On World Day for Farmed Animals, Let's Honor Who They Are
A Meat and Dairy Industries Article from All-Creatures.org

FROM Marc Bekoff, Psychology Today/Animal Emotions
October 2019

The amount of pain and suffering these animals endure is incalculable.... Slaughtering sentience: How much pain per pound do these animals suffer?

"Over 150 million animals are killed for food around the world every day—just on land. That comes out to 56 billion land animals killed per year in the U.S. alone. Including wild caught and farmed fishes, we get a daily total closer to 3 billion animals killed."

October 2 is World day for Farmed Animals. On the website for the annual recognition of what these billions of nonhuman animal (animal) beings go through at the hands of humans before they're brutally killed for unnecessary meals we read, "Each year, an estimated 70 billion cows, pigs, chickens, turkeys, and other sentient land-based animals are caged, crowded, deprived, drugged, mutilated and macerated in the world's factory farms. Then they are brutally slaughtered for our dinner table. Countless aquatic animals are caught and suffocated by vast trawler nets, so we can have our fish fillet or tuna fish salad." When fishes and other water animals are thrown into the equation—billions of these sentient beings also are farmed animals—the number easily swells to trillions of animal beings killed each year on food farms and in the wild.

Slaughtering sentience: How much pain per pound do these animals suffer?

"...the question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being?... The time will come when humanity will extend its mantle over everything which breathes..."
- Jeremy Bentham

It's a sad fact that the amount of pain and suffering these animals endure before they're killed truly is incalculable. So-called "food animals," including fishes and other aquatic animals, are intelligent and sentient, feeling beings. (See "It's Time to Stop Pretending Fishes Don't Feel Pain," When someone eats animals and animal products they're consuming a good deal of pain, suffering. While many people are led to believe that consuming dairy is okay because the animals are kept alive, dairy animals also deeply suffer when they're used and abused as "milk machines." (See "The Scary Facts of Dairy Violate the Five Freedoms" and "The Mistreatment of Female 'Food Cows' Includes Sexual Abuse.")

It's also important to recognize that "being smart" really isn't a factor in how much animals, including humans, suffer. It's what they feel that's important. (See, for example, "Are Pigs as Smart as Dogs and Does It Really Matter?" and references therein.) A young girl once asked me if so-called "food animals" suffer like her companion dog suffers when he's in pain. When I said, "Yes, they do," she blanched and almost started crying. At another talk I was asked, "How much pain per pound do these animals suffer?" and I said that it was really impossible to calculate any meaningful number but it's a good question to get discussions going about what these animal beings endure in their relatively short and horrific lives.

Those who choose to eat other animals and animal products also endure a good deal of cognitive dissonance. On many occasions I hear people lament something like, "Oh, I know they suffer but I really like my _____." You can fill in the blank with meat, beef, park, bacon, chicken, fish, lobster, and so on. (See "'Oh, I know animals suffer, but I love my steak'": The self-serving resolution of the 'meat paradox.'")

I often hear people say that farmed animals aren't treated all that badly, and that there are regulations and laws that adequately protect them. However, it's a fact that regulations and laws that supposedly protect farmed animals are incredibly weak and weakly enforced, and egregious violations are very common. Far too much lip service is given to protecting these amazing and fascinating animals. And, it's because people—including those who use them and eat them—know that there is incredible and inexcusable suffering among the trillions of food animals who wind up in humans' mouths, that regulations and laws exist in the first place. If these animals didn't suffer, there would be no reason to protect them. Current regulations allow for more than 1,100 pigs to be slaughtered per hour.

Even with iconic animal welfarist Dr. Temple Grandin's work to help farmed food animals along, the amount of pain and suffering farmed food animals endure is reprehensible, and, of course, avoidable. Only an extremely tiny percentage of these sentient being may, in fact, benefit, as they trod along her so-called "stairway to heaven" on their way to the killing floor while hearing, seeing, and smelling the slaughter of others. Their lives before their death sentence is actualized—right after birth, as they mature, and when they're shipped to slaughterhouses as if they're unfeeling objects—is inarguably brutally horrific. (See "Stairways to Heaven, Temples of Doom, and Humane-Washing" and "My Beef With Temple Grandin: Seemingly Humane Isn't Enough.")

The language we use to refer to other animals really matters. On World Day for Farmed Animals let's honor all nonhumans who are used for food. It's really a matter of who we eat, rather than what we eat, when it comes to the sentient nonhumans who wind up in our mouths. A few years ago. after I gave talk and asked people to consider who they are choosing to eat rather than what they were eating, I learned that five people changed their meal plans because the word who made them realize "they were eating pain and suffering."

Asking people to change their meal plans isn't some sort of "radical animal rights" move as some claim it to be. In fact, it's all about decency. It's about showing respect and compassion and honoring who these individuals really are, namely, deeply feeling, sentient beings. We need a Golden Rule for how we treat other animals based on decency, Silence isn't golden, it's deadly.

It's high time to phase out food animals and animal products once and for all. All of these animal beings need all the help they can get and then some. World Day for Farmed Animals is a perfect time to honor and to respect who these fascinating beings truly are.



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