Why making people allergic to meat isn’t the solution

What if we could reduce meat consumption, and thereby the suffering of farmed animals, by making people allergic to red meat?

That’s the proposal made in a recent Bioethics article by Parker Crutchfield and Blake Hereth (both at Western Michigan University). They suggest we deliberately promote alpha-gal syndrome (AGS), a condition transmitted by tick bites that can trigger severe allergic reactions to mammalian meat. The idea is simple: if people can’t eat red meat, they won’t, and animals will suffer less.

In a new paper just published in the same journal, my co-author Christian Koeder and I argue that this approach is not only misguided, but morally problematic.

Continue reading “Why making people allergic to meat isn’t the solution”