Pakistan Today

Textbook claims meat eaters steal, fight and turn to violence

You might be used to hearing this from your vegan pals during the holidays, but an Indian textbook company is now making claims that might surprise the most militant members of PETA. According to “New Healthway,” a health and hygiene book aimed at 11- to 12-year-old students, meat eaters are awful people.
“They easily cheat, tell lies, they forget promises, they are dishonest and tell bad words, steal, fight and turn to violence and sex crimes,” the book states on page 56. It also goes on to claim that the flavour of meat is the result of “waste products,” and that the Japanese are long-lived vegetarians whose “generous use of green leafy vegetables, soya beans and grams has helped [them] to maintain vigour, strength and endurance throughout the centuries.”
According to Businessweek, the Japanese eat more fish per capita than the residents of any other developed country, with 23 percent of their daily protein coming from that source. The book is published by the S. Chand Group, which released a statement condemning the questionable material, noting that “the matter is regrettable and the book has since been withdrawn.” In its statement, the publisher claims that the author of the book, David S. Poddar, is a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which advocates a vegetarian diet on religious grounds.
About 80 percent of India’s population is Hindu, while more than 13 percent are Muslim. For religious reasons, beef is not consumed by Hindus and Islamic dietary laws prohibit the consumption of pork. Not to cast any aspersions, but Adolf Hitler happened to be a vegetarian.

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