C
Cracker_Mom
Guest
You are still picking & choosing which methods of livestock production might be more palatable to human perceptions of what animals “feel.” And our perceptions of what might constitute animal welfare.Not what is most practical to the farmer or healthy necessarily for the animal.Certain natural behaviours are essential if animals are to be spared unnecessary stress. Domestic dogs, for example, require exercise and the mental stimulation of regular walks and playing. A dog that trusts its owner as a pack leader can be walked off lead in safety, where local laws allow this (my suburb is one such place). Successfully training a dog relies upon its natural sociability and instincts for pack-based behaviour and communication. In fact, the most successful training of any domestic animal is that which utilises its natural behaviours and responses. Natural behaviours can be mimicked in domesticated or captive environments, for the purpose of the animals’ welfare - this is the point of enrichment programs at zoos.
Sterilisation of domestic-bred dogs and cats is necessary to reduce the problem of overpopulation - there are already far more potential pet dogs and cats than there are people willing to care for them. There is also a safety issue involved - domestic pets are much less likely to roam and risk impoundment or accidental harm if their hormonal inducement to mate has been removed. Remember the point I have continually made about the necessity of actions. There is a moral distinction to be drawn between actions that are necessary for the animal’s wellbeing and actions that merely make them more convenient for us to use.
Consider also the degree of ‘processing’ to which factory farmed animals are subjected. Even cows that are specifically bred to produce a high milk yield are separated from their calves before the natural period of suckling has ceased; chickens that are bred to lay large numbers of eggs are starved to induce ‘shock’ laying, in order to push them even further beyond their standard capacity. Intensively farmed turkeys are not denied their ability to reproduce - but the fact that they have been bred to grow to unnatural proportions, in order to produce a maximum meat yield, means that their ‘mating’ can only be accomplished by human hands equipped with a syringe. Even the most basic natural behaviours such as foraging and grazing are restricted by confinement in intensive facilities. Animals raised in organic conditions lead much healthier lives, both physically and psychologically.
Even if you don’t care one way or another about the welfare of animals, you can’t simply dismiss arguments against intensive farming - in other words, systematic mistreatment of nonhuman animals for human convenience - by supposing that it is no different to other forms of human-animal interaction which actually value the animal’s welfare for its own sake. Ethically, there is a world of difference.
Domestic poultry given free range are routinely eaten by predators.Chickens & turkeys allowed to breed “naturally” can kill the hens in the process.Cows totally forget their calves when separated at birth.If a calf is allowed to suck off the mama cow you inevitably have sore,cracked cow teats & a pycho mama cow that will break down fences(& harm anyone in her path) to get to her calf.Basically you would have to give up commercial dairy farming if you followed this plan.Plus, grown heifers will go back & suck off their mom even after mama cow freshens with a new calf if they’ve learned where the milk source is when younger.
Sows not confined to farrowing crates tend to roll over & crush their young-not to mention making lunch of their own piglets.
It goes on & on.I’m not aware of folks starving laying hens in commercial egg production.
It really comes down to making a choice to farm profitably or not. The examples you provide would not portend well for a farmer’s survival.
I’ve suggested to folks locally that they visit area farms & get an idea of what really goes on & the struggles farmers face.