Karen Davis, President, UPC United Poultry
Concerns
July 2018
Camas Davis's interview consisted of clichés including how farmers and butchers are not “sentimental” but have “reverence” and “respect” for the animals they kill and cut up.

(Beth Clifton collage
Animals 24-7)
Camas Davis is the founder of the Portland Meat Collective which is part
of the “Ethical Meat Movement.” She was a guest yesterday on Terry Gross’s
Fresh Air on NPR where she described going from “righteous”
vegetarianism to a “hands-on relationship with food.” Her book is called
Killing It: An Education.
Her interview consisted of clichés including how farmers and butchers are
not “sentimental” but have “reverence” and “respect” for the animals they
kill and cut up. A dominant cliché of the ethical meat movement is how
considering an animal an IT fits with “respect” for the animal; and
“respect” for the animal means “using every part of it.”
Camas presents herself as a cultivated person for whom “we each have our own
narrative.” If you want to be a “righteous” vegetarian or vegan, that’s
cool, and so is shocking pigs with electricity and assuming that those
electrified things they clamp on the pigs’ heads to “stun” them are
“humane.” If not, well, “shit happens” is what her tone conveyed about her
attitude. She admitted that the electricity in those “head phones” doesn’t
always work, judged by the reaction of pigs whose behavior suggests that
they are, uh, suffering or stressed or something . . . Terry Gross piped up
with a reminder that the electric chair has been shown to torture human
victims, but that point was not pursued.
While Camas said that the “meat” one kills and consumes should be
“nutritious,” there was nothing that I can recall suggesting that she
slaughters and eats animals because she believes meat is necessary for
health or wellbeing. It is simply about food being “delicious” couched in
the relativity of “you have your narrative, I have mine.” There is no
chicken or pig “I” in her narrative; the animals are just grist for her
“personal thing.”
Every hesitation in her voice as she touched on aspects of her violence
sounded like an awareness that some listeners might be offended, rather than
that she felt any concern for the animals. Like many, in fact, she seemed
proud to narrate getting over whatever squeamishness (whether moral,
aesthetic, or both wasn’t clear) interfered initially with harming another
gratuitously without pity or guilt.
Scrambling the Reptilian Brain to Calm It Down
Toward the end of the interview, Terry Gross asked Camas what was the
first animal she killed with her own hands and she said a chicken. She
mumbled something about how chickens have a “reptilian brain” that causes
them to “calm down” (she obviously knows nothing about chicken cognition)
before you scramble their brains by sticking a knife through the roof of
their mouth.
To understand this procedure within the traditional slaughter process more
precisely, here is a summary from my book More Than a Meal: The Turkey in
History, Myth, Ritual, and Reality, pp. 64-65, based on the description in
Farm Poultry: A Popular Sketch of Domestic Fowls for the Farmer and Amateur,
published in 1901:
It is first necessary to suspend the birds in such a way that they will
not strike against each other or other hard object with their wings while
flopping and flapping, which can cause bruising and broken bones and
interfere with the killing. A common method of restraint and bleeding is to
suspend the bird in a metal funnel, or “killing cone,” with the head
protruding at the bottom, weighed down by a four-pound blood cup hooked to
the bird’s lower beak. The purpose of the blood cup is to “prevent the bird
from bending its neck and swallowing blood during the involuntary
convulsions subsequent to slaughter.”
In braining, the beak is pried open and a cut is made through the roof of
the mouth through a carotid artery or jugular vein to the base of the brain
with a knife, which can also be inserted through the bird’s lower eyelid to
the brain. The knife is then twisted in the brain to paralyze [not to stun,
i.e., anesthetize] the bird to facilitate immobilization and feather
release: “It is necessary that the brain be pierced with a knife so that the
muscles of the feather follicles are paralyzed, allowing the feathers to
come out more easily.”
This paralysis-inducing procedure with the knife is now done with
electricity in modern poultry slaughter plants following the introduction of
the electric shock method in the 1930s.
Like traditional as well as industrial slaughterers, Camas Davis falsely and
with willful ignorance or outright lying equates muscular paralysis of fully
conscious animals with “calmness.” In reality, the animal is in agony but
cannot express it due to the paralytic effect of the electricity or the
knife-braining which is done solely for the convenience of the killer and
the consumer and has nothing to do with rendering the animal unconscious or
pain-free or with showing compassion or being “humane.” As Virgil Butler,
who worked many years for Tyson in Arkansas, said of the chickens he killed:
“They have been ‘stunned,’ so their muscles don’t work, but their eyes do,
and you can tell by them looking at you that they’re scared to death.”
What can I do?
Share this post widely and encouraged others to join you in washing their hands forever of Killing IT.