Our gustatory pleasure is not as important as the lives of animals. The example used in the article to explain this argument was the “Torturing Puppies” argument. Anyone who has compassion and emotions would agree that saving the lives of the puppies is the right thing to do, as opposed to killing them just for a momentary, gustatory experience. This is the same with the meat farms and consumers. Many animals such as chickens are ripped off of their beaks. Baby cows are put in cages to make their meat tender by not allowing their bones and muscles to grow. Pig’s tails are cut off and are subject to enclosed spaces. The living conditions of these animals are poor. Hormones are being injected into animals, negatively affecting the consumer’s overall health. All of this torture, just to kill these animals for gustatory pleasure, seems just as bad as the puppy example mentioned…
The Causes of horse slaughter have many surprising effects people wouldn’t think of. The drastic nature of these events changes the economy, as well as the lives of those who need products that come from horses. There are many people for and against the slaughter of horses, which has affected the situation in itself. Horse slaughter affects the economy, the mortality and standard of living of horses, and the availability of needed horse byproducts on an international level, no matter a person’s thoughts on the subject.…
Animal Welfare: It reduces the neglect of elderly horses from their owners who don’t want to take care of them…
not only extremely harmful to the livestock, but more importantly, to humans. To have the animals…
In the United States, horses have never been raised for human consumption, but our horses have been bought and slaughtered by a predatory to high-end diners in Europe and Asia. The suffering begins before the horses reach the slaughterhouses. Horses can be left for long periods of time packed in trailers. When the horses are herded through the plant to get slaughtered, the workers use fiberglass rods to poke and beat their faces, necks, backs and legs as they are shoved into the kill box. Until Congress passes a legislation banning horse slaughter into law, show horses, race horses, foals, wild horses and family horses will continue to fall prey to this industry.…
Horse slaughter is a commonly unknown issue to the public but yet an important issue. One reason horse slaughter should be legalized is it would reduce equine neglect cases and thus reducing the need to rescues. People tend to breed two random horses together in hopes someone will buy that horse, but in reality people tend to buy more horse than they really need. This means the below average rider will buy the above average horse which leaves the below average horses unmarketable. From experience horses are expeive to keep, due this and the fact below average horses are difficult to sell, people tend to reduce care on these horses. This reduction in care increases the neglect cases along with the need for rescues. By legalizing horse slaughter in the United States horses bought at auctions would not endure hour long trips without food and water before being slaughtered. There is one major auction in…
In the American society, horses have become more of a domestic animal rather than a wild animal or just work animal. Because of a horse’s ability to show emotions, and their ability to form relationships, horses are becoming more and more referred to as a pet, just like any household cat or dog. This change in perspective towards horses has made it difficult for many people to accept allowing horses to be slaughtered for their meat as a food source. Most people cannot imagine slaughtering their own cats or dogs, so many people refuse to accept the slaughter of horses. Also, it is possible that the amount of horses being stolen in America will increase, so they can be sold for slaughter right here in America. This does make lifting the horse slaughter ban a bit of a gamble on rather or not it will actually improve the horse industry in…
“On Apr. 10, 2001, the Washington Post re-ignited public debate about slaughterhouses with their exposé "They Die Piece by Piece.” The investigation found that animals in slaughterhouses were often cut apart "piece by piece" while still conscious” (Procon.org). There are two methods that usually being used to kill animals. Both methods are cruel and unethical to animals. The first method would be using carbon dioxide gas. The animals will be transferred into the conveyor belt that moves through the tunnel filled with carbon dioxide gas to kill the animals. The second method would be using electricity. The electric current is applied to the animals’ head for making them unconscious. Some animals are still alive during both methods and it would make them even more painful. This is just one aspect of cruelty for animals. Many opponents of vegetarianism say that animals are killed so the other organisms can live, and meats have been in our lives for 2.3 million years so there is nothing wrong with killing animal for foods. But being an animal has been already pitiful; we don’t need to create more suffering for…
No one likes to suffer. None of us like to feel pain, but factory farmed animals such as cows, pigs, and chickens experience great pain in their short-lived lives. The website factoryfarming.com, states, “a standard beef slaughter house kills 250 cattle every hour.” The method used is “stunning” this is done by using a catapult gun and giving the cows a mechanical blow to the head. It is to render them unconscious, but this procedure is terribly imprecise: “as a result, conscious animals are often hung upside down, kicking and struggling, while a slaughterhouse worker makes another attempt to render them unconscious. Eventually the animals will be ‘stuck’ in the throat with a knife, and blood will gush from their bodies whether or not they are conscious” (factoryfarming.com). An animal has an intrinsic value, and to dismiss that, is morally wrong. How do we kill others that value their life? People may say it’s the cow’s…
The first time I heard about the topic “Animal Abuse” come up was really sad. PETA came to one of the livestock shows and were trying to tell us what we were doing wrong, but in reality we were treating the animals with love and respect. I have participated in all of these events and have seen how the animals get treated. I believe there is nothing wrong with the way they get treated. Most animals actually get treated better than some humans do. There are many society practices that people believe are cruel to animals but are not. Rodeos, showing livestock, and factory farms do not show animal cruelty.…
"State Breakout Studies for the following States:." Welcome to The American Horse Council. American Horse Council, n.d. Web. 10 Apr. 2013.…
Are horse slaughter houses humane? The term “horse slaughter” refers exclusively to the killing and processing of horses for human consumption. When looking up synonyms from the online source thesaurus.com for the word “slaughter,” words like murder, bloodbath, and destruction come up. Horse slaughter is not humane euthanasia. While “euthanasia” is defined as a gentle, painless death provided in order to prevent suffering, slaughter is a brutal and terrifying end for horses. Although there are no legal slaughter houses in the United States, American horses are being trucked over the borders to Mexico and Canada to be taken to open slaughterhouses; that is only part of the issue. The other issue is that hundred thousands of horses are taken across the border each year because of uneducated horse breeders and horse owners. By educating owners about proper rehoming and expanding adoption, horses can be given a long happy life they deserve. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) documented that, “92.3% of horses sent to slaughter are in good condition and are able to live out a productive life.”…
Behind the scenes of all the excitement of horse racing, many owners, trainers, and jockeys use illegal methods to get an advantage on the track. The horses in the industry often experience abuse and mistreatment that is both inhumane and illegal. Those who participate in these illegal actions go to great lengths to cover up or hide what they have done. There are many laws and regulations to attempt to prevent these actions and punish those who commit them.…
All through American history, horses have been by our side. They were our transportation, an advantage in war, ways to herd cattle for food, and our family. To thousands and thousands of people in the U.S, these beautiful animals are still family, or means of money. Whether people are herding cattle, barrel racing, jumping, teaching people to ride, or running a summer camp, whatever the case may be, all these animals do is what we ask of them. Humans are repaying them with cruel deaths. Horse slaughter should be illegal in the U.S. Horses should not be killed for human consumption in the United States until there is funding for proper inspection of the meat, and if there is to be proper funding for slaughter houses, there needs to be a more humane way to kill the animals, the punishment for black market horse slaughter should be equal to that of a murderer.…
It's just that I don't personally find the use of animals as a food product as "useless slaughter". Maybe there's a different word out there we can use besides "slaughter". Animals that "valiantly sacrifice their life so that humans may Bar-B-Q" sounds a lot better to me. That doesn't detract from the principals behind a vegan diet as such. But I look at it this way: if we don't use cows and steers and other potential meat sources as just that - - a meat source, then we're going to have an over-abundance of these animals. Then what do we do? Lift the bans on mountain lions and wolves and bears and whatever other predatory animals are out there? Or do we convince these animals to convert to vegan food…