Monday, April 2, 2012

Blog 2





In my recent blog I informed you on a book I am reading, “The CAFO Reader: The Tragedy of Industrial Animal Factories” by Daniel Imhoff. I’ve been looking for information on industrial animal factories and I came across this video clip on YouTube.com called “Farm to Fridge” by Mercy for Animals, which was traumatizing to watch. People need to be informed about the slavery this system is embracing. The torture that these animals are put through is heartless, intense and sickening to see. It’s only by actually seeing the circumstances these innocent animals live in is where you think twice about what foods your buying and what you should be eating. Both the video clip and readings from the CAFO system give immense information of the slavery, controlling and emotionally dead industrial system we’ve been accepting.

Poultry/Eggs:
 We all know what a McChicken is and we probably all ate chicken nuggets once before. Though we don’t know where our chicken came from. According to Mercy for Animals, Slaughter plants birds are killed by being hung upside down from there legs on moving shackles, then dragged through an electric vaunt of water that paralyzes them but still leaves them conscious. Pulled across a blade that slices their throats while blood drips down in a bin (From Farm to Fridge).
The way our chicken is slaughtered in these industrial factories is highly unnatural. In this clip I watched a male worker in rain boots, viciously stomp on a chickens head over and over again. Another male worker pulled and twisted a chicken’s head to make its neck crack, the poor chicken was thrown on the floor and you could see it still moving. This practice is done daily, this is the factory’s way of getting rid of sick or injured chickens.
Birds are NOT walking around in a beautiful farm. Every chicken, turkey as well as every other animal are kept in crates unable to move and denied basic behavioral and natural needs. “Male baby chicks cannot lay eggs so they are killed within hours of being born. They are thrown in grinding machines while still alive. Another way workers get ride of male chicks is by throwing them in trash bins and later smothering or suffocating them. Female chicks aren’t left off so easy either. The have a destiny filled with cruelty and torture” (From Farm to Fridge). I watched baby chicks get their beaks cut off with a hot blade; this mutilation is called “de-beaking”. This technique is needed due to over crowded living conditions. It’s a mutilation that causes chronic pain. In the video you watch a little chick with half a beak left and the pain in her eyes. There are long assembly lines filled with chicken hens stuffed inside a small cage. Fact: 95% of egg laying hens spend their lives confide in tiny wire cages (From Farm to Fridge).

Dairy/ Beef:
 The majority of dairy cows are kept confined. They are kept in tight spaces with only enough space to move their heads. Cows that are injured or sick are called “downers”. Instead of taking a cow to veterinarian cows are left to slowly die and suffer from their injuries (From Farm to Fridge). This is the factory’s way of getting rid of sick and injured cows. Baby calves are dragged away from their mothers and violently killed.

I watched a worker walk in and grab a baby calve form his neck with his bare hands while he was drinking on from his mothers utters. It’s so sick to think this is what’s done just so humans can drink milk. At a fraction of their natural life span so-called spent, dairy cows are plotted on to transport trucks and sent to slaughterhouses (From Farm to Fridge).
Beef comes from hanging a cow upside down while a worker slices his throat open and watches all the blood gush down into a bin. In the video Mercy for animal’s representatives states that “Unreliable stunning practices at slaughter houses commend cattle’s to getting their throats cut, limbs hacked off all while still alive.
Pork
I watched a pregnant sow laying down in a narrow metal stall smaller then her body, unable to move and barely enough space to breath. This is where they lay during their entire 4-month pregnancy. I watched a newborn piglet being thrown to a worker, the worker with no remorse caries the piglet upside down, cuts his skin open, without hesitation rips out his testicles and cuts off his tail. You can hear the baby piglet screaming in pain, squirming around trying to get away. The factory’s way of getting rid of sick or injured piglets is being slammed to the ground, head first.
To think that this is allowed, that this is our food system. These are animals, with emotions not reflexes. The view that society, CAFO, and the workers perceive these animals is the same way the Nazi perceived the Jews. Slavery is defined by “A civil relationship in which one person has absolute power over the life, fortune, and liberty.” That’s exactly what this system is based on.  We all are blind to it.
The passages in Slaughterhouse by Gail A. Eisintz are quite intense but very informative. I read this narrative that really struck my attention. An Industrial Farm worker, Tommy Vladak explains his position and astonishing moments while slaughtering hogs. As corrupted as it seems this is a man that took much pride in his job. Tommy surprises me when he states, “There was one night I’ll never forget as long as I live..  A little female hog was coming through the chutes. She got away and the supervisor said ‘Stick that bitch!’ I grabbed her and flipped her over. She looked up at me. It was like she was saying ‘Yeah I know it’s your job, do it.’ That was the first time I ever looked at a live hogs eyes. And stuck her” (Slaughterhouse 74).
Whether it was Tommy going insane, or whether it was his inner voice. It’s the fact that he felt something for the first time. About most of these workers are emotionally damaged. They learn just like society learns to see these animals as nothing less then nutrition. I can agree that we live off of dairy, poultry, and pork. But I cannot agree that the techniques used in the factory farms are the healthiest nor right way to do kill them.
Its slavery, it’s controlling and it’s emotion-less what we’ve been allowing innocent animals go through. Imagine showing a 7yr old child a slaughtering video such as “from farm to fridge”. I could bet all the money I have that child will not view meat the same ever again. But why are we willing to allow this? Why can a child see the simple difference between right and wrong but an adult can care-less? These are questions you need to ask your self. Look into society with different views. Don’t believe what you given to you. Get answers. Get information. 

1 comment:

  1. HELLO my name is Jordan
    You did an excellent job on your blog, it was very well organized thought-out and executed. I feel that you could have added into the writing with some critical thinking and connections. For example could have connected the treatment and enslavement of animals to that of slavery in American or Indian indentured slaves. Specifically a line such as “According to Mercy for Animals, Slaughter plants birds are killed by being hung upside down from their legs on moving shackles, and then dragged” could have been directly connected with slavery in American. Critical thinking would just add to the impact this writing would have on a reader and make a stronger connection between the reader and the story. In your blog post you say “It’s only by actually seeing the circumstances these innocent animals live in is where you think twice about what foods your buying and what you should be eating”, would better treatment of the animals make the food people eat healthy or better in some way? If you so please elaborate further. Regarding the previously quoted line do you mean that people need to be conscious of the food they eat solely based on the treatment of the animals? Some of your opening lines could be a little stronger. You could try and add a little more build up to them. Example “The majority of dairy cows are kept confined”, you could try saying something like the treatment of cows is especially deplorable or something similar. Overall this is a very strong paper and your ideas and facts are very well thought up and backed up.

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