Planet Debate 2011 September/October l-d release Animal Rights


Farm Animals Subject to Abuse and Exploitation Now



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Farm Animals Subject to Abuse and Exploitation Now


MANY FACTORY FARMING PRACTICES INFLICT TREMENDOUS PAIN AND SUFFERING ON FARM ANIMALS

Gaverick Matheny & Cheryl Leahy, Professor Agricultural Economics U. Maryland & General Counsel, Compassion over Killing, 2007, Law and Contemporary Problems, Winter, 70 Law & Contemp. Prob. 325, p. 330-2

In the United States, almost nine billion chickens, known as broilers, are raised for meat, and more than 270 million turkeys are reared and slaughtered each year. Virtually all these birds are members of fast-growing breeds produced by a handful of breeding companies. Broilers now reach market weight in seven weeks - around one-third the time it took fifty years ago. Turkeys now reach market weight in four months - about half the time it took fifty years ago.

The birds' rapid growth contributes to a number of welfare problems, including skeletal, respiratory, and cardiovascular disease, as well as chronic hunger in breeding stock. n27 Between one-third and one-half of birds suffer from leg deformities, and one-quarter are believed to suffer chronic pain. n28 Because of the vast number of broilers and turkeys raised each year, fast growth has been called, "in both magnitude and severity, the single most severe, systematic example of man's inhumanity to another sentient animal." n29

Egg-laying hens face their own set of inhumane practices. Around ninety-five percent of the approximately 350 million egg-laying hens in the United States are housed in barren wire cages known as "battery cages." n30 Battery cages are known to contribute to a number of welfare problems: they typically afford  less than half a square foot of area per hen, preventing the birds from stretching their wings; they contribute to bone weakness and fractures during depopulation; and they are barren, preventing hens from natural behaviors such as nesting, perching, or dustbathing. n31

By the end of their two laying cycles, most birds are physically wrecked from a lay-rate ten times higher than natural. n32 Between eighty and ninety percent suffer from osteoporosis by the time they are considered "spent," and one-quarter suffer one or more bone fractures. n33 In its 1996 report, the European Commission's Scientific Veterinary Committee (SVC) condemned the battery cage, concluding, "It is clear that because of its small size and its barrenness, the battery cage as used at present has inherent severe disadvantages for the welfare of hens." n34

In the United States, six million breeding sows are maintained in commercial production, making up ten percent of the U.S. pig population. n35 When pregnant, sixty to seventy percent of these sows are kept in barren, individual, concrete-floored stalls, called gestation crates, measuring seven feet long by two feet wide - too small for sows to turn around. n36 Nearly all of a sow's sixteen-week pregnancy is spent in the crate; immobilizing sows decreases the costs of labor and extra feeding equipment. n37

In its review, the European Union's SVC concluded, "Since overall welfare appears to be better when sows are not confined throughout gestation, sows should preferably be kept in groups." n38 The report notes that when sows are housed in groups rather than in crates,

sows have more exercise, more control over their environment, more opportunity for normal social interactions, and better potential for the provision of opportunities to root or manipulate materials... . As a consequence, group-housed sows show less abnormality of bone and muscle development, much less abnormal behaviour, less likelihood of extreme physiological responses, less of the urinary tract infections associated with inactivity, and better cardiovascular fitness. n39
Calves raised for veal are typically tethered by the neck or confined in individual stalls, or both; the stalls are so small that the calves cannot turn around during their entire sixteen to eighteen week lives. n40 Immobilizing calves reduces labor and housing costs and prevents muscle development, making the resulting meat a pale color, preferred by some consumers. n41

Veal crates have been widely criticized on animal-welfare grounds, although it is unlikely they are worse than gestation crates or battery cages. The European Union's SVC concluded,

The welfare of calves is very poor when they are kept in small individual pens with insufficient room for comfortably lying, no direct social contact and no bedding or other material to manipulate... . In order to provide an environment which is adequate for exercise, exploration and free social interaction, calves should be kept in groups. n42




Farm Animals Subject to Abuse and Exploitation Now



COWS ARE TORTURED DURING PROCESSING AT CAFOs

Robyn Mallon, Attorney, 2005, Journal of Medicine and Law, Summer, 9 Mich. St. J. Med. & Law 389, p. 401-3



Ramon Moreno worked at an IBP, Inc. meatpacking plant in Washington state. n110 His job was to cut the legs off of dead cows that came past him on an assembly line, which sent by 309 cows per hour. n111 The Humane Slaughter Act dictates that the cows are supposed to be rendered unconscious before Moreno starts his job, but this does not always occur. n112 Moreno said that when the cows get to his station "They blink, they make noises . . . the head moves, the eyes are wide and looking around." n113

Today's factory farms are so fast and have such heightened production that it only takes 25 minutes to process a cow in the meatpacking plant and ship it off to supermarkets as prepackaged steak. n114 Moreno states that he does his job regardless of whether the cow is dead or alive and that he is required to remove the legs of "dozens" of live cows per day. n115 In fact, he states that cows may even make it through his station still alive and reach further processing areas such as the hide remover that they are required to go through while still alive. n116 Moreno states that the cows die in the meatpacking plant "piece by piece." n117 In 1998, the government discovered that a Texas slaughterhouse was cutting the hooves off of live cows and received 22 citations but the government failed to act. n118 Even while workers cannot keep up with line speeds the way they are, line speeds are continuing to increase. The rate "increased from 50 head of cattle an hour in the early 1990s to almost 400 head an hour in some of the newest plants" in the United States. n119 Yet, "[t]he line is never stopped simply because an animal is alive." n120



USDA is supposed to be enforcing the Humane Slaughter Act so that cows are immediately unconscious before they are processed by workers like Moreno, but veterinarians state that Moreno's story ". . .happens on a daily basis." n121 CAFOs have strict production quotas and USDA agents, even while observing a violation, rarely stop the production line or else they are harassed by the CAFO owner for costing the CAFO money. n122 Many USDA agents are therefore frightened to act and the result is that the Humane Slaughter Act is rarely enforced. Even if a line is stopped or a violation is witnessed by the USDA, "sanctions are rare." n123 This kind of cruelty even has an effect on quality of meat because "[f]ear and pain cause animals to produce hormones that damage meat and cost companies tens of millions of dollars a year in discarded product . . . ." n124 Apparently this loss of product does not bother the CAFO owners who consider animals to be unfeeling automatons that are easily replaceable and easily bred. They see animals that suffer and die from extreme conditions in their plant as a cost of doing business.

Unfortunately, another animal protection law, the Animal Welfare Act, protects animals used in research and exempts livestock. n125 Furthermore, the anti-cruelty laws of various states also exempt farm animals so unless the USDA is enforcing the Humane Slaughter Act, the evisceration of live animals a little at a time at meatpacking plants is allowed to continue unnoticed.


VEAL CALVES SUBJECTED TO CRUELTY

Robyn Mallon, Attorney, 2005, Journal of Medicine and Law, Summer, 9 Mich. St. J. Med. & Law 389, p. 403-4

Undoubtedly, the worst abuse of cows in meatpacking plants occurs to veal calves. Because the gourmet meat of the veal calf is very unique and consumers have certain, strict expectations for it, the calf is raised with unrelenting cruelty. The cruelty begins when the calf is born and is torn from its mother before weaning. n130 The calf then is forced into anemia because it is only given powered milk to drink and no water or solid food. n131 The calf is also drugged to increase  its weight, and it is forced to remain immobile, chained into wooden crates so small that the calf cannot even turn around. n132 The calf never leaves the crate and is even forced to live in its own excrement which makes the calf vulnerable to respiratory problems to the point where ten percent of CAFO veal calves die before slaughter even while force-fed antibiotics.



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