Ahh there is some hope for PETA yet...sort of:
http://www.kfccruelty.com/cemsgestationreport.html
This is from Cain's link and I find it to be well documented and full of logical suggestions for in this case pig gestation stalls. But guess what. If I had not been actively looking through and examining Cain's link because of this thread I'd never have gotten far enough into this site to read the article. Why? Because its plastered with cartoons of Colonel sanders holding up and knifing plucked chickens, blood all over the place, and oh..."Hey kids, sign up to be a Veggie today! GoVeg.com!!!". This really has been the gyst of my arguement, and why I think the holocaust comparison is not only in bad taste, but just plain ineffective. Having a website called KFCCruelty in the first place will not attract people trying to objectively find out more about livestock welfare. Just as comparing factory chicken conditions to the holocaust is also ineffective. Yah it has shock value, and it gets peoples attention, but guess what, they dismiss it as just that, shock value media. The only people that follow through and find out more and read are the people that were already looking in the first place.
They also show pics such as this (graphic):
http://www.kfccruelty.com/images/h8.jpg
But don't directly state what it is we're seeing. They alude in other parts of the site that chickens don't get stunned well enough in the stunbaths, and then their throats are cut, and they are sometimes still dying when boiled (which removes the feathers). However this picture doesn't necessarily show any of that. I watched some of their videos, and on this point in particular, even their video's are inconclusive. Sure that pic looks horrible to you and I, but its probably somewhat typical of all slaughter scenes. Don't forget that the blood has to be drained or it can damage the meat. Lots of places site examples of cows and pigs strung up, blood running from slit throats. Well that's a normal part of the process of draining the animal of blood. Now if its still alive when they do this, ok you have an arguement there, but I'm not seeing solid evidence of that being the norm. Again I agree standards need to be looked at, and this article on the PETA sight was actually well researched. Its just a shame that their Vegetarian diet and shockvalue agenda's get in the way.
Markets compel us to choose A over B and never really ask questions. The suffering of animals is an externality not captured in price (George Soros documents the general fallacy).
Stated many times and fine, seems logical. What can we do about it? Go Vegan? Consumers do have a choice, and its clear their starting to on some levels to exercise that use of choice to demand there be as little suffering of livestock animals as possible. Their suffering (which appears to be defined differently by everyone) may not be captured in price, but its starting to be captured in consumer awareness.
what characteristics do non-human animals lack that allow us to endlessly consume them?
Pardon my french, but who cares? They taste good and we can. "What right do we have to consume them" again is a different arguement to me. I see how one somewhat leads into the other, but only slightly. We do consume them, fact, so given that what standards are needed to provide them the healthiest, least cruel, type conditions?
If a person thinks of animals no differently than rocks, then there's not much to discuss about practices on factory farms
You always make it out to be black or white. If you think of livestock as no more than rocks, etc. So if I don't believe in their morale significance, or at least in that its on a level equal with humans, which I don't, I just think of animals as rocks? I think of them as animals, livestock, that feel stress' and physical pain, and can suffer behaviourial problems, which should be addressed as it affects their health as a food supply, and would be less cruel. My reading has started to convince me of that fact. I don't believe their on the same mental or morale capacity as humans, and there are many of this board that know far more on both sides of this arguement than me. But again, that's still pointless. We still consume them, so at the end of the day defining non-human charateristics and morale significance doesn't change that, or the fact that the consumption causes problems for the health of the animals based upon factory farming process' and demand, if we're to believe PETA and other sites. So I say deal with the problem at hand.
So, yes, it would be impractical to suddenly discontinue the consumption of meat, but that defies the slow, incremental process and history of all liberation movements.
Agreed, which is why I find it annoying that PETA gets the attention it does because it first and foremost in peoples mind pushes this message of discontinued consumption of meat. Once again I'm not particularly against the movement, but I think its shooting itself in the foot, especially with ad campaigns like this one.
The last point has always annoyed me -- you're enforcing your beliefs on me.
Good, you have a point there. And now you must get an idea how any normal person who enjoys consuming meat must feel when trying to read through many of these animal/livestock liberation sites. Give up your habit of meat, its you're fault this abuse continues, go vegan, and oh in small print at the bottom, here's links to actual level headed studies done on the subject. Its damned annoying.
No, if animals are morally significant creatures, then you're taking actions against them, and I'm merely preventing abuse and protecting rights.
If they are. In the meantime its ok to try and guilt me on my eating habits, while keeping the high ground yourself. Not a good way to convince most people of anything.
I've never really liked PETA, and I'm not a member. But after seeing how they get under people's skin, I might just join.
I will give PETA credit for one thing. They seem to say thev've had no luck getting regulations passed on a whole on the factory farm level. So instead they've switched their campaigns to the companies relying on those factory farms. MacDonalds, Burger King, Wendy's. And used their tactics on them instead, trying to get them to force their suppliers to adhere to stricter standards. And its worked in a few cases. Too bad nobody knows about it because you'd have to go to one of the following sites to find the press releases:
http://www.kfccruelty.com
http://www.mccruelty.com
http://www.murderking.com
http://www.wickedwendys.com
Go check out the look of these sites and tell me if you'd take them seriously enough to actually get far enough to read an objective article.