I recently took an Animal Welfare and Behavior course through the prestigious Edinburg University. We all know there is much more to be accomplished in order to improve the lives of farm and production animals. One thing that the Animal Welfare course highlighted was the need for more in-depth scientific studies evaluating the physical and emotional stress and responses that farm and production animals experience with relation to the living conditions. The course revealed how simple changes and adjustments to housing and living conditions can dramatically reduce the physical, mental and emotional stress of production animals, and thereby improve their quality of life. In order to affect these changes though, it is critical that the scientific community get onboard so it can be presented to those in the agriculture business that, indeed, changes will result in more humane conditions for the animals in their charge.
Today I read a great article on the ASPCA blog, titled “Are Farm Animals Not Considered Animals?” by ASPCA President & CEO Matt Bershadker. Give it a read. There are great links within the article too. And you’ll see how important it is that farm and production animals finally be elevated to the status that they deserve: that of sentient beings who are owed consideration, respect, dignity and quality of life conditions.
Are Farm Animals Not Considered Animals?
Guest blog by ASPCA President & CEO Matt Bershadker
Yesterday, August 24, was the 48th anniversary of the federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA), a groundbreaking law establishing minimum standards of treatment for animals… Well, some animals.
You see, while some animals used for research, as pets, or for exhibition, are considered worthy of minimal legal protection (and to be clear, the AWA protections leave lots of room for improvement), animals used for food, like farm animals, are explicitly left out. Other federal statutes, like the 28 Hour Law and the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act, cover livestock transportation and slaughter, but both exclude birds, and there are no federal laws at all governing the conditions in which farm animals are raised.
Do the over 9 billion animals farmed in the United States each year require less protection? No. Should we allow them to endure extreme cruelty during their lives just because they’re destined for slaughter? Certainly not.
If anything, considering how many farm animals there are and the direct link between farm conditions and food safety, farm animals require more attention, and their conditions more scrutiny. As the products of agricultural corporations, farm animals are among the most exploited and abused animals in the world.
You don’t have to look very hard to find documented cases of cruelty against farm animals or on-going practices that fit the very definition of torture, such as battery cages for egg laying hens and gestation crates for sows. In late June of 2014, Compassion Over Killing released undercover video from a poultry farm in North Carolina that showed sick and injured chickens being dumped alive into pits of carcasses, where they suffocate or expire of hunger, thirst or exposure.
Instead of working to fix these abuses, the factory farming industry uses its influence to keep them secret by trying to pass “ag-gag” laws, which prevent video or photographic documentation of farm activities.
Ironically, this anniversary comes only a week before the start of National Chicken Month, an annual September promotional exercise by the National Chicken Council to promote chicken sales and to celebrate chicken consumption, which in effect also celebrates the cruel ways we treat those very chickens.
But imagine, for a moment, a very different “National Chicken Month,” one in which we ensure chickens are not abused, exploited, or tortured. A month in which we highlight farmers who treat chickens more like the animals they are, not like the products they become.
Some states are acting on their own to institute farm animal protections, and we hope that trend spreads throughout the country and on the federal level. But even before that happens, there are things we all can do to help.
We urge concerned consumers to ask their supermarkets and the companies that supply them to think about raising chickens that can stand up and be chickens, not be pumped with unnecessary antibiotics and bred to be so absurdly huge that they fall over in their own waste. And we encourage people to sign our pledge, urging more humane industry practices.
Whether it happens on the federal, state, community, or personal level, action must be taken to safeguard the welfare of all animals, no matter what purpose they serve.
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Keep fighting the good fight! We have to be the voice for the animals. We need to be heard, loud and clear, that ALL animals deserve a dignified life. Ideally, switching to a vegetarian or vegan diet would have the most impact but it’s a bit unrealistic to think that everyone in the population will make the switch. But every little step helps move toward making major strides to improve the life of our farm and production animals.
What are your thoughts on this issue?
Another issue to consider is that even with regulations for transport, markets, auctions, and slaughter houses in place, these laws are routinely flouted and enforcement is minimal. Violators rack up thousands upon thousands of dollars in fines that are never collected and they are allowed to continue their operations unabated even with the most serious violations under their belts. Enforcement has always been an issue. So not only do we need stricter laws to ensure the humane treatment of farm animals, we need harsher penalties that are actually enforced.
Another group who has done excellent work for farm animals in the US that you may be interested in is Animals’ Angels, Inc. http://www.animalsangels.org
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So very true!! I’ve always said, in any legislation dealing with animals, we need harsher penalties, strict enforcement. It’s a sad state of affairs in that world. It makes me cry. Thanks so much for stopping by and for your thought-provoking comment!
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It’s horrendous what goes on and stricter regulations certainly are a step in the right direction, but, as your previous commenter said, they have to be enforced. It’s unfortunate that organic meat is so expensive, but hopefully one day, it will be the standard.
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Enforcement is always going to be a problem because money is the motivator, unfortunately, and not the animals. Look at the industry’s “ag-gag”: it’s all about cover-ups. And no one can tell me that bribes and “look the other way” money isn’t prevalent in that industry. It breaks my heart to see what these poor animals have to endure. Thanks for stopping by Debbie! Always good to hear from you. ❤
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