680:
Humans enjoy
eating animals and animal by-products. We wear their skins and skin coverings.
We experiment with them to test the safety of drugs and cosmetics. We downplay
empathy for animals and emphasise the need for a more cold-hearted, macho and
pragmatic attitude. Perhaps we regard animals as the spoils of a war. This is,
after all, a war being waged against them, and they are our trophies. We eat and
exploit animals as a celebration of our status as the ‘dominant’ species.
Animals are eaten at almost every
meal. We have a ‘couldn’t-care-less’ attitude about these animals, and this
won’t change until we see how ugly the whole system is and what we are buying
into.
We need to remind ourselves what
actually happens to the animals we are about to eat. Lobsters and crabs are
boiled alive, fish are slowly suffocated or crushed under the weight of other
caught fish, chickens are hung upside down by their legs, and carried on
conveyors, one behind the other, to have their throats cut by revolving blades.
Cattle have a bolt fired into their foreheads before they have their throats
cut and are bled to death. Pigs have electrified tongs clamped to their heads
to immobilize them before being knifed. Male chicks are thrown live into
mincing machines because they are useless to the egg-laying industry, and so it
goes on.
The way in which we kill and
mutilate animals is cruel by any standard and yet the consumer accepts this as
part of the essential food that they must have, glad enough to use the
‘end-corpse’ for food. The supermarket trolley, filled with styrofoam packets
of the muscle tissue of killed animals are a familiar sight in the supermarket.
We never get to see a dead whole animal, unless with fish, where often their
whole bodies can be seen, dead, laid on ice and gutted. As gruesome as the
sight of a dead fish might be, it’s such a familiar sight that the customer
doesn’t turn a hair. They’ve been familiar with this sight since they were
children.
The way these animals are caught or
killed at abattoirs is not often witnessed, the customer only sees the body of
the dead animal when it has been cut up and packaged, by which time it bears no
resemblance at all to the whole animal. We rarely see the animal in the process
of dying; the animal is either fully alive and then fully dead. That’s a long
way from being personally involved in the complete process. It’s a very long
way from fulfilling our hunting instinct which involved stalking, killing,
skinning and butchering.
Today we eat animals that have been
caught or imprisoned by other people and then killed and butchered by others
people. We’re not too fussy how it all happens just as long as we don’t have to
know too much about it. If we use animals for food or clothing we comply with
an industry that cares nothing about the feelings of the animals they use; they
simply coral, breed, fatten and execute them for us.
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