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We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals.
About think Differently Immanuel Kant
About Sheep
...the deer, the horse, the great eagle, these are our brothers. The rocky
Sentient Sheep crests, the juices in the meadows, the body heat of the pony and man--all
belong to the same family... The White Man must treat the beasts of this land
Sheep in religion and as his brothers.
mythology Chief Seattle (c.1786-1866)
Sheep in Art
Why do animals rights matter. Why should we treat animals differently, with
Sheep Breeds
respect and with the recognition that they too have the right to life? Why is it
Liberate our Sheep important to review the way we think about the creatures with whom we share
this world, particularly the animals which we use and abuse for food, clothing,
Vegetarianism/veganism
labour and entertainment.
Animal Rights
The human animal is a very inconsistent creature in many ways and none more
Animal Rights and Why
so than his attitude to his fellow creatures. Animals do appear to matter to
they Matter
man but sadly only certain animals, pets such as cats and dogs and to a lesser
Sentience in Farm degree rabbits, guinea pigs, rats, caged birds and fish in tanks. Man's most
animals favoured animal, at least here in the west is his dog, a creature less highly
Why Animals matter: favoured and even consumed in other parts of the world. Why is a dog or a cat
A Religious and so well favoured as opposed to a pig, a creature of equal intelligence and in
Philosophical perspective many ways more like us than your dog or cat. In fact if handled affectionately
Farm Animal Facts a adult pig will become just as friendly as your pet dog who has always been
with the family.
Photograph Gallery
So why is one animal, the dog, a much loved pet while another animal, the pig,
Art Gallery
a much despised, abused and exploited creature? Why is one animal, the most
Clip art favoured of all pets, treated with compassion, invited into our homes, fed and
sheltered, cared for and much loved while the other is confined to a cage
Quotations
(which in reality is how most pigs spend their lives on factory farms in pens
Portrait Gallery: Animals with no room to turn round) force fed with antibiotics, the sow treated as a
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do Not all Look the Same breeding machine, her offspring slaughtered at two to four months of age as
she herself will be when she has outlived her usefulness, used in experiments
Links
and as a source of spare parts.
Useful Links: Action You
Can Take Both animals are like us, mammals, both are intelligent sentient beings capable
of feeling pain and pleasure, both are friendly social animals. And as already
Contact
mentioned pigs are very much like us in so many ways, if this where not so
they would not be used as spare parts in heart surgery procedures. So why do
we love and respect our dog more than a pig? Why is it cruel to mistreat a dog
yet okay to mistreat a pig? Both feel pain in the same way as each other as
indeed do we. If its cruel to inflict pain or confine your dog in a cage where he
cannot turn round and slaughter him for food, why is it not considered cruel to
do so to a pig? Can you imagine what the RSPCA would do if you treated your
dog in the same way as a pig or other farm animal is treated? You would not be
allowed to confine your dog in a dark shed where he would never see the light
of day, in a cage where he could not turn round until he became infected and
bleed from sores caused by rubbing against the bars, cried in pain and went
mad due to lack of stimulation, and finally herded into a lorry taken many
miles in extremes of temperature to be slaughtered quite often fully conscious.
Yet this kind of treatment, and even worse, happens to pigs and other farm
animals day in and day out.
Sheep, cows and poultry are also similar to dogs and cats in many ways and in
the right circumstances can be as social and interactive as your cat or dog as
you will see from the story below
Piggy, a pig of course, Audrey and Sybil who where lambs all became close
friends, although there was a more close friendship between Audrey and Piggy.
However this story concerns Audrey and Sybil. In her book , The secret life of
Cows Rosamond Young tells this story of how Audrey rescues Sybil from
drowning.
While in the kitchen one day I heard a very loud banging noise at the back
door; a really fierce, repeated relentless rapping. As I rushed to open the door I
realised that the banging was accompanied by a strident and persistent baaing.
It was Audrey knocking with her foot. When she saw me she baaed even louder
and ran to the lawn, stopped, looked at me, ran towards me, calling, ran away
agitated, trying Lassie-like to make me follow. We ran down the lawn,
jumped the stream, scrambled up the back and I found myself standing on the
edge of the swimming pool where Sybil was swimming round and round, totally
unable to do anything but swim. I jumped straight in to rescue her, put my
arms round her and realised that the dry lamb that I could carry now had a
sodden fleece and was much too heavy for me to lift up the steep sides of the
half full pool.
Rosamond did successfully rescue Sybil but they needed assistance so both she
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and Audrey cried out both together and in turn. Thanks to the actions of Sybil,
Audrey was saved. Doesn't this rather remind you of many similar stories of
rescues involving dogs, in the extract above the author compares Audrey's
behaviour to that of Lassie.
You would not eat your dog or cat yet few people see any incongruity about
eating a pig or a lamb. Yet both pigs and sheep make good pets. In a village in
Sussex where we once lived some years ago there was a lady who had a pet
sheep and she interacted with this sheep in the way more conventional pet
owners interact with their cat or dog. As is the case of the lamb who was
rescued from abandonment in a field and thereafter raised as a pet. Rescued
sheep raised as pet My husband and I often feed local sheep in a nearby field
who are clearly pets, “much loved” as the owner once explained. These sheep
recognise you, they interact with you.
Many people have birds as pets. What is the difference between a parrot and a
turkey or chicken? You would not dream of roasting your pet budgie would you,
so why sit down at Christmas time and eat a roast turkey? Did you know that a
chicken can be just as friendly as your cat or dog if given the chance? Many
people keep chickens as pets, turkeys also.
As I sit at my desk this morning, a large white rooster and two sturdy brown
hens are traipsing through the grass outside my window. Watching them I agree
with chicken keeper Dorothy English of Illinois who says that "People who just
have lawn ornaments are really missing out."
People who know chickens would agree. Some grew up with chickens on farms,
others got to know them in suburban settings. New York attorney, Barbara
Monroe, had never really seen a chicken till her daughter bought a baby white
leghorn rooster from a peddler. To her, "The most amazing thing about Lucie is
the way he's adapted to suburban life," sitting in a car like a person or on the
sofa watching TV with the family. Merry Caplan of Louisiana got a chicken by
surprise one day when a neighbor brought her a fuzzy black baby bird who
made a beautiful trilling sound. For a while Merry didn't know if she had a
rooster or a hen. She carried "Charlie" in her pocket, tucking her into a shoe
box at night where "She continued her beautiful song and chirped herself to
sleep."
How did Celeste Albritton of Texas meet Cluck Cluck? "I never dreamed of
having a companion chicken till one day a dog drug this chicken home. She was
hurt, so Mom and I took care of her till she was well. Now she's part of our
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family." Celeste and Merry both got roosters for their hens. Cluck Cluck has
Chick Chick and Charlie has Chuck, who Merry says, "Sits next to her while she
lays her egg and announces the event with a series of cock-a-doodle- doos!"
Extract: Chicken Companions by Karen Davis, Ph.D. Please read the complete
article:
United Poultry Concerns Chicken Companions
It is possible to think lambs the cutest things ever and then go and eat a lovely
lamb dinner overlooking a field of them
Jo Homer: Observations on the United Kingdom
In spring there are lamb feeding open days in farms where visitors are invited
to feed the lambs, and afterwards often the same people will in all probably sit
down to a meal lured by the promotional slogan of fresh local lamb in a nearby
pub or cafe and think nothing of it. Children, and adults too, love animated TV
shows about farm animals for instance Wallace and Grommet and the spin off
Shaun the sheep yet sit down to a meal of lamb. Enter sheep or any other farm
animal in the search field in Amazon or other on line book retailer and you will
notice many cute books for children where the character is a sheep or cow or
chicken. Animated films and cartoons such as Bugs Bunny, Donald duck and in
more recent years the ever popular animated films about chickens: Chicken
little and Chicken run. The later is a humorous story about a group of farm
chickens who escape thier coop before their owners Mr and Mrs Tweedy plan to
turn them into pies because they are not making enough money from the sale
of their eggs. I can well imagine that after taking the kids to a showing at the
local cinema the whole family stops off at Kentucky Fried Chicken whose
establishments are often close by cinemas without any qualms whatsoever as
though the incongruity does not exist.
Every year at Easter time Asda sell a cute cuddly soft toy lamb while in the
adjacent isle you may buy dead lamb in the form of chops, legs, stew. Yet
another incongruity that few appear to notice
“Why does Sea World have a seafood restaurant?? I'm halfway through my fish
burger and I realize, Oh my God....I could be eating a slow learner.”
Lynda Montgomery
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In one shop in the Yorkshire dales you can buy soft cuddly toys of sheep right
along side decorated lamp shades made from the skins of sheep or cattle as are
shoes, handbags, belts, and purses all of which are on sale here. In the dales
and similar areas of intensive sheep farming you will find post cards, greetings
cards, clothes with sheep designs, cute little cartoon sheep, photos of lambs
and calves, all sorts of paraphernalia you can image. You can collect a whole
series of ornamental sheep of many different breeds, along with a sheep dog, a
border collie, even a sheep dog feeding a baby lamb holding the bottle in his
mouth. Oh how cute! you can see it in the faces of people who admire, buy and
collect these items.
Yet behind this idyllic and incongruous facade is the grim reality of much abuse
exploitation and suffering. Sheep live wretched lives, many die of exposure and
pneumonia in fields or worse on the hills and mountains in the north without
shelter, ram lambs are slaughtered within a couple of weeks after birth, ewe
lambs not needed for reproduction are taken from their mothers at four months
old, sometimes after only a few weeks to provide lamb for Easter, herded into
a lorry and taken to the slaughter house. Of the millions of sheep slaughtered
(16 million in 2003 in the UK alone) 4 million stunned before slaughter will
regain consciousness.
"Viva! estimates that 4 million may regain consciousness each year before they
die and we have video footage showing sheep regaining consciousness as they
bleed to death. If only one carotid artery is cut, sheep may not be dead after
the required 20 second bleed out time and they will therefore be skinned
alive."
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Hope you see here what I am getting at. Isn't it bizarre. How can we have such
found feeling towards creatures we abuse and or use even those of the same
species and breed. Why is it okay to treat a collie dog badly if he is used for
labour, exploit him and in my opinion mistreat him, but not okay to treat a
similar animal of the same breed in a neglectful manner if he is a pet ? What do
you imagine would happen if your neighbour kept a collie dog in plain view
outside his home in all weathers only unleashing him when his services where
required. I doubt very much if there RSPCA would refuse to take action. The
RSPCA are an excellent charity for the protection and welfare of animals but
still they are only human and like any other human, they may fail to see such
incongruities. In the above incident I got the distinct impression that the
person I spoke to agreed with me on the matter, but of course was restricted
by law from taking further action. The RSPCA can only act within the remit of
the law. You will find that there are many antiquated laws concerning animal
welfare here in the UK. It is only recently that here fox hunting has been
banned, yet other types of hunting still take place. Millions of peasants are
reared each year simply as targets for those warped individuals who think it is
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If you love animals called pets, why do you eat animals called dinner?
As seen on a shirt at veganstore.com
Why is one animal more important than another ? Why do we love our cats,
dogs and our budgie in some cases as much or even more than another human
being but care nothing for other animals, eating their flesh, using them as a
commodity, as entertainment or labour or to conduct experiments upon ? I
would imagine that many RSPCA and other members of animal rescue
organisations, vets and others involved in animal welfare go home at the end of
the day to eat a meal comprised of meat, possibly a pig, an animal more
intelligent than most of the animals that they have tried to rescue, and will
not see any incongruity. Likewise many scientists who experiment on animals,
and yes here dogs are included in such cruel painful experiments, have a pet
dog who they consider as sentient, a friend, a family member. Yet when it
comes to their work they mistreat a similar creature and cause him extreme
suffering.
To my mind all animals are equal, all creatures are important, all have a right
to life and to be treated with respect as thinking feeling sentient beings.
Those who wish to pet and baby wild animals "love" them. But those who
respect their natures and wish to let them live normal lives, love them more.
Edwin Way Teale, Circle of the Seasons,
So why is animal rights important for all animals not simply those that man
takes into his home as pets for reasons mostly of a selfish nature. Certainly the
lot of a pet is better than that of a farm animal but often his or her life is not
without difficulty. Many dogs are trapped indoors all day unable to perform
natural bodily functions while owners go to work. Still others suffer rough
handing from young and even older children, some may be deliberately
neglected. It's getting increasingly common to hear the term house cat in
much the same way as one would say house plant. I know two people who have
so called house cats, the animal is provided with a litter, his entire existence
consists of confinement in the house, he is never allowed out of doors, never
feels the warmth of the sun or enjoys any other activity that is natural to the
behaviours of a cat, even a domesticated cat who was once allowed to freely
roam. People confine their cat fearing harm coming to their so called beloved
pets such as traffic accidents, animal cruelty, or even capture for
experimentation. But consider would we do this to our children because we
loved them and do not want harm to come to them, of course not.
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One day, we would like an end to pet shops and the breeding of animals.
[Dogs] would pursue their natural lives in the wild ... they would have full
lives, not wasting at home for someone to come home in the evening and pet
them and then sit there and watch TV.
Ingrid Newkirk
Why are there so many inconsistencies in our attitudes and behaviours towards
our fellow creatures? The main problem is that plain and simply we do not
think, few people analyse the situation. By force of habit the same atrocities
towards our fellow creatures continue questioned only by the relative few, who
see past cultural upbringing. Adherence to the force of habit without
questioning it, let alone breaking it is the greatest impediment to change, to
leaving behind barbarous behaviours which we cannot condone or allow to
continue if we wish to really be described as a humane and civilised society.
Indeed there are many independent thinkers, who, rather like I, began to feel
unease and began to question beliefs that have been drummed into us for
generations and which are promoted by the meat and dairy industry whose only
motivation of course is profit, the rearing of animals for meat and other
products has nothing to do with providing food to the world’s vast populations.
We need to question question question both our habits and our thinking.
While we ourselves are the living graves of murdered beasts, how can we
expect any ideal conditions on this earth?
George Bernard Shaw
Why do all animals matter without discrimination as all humans matter without
discrimination? Why should we treat all animals with whom we share this world
differently than we do at the present time, in a more respectful humane
manner allowing them to live out the natural duration of their lives without
detrimental interference? I believe that we should provide medical care and
other aid to animals in much the same was as we do, or should do, with our
fellow human beings, although sadly in the case of our own species this is not
always so. Having the capabilities and resources, we have a moral and ethical
duty to do so.
What needs to be done to improve the way we see animals and the way we
behave towards them? How can we begin to treat animals better than we do
now, in a more compassionate way allowing them to live out the natural extent
of their lives? Why should we stop eating the flesh of other sentient beings or
exploiting them in other ways for labour, entertainment and for use in
experimentation? Why is it unethical? Ask yourself why you eat meat, drink
milk, consume eggs.
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Here I will tempt to focus on the reasons why we need to treat animals more
humanly and what may be done to bring this about.
Animals are sentient in a similar way to humans: animals fear death, like you
or I they wish to live, and animals experience pain; both emotional and
physical. Furthermore we should treat animals more humanely because it is
ethical to do so, for instance harming animals encourages violence and cruelty
towards humans also.
Sentience
People must have renounced, it seems to me, all natural intelligence to dare
to advance that animals are but animated machines.... It appears to me,
besides, that [such people] can never have observed with attention the
character of animals, not to have distinguished among them the different
voices of need, of suffering, of joy, of pain, of love, of anger, and of all their
affections. It would be very strange that they should express so well what they
could not feel. Voltaire, Traité sur la tolerance
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The soul is the same in all living creatures, although the body of each is
different.
Hippocrates
We need to treat animals more humanely simply because they are living beings.
I and many others including scientists believe that animals are sentient beings,
they are conscious, aware of themselves, others and their environment. And
this as already stated applies also to farm animals. As already mentioned most
people will agree that their pet dog or cat is sentient. Consider that both a dog
and a pig are mammals, if a dog is sentient it is likely a pig is also. So why do
we feel its okay to eat a pig but not our dog. Pigs are so like dogs to the extent
they can be house trained just like your dog. Often you hear of a dog rescuing
someone or getting help.
Well here is a story about a pig who saved a boy from drowning.
“A young pig in the UK was being taken for a walk by her caregiver. During the
walk the voice of a small boy was heard screaming for help in a nearby river.
Immediately the pig pulled free from her guardian, leash trailing, and dove
into the river. She swam out to the boy and continued to circle him until he
grabbed the leash. The boys weight dragged both him and the pig under water,
and the crowd on shore gasped with horror. But sure enough a few seconds
later both their heads popped above the surface as the little pig swam
furiously towards shore towing the boy behind her. Exhausted, both the boy
and the pig made it safely to shore where waiting onlookers wept with joy.
And to think that this little pig was slated for the slaughter house.”
Extract from Canada Earth Saver article: Farm Animals not so different
http://www.earthsave.ca/archives/2006_0304.pdf
Many people have observed that their dog or cat has different moods and that
he or she may be depressed as the dog described in the section on Animal
Sentience . Pigs, like your cat or dog, have similar moods and are indeed very
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susceptible to depression
Sheep also are similar to humans. When one of their family goes missing sheep
will actively seek him or her out just as we do. Sheep bleat in distress when
they cannot find a friend or when a ewe loses a lamb other members of the
flock come to give comfort. The same behaviour is common in cattle and pigs.
And indeed poultry, a goose who loses a partner will pine for days and become
depressed just like a human being.
In all animals including ourselves of course the instinct for survival is strong.
Abraham Lincoln once said concerning the killing of ants that the life of an ant
is as precious to the ant as the life of a human being is to him or her.
Now the wisdom of this statement or others like it has nothing to do with
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religion so please do not be put off if you are not religiously inclined, with or
without a religious context such observations are reasonable and most relevant
concerning our attitude towards animals . We should treat animals with respect
and not harm them in any way because they are like us, and like us they simply
wish to live.
All animals fear death, if they did not they would not survive for long, all
creatures fear pain and avoid contact with situations and things in their
environment that bring about pain. The avoidance of both death and pain are
instinctive in all animals including man. All animals feel pain, all experience
the flight or fight response, a survival mechanism triggered by fear.
Thankfully it is recognised that animals experience pain and this is the reason
that in most countries there are laws to protect animals from basic blatant
cruelty. Sadly though these laws do no go far enough and often farm animals
are excluded. The recent EU protocol which recognises that animals are
sentient may result in some modification concerning the treatment of farm
animals, improving conditions for them and treating them more humanely,
however it does not go far enough. This is yet another example of our
inconsistency, while this recognition is of course a good beginning, it appears
incongruous that having recognised that farm animals are sentient to than
continue to breed and slaughter them for food ! To my way of thinking breeding
animals for slaughter is cruel, inhumane, an atrocity; there is nothing humane
about causing the death of another creature, it is the ultimate act of profound
cruelty to rob a creature of his existence however "humanely" this act is carried
out, moreover there is no way to kill any animal without causing him pain and
distress. Even if factory farming was abolished, and despite the EU protocol
there is no indication of this happening, it is still cruel to confine animals, steal
their eggs or the milk that is meant for their calves, determine their lives,
when the will conceive and when they will die or enslave them in a life of
labour for instance to round up sheep, or to provide us with entertainment such
as race horses and racing dogs or for use in experiments. No the only humane
treatment of animals is to allow them to live out their lives the way nature
intended without detrimental interference.
It is at the very least accepted in scientific circles that all creatures man,
dogs, pigs, sheep, cows, poultry, all feel pain both physical and emotional as
do fish and indeed invertebrates often not equated with sentience or even the
capacity to feel pain; crustaceans for example are capable of feeling pain,
experience distress and fear.
Read about how animals experience stress and fear: Animal rights
We need to treat animals as we would treat each other because animals like us
feel pain
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“Never believe that animals suffer less than humans. Pain is the same for
them that it is for us. Even worse, because they cannot help themselves.”
Dr. Louis J. Camuti
Ethics
"The person who kills for fun is announcing that, could he get away with it,
he'd kill you for fun. Your...life may be of no consequence to anyone else but
is invaluable to you because it's the only one you've got. Exactly the same is
true of each individual deer, hare, rabbit, fox, fish, pheasant and butterfly.
Humans should enjoy their own lives, not take others."
Brigid Brophy
I recall during a discussion with a Buddhist I remarked that I did not kill even an
ant and that killing any creature was one step closer to killing a human being.
This statement was met with complete agreement. However one does not have
to be religious to know this, it is common sense surely. Violence, killing,
cruelty on any level all becomes easier the more it is practised; the more a
person kills another being whether man or animal the easier it is to kill another
time. To kill thousands of animals day after day becomes a callous act which
breeds other callous acts. How can we expect a peaceful harmonious world
while we kill other creatures who have as much right as do we to their lives.
Killing taints the soul for want of a better word. This is not a religious
discussion or consideration for indeed many religions advocate the killing and
eating of other creatures, no this is an animal rights issue, a matter of
conscience which is independent of religious belief or otherwise, a simple
matter of right and wrong which in my opinion is not dependent on religious
belief. I am agnostic so this is not a religious issue for me although many
religious ideas may be relevant as mentioned earlier. The word soul is used
here for want of a more appropriate word, we could say instead the killing of
thousands of creatures everyday causes psychological damage for a less
religious connotation. The point is violence breeds violence it taints you as a
person. I can't image associating with anyone who quite readily day after day
works in a slaughter house, sees the innocent face of a tiny timid lamb for
example and goes on to take his or her life with out a tinge of guilt or regret
and with callus disregard.
Animals should be treated differently than they are at present, treated with
humanity and compassion as one would treat another human being because it is
ethical to do so.
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"I could not have slept tonight if I had left that helpless little creature to
perish on the ground." (Reply to friends who chided him for delaying them by
stopping to return a fledgling to its nest.)
Abraham Lincoln.
Until we have the courage to recognize cruelty for what it is - whether its
victim is human or animal - we cannot expect things to be much better in this
world... We cannot have peace among men whose hearts delight in killing any
living creature. By every act that glorifies or even tolerates such moronic
delight in killing we set back the progress of humanity.
Rachel Carson
Here I will focus on farm animals, in time in a separate article I will discuss the
plight of other types of animal abuse such as animals used for labour and
entertainment and experimentation.
Concerning farm animals, we need to examine our behaviours and our thinking,
we need to think differently about creatures we have designated as sources of
food, food which we no longer need and which causes the destruction of the
rain forest and contributes to world hunger all to provide the richer countries
with meat. We need to examine the idyllic imagine that many people have of
farms and to see the reality.
Again question, question, question, educate yourself, find out how the food you
eat at arrives on your table
Ask yourself can a so called civilised country condone such cruelty to sentience
beings, creatures who experience pain and fear.
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Please read this account, it is horrifying, shocking; but if you eat meat you
should know the extent of the suffering involved for these sentient, sensitive
and intelligent creatures:
"What’s that noise?” asked John, the high-screech pitch too unimaginable to
ignore. We were on the offside of a slaughter plant wall. He cupped his hands
over his ears to give himself an impossible reprieve.
I could tell he didn’t understand. I hadn’t understood the first time I’d heard
them, either.
We climbed on lidded barrels to peer over the wall: in every direction, as far
as the eye could see, there were pigs: pigs on top of pigs, crammed into cross-
fenced pens by the thousands, like dead sardines in tin cans. The odor they
emitted was almost unbearable, of feces and urine; from the dark-walled
interior building, the pungent stench of blood invaded our nostrils.
Right on cue, from the depth of the building’s interior, a screaming pig could
be heard and I could see the animal, the way I once had: pushed onto a moving
conveyor belt that would take it to the stunning tongs. Once there, the plant
man would grab the pig’s head in the giant vice the way one would lift lettuce
from a salad bowl. A painful current of electricity would surge through the
animal’s body, stunning it just enough — or so it is hoped — to render it
unconscious before the pig reaches the throat-cutting blade.."
You have just dined, and however scrupulously the slaughterhouse is concealed
in the graceful distance of miles, there is complicity.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ask yourself why you eat meat, drink milk, and consume eggs.
There are many reasons why people consume meat and other animal products.
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Many people will argue that eating meat is natural and that we ourselves are
an animal and therefore like any other animal we consume meat; this notion is
a fallacy, I will discuss this issue in more detail later. Despite evidence that
eating meat is not healthy the erroneous belief persists that without meat it is
not possible to be adequately nourished, yet another misconception. Many
people eat meat because of religious belief that God created animals for us to
eat. Many people simply eat meat or consume dairy products and eggs because
they have always done so simply without thinking from force of habit. The
consumption of animals foods often continues because of ignorance concerning
how animals are treated.
Lets look more closely at some of these reasons why people eat animal
products
Consider for instance why we drink milk, after weaning all mammals stop
drinking milk, that is with the exception of human beings who continue to drink
milk and moreover the milk of another species. How many other animals except
the cat whom we give milk, drinks the milk of another species or drinks any
kind of milk after weaning. Is it unnatural? Of course it is. Milk is meant to feed
a baby animal until he or she is able to take solids. The milk of each animal has
evolved to meet the needs of that particular creature. Cows milk for instance
is meant to support the growth of a large muscular creature not a relatively
weak, and in comparison to cattle, frail animal, man. No wonder obesity
flourishes in the west, overweight is not the problem in Asian countries where
dairy products are not part of the diet.
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They eat a diet high in wild hunted meats and have the worst life expectancy
in the modern world. Life expectancy is 45 years for women and 42 years for
men. African researchers report that historically Maasai rarely lived beyond
age 60. Adult mortality figures on the Kenyan Maasai show that they have a
50% chance of dying before the age of 59.2
Joel Fuhrman MD Reffering to the high meat-consuming Maasa in Kenya.
We are told that man is an omnivore. I learnt this in "o" level biology and
believed it! but consider, do we really have the anatomy of an omnivore,
moreover an omnivore whose diet is predominately carnivorous, do we have
sharp teeth or claws to shred meat. A carnivore such as a lion has sharp claws
and teeth to shred meat and she is equipped with such to catch and kill her
own meat and needs no tool or implement to do so such as a gun or spear.
Could you tear meat with your smooth even teeth, raw meat that is ? Could you
kill an animal with your bear hands and shred his flesh to eat ? No of course not
because evolution did not design our bodies to be either carnivores or
omnivores. Consider can you eat meat without cooking it? Most certainly not. If
it was natural for us to eat meat would we need to cook it first? Man is the only
animal who cooks his meat. We have not evolved to eat meat. After all we
evolved from herbivores did we not, more about this further down, it is
difficult to imagine that evolution would have developed our organism from
that of an herbivore towards that of a carnivore.
Such obvious facts, at least in retrospect, are rarely considered, yet Plutarch
the first centaury Greek historian, biographer and essayist commenting on the
argument that the eating of meat was not natural wrote:
...its is absurd for them to say that the practice of flesh eating is based on
nature. For that man is not naturally carnivorous is, in the first place, obvious
from the structure of his body. A man's frame is in no way similar to those
creatures who were made for flesh eating: he has no hooked beak or sharp
nails or jagged teeth, no strong stomach or warmth of vital fluids able to
digest and assimilate a heavy diet of flesh. It is from this very fact, the
evenness of our teeth, the smallness of our mouths, the softness of our
tongues, our possession of vital fluids too inert to digest meat that Nature
disavows our eating of flesh. If you declare that you are naturally designed for
such a diet, than first kill for yourself what you want to eat. Do it, however,
only though your own resources, unaided by cleaver or cudgel of any kind or
axe. Rather just as wolves and bears and lions themselves slay what they want
to eat, so you are to fell an ox with your fangs or a boar with your jaws, or
tear a lamb or hare to bits. Fall upon it, and eat it still living as animals do.
But if you wait for what you eat to be dead, if you have qualms about enjoying
the flesh while life is still present, why do you continue, contrary to nature, to
eat what possesses life? Even when it is lifeless and dead, however, no one
eats the flesh just as it is ; men boil it and roast it, altering it by fire and
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drugs, recasting and diverting and smothering with countless condiments the
taste of gore so that the palate may be deceived and accept what is foreign to
it.
The extract above from Plutarch's essay On the Eating of Flesh was quoted in:
Ethical Vegetarianism From Pythagoras to Peter Singer, Edited by Kerry. S
Walker and Lisa Portmess.
So why did humans go from a herbivorous diet to an omnivorous diet, the main
component of which is carnivorous, the consumption of meat?
One theory which we may consider is that humans began to eat meat not
through any natural impulse but because of a necessity. Famines may well have
been responsible for man becoming omnivorous, which for example may well
have been responsible for the varied diet of the Chinese. At periods throughout
the history of China, including the 1950s, millions died of starvation. Trees
where stripped bare of leaves and not a blade of grass could be seen so severe
was the shortage of food. From sheer necessity some of the varied, and to our
concept, unusual food consumed in China may well have been introduced this
way, such as tiny birds similar to those you see in your garden, insects,
including caterpillars and grasshoppers, and even dogs. I consider that scarcity
of food was perhaps the most likely reason man went from an herbivore to an
omnivore and in Palaeolithic times most likely during the winter months man
became entirely carnivorous perhaps eating meat due to the absence of
anything else. It is now widely accepted that man evolved in Africa and
migrated to other regions. During the winter in cooler climes before man took
up cultivation and farming there would not have been the vegetation to sustain
them.
Another theory as to why man changed his natural diet may simply be from
choice, observing that other creatures consumed meat man may have thought
to do likewise much like we today introduce new foods into our diet. Here in
the UK in the last few decades our eating habits have changed due to cultural
influences particularly from India and other places from where there has been a
significant number of immigrants.
Now this time has passed, and man is able to provide enough plant based food
to feed the entire world and the need to eat meat is no longer necessary, and
it is a fact that doing so now actually results in other humans starving to
death. Again it is all a matter of thinking differently and considering that in
basic terms many people simply consume animal products from an habit of
extremely long standing, one most likely only undertaken in the very distant
past to stop starvation but which now helps to cause it.
Moreover the erroneous concept that man is a natural meat eater may well
have become entrenched in our culture as a result of religious influences.
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Generally accepted in the theory of evolution is the concept of man the hunter,
yet this idea may well have arisen from Judeo-Christian beliefs.
"It developed from a basic ideology of man being inherently evil, aggressive
and a natural killer. In fact, when you really examine the fossil and living
non-human primate evidence, that is just not the case."
You wouldn't know it by current world events, but humans actually evolved to
be peaceful, cooperative and social animals.
In his latest book, an anthropologist at Washington University in St. Louis goes
against the prevailing view and argues that primates, including early humans,
evolved not as hunters but as prey of many predators, including wild dogs and
cats, hyenas, eagles and crocodiles...
It was not possible for early humans to consume a large amount of meat until
fire was controlled and cooking was possible. Sussman points out that the first
tools didn't appear until two million years ago. And there wasn't good evidence
of fire until after 800,000 years ago. "In fact, some archaeologists and
palaeontologists don't think we had a modern, systematic method of hunting
until as recently as 60,000 years ago," he says.
It is often argued that other primates eat meat. But consider the diet of a
chimpanzee which is about 95-99 percent vegetables. No, the other small non
vegetable percentage is not meat, its termites. Yes a termite is an animal and I
am not implying that termites are not animals, or that they are not sentient or
intelligent. I am simply saying that a termite is not meat in quite the same way
as a pig or a sheep and cannot therefore constitute an omnivorous diet in
itself.
Primates are intelligent creatures able to make choices much as we are and the
addition of termites in their diet rather like the addition of meat in ours may
simply have been included from necessity of food shortage or simply choice,
but is not necessarily natural. It is in any case a great leap to say that because
chimpanzees eat termites that they are omnivorous.
The issue relating to why man is not naturally omnivorous is a huge subject and
requires an article of its own. It seems rather superfluous for me to write more
on this matter as you can read an excellent in-depth article about this subject.
Here is an extract from the article: Eating meat isn't natural Why humans are
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Concerning the arguments that are often presented to justify the consumption
of meat as a natural food source for man:
"A fair look at the evidence shows that humans are optimized for eating
plant foods, and not meat.
Consider:
Longevity & health: The more meat we eat, the sicker we get. Meat is
poison to us. It's the primary reason we get heart disease, cancer,
diabetes, osteoporosis, and every other major degenerative disease. If
eating meat were natural, it wouldn't destroy our health.
We'll look at these in more detail later, but for now here's a preview:
Our early ancestors from at least four million years ago were almost
exclusively vegetarian.
The animals most similar to us, the other primates, eat an almost
exclusively vegetarian diet (and their main non-plant food often isn't
meat, it's termites).
Our teeth, saliva, stomach acid, and intestines are most similar to other
plant-eaters, and dissimilar to carnivores.
Plant-eaters have the longest lifespans, and humans are in that category
(and yes, this was true even before modern medicine).
We sleep about the same amount of time as other herbivores, and less
than carnivores and true omnivores.
Please read the complete article it will change your thinking about the common
misconception concerning our assumed need to eat meat.
Consider whenever you are advised about healthy eating that much of the
dietary advice is published by those with an interest other than your health,
this interest of course is mostly profit. Recall the advertising in the sixties, if
you are the appropriate age you may recall here in the UK the slogan "Go to
walk on an Egg" the implication that eggs are healthy. And also the promotion
of milk and the advice to drink a pint a day. Can't imagine such an advertising
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campaign now can you with the connection between high cholesterol and eggs.
But still the notion that diary and meat are important to an healthy diet
continues, its has become so entrenched in our culture that still the majority
never question it, particularly here in the Northeast UK, where still many
people use lard to cook their meals and where obesity is the highest in the
country.
Also consider that even if we had evolved to become omnivorous this does not
mean we have to continue to be so nor does it give us license to factory farm
sentient beings. People live healthy lives without eating meat. The promotion
of health and its dependence up eating meat and other animal products is the
most tired excuse of them all that people present to justify including meat in
their diet and one that really is no longer valid as all the proteins, minerals and
other nutrients are so easily available in a variety of alternative food.
It is mostly only people in the west and other affluent countries who consume
meat, the production of which is not only at the expense of the lives of other
creatures but also at the expense of other people in poorer countries. Read the
thought provoking article: Meat = Death The insanity of the 'traditional' diet
essay-meat=death
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remove their wool, but this is not a natural occurrence in the evolution of
sheep but rather the result of selective breeding as indeed is the existence of
woolly sheep: before man's intervention sheep had mostly hair or kemp
intermixed with wool.
Educate yourself concerning the attitude of the factory farming industry which
has led to shocking abuse and cruelty, cruelty far beyond that which many
people would imagine, not only here in the UK and in similar western countries
but throughout the entire world. The industry does not consider these animals
as sentient feeling beings who experience pain both emotional and physical.
Here are statements made by those in the factory farming industry made about
animals:
Forget the pig is an animal. Treat him just like a machine in a factory.
Schedule treatments like you would lubrication. Breeding season like the first
step in an assembly line. And marketing like the delivery of finished goods.
pigs
The breeding sow should be thought of, and treated as, a valuable piece of
machinery whose function is to pump out baby pigs like a sausage machine.”
L. J. Taylor, export development manager for the Wall’s Meat Company, Ltd.,
National Hog Farmer, 1978
Poultry
Sheep
“Sheep farming, like most agriculture, has become agribusiness and not just a
way of life. We must be concerned with the amount and quality of the saleable
product produced from our basic production units. In sheep farming, the basic
production units are the ewes. . . . We don’t need large beautiful fat happy
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ewes that only produce one lamb a year. We need ewes that will provide us an
adequate gross income to cover all our costs and then some.”
— D. E. Hogue, Animal Scientist
Cattle
Quotations are from SentientBeings.org - Industry's Attitude where you will find
a selection of similar quotations concerning the industry's attitude to farm
animals.
One of the most ludicrous objections is the argument when considering animal
sentience, which in turn leads to the consideration of animal rights, is that
animals are all alike. Despite the fact that this is most certainly not true -
similar statements when applied to humans is considered racism, and this
argument has been used also to justify the suppression of humans - this kind of
reasoning to my mind is utterly irrelevant. Even if animals or a race of humans
where all alike what is the relevance to sentience or animal rights?
The argument that a group of individuals is ‘all alike’ has been used
throughout human history as a justification for the oppression of that group. If
all the individuals are alike, then they become impersonal and killing them
seems less wrong or horrendous. Chickens, whether intelligent or stupid,
individual or identical, are sentient beings. They feel pain and experience
fear. This, in itself, is enough to make it wrong to cause them pain and
suffering.
Jennifer Raymond
Another argument that is often presented when the rights of animals are
considered is connected with the religious concept of a soul. Religions including
the Abrahamic religions, Christianity, Judaism and Islam generally but not
exclusively believe that animals have no souls.
The following quotations are extracts from Animal rights activist Edward Byron
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Edward Byron Nicholson born 1849 was an English scholar and librarian, in 1873
he became librarian of the London Institution. He published commentaries on
the Gospel according to the Hebrews (1879) and St. Matthew (1881) and papers
on philology.
In the extracts below he addresses two common objections which are often put
forward in the consideration of animal rights.
Animal-Reason
The time which they have for living and learning is but short: wild, their life is
in some cases all fear and struggle; tame, they are under the rule of one who
is often a bad master and seldom a good schoolmaster—man. Even thus we are
driven to see in them, despite our contempt, and to acknowledge in them,
despite our pride, numberless proofs of the same mental and moral faculties
to which we ourselves lay claim often (though not always) different in degree,
but not so in kind. Nay, if we are pressed we must admit that many animals
are wiser and better than many men and some entire races, of men. And, since
we cannot put down these faculties to instinct, ought we not rather to admire
and cultivate than disparage and slight the animal-mind ? can we do less than
forbear henceforth to bring forward the supposed defects of that mind as a
ground for refusing to the animal what would otherwise be its rights as a
feeling creature?
The Animal-Soul
The other common objection to allowing animals rights is that they 'have no
soul,'…This objection [is no more to the point than the former [that they have
no reason]. For put it thus—Animals will have no after life : that is a reason
why they should be denied what would otherwise be their rights in the present
one'—and its absurdity is plain. Nay, if animals have no chance of happiness in
another life we should be the more careful to ensure their happiness in
this.…But were the objection ever so much to the point it would still be a bad
one. For in the first place it is not capable of proof and therefor cannot be
used to bar a natural right. And in the second place, we allow souls to men, I
cannot see how we are to deny them to animals.
Edward Nicholson,
Visit the home page of the above website for a wealth of information
concerning the history of animal rights. Here you will find links to Primary
Source Historical Literature which provides a more in-depth insight into the
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Even amongst the religions that do not believe that animals have souls most of
these religions advocate that animals should be treated humanely. I cannot
imagine that the teaching of any religion that believes in a compassionate
deity could possibly condone factory farming and the general mistreatment of
animals that prevails the world over. I think that it is unreasonable to use the
excuse, most prevalent amongst Christians, that God created animals for our
use in order to justify factory farming. I rather doubt that those who belong to
religions that believe that animals are here for our benefit can honestly think
this gives mankind the license to mistreat animals in factory farms, or to hunt
them for sport, or use them for experimentation or for entertainment. All of
these religions teach against animal cruelty
"Although it is not well known, Judaism has very powerful teachings about the
proper treatment of animals. If Jews took these teachings seriously, they
would be among the strongest protesters of many current practices related to
animals."
Surely the methods used in factory farming, and the experimentation upon
animals for example, constitutes dreadful cruelty and therefore cannot be
condoned by any religion that teaches against cruelty to animals.
Moreover members of the Abrahamic religions for the most part if asked the
question do animals have souls will reply in the affirmative. Furthermore
according to my understanding there are no references in any of the literature
of these faiths that states in so many words that animals do not have souls.
Jainism is probably the only religion to consistently teach against harming any
creature including the tiniest of insects, you will find references admonishing
against cruelty to animals in many ancient and modern religions including,
Buddhism and Hinduism. Many of these religions adhere to a vegetarian or
vegan diet even some sects of the Abrahamic religions. For example St Francis
was a vegetarian and in times passed Christian monks mostly adhered to a
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vegetarian diet.
Also of interest
I do not wish to go too deeply into the religious view of animal rights here or
comment further on the issue of animal souls as in due course I hope to include
an in-depth article on this subject. Personally I do not know if man or other
animals have a soul. I rather think that if man does have a soul then so do
animals, conversely if animals do not have souls then neither does man, for
man is an animal like any other. Moreover what is a soul? Is a soul the same as
a spirit, the mind, or is this a concept that has come into being that actually
refers to sentience? The part of us that makes us who we are, an aspect of our
existence that I strongly believe that other animals, including farm animals,
fish and invertebrates, in fact all living things, possess. This is a huge subject
which I hope to tackle in an unbiased way in the near future. For now here is a
selection of quotes from religion and philosophy stating that animals have souls
and that animals should be treated humanely, with kindness and compassion.
Wherever there is the evolution of living beings, let people cherish the thought
of kinship with them, and, thinking that all beings are [to be loved as if they
were] an only child, let them refrain from eating meat.
Buddha, The Lankavatara Sutra, "On Meat Eating*
For profit sentient beings are destroyed, for flesh money is paid out, they are
both evil-doers.
Buddha, The Lankavatara Sutra, "On Meat Eating*
Pythagoras taught that …all animated beings were kin, and should be
considered as belonging to one great family.
For as long as men massacre animals, they will kill each other. Indeed, he who
sows the seed of murder and pain cannot reap joy and love.
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Pythagoras
Not to hurt our humble brethren (the animals) is our first duty to them, but to
stop there is not enough. We have a higher mission--to be of service to them
whenever they require it... If you have men who will exclude any of God's
creatures from the shelter of compassion and pity, you will have men who will
deal likewise with their fellow men
St. Francis of Assisi
There is not an animal that lives on the Earth, nor a being that flies on its
wings, but forms part of communities like you. Nothing have we omitted from
the Book, and they all shall be gathered to their Lord in the end.
Al-Qur’an
When you hear the crowing of cocks, ask for Allah's Blessings for (their crowing
indicates that) they have seen an angel...
Hadith 4:522
Maybe not the intent of this passage but it does imply sentience
There is not an animal on the earth, nor a flying creature on two wings, but
they are people like unto you.
Qur'an
Here I will discuss ways in which we may bring about changes in the way we
think about animals and how we treat them
Education
Challenge the habit. Find out how your food gets to your table. Learn about the
cruelties of factory farming : Animal Rights
Also information concerning factory farming and other abuse may be found on
the following external websites:
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"Eating meat; fish and dairy causes environmental destruction, damages human
health, contributes to global hunger and inflicts immense suffering on billions
of animals across the world. Viva! believes that the solution to all these
problems is in our own hands: the best way to stop the destruction and the
cruelty is to stop eating animals now – go vegetarian, or better still, vegan. "
Viva! USA
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA): The animal rights
organization USA
"PETA US formed in 1980 in the United States and has more than 2 million
members and supporters, making it the largest animal rights organisation in the
world.
PETA US and PETA Europe are dedicated to establishing and protecting the
rights of all animals. Like humans, animals are capable of suffering and have
interests in leading their own lives; therefore, they are not ours to use – for
food, clothing, entertainment, experimentation or any other reason.
PETA-named affiliates around the world educate policymakers and the public
about cruelty to animals and promote an understanding of the right of all
animals to be treated with respect."
Please check out the website below for information about a number of issue
concerning animal cruelty .
Uncaged campaigns
"We are a peaceful international animal protection organisation based in
Sheffield, England. Our main campaigns are against animal experiments
(vivisection); against xenotransplantation (animal to human transplants); the
global boycott of Procter & Gamble; for animal rights and for democratic
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Go Veggie /vegan
The most effective way to put an end to the atrocities of factory farming is to
go vegetarian or preferably vegan.
For information about becoming a vegetarian or Vegan click the links below.
More advice about changing your diet to vegetarian or vegan can be found on
the following external websites:
Includes recipes
Campaigns
Campaigns
"Every year in Britain, more than 7 billion animals face the barbarity of
slaughter - many fully conscious. Most spend their short, brutal lives in
confinement, pain and misery. Viva! launches regular, hard-hitting campaigns
and has forced the vegetarian and vegan debate back on to the agenda - on TV,
radio and in the press."
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VIVA have wide range of campaigns again animal cruelty for you to participate
in and provides a supporter pack
PETA and PETA Europe are dedicated to establishing and protecting the rights
of all animals. Like us, animals are capable of suffering, and they have an
interest in leading their own lives; therefore, they are not ours to eat, wear,
experiment on, use for entertainment or use in any other way. PETA and PETA
Europe work through public education, research, legislation, special events,
celebrity involvement and protest campaigns.
A wide range of campaigns in which you may become involved, plenty of help
and advice to help you take action against cruelty to animals
Campaigns and action in which you may become involved to help stop
experimentation and other forms of cruelty
"The UK Government annual statistics 2007 reveal that over 3.2 million animals
suffer and die in British laboratories in experiments that "may cause pain,
suffering, distress and lasting harm" (experiments that are considered unlikely
to cause pain do not need to be licensed and are therefore not included in the
annual statistics). An estimated additional 8 million animals are bred and then
destroyed as surplus to requirements. As well as mice, rats, hamsters, gerbils
and guinea pigs (the bulk of experiments involve rodents), other animals such
as rabbits, dogs, cats, monkeys, horses, cows, pigs, sheep, fish, amphibians,
reptiles, birds and even insects are used - in fact there's hardly a species that
are not experimented on."
On the above website you will find information about the shocking film below
and action you can take.
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Think Differently About sheep is a new website and went on-line in March
2009. I hope to provide more information about the above topics including links
to information, campaigns and dietary advice as such becomes available.
The information on this webpage is on going and the content will be revised
and new additions included as more information becomes available.
We believe in the evolutionary and moral kinship of all animals and declare our
belief that all sentient creatures have rights to life, liberty and natural
enjoyment."
Truely man is the king of beasts, for his brutality exceeds theirs. We live by
the death of others: we are burial places! I have from an early age abjured the
use of meat, and the time will come when men such as I will look on the
murder of animals as they now look on the murder of men.
Leonardo da Vinci
As often as Herman had witnessed the slaughter of animals and fish, he always
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had the same thought: in their behaviour toward creatures, all men were
Nazis. The smugness with which man could do with other species as he pleased
exemplified the most extreme racist theories, the principle that might is
right.
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