The Myth of the Happy Farmed Animal
by Paul Shapiro
VegNews, Sept./Oct. 2004, page
9
"People should know the chickens are better off
in cages and why. They should know the chickens are content and productive."
Henry Wentink, then vice president of agribusiness giant Walt Montgomery
Associates |
Few representatives from the meat, egg, and dairy industries still publicly
argue that animal suffering is of no concern. Their new public relations message
assures us that agribusiness is of course concerned about animal suffering,
and farmed animals today could hardly have it better.
Take, for example, the comments of Trent Loos, spokesperson for agribusiness
PR front group Faces of Ag, in a March 2004 press release: "The technologies
used by today's farmers provide the most comfortable living conditions that
food animals have ever had."
Loos isn't the only spin-doctor. Ken Klippen, spokesperson for trade association
United Egg Producers, recently assured television viewers that laying hens "prefer
to be in cages."
Even further, Moira Henderson, a battery-cage egg producer, recently stated
in a news piece, "The welfare of my hens is top of my priority list and
I know they're happy. They 'sing' to me in the sheds."
It's hard to know what to make of happy hens singing in their tiny wire battery
cages, but we should rest assured that after multiple undercover investigations
at battery egg factory farms, no animal welfare investigator has yet witnessed
this phenomenon.
"Our slave population is not only a happy one,
but it is a contented one."
Pro-slavery Virginia legislator in 1831 |
One might expect this kind of deception to be limited to agribusiness. But
unfortunately, even the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington, D.C. has joined
inand is doing so with our tax dollars. This past June, the National Zoo
opened its newest exhibit, Kids' Farm. With the help of a $5 million Congressional
appropriation, the exhibit targets children aged three to eight with the purpose,
according to assistant curator Bob King, of letting kids "identify where
some of their food comes from."
So where do our chicken and eggs come from? At Kids' Farm, all of the chickens
have outdoor access, branches for perching, as well as nesting boxes. The visitor
is led to believe such farming conditions are typical. In fact, 98 percent of
chickens in the U.S. egg industry are overcrowded in barren, wire battery cages,
where they can't dust bathe, let alone flap their wings, forage, perch, or even
walk. And 99 percent of chickens in the U.S. meat industry are confined in barren,
warehouse-like sheds. The exhibit is a fairy tale.
Just like slaveholders perpetuated the "myth of the happy slave,"
factory farmers today promote the "myth of the happy farmed animal."
As more of the public becomes outraged over the treatment of farmed animals,
agribusiness will scramble to assuage us that farmed animals actually enjoy
living in cages, being castrated, de-beaked, or de-horned without painkiller.
As vegetarians, we have an obligation to be well-informed, taking agribusiness
to task both for abusing animals and for misleading the public. Since farmed
animals can't speak for themselves, it's up to us to let the public know the
truth about the routine cruelty they endure. Let's not let them down.
Paul Shapiro is campaigns director of the D.C.-based animal advocacy organization
Compassion Over Killing, www.cok.net.
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