(If so inclined)
Links: Animals
- Virgil Butler: Ex-Slaughterhouse Worker
- Christian Vegetarian Association
- all-creatures.org
- Episcoveg
- United Poultry Concerns
- Eastern Shore Chicken Sanctuary & Education Center
- Compassion Over Killing
- Vegan Outreach
- In Defense of Animals
- No Eggs
- SHARK (Showing Animals Respect and Kindness)
- Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting
- Animals Voice
- Compassionate Cooks
- Viva! USA
- Assoc. of Veterinarians for Animal Rights
- Care for the Wild
- Vegan Poet
- Humane Society of the United States
- Humane Society Legislative Fund
- Vegan Vanguard
- Foie Gras Cruelty
- Monkeying Around with Human Health
- Stop Animal Exploitation Now
- The Truth About Vivisection
- Save the Chimps
- Americans For Medical Advancement
- Circuses.com
- Fur-Free Action
- Mercy For Animals: Fur Farms
- Choose Veg
- Kindness Not Cruelty
- Anti-Fur Society
- Fur-Bearer Defenders
- Coalition to Abolish the FurTrade
- Heal Our Planet Earth (HOPE)
- Animals in the Wild *New Link*
- Vegan School 101
- Best Friends Animal Society
- Alley Cat Allies
- Alley Cat Rescue
- Dogs Deserve Better
- International Aid for Korean Animals
- AnimaNaturalis.com (En Espanol)
- Pet Store Cruelty
- RabbitWise
- Friends of Rabbits
- Metro Ferals (DC area)
- Humane League of Baltimore
Links: People
- Easter Seals
- Birth Defect Research for Children, Inc. (Better than March of Dimes)
- Street Sense (Opportunity for DC's Poor and Homeless)
- Tolerance.org (Southern Poverty Law Center)
Links: Politics and Current Events
Links: Humor
Links: Hard to Categorize
Blogs
- Veg Blog
- Vegan Chai
- Neva Vegan
- All's Well That Ends VEGAN
- Vegan Metal Biker Dad Punk Blog
- SuperWeed
- Super Vegan
- Vegan Momma
- The Joyful Vegan
- Vegan Bits
- Cats and Cows
- Value System: Peak Oil, Gas Prices, Money and The Future
- Invisible Voices
- Peaceful Prairie Animal Sanctuary
- Vegan FAQ
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Essays and Musings on Animals and Society
Monday, June 09, 2008
Some Worthwhile Online Things to Visit
- I'm very tardy in mentioning this, but Erik Marcus, of vegan.com and Meat Market fame, is tracking Oprah's 21-day tryout of veganism with a superb collection of supplemental podcasts and blog posts. Erik's pieces on finding vegan food at grocery stores and restaurants, dealing with friends and family members, staying committed to your diet, and other useful topics for new vegans and the vegan-curious, are well-written (or spoken) and jive nicely with the current series here. Check it out.
- I (and others) have fantasized about McDonald's or some other behemoth fast-food chain converting their menu to veganbecause I think that as long as the food tasted good,
- People would get used to it in no time at all;
- Literally billions of animals would be spared from being confined, mutilated, and killed as soon as profitable;
- The environment would partially recover;
- Public health would probably improve, and medical costs would go down.
Well, thanks to protracted effortsprotests, online campaigns, and negotiationsby PETA, KFC Canada is introducing a vegan chicken option at two-thirds of its locations, which comes out to 461 restaurants. This isn't quite McDonald's veganizing its menu, but it's huge. In fact, this move by KFC could mainstream vegan food more than anything else that's ever been done. KFC is an influential multinational company with a gigantic advertising budget. The potential is enormous.
While veggie burgers are fairly commonplace now, veggie chicken is still rare in meat-eating households. Walking into KFC and seeing it on the menu every day may significantly help to change perceptions, which is often the precursor to changing behaviors. The effects could be broad and multifaceted; here are some of the possibilities:- Suppliers of veggie meat to KFC could realize economies of scale that could lead to new innovations or a reduction in price for their productswhich would almost definitely increase sales.
- If the new vegan dish is popular in Canada, it could spread to the US, not to mention other countries.
- If the veggie chicken sells well, KFC's competitors may add similar dishes to their menus.
The success of this new venture hinges in part on how much KFC advertises the product. If they practically never mention the product (the way Burger King hides the BK Veggie), that could really hinder the product taking off. If, on the other hand, they feature it in newspaper spreads, coupons, and/orbe still my beating heartnational TV commercials, that could herald the beginning of the end for fast food chicken. Ultimately (in fact, probably right this second), veggie chicken is far cheaper to produce then animal-based chicken, and with some minimal diligence it's healthier and more environmentally friendly.
If I lived in Canada, I would definitely buy this product on a regular basis. I am no fan of KFC, believe me. But I would put that aside in order help the chickens, and the environment. Nine out of ten animals killed for food are chickens, and almost every single one leads a short and miserable life. By purchasing this product and making it successful, it will prove that veggie chicken can be mass-marketed to the mainstream; it could have a tremendous ripple effect.
You can read about the PETA campaign here. On that page is a link to the KFC feedback page. I would recommend telling the company that if they add a vegan chicken menu item to a store near you, you will buy it. Of course, do this only if you mean it. Two weeks ago, there's no way I would have made this suggestion. But now that KFC is adding vegan chicken to their menu in a pretty big way, it's obviously on the minds of their executives. Again, if we can popularize veggie chicken in a major fast-food chain like KFC, that will go a long way toward the concept becoming accepted throughout society; it could be a significant catalyst in getting people to modify their food habitsspecifically, to seriously consider veggie chicken when they eat out or go to the supermarket. The potential upsides are huge.
You never know, this could be the tipping point. - In a groundbreaking move, Peaceful Prairie Animal Sanctuary (see link in blogroll at right) placed a large ad about the sordid truth behind so-called "free-range" farms in the LA Times, one of the biggest newspapers in the U.S. The ad explains many of the cruelties and inflictions of suffering that go on at nearly every commercial dairy and egg farm, respectively. This could be a real eye-opener for readers. The ad closes with a message to go vegan, which is the only practical way to end such transgressions against animals. Mass exploitation inevitably entails cruelty and suffering.
Labels: cage-free, chicken, Erik Marcus, free range, free-range, KFC, Peaceful Prairie, PETA, vegan chicken, vegan.com, veggie chicken
Saturday, December 22, 2007
To Meat-Eaters: Easy Ways to Reduce Meat Consumption While Retaining Your Comfort Foods, Part 3
This is third of three posts that discuss why you should reduce meat and dairy from your diet as much as possible. The first two posts presented health and environmental reasons. This post looks at animal cruelty. After that, we will focus on how to replace animal products with plant-derived ingredientswithout giving up taste or significantly changing your routine. You will, however, almost certainly increase the diversity, satisfaction, and healthfulness of your diet.
This post is not a comprehensive treatise on the cruelty and sufferingor, for that matter, the moral transgressionsinvolved in the raising and killing of animals for food. That would require a book.
Where to start? Perhaps with this: All the animals who are killed for food are individuals. Any of you who have lived with more than one dog or cat know that each one is unique, with his or her own personality. A dog or cat may be gregarious or shy; assertive or timid; active or a couch potato; easily bored or satisfied with a comfortable routine; an explorer or a passive observer. If you've interacted much with companion animals, you've probably noticed their unique quirks, preferences, and habits. You've picked up onand maybe been amazed bytheir emotional capacity: Their joy when playing, their anticipation of a tasty meal, their affection toward their human and non-human friends, their fear of danger, their depression when they're sick, and their grief when they lose a long-time companion.
It's no different with cows, chickens, turkeys, pigs, lambs, sheep, or goatsor any other animals on farms or being trucked to the slaughterhouse. I've gotten to know many of these animals; each one is different from any of the others. They have as broad a range of personality and emotions as companion animals. All have the capacity to feel joy and sadness; all of their lives have meaning to them, and none want to die, unless they are on death's door and in severe agony. In many deep respects, they are just like our dogs and cats, and just like us.
Please take a look at these pictures and video, for a brief overview of modern animal farming. You should know what it is you're causingwhat you're financingwhenever you buy meat or order it at a restaurant. That alone might compel you to reduce your meat consumption.
Chickens on their way to the slaughterhouse
A baby chick getting her beak amputated with a searing hot blade. The ends of chickens' beaks are filled with nerves. The chicks are given no painkillers during this operation. In fact, farmed animals are never given painkillers when portions of their bodies are amputated.
Pigs who died on their way to slaughter
A pig being castrated without anesthesia
An introduction to how turkey meat is produced. In the video, the mutilations, painful procedures, and slow deaths are inflicted on newborn turkeys. This is their introduction to the world.
Similar cruelties and suffering occur at dairies and egg farms. All those animals are killed, too, at young ages, and almost all of them are subject to horrific conditions throughout their lives. In fact, please view one more set of picturesa brief slide show of large dairy farms in California, where they like to boast of pampered cows in lush pastures. Note the difference between the commercials and the reality.
It's not hard to find extended suffering and brutal mistreatment of animals in all phases of the agriculture business, including breeding, auctioning, raising, "culling" (destroying animals who aren't market-worthy), transporting, and slaughtering. Here are a few excerpts:
From Animals' Angels:
In January, 2007, Animals' Angels "filmed Sara Lee turkeys in cages being trucked to slaughter in Iowa with broken legs, missing toes, and frostbite on their heads and toes. Some birds appeared to be dead, others were crammed into a broken container, and there was a large amount of blood on top of one of the cages. Birds and cages were caked with feces and once the trailer arrived at the slaughter plant (at 6:30 pm), the turkeys had to sit for 2 more hours in the open cold as the trucks waited in line to enter the plant." (As summarized by United Poultry Concerns)
Sara Lee turkey products are sold under the brand names Hillshire Farms, Jimmy Dean, and Ball Park.
Keep in mind that this is just the very tip of the iceberg.
What about "free range?"
"Free range" tends to be a far-fetched exaggeration. A "free range" operation can mean ten thousand birds confined in a dark, ammonia-filled shed with a door in the back that's open an hour each day and leads to an uncovered, muddy area that's big enough for a hundred birds. That's all legal.
Don't believe any of the pictures on packages; don't trust any of the producers' claims. Here's a photoessay of a "free range" turkey farm that supplies turkeys to Whole Foods. "Free range" in this case, like so many other cases, is a cruel farce.
I'm not trying to single out Whole Foods; in fact they're better than most grocery stores. The dishonesty and deception is widespread.
Smaller farms can be just as bad as large industrial farms. Far too many eyewitness accounts show animals starving to death, sick animals neglected and left to suffer and die, animals outside in 95-degree heat with no shade or water, excessive cruelty in prodding animals onto slaughterhouse-bound trucks, violent "culls" of unmarketable pigs, and more. The animals on smaller farms, just like on larger farms, typicallydepending on their specieshave their horns, testicles, toes, teeth, beaks, and tails amputated without painkillers. The animals are fattened up at a hyper rate due to intensive breeding and feed additives. Dairy cows have their calves taken from thempermanentlywhen only two days old. The animals are subject to the same gruesome transport and slaughter as their brethren imprisoned in larger factory farms.
Here's one more story, about a naive meat-eating couple who, after witnessing the realities of "free-range" farming up close, decided to change their lives and provide a haven for those animals instead. [Note that the story is continued on page 2 of the PDF document, but you need to scroll down to near the end of the document to see that part of page 2.]
Poplar Spring Animal Sanctuary is a wonderful oasis about 45 minutes outside Washington, DC. I urge all readers in the DC area to consider visiting it. Seeing the rescued animals, meeting them, and in some cases petting and holding them, is more powerful than anything I can say. The grounds are peaceful and it's a refreshing respite from the city and the burbs. Contact the sanctuary at info@animalsanctuary.org to let them know you'll be coming by, so a volunteer can show you around.
In California, you've got Animal Acres and Animal Place. In New York, you've got Farm Sanctuary and Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary. In Colorado, there's Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary. These are some of the bigger and better known farmed animal sanctuaries; there are others scattered across the United States. Google or ask around in your area. Highly recommended.
Nine out of ten animals killed for food in the U.S. are chickens.
"Broiler" chickenstheir fate embedded in their namesare killed at only seven weeks old. Some are still peeping. They've been engineered to grow at super-fast rates. They're the equivalent of human children weighing over 300 pounds. Many die of heart attacks. Others fall over and can't get back up because their legs can't support their oversized upper bodies; they slowly die of dehydration, even though they may be within inches of water. This is all due to the public's demand for cheap "white meat."
The chickens are starved for one to four days before their slaughter, because their last meals wouldn't have enough time to be converted to sellable meat. The day of their slaughter, they're grabbed by their legs and stuffed into cages on trucks. Several chickens may be crammed into each cage.
Once at the slaughterhouse, they may sit on the truck for another one to twelve hours. Then they're yanked out of their cages and hung by their feet in shackles. At this point they're on the moving slaughterhouse line. Each chicken is dunked head-first into an electrically charged trough of water that paralyzes their muscles but does not knock them out. An employee called the "cutter" attempts to sever both of the chicken's carotid arteries. But because the process is so rushed, and some birds are improperly hung, he may miss the mark, with the result that the chicken will be fully alive and consciousbut still paralyzedas he or she is submerged in a "scalding tank" of near-boiling water that loosens feathers from the chicken's body.
I haven't talked much about eggs, mostly to save space. But here are some facts you may not know about egg production. Hens in commercial egg facilities have been engineered to lay up to ten times the number of eggs they would lay in the wild. This robs the hens of calcium and other nutrients, leaving their bones weak and brittle. The intense egg-laying frequency also increases the chances of painful conditions such as prolapse, in which the egg sticks to the uterine wall. At the hatcheries that produce laying hens, all the newborn male chicks are killed because they're of no economic use to the producers. The laying hens themselves are slaughtered when they're between one and two years old. They may be killed by the same torturous methods as those used on broiler chickens, or they may be disposed of in other gruesome ways, such as being thrown into a macerator, which is basically a wood-chipping machine. For more information, see www.noeggs.org.
There is a myth that farmers have to take good care of their animals or the animals won't produce. On today's farms, almost the exact the opposite is true. Animals are kept in hideous conditions, and they're confined so they won't burn up calories and cost more to feed. Farms only have to keep broiler chickens alive for seven weeks. Genetic manipulation makes them grow at ridiculous rates during that brief time. Even under the best conditions, at farm sanctuaries, these birds suffer from a host of problems and don't live long. Likewise, laying hens' "productivity" is a function of genetic tinkering and environmental tricks such as near-constant lighting that makes their bodies lay more eggs. By the time these hens are the equivalent of teenagers and are slaughtered, they look miserable and often are filled with disease.
Undercover investigations at slaughterhouses typically reveal cruelties and suffering that go beyond what I've described and that are outside the scope of this post. Investigators witness sadistic acts such as employees impaling live chickens on spikes, jamming steel rods into pigs' anuses, and throwing turkeys full force against a concrete wall. Imagine being in a job where you were soaked with blood and killed animals every day, with such rapidity that you ceased to see the animals as individuals. Add to that the repetition of the job, the long hours, the low pay, and the almost non-existent benefits. Some of the workers take out their pent-up frustration on the animals. The animals, unfortunately, are an easy target. Slaughterhouses are saturated with violence. The non-humans are brutally killed, but there is a human toll, too. Remember, you support all this when you buy meat, as well as when you buy dairy, eggs, and products such as muffins and soup that contain animal-derived ingredients.
Now, there's little to be gained from getting disgusted, angry, or depressed and then not being able to do anything about it. Fortunately, that's not the case here. Your choice of which foods to buy and eat can make a huge difference in terms of your health, your environmental footprint, and your contribution to animal suffering.
But it may go beyond that. Reducing your meat and animal product consumption may also give you peace of mind. Most people are decent and do not really want to harm animals if they can help it. But we get stuck in our ways. We eat what we're used to, what's convenient, and what others are eating. We don't think about this, but we become emotionally attached to our diets. They're comfortable. If we're eating roughly the same foods as our friends, co-workers, and relatives, we're never the "odd man out;" and it's nice to fit inas much as we may like to consider ourselves independent and above all that.
So in the back of our minds we're uncomfortable with the suffering and death we inflict on animals (and maybe with the negative impact we're having on the environment and on our long-term health). We push those thoughts out of our mind, or we make rationalizations. But the disconnect ultimately takes a toll.
When your diet is more in line with your deepest goals and your morals, it relieves you of a burden you may never have even realized you had. It improves your relationship with the earth and its creatures, and it brings you peace of mind.
For most people in the Westwhere we have an abundance of foods all year longthe barriers to reducing meat and dairy consumption are almost all psychological. True, there are exceptions; some people have unusual dietary needs or health conditions that impede their efforts to replace meat with vegetarian alternatives. In those cases, a veg-friendly dietitian may be of great benefit. But for the vast majority of people in this part of the world, their reasons for not cutting meat consumption and trying vegetarian main dishes are primarily mental and emotional.
One persistent barrier is a reluctance to give up familiar routines and favorite foods. That's perfectly understandable. If you take a vacation to Japan, you may decide to become absorbed in the culture while you're there and eat miso rice and soup for breakfast each day. Even if you go to France, another Western country, you may do as the French do and eat a baguette with jam or Nutella every day for breakfast. But when you get home, chances are close to 100 percent that you'll settle back into your normal eating patterns, which may consist of cereal and toast for breakfast. You'll be enriched by your overseas experience but be glad to be eating familiar foods once again.
It's not that cereal and toast makes any more sense than miso soup and rice for breakfast. It's what you're used to. We grow attached to our comfort foods.
My observation is that this fear of having to give up everything that's comfortable and replace it with things that are strange is an impediment to people changing their diets, and specifically trying vegetarian foods.
My goal in the next several posts is to show you easy, unstressful ways to reduce meat and dairy and replace them with plant-based choices. I'm putting myself in your place, as though I were a somewhat skeptical meat-eater (which I used to be).
I'll start with a few straightforward substitutions, then move on to:
I don't want to narrow the focus too much, but the primary audience I'm targeting is people who don't cook much and whose tastes are fairly conventional but are willing to try new things.
With the holiday approaching, I'll probably be pressed for time and have to add to the posts in small batches. I'll continue the convention of ending incomplete posts with More to follow....
If you are going to a faraway land that has limited Internet access, have a great holiday, snack on Smokehouse Almonds instead of cheese, graciously bring some (spoiler alert!) Silk Nog to your hosts' house, don't fight with your relatives, and check out the series when you get back!
To be continued...
This post is not a comprehensive treatise on the cruelty and sufferingor, for that matter, the moral transgressionsinvolved in the raising and killing of animals for food. That would require a book.
Where to start? Perhaps with this: All the animals who are killed for food are individuals. Any of you who have lived with more than one dog or cat know that each one is unique, with his or her own personality. A dog or cat may be gregarious or shy; assertive or timid; active or a couch potato; easily bored or satisfied with a comfortable routine; an explorer or a passive observer. If you've interacted much with companion animals, you've probably noticed their unique quirks, preferences, and habits. You've picked up onand maybe been amazed bytheir emotional capacity: Their joy when playing, their anticipation of a tasty meal, their affection toward their human and non-human friends, their fear of danger, their depression when they're sick, and their grief when they lose a long-time companion.
It's no different with cows, chickens, turkeys, pigs, lambs, sheep, or goatsor any other animals on farms or being trucked to the slaughterhouse. I've gotten to know many of these animals; each one is different from any of the others. They have as broad a range of personality and emotions as companion animals. All have the capacity to feel joy and sadness; all of their lives have meaning to them, and none want to die, unless they are on death's door and in severe agony. In many deep respects, they are just like our dogs and cats, and just like us.
Please take a look at these pictures and video, for a brief overview of modern animal farming. You should know what it is you're causingwhat you're financingwhenever you buy meat or order it at a restaurant. That alone might compel you to reduce your meat consumption.
Chickens on their way to the slaughterhouse
A baby chick getting her beak amputated with a searing hot blade. The ends of chickens' beaks are filled with nerves. The chicks are given no painkillers during this operation. In fact, farmed animals are never given painkillers when portions of their bodies are amputated.
Pigs who died on their way to slaughter
A pig being castrated without anesthesia
An introduction to how turkey meat is produced. In the video, the mutilations, painful procedures, and slow deaths are inflicted on newborn turkeys. This is their introduction to the world.
Similar cruelties and suffering occur at dairies and egg farms. All those animals are killed, too, at young ages, and almost all of them are subject to horrific conditions throughout their lives. In fact, please view one more set of picturesa brief slide show of large dairy farms in California, where they like to boast of pampered cows in lush pastures. Note the difference between the commercials and the reality.
It's not hard to find extended suffering and brutal mistreatment of animals in all phases of the agriculture business, including breeding, auctioning, raising, "culling" (destroying animals who aren't market-worthy), transporting, and slaughtering. Here are a few excerpts:
From Animals' Angels:
Livestock Auction, 5/8/2007, Middleburg, PA
Chickens, ducks, turkeys, rabbits and doves are piled on top of each other in wired cages and paper boxes. Some of the boxes do not even have holes to let air into the tiny confinement.
Livestock auction, 6/18/07, New Holland, PA
It is a very hot and humid day, with temperatures as high as 94 degrees. The inspectors encounter many dead pigs, cattle and goats on the premises.
Especially the pigs, who still have no access to water at the auction, are struggling. The inspectors observe several downed pigs in pens and alleys. To our concern, the downed pigs are not given any water or veterinary care. ["Downed" animals have collapsed and are unable to walk.] Instead, Jim, one of the workers at the pig stable, uses excessive electric prodding and kicking in order to make them move.
Especially the pigs, who still have no access to water at the auction, are struggling. The inspectors observe several downed pigs in pens and alleys. To our concern, the downed pigs are not given any water or veterinary care. ["Downed" animals have collapsed and are unable to walk.] Instead, Jim, one of the workers at the pig stable, uses excessive electric prodding and kicking in order to make them move.
Livestock Auction, 7/24/07 Carlisle, PA
Several [dairy cows] are in terrible condition, emaciated and limping. One cow is down and unable to rise. The workers hit the cows’ hips excessively with heavy wooden sticks in order to make them move. It is heartbreaking to see how these weakened animals struggle their way through the auction ring. The downed cow remains in the pen for several hours, without water or veterinary care.
In January, 2007, Animals' Angels "filmed Sara Lee turkeys in cages being trucked to slaughter in Iowa with broken legs, missing toes, and frostbite on their heads and toes. Some birds appeared to be dead, others were crammed into a broken container, and there was a large amount of blood on top of one of the cages. Birds and cages were caked with feces and once the trailer arrived at the slaughter plant (at 6:30 pm), the turkeys had to sit for 2 more hours in the open cold as the trucks waited in line to enter the plant." (As summarized by United Poultry Concerns)
Sara Lee turkey products are sold under the brand names Hillshire Farms, Jimmy Dean, and Ball Park.
Keep in mind that this is just the very tip of the iceberg.
What about "free range?"
"Free range" tends to be a far-fetched exaggeration. A "free range" operation can mean ten thousand birds confined in a dark, ammonia-filled shed with a door in the back that's open an hour each day and leads to an uncovered, muddy area that's big enough for a hundred birds. That's all legal.
Don't believe any of the pictures on packages; don't trust any of the producers' claims. Here's a photoessay of a "free range" turkey farm that supplies turkeys to Whole Foods. "Free range" in this case, like so many other cases, is a cruel farce.
I'm not trying to single out Whole Foods; in fact they're better than most grocery stores. The dishonesty and deception is widespread.
Smaller farms can be just as bad as large industrial farms. Far too many eyewitness accounts show animals starving to death, sick animals neglected and left to suffer and die, animals outside in 95-degree heat with no shade or water, excessive cruelty in prodding animals onto slaughterhouse-bound trucks, violent "culls" of unmarketable pigs, and more. The animals on smaller farms, just like on larger farms, typicallydepending on their specieshave their horns, testicles, toes, teeth, beaks, and tails amputated without painkillers. The animals are fattened up at a hyper rate due to intensive breeding and feed additives. Dairy cows have their calves taken from thempermanentlywhen only two days old. The animals are subject to the same gruesome transport and slaughter as their brethren imprisoned in larger factory farms.
Here's one more story, about a naive meat-eating couple who, after witnessing the realities of "free-range" farming up close, decided to change their lives and provide a haven for those animals instead. [Note that the story is continued on page 2 of the PDF document, but you need to scroll down to near the end of the document to see that part of page 2.]
Farm Sanctuaries
Poplar Spring Animal Sanctuary is a wonderful oasis about 45 minutes outside Washington, DC. I urge all readers in the DC area to consider visiting it. Seeing the rescued animals, meeting them, and in some cases petting and holding them, is more powerful than anything I can say. The grounds are peaceful and it's a refreshing respite from the city and the burbs. Contact the sanctuary at info@animalsanctuary.org to let them know you'll be coming by, so a volunteer can show you around.
In California, you've got Animal Acres and Animal Place. In New York, you've got Farm Sanctuary and Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary. In Colorado, there's Peaceful Prairie Sanctuary. These are some of the bigger and better known farmed animal sanctuaries; there are others scattered across the United States. Google or ask around in your area. Highly recommended.
Nine out of ten animals killed for food in the U.S. are chickens.
"Broiler" chickenstheir fate embedded in their namesare killed at only seven weeks old. Some are still peeping. They've been engineered to grow at super-fast rates. They're the equivalent of human children weighing over 300 pounds. Many die of heart attacks. Others fall over and can't get back up because their legs can't support their oversized upper bodies; they slowly die of dehydration, even though they may be within inches of water. This is all due to the public's demand for cheap "white meat."
The chickens are starved for one to four days before their slaughter, because their last meals wouldn't have enough time to be converted to sellable meat. The day of their slaughter, they're grabbed by their legs and stuffed into cages on trucks. Several chickens may be crammed into each cage.
Once at the slaughterhouse, they may sit on the truck for another one to twelve hours. Then they're yanked out of their cages and hung by their feet in shackles. At this point they're on the moving slaughterhouse line. Each chicken is dunked head-first into an electrically charged trough of water that paralyzes their muscles but does not knock them out. An employee called the "cutter" attempts to sever both of the chicken's carotid arteries. But because the process is so rushed, and some birds are improperly hung, he may miss the mark, with the result that the chicken will be fully alive and consciousbut still paralyzedas he or she is submerged in a "scalding tank" of near-boiling water that loosens feathers from the chicken's body.
I haven't talked much about eggs, mostly to save space. But here are some facts you may not know about egg production. Hens in commercial egg facilities have been engineered to lay up to ten times the number of eggs they would lay in the wild. This robs the hens of calcium and other nutrients, leaving their bones weak and brittle. The intense egg-laying frequency also increases the chances of painful conditions such as prolapse, in which the egg sticks to the uterine wall. At the hatcheries that produce laying hens, all the newborn male chicks are killed because they're of no economic use to the producers. The laying hens themselves are slaughtered when they're between one and two years old. They may be killed by the same torturous methods as those used on broiler chickens, or they may be disposed of in other gruesome ways, such as being thrown into a macerator, which is basically a wood-chipping machine. For more information, see www.noeggs.org.
There is a myth that farmers have to take good care of their animals or the animals won't produce. On today's farms, almost the exact the opposite is true. Animals are kept in hideous conditions, and they're confined so they won't burn up calories and cost more to feed. Farms only have to keep broiler chickens alive for seven weeks. Genetic manipulation makes them grow at ridiculous rates during that brief time. Even under the best conditions, at farm sanctuaries, these birds suffer from a host of problems and don't live long. Likewise, laying hens' "productivity" is a function of genetic tinkering and environmental tricks such as near-constant lighting that makes their bodies lay more eggs. By the time these hens are the equivalent of teenagers and are slaughtered, they look miserable and often are filled with disease.
Undercover investigations at slaughterhouses typically reveal cruelties and suffering that go beyond what I've described and that are outside the scope of this post. Investigators witness sadistic acts such as employees impaling live chickens on spikes, jamming steel rods into pigs' anuses, and throwing turkeys full force against a concrete wall. Imagine being in a job where you were soaked with blood and killed animals every day, with such rapidity that you ceased to see the animals as individuals. Add to that the repetition of the job, the long hours, the low pay, and the almost non-existent benefits. Some of the workers take out their pent-up frustration on the animals. The animals, unfortunately, are an easy target. Slaughterhouses are saturated with violence. The non-humans are brutally killed, but there is a human toll, too. Remember, you support all this when you buy meat, as well as when you buy dairy, eggs, and products such as muffins and soup that contain animal-derived ingredients.
Now, there's little to be gained from getting disgusted, angry, or depressed and then not being able to do anything about it. Fortunately, that's not the case here. Your choice of which foods to buy and eat can make a huge difference in terms of your health, your environmental footprint, and your contribution to animal suffering.
But it may go beyond that. Reducing your meat and animal product consumption may also give you peace of mind. Most people are decent and do not really want to harm animals if they can help it. But we get stuck in our ways. We eat what we're used to, what's convenient, and what others are eating. We don't think about this, but we become emotionally attached to our diets. They're comfortable. If we're eating roughly the same foods as our friends, co-workers, and relatives, we're never the "odd man out;" and it's nice to fit inas much as we may like to consider ourselves independent and above all that.
So in the back of our minds we're uncomfortable with the suffering and death we inflict on animals (and maybe with the negative impact we're having on the environment and on our long-term health). We push those thoughts out of our mind, or we make rationalizations. But the disconnect ultimately takes a toll.
When your diet is more in line with your deepest goals and your morals, it relieves you of a burden you may never have even realized you had. It improves your relationship with the earth and its creatures, and it brings you peace of mind.
For most people in the Westwhere we have an abundance of foods all year longthe barriers to reducing meat and dairy consumption are almost all psychological. True, there are exceptions; some people have unusual dietary needs or health conditions that impede their efforts to replace meat with vegetarian alternatives. In those cases, a veg-friendly dietitian may be of great benefit. But for the vast majority of people in this part of the world, their reasons for not cutting meat consumption and trying vegetarian main dishes are primarily mental and emotional.
One persistent barrier is a reluctance to give up familiar routines and favorite foods. That's perfectly understandable. If you take a vacation to Japan, you may decide to become absorbed in the culture while you're there and eat miso rice and soup for breakfast each day. Even if you go to France, another Western country, you may do as the French do and eat a baguette with jam or Nutella every day for breakfast. But when you get home, chances are close to 100 percent that you'll settle back into your normal eating patterns, which may consist of cereal and toast for breakfast. You'll be enriched by your overseas experience but be glad to be eating familiar foods once again.
It's not that cereal and toast makes any more sense than miso soup and rice for breakfast. It's what you're used to. We grow attached to our comfort foods.
My observation is that this fear of having to give up everything that's comfortable and replace it with things that are strange is an impediment to people changing their diets, and specifically trying vegetarian foods.
My goal in the next several posts is to show you easy, unstressful ways to reduce meat and dairy and replace them with plant-based choices. I'm putting myself in your place, as though I were a somewhat skeptical meat-eater (which I used to be).
I'll start with a few straightforward substitutions, then move on to:
- Simple ways to boost the fruit, vegetable, whole grain, and/or legume content in your menu;
- Tips on how to vary and increase your enjoyment of dishes that you already eat that are vegetarian.
- Foods that may be new to you but thatalone or in combination with other ingredientsyield familiar tastes and textures.
I don't want to narrow the focus too much, but the primary audience I'm targeting is people who don't cook much and whose tastes are fairly conventional but are willing to try new things.
With the holiday approaching, I'll probably be pressed for time and have to add to the posts in small batches. I'll continue the convention of ending incomplete posts with More to follow....
If you are going to a faraway land that has limited Internet access, have a great holiday, snack on Smokehouse Almonds instead of cheese, graciously bring some (spoiler alert!) Silk Nog to your hosts' house, don't fight with your relatives, and check out the series when you get back!
To be continued...
Labels: chicken, chickens, defense mechanisms, diet, eggs, nog, slaughterhouses, violence
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Interspecies Friendships, Part 10
Bev Pervan and Chris Mercer, writing in Animal People about Jeffrey Mousaieff Masson's book, Raising the Peaceable Kingdom, in which the author raises dogs, cats, chickens, rabbits, and rats to see how they get along (pretty well overall, sometimes not so well, sometimes famously) thought the book was okay, but were not that impressed, because they had already gone far beyond what Mr. Masson had done. Moreover, their cross-species matchups were the result of wildlife rehabilitation, not an experiment (albeit, a fairly benign one).
Here are some excerpts:
Among many impressions I have from reading these and other accounts, I am fascinated and delighted by the somewhat universal language of play and snuggling. All these differently-shaped, differently-sized, differently-abled, different-specied individuals finding common ground in the pleasures of cooperative play and curling up against one another.
Furthermore, animals' enjoyment when playing and when cozying up with close companions is often palpable and infectious from my standpoint. I used to think these effects from watching other species engage in enjoyable activities were only felt by humans. Now, with all this interspecies play, I wonder if one species' fun, friendliness, and maybe even mischief is understood and transmissible to many other species.
There certainly are come commonalities in terms of behavior and body language when it comes to playfulness. The individual at play generally exhibits a bright-eyed, buoyant demeanor, a fluidity of motion, a relaxed yet alert posture, and a general zest for life. I believe internally there are many similarities between species also when playing: endorphins, blood flow, brain waves, and so forth. We're different, yet it many fundamental ways we're the same.
Here are some excerpts:
Masson writes on page 45 that he "would almost certainly not succeed with this project with animals who were truly wild." However, our experience is that even wild animals can and do form friendships outside their species, and indeed, we used this fact as a tool in rehabilitation. Animal People recently published a photograph of our large, fierce Boerbull dog Shumba snoozing while a meerkat friend sat upright on his body doing sentry duty. [Accompanying the review is a picture of a meerkat standing guard on top of Shumba, while Shumba is snoozing away. Each looks as comfortable as can be with the other, to say the least.]
...
Catching quick young jackals to handlle them was virtually impossible in a large veld camp. But just bring Shumba into their camp, and the jackals would come running up to him, tails swishing wildly, and prostrate themselves in front of him in submission. Form there it was easy to grab them and to remove thorns or ticks. Seeing how easily the dogs, foxes, and jackals befriend each other causes us to doubt Masson's statement on page 61 that "No wolf has ever made friends with an animal from an another speciesunlike dogs, although they are of the same species."
...
We have video of of our morning strolls through the Kalahari bush, a veritable caravan led by ourselves and followed, always in the same order, by the dogs, then the bat-eared foxes, a Springok ewe, the meerkats (not much bigger than rats but easily keeping up), and finally a pair of ostriches.
Mori the Vervet monkey delighted in cross-species relationships. She needed a companion and we could not find her one of her own species. So we put a two-week old chick into her enclosure. They adopted each other, slept and played together, and became so interdependent that if we tried to remove the chicken, mmori would attack us. If Mmori sat up in the branches, the chick, still too immature to fly, would try desperately to flutter up and join her.
Later we had to rehab a young duiker antelope, and decided that she would settle down better in animal company. So we put her in with Mori and her chicken. Soon Mori was grooming the little buck. She would curl up with her to snooze, while the chicken, now fully grown, would cluck and peck around them. The three became inseparable.
...
Catching quick young jackals to handlle them was virtually impossible in a large veld camp. But just bring Shumba into their camp, and the jackals would come running up to him, tails swishing wildly, and prostrate themselves in front of him in submission. Form there it was easy to grab them and to remove thorns or ticks. Seeing how easily the dogs, foxes, and jackals befriend each other causes us to doubt Masson's statement on page 61 that "No wolf has ever made friends with an animal from an another speciesunlike dogs, although they are of the same species."
...
We have video of of our morning strolls through the Kalahari bush, a veritable caravan led by ourselves and followed, always in the same order, by the dogs, then the bat-eared foxes, a Springok ewe, the meerkats (not much bigger than rats but easily keeping up), and finally a pair of ostriches.
Mori the Vervet monkey delighted in cross-species relationships. She needed a companion and we could not find her one of her own species. So we put a two-week old chick into her enclosure. They adopted each other, slept and played together, and became so interdependent that if we tried to remove the chicken, mmori would attack us. If Mmori sat up in the branches, the chick, still too immature to fly, would try desperately to flutter up and join her.
Later we had to rehab a young duiker antelope, and decided that she would settle down better in animal company. So we put her in with Mori and her chicken. Soon Mori was grooming the little buck. She would curl up with her to snooze, while the chicken, now fully grown, would cluck and peck around them. The three became inseparable.
Among many impressions I have from reading these and other accounts, I am fascinated and delighted by the somewhat universal language of play and snuggling. All these differently-shaped, differently-sized, differently-abled, different-specied individuals finding common ground in the pleasures of cooperative play and curling up against one another.
Furthermore, animals' enjoyment when playing and when cozying up with close companions is often palpable and infectious from my standpoint. I used to think these effects from watching other species engage in enjoyable activities were only felt by humans. Now, with all this interspecies play, I wonder if one species' fun, friendliness, and maybe even mischief is understood and transmissible to many other species.
There certainly are come commonalities in terms of behavior and body language when it comes to playfulness. The individual at play generally exhibits a bright-eyed, buoyant demeanor, a fluidity of motion, a relaxed yet alert posture, and a general zest for life. I believe internally there are many similarities between species also when playing: endorphins, blood flow, brain waves, and so forth. We're different, yet it many fundamental ways we're the same.
Labels: animal people, animal people news, antelope, chicken, dog, friendship, interspecies, interspecies friendship, meerkat, monkey, ostrich, play, snuggling, wildlife

