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Recently in Beyond Belief Category

For the love of Thanksgiving

PETA:
While working at a series of Aviagen factory farms in West Virginia, PETA's investigator documented that workers tortured, mutilated, and maliciously killed turkeys. The following are just a few of the documented offenses: 
  • Employees stomped on turkeys' heads, punched turkeys, hit them on the head with a can of spray paint and pliers, and struck turkeys' heads against metal scaffolding.
  • Men shoved feces and feed into turkeys' mouths and held turkeys' heads under water.
  • Another bragged about jamming a broom stick 2 feet down a turkey's throat. 
  • A supervisor said he saw workers kill 450 turkeys with 2-by-4s. 
  • One man said he saw a coworker fatally inject turkey semen and sulfuric acid into turkeys' heads.

  


Look at those "real men" go. Oftentimes, when we are lacking in other areas of our lives, we search out those opportunities to strong arm the helpless. It's what Gary Francione calls a "bully-ish mentality." It's not ethical, but more than that, Francione is getting to something deeper here. Such overt over-compensation suggests something fundamental about our nature.

From wantonly killing insects, to eating turkey flesh, to disciplining your dog slightly more than necessary, there's an ethical sickness endemic to our species. We lack real power, as defined within our society, and no matter how unethical it may be the paradigm of animals-as-property allows us to compensate for this absence by dominating another feeling being (he or she must feel and experience what we are doing or else we wouldn't get any pleasure from it) and not caring about it. It's just like the most blatant patriarch who controls his daughter; the result is often the same.        

It's probably just an isolated incident...maybe not though, given the following:
PETA's investigator repeatedly brought abuses to a supervisor's attention. The supervisor responded, "Every once in a while, everybody gets agitated and has to kill a bird." PETA also brought the abuse to the attention of Aviagen, and although the company made assurances and instituted some new rules, the cruelty did not stop.
PETA's investigator also saw disgusting, cramped conditions. The rotting remains of about 70 hens were left amid live birds--who had to climb over the dead--for more than a day. A supervisor urinated in turkey pens, and workers spat tobacco in the pens as well. The suffering typically found on factory farms was also routine in Aviagen's sheds: Hens' beaks were cut with pliers, massive birds collapsed and died of exhaustion or heart attacks, and turkeys were thrown into transport cages.
Who is Aviagen Turkey, Inc.? The self-proclaimed world's leading poultry breeding company.

I find it odd that it is the animal rights movement that is derided as "extreme." If this isn't extreme, I wonder what is? If it is, however, what are we to think of those who purchase the products of this abuse? 

We could be angry because it is often these incidences that predict future act's of violence against human animals. Or, we could be angry because those thousands upon thousands of turkeys are subjectively experiencing this world which we have created for them: every head stomped is felt; being confined that tightly is internalized; they are conscious when thrown through the air, and they experience the crashing.

It's the latter that really ought to enrage moral animals.  
 
For more information visit Animal Rights - Change.org

From peta2

peta2:

 

"I hate the whole god damn human race" - this is making me crazy, this world we live in, these people, this system. I see nothing of value in anyone who doesn't acknowledge our moral culpability.

Thanks go out to 4th time:

"The video content shows a highly placed PRCA official repeatedly and covertly applying an electrical shocking device to horses necks, faces, and other body parts to force them to buck out of their stalls...even within sight of a "judging official". One horse collapses moments after being shocked and does not get up."

 

 

This treatment may appear innocuous, however, common sense would suggest otherwise. Consider the violence of a high-charged electrical pulse; High Life Gal collapsed after being "encouraged" with just such a pulse. What a crime this is, and we know who the victims are.  

And just like eating individual chickens because we enjoy the taste of their flesh, rodeos are simply abuse and cruelty for entertainment. That's it; no need, nothing essential, just the good down home fun of using a weapon to force a feeling horse to jump about. Indeed, the very use of the shocking device is an implicit acknowledgment that the horse does in fact experience the pain to such a degree that they're literally transformed (through force) into the bucking and aggressive horse so prized in this so-called "sport."

How do we not understand that this is finding pleasure in seeing cruelty done and nothing more? I think it's telling that those who were caught doing this denied their actions, quite telling indeed.         

From Showing Animals Respect and Kindness, or S.H.A.R.K.

Unbelievable abuse...

Thanks go out to 4th Time for bringing this to my attention.

 

 

Hidden camera video recorded in early 2008 at Gemperle Enterprises in Merced County, California, a supplier to NuCal Foods Inc. - the largest distributor of shell eggs in the Western US - reveals:

  • Rotting carcasses in cages with live hens still laying eggs for human consumption.
  • Birds suffering from untreated broken bones, open wounds, infections and prolapses.
  • Workers brutally killing sick hens by grabbing their heads and swinging their bodies around to break their necks, or through neck-twisting, often resulting in a prolonged, torturous death.
  • Workers roughly and forcefully handling birds, resulting in injuries, such as broken bones and blunt trauma.
  • Hens covered in excrement, confined five to seven per cage the size of a file drawer, unable to stretch their wings, move freely or exercise.
  • Crippled hens left to languish in cage aisles without access to food, water, or veterinary care.

From Mercy For Animals: California Egg Industry Exposed!

The extent of this moral crisis...

According to John Robbins, author of Diet for a New America,

the number of animals killed per hour for meat in the U.S. alone is 660,000.  

This means that 5,280,000 individual animals were killed during the eight hours that you were at work today because we think they taste good. That's 211,200,000 lives taken during a single forty hour work week. The end result is 9 billion animals killed annually in the U.S. alone to satisfy our preferences (some estimate that the number is closer to 10 billion).

It's difficult for me to even comprehend these numbers. And some would have us believe that the plight of nonhumans ought to be beyond our ethical concern.     

Thanks go out to Ethical Eating.org   

The recent dog shooting.

Watch this video. Before you do, however, you should know that the dogs survived the shooting; although one will loose an eye.

 

 

Here is the back-story.

Witnesses argue that these two husky dogs had been playing with each other in the pasture and the surrounding areas for approximately two hours prior to being shot. The man seen shooting the dogs, over seven times if I'm accurate, has attempted to justify his actions by suggesting that he was "protecting his friends property" (properly known as cows!) from these two "predators" - wolves, he said.

Witnesses dismiss this justification because the dogs were in fact posing no threat at all. Indeed, as the dogs had been in the area for hours playing and making their presence known to all, including the cows, this "threat" defense is baseless. The dogs also had tags, and their person can be seen running into the video as the shooting began. It is clear from the evidence that the dogs were simply off-leash, acting as dogs do, indeed as two friendly animals (and people) behave when together: playing, or doing whatever two individuals do.

Officials apparently thought, however, that such behavior warrented a death sentence, as they initially allowed the shooter to leave without being charged with a crime. However, when the video surfaced, showing the man walking up to the stationary animals and shooting them, which he continued to do as they ran away from him and as their person appealed to the shooter to stop, authorities have apparently re-opened the case and are considering animal cruelty charges. An outcome that is likely, from what I understand.

You felt that moral pang inside when you watched the video didn't you? The person recording this indefensable act certainly did.

Now, please watch this video. 

 

 

This is occurring everyday. It's happening as you read this sentence, in our country and throughout the world.

You feel the same moral pang don't you?

The experimenters will deny that they feel such a pang, insisting that "animals can't suffer" (well, why do we care about the dogs then?). If you pay attention when discussing this with scientists you will notice that this insistence that animals can't suffer is a little too emotional, to the point of a tantrum, to be plausibly considered driven by a serious consideration of the issue and common sense as opposed to mere necessity. Why do they do this? Because if these scientists admit reality then they are implicitly admitting to cruelty, and they don't want to do that even though they know they are in fact performing acts of torure. 

Bernard E. Rollin points out how the experimenter will use linguistic disguises like "sacrifice," suggesting some kind of noble selfless act for the greater good being undertaken by the monkey, to hide their moral culpability. Do you believe that those monkeys are being "sacrificed" or simply brutalized?

Why, then, the outrage over the dogs and not the monkeys?

"Having granted some protections to animals," Matthew Scully writes,

"we are constantly confronted with the logic of our own laws, troubled by perfectly rational connections between the random "wanton" acts of cruelty that the law forbids and the systematic, institutional cruelties it still permits. If this animal is to be protected, why not his identical one, too?"

Indeed, Mr. Scully. Let's charge the shooter for his attempted murder of the dogs, and let's charge the scientists for their torture and murder of the monkeys. Or we could simply remain irrational and arbitrary, clinging to the old ways like the husband-patriarch who "loves his wife" but refuses to acknowledge and respect her decision to leave the home and find a job of her own because it's natural for her to cook dinner and receive a weekly allowance.    

Crossposted @ Vegan Soapbox

More examples of animal cruelty.

 

The cats and dogs were raised for chinese meat, pet food, and even your shoes and belts. (40% of leather comes from dog/cat skin). 

Some of the animals (pigs cows chickens ducks and geese) were raised for meat, dairy, eggs, and fois gras. Some were raised for KFC produce. Some of the footage was taken from free-range egg companies that had the 'animal care certified' mark on. 
 
The animals in the testing labs were from Iams, and other P&G companies. The tiger and lions were being kept in a poor, unhygenic sanctuary.


It is difficult to watch because you intuitively know that this is wrong. Act on your intuition; do not deny its validity because you prefer chickens over pasta. 

What moral person would allow this to continue unchallenged. Going vegan is a form of direct protest, an explicit statement that you will no longer condone this with your dollars. 

Allow me to modify Pascal's Wager: If those who advocate for the philosophy of animal rights are wrong, the worst possible result is the end of the behavior witnessed in the video (less suffering!) and a change in your dietary habits; if we are correct, then our culture, your "lifestyle," is markedly immoral or intrinsically bad. Which potential result is worse?       

Way to 'marr' my race viewing pleasure.

"The race was marred by the death of runner-up Eight Belles, who collapsed after the wire after fracturing both front ankles. The brave and massive gray filly, trained by Larry Jones and owned by Fox Hill Farms, was euthanized almost immediately on track."

From the synopsis on this year's 124th Kentucky Derby. 

This 'brave' filly was asked to put thousands of pounds of pressure per stride on her delicate, half-formed leg bones. Years of 'selective breeding' have created a Thoroughbred horse who is faster - but who is so delicate that track injuries are steadily increasing. When 800+ plus horses die on tracks every year, it makes you wonder, what number will be great enough that we'll move horse racing into the category of abuse currently occupied by dog and bird fighting. Add to that 800 the thousands of horses who are seriously injured and killed later, or who do not perform and either end up as meat or breeding machines. Once again, it's not okay for me to break a horse's legs at home, even if someone paid me a million dollars. But in a competition? Sure, that's fine. Yes, the odds of it happening aren't huge, but the odds are significantly greater than if Belles was home, hanging out, doing what horses are meant to do. Which isn't to run 35mph for a mile and a half with a 105lb human on their backs. Or to jump a 5 foot fence with a 120lb human on their backs. 

I see a great beauty in a horse speeding down the track. Despite everything I know, my heart soars when I'm watching them fly down the backstretch. But I see equal beauty in a horse playing by himself in a field. I can see no beauty in a three year old with her whole life ahead of her snapping both her ankles. I see nothing but a grizzly spectacle reminiscent of the the gladiators of Rome. 

Please, stop saying that Eight Belles didn't deserve this and start saying that no one, no horse, no animal, deserves this, and thus no human should put them in a position where it can happen. This isn't a tragic accident. It's "a risk we're willing to take", gambling with another life. I can't help but remember three years ago when Barbaro shattered his leg in the Preakness Stakes. Thousands of people were crushed and saddened, but did anything change?  Can things change? Yes, absolutely. It's up to us to make sure they do. 

I think the end of this article sums it up nicely; although she did what very few fillies has ever done, raced the Derby, killed herself for human pleasure, is dead...

"Still, Eight Belles was a sentimental pick by 157,770 fans, second-largest crowd in Derby history. She repaid their support by returning $10.60 and $6.40 for a $2 win ticket."

At the last, we rate her by her monetary value. 

belles2.jpgYou can read more about this insanity here

Maybe I shouldn't have slept through art class.

A friend sent me this link today, and I was blown away. No matter how many times I see people being cruel, how many times I think there's no way in hell something can surprise me, someone does something stupid like KILL a dog for an art installation. Yeah, you heard me. Some out-of-his-fucking-mind 'artist' woke up one morning and thought - today? Today I think I'll tie up a dog and not feed it, charge admission and CALL IT ART instead of shooting myself in my worthless head. This is not art, unless we changed the definition of art to murder and I didn't get the memo. 

What is it about the death of an animal we find so aesthetic? There is nothing beautiful about the torturous, slow, agonizing death of starving, just like there is nothing beautiful about the brutal murder that goes into the 'production' of fur. Perhaps there is a haunting beauty in a natural death, but there is nothing attractive, nothing beautiful, nothing worthwhile about senseless, pointless, useless murder. Perhaps art isn't meant to be beautiful. In many cases, it could be argued that art should cause discomfort - to the VIEWER. Provocative though this might be, to walk through this 'gallery' and see a dog look at you, suffering, and to do nothing more than sip your champagne and talk industry is nothing short of purely callous. It is an example of all that is wrong with out treatment of animals, how we treat them as nothing more than pieces of art to be disposed of as suits the artists' fickle pleasures. It doesn't matter that he's a dog - if he were a pig, a duck, a freakin' giraffe, it would remain inexcusable. 

littledog.jpg
Photo from El Perrito Vive.

This dog died starving slowly on a concrete floor while people walked back and forth in front of him, carrying drinks and probably food. They were within feet of him, watched him die in abject misery. And  they did nothing. That he is a dog does not matter. He was a sentient being, and he felt every minute of this.

Note: There are various rumors throughout the art world about what may be actually occurring here: one rumor is that the artist found the dog on the street, tethered him up for three hours to "make a point about human cruelty to non-human animals," and then took him home as a companion animal; another rumor being circulated is that the dog was already dying, so this man simply tied him up and allowed him to die in the museum.   

The former rumor make's an excellent point, however, the means to the end of making this point is an example of cruel animal exploitation, which is precisely the point the artist was allegedly attempting to make. So, where does he stand on the issue? Perhaps he could have taken several photographs of homeless and hapless dogs, and exhibited them to make his point. What if he were to have tethered a sickly African to a corner of that museum to make a point about the plight being suffered by millions of individuals throughout the African continent?     

If the latter rumor is substantiated, then he ought to be petitioned because this is a tragedy. Who could claim otherwise? 

Look at the picture(s). This is sanctified cruelty, regardless of the morality of the point he is attempting to make.  

There's a petition here to stop this 'artist' from putting on another 'art installation' in 2008. Please, sign it.