S
spencelo
Guest
And how do you know this? Do you have expertize on pig psychology?The pigs want nothing more than to be penned and they weren’t distressed at all.
And how do you know this? Do you have expertize on pig psychology?The pigs want nothing more than to be penned and they weren’t distressed at all.
Which is perfectly true.
- the author said the males were castrated to prevent a strong taste in the meat.
This doesn’t justify castration without painkillers.anyone who has owned a complete male animal knows why they are castrated: they are extremely agressive, esp if there are several all together.
Ringing is very painful, and prevents pigs from doing what they’re naturally inclined to do (foraging) - hence they get depressed. Although animals aren’t people, animals are very similar to people in many relevant ways.
- The author quoted someone saying the nose-ringed pigs are depressed because they can’t fulfill their identity or some such baloney? (I couldn’t read the article easily because half of it kept getting covered up by a block of grey.) People think animals are people… ridiculous.
Yeah, you’re right about that. You guess you have to use a ring if you use the same area.And Rence, if you need to keep the pigs in the same area, you can’t let them root it all up. Just because it grows back doesn’t mean it grows back fast enough. The nose-rings appear to be a part of pasture management.
You’re not guilty of agenda posting IMOHO.I intend to provoke discussion and debate on important issues, and if that’s “agenda posting,” then I suppose I’m guilty.
First, there is his claim that nose-rings are near universal on free-range farms. Bat doesn’t seem to be the case in the US, and Mr. McWilliams offers no evidence in support of his claim.What flaws?
But it does. He has, in both articles, made unsubstantiated claims and misled by withholding important information.I haven’t looked into this, but even if true, it has nothing to do with the Slate article I posted.
Like I said, one or two counter-examples doesn’t challenge McWilliams claim. Ringing appears to be a common practice.First, there is his claim that nose-rings are near universal on free-range farms. Bat doesn’t seem to be the case in the US, and Mr. McWilliams offers no evidence in support of his claim.
Who disputes that castration isn’t done when young? It is. And even if castration is necessary, here’s the key point: it’s often done without painkillers.Then there is the matter of castration. It is not done when young, sexually mature boars will attack one another, often causing grievous injuries to themselves.
Circumstantial ad hominen. Whatever errors (if any) McWilliams might have made in some prior article doesn’t disqualify his statements in this present article.But it does. He has, in both articles, made unsubstantiated claims and misled by withholding important information.
No, she gave the (correct) impression that a lot of meat is wasted – not necessarily 40%. I already addressed this in the other thread.It is similar to that article you posted by Ingrid Newkirk. She claimed 40% of food is wasted in the US and wanted us to think that meant 40% of meat is wasted.
There’s no sleight of hand. The factual assertions in McWilliams article were not refuted in any way.Its this kind of sleight of hand rhetoric which makes me suspicious of the articles you have been posting.
No wonder many people here (including myself) tend to suspect him.But it does. He has, in both articles, made unsubstantiated claims and misled by withholding important information.
It is similar to that article you posted by Ingrid Newkirk. She claimed 40% of food is wasted in the US and wanted us to think that meant 40% of meat is wasted. But that implication doesn’t automatically follow and she offers no evidence in support of that claim.
Its this kind of sleight of hand rhetoric which makes me suspicious of the articles you have been posting.
^This.It’s not eating meat that’s unethical. It’s the way the poor animals are treated beforehand and how they are slaughtered.
Yes!It’s not eating meat that’s unethical. It’s the way the poor animals are treated beforehand and how they are slaughtered.
I agree with you, but wonder how much responsibility do consumers have to make sure the meat they purchase is ethically produced?It’s not eating meat that’s unethical. It’s the way the poor animals are treated beforehand and how they are slaughtered.
And I’m sure that somewhere in the bowels of the internet I could find a racing driver who thinks cars are evil.Real and honest: mcaf.ee/tosh4
“What I do is wrong. I know it in my bones, even if I can’t yet act on it. Someday it must stop. Somehow we need to become the sort of beings who can see what we are doing when we look head on, the sort of beings who don’t weave dark, damning shrouds to sustain, with acceptance and celebration, the grossly unethical, solely for shallow sensual pleasure. Deeper, much deeper, we have an obligation to eat otherwise.”