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Assessment of a students personal learning style
Evaluation of an understudies individual learning style Any instructive course is constantly started with certain desires and wants to ac...
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Cause and Effect Essay - Factory Farms Cause Sickness and Pollution
Cause and Effect Essay - Factory Farms Cause Sickness and Pollution      There is little doubt that animals raised on small-scale diverse farms are  apt to be healthier. When allowed to range freely, particularly in  organically maintained yards and pastures, they receive more exercise, their  diet is more varied and they are exposed to commensal bacteria that help  exclude, and build resistance to, harmful pathogens. Some organic  practitioners also argue that free-ranging animals actively seek out plants  with medicinal properties that can build their resistance to illness,    When Livestock production is carried out on a scale that suits  the global market, however, huge numbers of animals are kept in tightly  confined conditions, and the potential for disease outbreaks is much higher..  The important considerations of animal welfare aside, these methods lead to  the rampant use of antibiotics, which poses a significant health risk, not  only for the livestock, but for consumers as well, since antibiotic residues  can remain in meat and milk. Roughly half the 25,000 tonnes of antibiotics  produced in the United States are used in the raising of animals for human  consumption.    There are other reasons for concern about the overuse of  antibiotics in giant livestock operations. Some 40 to 80 percent of the  antibiotics used in farming are thought to be unnecessary even under factory  conditions, as 80 percent of their use is as a preventative measure and for  growth promotion. Overuse has already rendered some drugs ineffective and  may even make some strains of bacteria untreatable. According to the Public  Health Laboratory Service in Britain, a new strain of salmonella that first  appeared in the United Kingdom in 1990 is re...              ...rom practices all too common among industrial pig  operations: transporting animals in contaminated vehicles and feeding them  waste food containing infected meat.    Problems like these are an inherent part of a food system that  is so large that companies can increase their profits by millions of dollars  simply by saving a few cents on each animalĂ ¹s feed, or by using chemicals or  processing methods that reduce costs by a fraction of a percent.    We all want safe, healthy food, but we cannot rely on the global  food system to provide it. The corporate food chain has grown so long and  the distance between producers and consumers so vast that no one can really  know how their food was grown, how it was processed, and how it was treated  during its long travels. Only by localising and reducing the scale of our  food systems can we once again trust the food we eat.                        
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