21.
Not many of us would
have the nerve to deliberately end the life of an animal unless we were
starving. Most, if not all of us, have never known starvation nor are likely
to. So what is this mass murdering of animals all about? Why are we condoning
something done by others which we could not do for ourselves? Why are we
passive proxy killers? Perhaps most people haven’t really thought about the act
of killing an animal. If you don’t actually get to see the act of killing you
don’t have to think about it - perhaps it’s upon that basis that our society
indulges in all this slaughter, and very few make any murmur of dissent about
it. So, let’s look at the act itself.
We see lots of killing on TV but it’s often seen in the
form of a drama; a quick bullet fired
from a gun and the victim falls down dead - clean and easy. An elderly friend
of mine wants to die of a heart attack – “nice and quick”, she says. Killing is
bathed in euphemism; we cull the kangaroos, the faithful family dog has to be
‘put to sleep’. If we have to think of death, we like to think of it as
a smooth transition. But there are terrible deaths; lingering, painful and
frightening experiences. We dread it for ourselves and can empathise with an
animal facing slaughter. A condemned prisoner on Death Row would probably think
about all this, but do animals premeditate their own end? Do they ever realise
what fate awaits them? Certainly when the day comes and they are transported to
the abattoir, they show all the signs of great agitation. It’s likely they can
smell death which triggers their terror even if only at the moment when they’re
being restrained and positioned for execution.
No one is made to see
killing. I live in a sanitised world where such things aren’t even talked
about. But recently, the brutal killing of cattle was shown on TV and there was
great public outrage afterwards. This was animal slaughter in its ugliest and
most terrifying form and because it received a lot of publicity, it made a
lasting impression on many people. At an Indonesian abattoir, cattle were seen
being dragged to the floor, kicking and screaming, to have their throats cut,
without pre-stunning! Animals Australia filmed the whole gruesome business and
the National ABC TV network televised it on the popular Four Corners current
affairs programme. It transpired that this was not an isolated incident but a
routine practice involving hundreds of thousands of animals every year. How
could anyone not feel empathy for these beautiful Brahmin cattle and not then
feel angry on their behalf? Yet most people eat meat and whether our animals
are pre-stunned or not, the killing is always ugly. The cruelty shown towards
such animals is always undeserved since the animals are innocent and have no way
of understanding what is happening to them.
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