added. "We all know raising and killing animals for food is not in their best interests."
The Countryside Alliance has hit back against the demands in the press, pointing out that 86% of Scotland's agricultural land is 'Less Favourable', meaning it is only really suitable for livestock farming and, sparsely, harvestable animal fodder. Such land cannot be given over to arable farming because the crops will not grow.
Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Mo Metcalf-Fisher, a spokesman for the Countryside Alliance said: "PETA are notorious attention seekers and a group better off ignored. While any event may wish to offer a range of catering options, including vegetarian and plant-based, no one should be limiting the dietary preferences of the vast bulk of the UK population or browbeaten into removing it. Red meat produced in Britain is among the most sustainable in the world".
He added: "Ruling out livestock farming would not only remove several major food sources and ravage personal freedom, but would blight Scottish agriculture and its dependents as a whole".
The Royal Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland has been approached for comment by the Daily Telegraph.
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