Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Touting Factory Pig Farming Safe, Really?


Click on the title to get to Treehugger or the link below.

When you think of a farm, does Old McDonald come to mind? Horses running around, chickens flapping their wings, pecking at the ground, cows mooing in the pastures?

Nothing can be further from the truth. As more and more articles come out showing the farming techniques to squeeze out the last nickel, whose fault is it?

It's you Mr. and Mrs. consumer. Its all of us. We don't want to pay too much for our food so the farmer (cold hearted corporate machine) has to cut corners to make ends meet. This spells trouble for us all. The anti-biotic that could save us in the hospital when we are sick is being used so frequently to keep the animals alive, that it is fast becoming ineffective.

Most people would not be able to watch the processing of animals from the farm to the market. It they did some changes might be made. Humane practices would be used.

Factory farming should be outlawed or at least better conditions achieved to fill our bellies. Don't be too smug vegans, the stuff you eat today is not the same as when you were a child. Nothing is.

For other information, please read my post on salmon farming.

Touting Factory Pig Farming Safe, Really?
by Sara Novak, Columbia, SC on 04.12.09

In an age where nearly 70 percent of antibiotics produced annually are given to some form of livestock and mass production of livestock has led to widespread animal mistreatment and serious environmental repercussions, it seems flippant to claim that factory farming is done for the safety of consumers.

In a recent NY Times editorial, James McWilliams dismisses "free range [as] ultimately an arbitrary point between the wild and the domesticated" and claims that there are higher rates of salmonella in free-range pigs.

According to the National Academy of Sciences, however, roughly 70 percent of the antibiotics and other antimicrobial drugs used in the U.S. are fed to farm animals in order to promote growth and prevent rampant disease from striking animals that are kept in filthy, stressful environments.

In fact, many common bacteria (such as Salmonella, Campylobacter, Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and E. coli) have developed a resistance to these drugs. What's worse, according to Paula Crossfield over at Huffington Post, the study cited by Mr. McWilliams (Foodborne Pathogens and Disease) was funded by the National Pork Board, which determined that the parasite trichinia was "present" in two of the free-range pigs in that study because of the presence of antibodies -- no disease had formed at all.

The Overall Health of the Animal Sacrificed in Factory Farming The limited consideration given to the editorial is best evidenced by its failure to address the fact that overall health is markedly better in free range pigs.

This is the likely consequence of choosing not to pack fully grown 250-pound male hogs into tiny pens, so that they can trample each other to death in their own feces. Maybe free range pigs are just healthier because they avoid the temperatures inside hog houses, which often exceed ninety degrees and exacerbates the unbearable stench. That smell is a sign of the polluted air that can be lethal to the pigs.

Hogs produce three times more excrement than human beings do. Lloyd wrote about a Rolling Stone article entitled Pork's Dirty Little Secret which reported that an estimated 500,000 pigs at a subsidiary of pork giant Smithfield generates more fecal matter each year than the 1.5 million inhabitants of Manhattan.

The kindest estimates put Smithfield's total waste discharge at 26 million tons a year. And this is toxic shit; the excrement falls into a waste bin under the pens along with broken bottles of insecticide, antibiotic syringes, stillborn pigs -- anything small enough to fit through the foot-wide pipes that drain the pits.


Factory Farming, a Greed Based Industry Mr. McWilliams' most misguided statements might be that grass fed is just a gimmick for farmers to make more money and that factory farming wasn’t just adopted because of it’s lucrative nature. Smithfield, the largest and most profitable pork processor in the world, killed 27 million hogs last year. The business is profitable because it is inhumane. Factory sows live in a continuous cycle of impregnation. In fact, each sow has more than 20 piglets per year.

After birth, factory hogs and sows are packed into tiny pens to increase marginal returns, regardless of the health consequences. Large pork producers figure that they can just inoculate their way out of any health concerns.

Can anyone seriously assert that ensuring that an animal eats better and has a little room to breath doesn't produce better quality pork?

While grass fed pork may be slightly more expensive, it is because the marginal costs are higher. For anyone to call grass fed farming greed-based seems no less than suspect.

Greed-based or not, I'd rather eat pigs that roam freely, socialize, and engage in instinctive pig behavior like rooting, wallowing, and foraging; pigs that are not force fed hormones and antibiotics, or anything other than food you might eat yourself.


http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/04/grass-fed-pigs-and-human-health-safety.php?dcitc=daily_nl

4 comments:

linda said...

Modern farming tecniques are disgusting and show an immense lack of respect for life. There is no need for it at all.

raydenzel1 said...

Linda
That is my point exactly. This story puts a bad spin on what goes on the table to eat. Food for thought?

Bea Elliott said...

This is a great piece... and also encourages the thought of going a bit further into the need for animal agriculture at all? The pigs, cows and chickens still do require land and feed that could be used to feed 16 times more humans. And simply that the animals live outside does not mean that they do not contribute to global warming trends and that dwindling water resources are used in excess throughout the lives/deaths of these animals.

When one carries the logic further... to human health and sustainability it becomes ever more clear that a plant based diet is the shift necessary to insure our survival. Thankfully, there's a wonderful world of tasty, sustainable and compassionate options through a vegan diet.
www.humanemyth.org

raydenzel1 said...

There must be a middle of the road solution to the feeding of the world. I don't assume to know what it is. But what is going on is not the right way. Thanks for writing and stopping by.

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