There's an Elephant in the Room blog
September 2017
Hens, like all of the victims of our every nonvegan consumer choice, are sentient individuals, each one with her own mind and thoughts, her own individuality, her own unique personality and preferences.

The problems faced by all egg-laying hens are not caused by their
environment, but by the very bodies that have been created by humans. Their
bodies are the result of years of selective breeding to maximise egg
production for human interests. This selective breeding has escalated egg
laying by each individual bird to 250 – 300 a year from the original annual
total of 12 – 15 by the wild relatives from whom she has been developed.
Hens, like all of the victims of our every nonvegan consumer choice, are
sentient individuals, each one with her own mind and thoughts, her own
individuality, her own unique personality and preferences.
The prison than none can escape
Yet every single hen is locked within a prison.
That prison, that none can escape, is so much more insidious than the battery, the cage, the barn, the shed or the free-range, feel-good, family farm in which her use as an egg-layer takes place.
Every single hen remains locked within her individual prison, even in the ‘backyard’ setting; that ‘backyard’ so often extolled and promoted by those who continue to take the eggs from these gentle little birds; that fairy tale place that is mentioned in comments by those contradicting explanations of why eggs can never be ‘humane’ on every social media article I’ve ever read.
Her prison is completely inescapable, no matter how ‘loved’ she is, no matter how ‘free’ she is mistakenly thought to be, no matter how ‘wonderful’ the life that even her users would undoubtedly wish her to have.
For every single egg laying hen, her own body is her prison. From Eggs Hurt:
We hear from time to time that “happy hens lay eggs.”
No, all hens lay eggs. They lay eggs in cages, they lay eggs in ammonia-filled sheds, they lay eggs on their very deathbeds, because they have been genetically programmed to do so.
And we humans are still working on breeding ever more efficient egg-laying machines. Hens who lay earlier, with smaller bodies; Who require less food to pump out even bigger eggs. Hens who don’t take even a single break to renew their feathers (a natural and healthy process in birds–but one which requires the cessation of laying). We are still trying to squeeze every last penny we can out of their broken little bodies.
The heartbreak of sanctuary
There are vegans who rescue hens from use as egg-layers, who offer them
sanctuary and a life free from harm, with the freedom and the companionship
of their own kind so enjoyed by these sociable birds. Time and again, each
rescuer faces the inevitable heartbreak of helplessly witnessing death part
them from those whom they care for as the special and valued friends that
they are.
Each rescuer faces a battle they know they’re unlikely to win. Despite
feeding her eggs back to her to replace her body’s depleted nutrients and
despite providing the best medical care that can be found, few if any
rescued individuals will be unaffected by the consequences of our genetic
meddling; few if any, will enjoy the health that should be their birthright.
Most die young, their pitiful little bodies ravaged by disease and wracked
with pain.
From Sandra Higgins, Director, Eden Farmed Animal Sanctuary and Go Vegan World:
I have seen the light go out of too many eyes. Every one of them struggles to hold onto their precious only life, right until their last breath. A vegan world is only the starting point; our goal must be their freedom from us.
Not ours, not food
Every egg that is consumed by humans, regardless of where it was laid, perpetuates the use of eggs as an appropriate ‘food’ for humans. It is neither appropriate nor necessary.
Every egg use in which we participate, regardless of where the egg was laid, is predicated on a mistaken assumption that we have a right to take what is clearly not ours, no matter how we seek to justify and excuse that action.
Every egg use in which humans participate, is a statement that
we consider it acceptable to use other sentient individuals as nothing more
than a resource, and is a stamp of approval for others to do so.
Every egg use in which humans participate, ensures that because eggs are
viewed as an appropriate ‘food’ for our species, there will continue to be a
demand for these defenceless little individuals to be born into the
treacherous bodies that humans have created for them.
Human nature being what it is, it doesn’t matter how individuals seek to
claim ‘exceptional circumstances’ to cover their own personal exploitation,
egg production will continue on the current commercial scale because this is
most economically advantageous for a supply industry driven by consumer
demand. That demand will continue until consumers, as individuals, take
responsibility for their own actions and decide they no longer wish to
participate in the unspeakable practice of egg use, with the unthinkable
violence and atrocities that are an inherent part of the whole concept.
Will current breeds become extinct?
Often used as an attempt to justify the continuation of current use,
will current breeds become extinct when egg use by our species stops
and a vegan world dawns?
Do we truly need to ask whether these innocent victims, these man-made
creations who are powerless to escape the atrocity of their self-destructive
bodies, should be allowed to die out?
But since the question is frequently asked, I’ll answer. Yes. I hope with
all my heart that our victims will one day be allowed to become extinct.
It’s the only way they can ever escape the agony of what we have done to
them and for me the day cannot come quickly enough.
Be vegan.
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Animal Rights Articles
Read more at Egg Production