Preview

Animal Slaughter

Best Essays
Open Document
Open Document
2795 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Animal Slaughter
Livestock: from Stable to Table
Animal slaughter is a necessary evil, but unfortunately with the way it is carried out it is repulsive. For as long as recorded history mankind has hunted animals for survival and that practice continues today. The main use for an animal is for food; this is the oldest and the most universal form of an animal. With advancements of the world’s civilization, animals were traded at markets and the owner would receive a payment for the animal’s value. This process continues today. Animals are sold for larger sums to corporations that will then send the animal to a slaughterhouse and sell the meat to a distributer. Here customers purchase the meat at inflated prices. Around the globe meat from livestock animals is a popular item to add to one’s plate for any meal. One could have beef, lamb, pork, or even horse, but how does this animal get from a place it once thought was it’s home to the customer’s table. The amount of stress the animal goes through before the slaughter process is astonishing. Horses that are slaughtered regularly come from the racetrack where they were administered drugs before running a race.
These drugs are harmful to humans if consumed. The health of an animal while it is living in its pen, cramped with many of its own breed is heartbreaking to see. The World
Organization for Animal Health has helped established new regulations for slaughter, transportation and killing animals for disease control.
The World Organization for Animal Health, also known as OIE, has developed basic standards that developed and developing countries now agree on. In addition to
OIE’s standards, each country has specific laws and standards of their own. OIE designed the five basic standards. “One, the percentage of animals stunned on the first attempt.

Two, percentage rendered insensible prior to hoisting. Three, percentage that vocalize
(moo, bellow, or squeal) during movement up the race and in the stunning box.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    SUBJECT: In this chapter of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, titled “The Feedlot: Making Meat”, Michael Pollan discusses the use of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO), and the factories where countless cattle are being mistreated day in and day out.…

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Next time you buy meats or vegetables from a corporate supermarket just think it may be loaded with antibiotics and/or harmful bacteria that may cause you to get sick or may even take your life, not to mention the inhumane or unhealthy conditions that the animals are kept in which in return pollute our air and water.…

    • 940 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Banning Horse Slaughter

    • 113 Words
    • 1 Page

    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.…

    • 113 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The ancient Botai culture in Kazakhstan first domesticated horses 5,500 years ago, and its economy was equine-based. Horses were used for labor, transportation, milk, and consumption. Even at that early time, if the horses did not succumb to the rigors of daily life, work-related injuries, or battle, then they were sold for salvage. The money received from the salvage was reinvested in a younger, stronger horse. The salvaged horse would go to the rendering plant for leather, horsehair furniture, glue, gelatin, cosmetics, or to the butcher for dog food and human consumption.…

    • 3657 Words
    • 15 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Inuit Paradox

    • 297 Words
    • 1 Page

    reason for this is because of how the fresh meat that they caught was filled with many beneficial…

    • 297 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    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…

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 2002, close to one-hundred five horses were slaughtered in three slaughter plants, two of them in Texas and one in Illinois (Cowan 1). Since horse meat is not a generally accepted food source in the United States, the majority of meat was exported to…

    • 774 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “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…

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Many aspects of this industry have been explored in excerpts from “Fast Food Nation” and scenes from Food Inc., but something that particularly stood out to me was the way that the workers and animals in the slaughterhouses were treated. Workers are treated unfairly and put through unnecessary and unhealthy conditions. We get nearly all of our meat from these slaughterhouses, so it caught my attention that there are people that must work through these conditions in order to make a living, and animals that must lose their lives against their will. It made me think that while consumers are often blind to the ways in which their food is being made, it is incredibly crucial to have an understanding of the severity of poorly treated slaughterhouse workers and animals, because it is, after all, the food we are eating that comes out of the process.…

    • 1812 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Vegucated

    • 1590 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Though we have practiced Animal Agriculture for many years, it is no longer like Old…

    • 1590 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Live Exports Issue

    • 981 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Have you ever driven along the freeway and found yourself overtaken by a truck absolutely filled with sheep? Can you possibly imagine the journey from the farm to the abattoir overseas? Not only are the animals subject to inhumane slaughter, the voyage of up to…

    • 981 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Horse Slaughter

    • 1930 Words
    • 8 Pages

    "Facts That Refute the 7 Most Common Myths about Horse Slaughter." Saving Americas Horses. Wild for Life Foundation Equine Protection Program, n.d. Web. 10 Jan. 2013. <http://www.savingamericashorses.org/WFLF 's_Facts_that_Refute_the_7_Most_Common_Myths_about_Horse_Slaughter.pdf>.…

    • 1930 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Horse Slaughter

    • 978 Words
    • 4 Pages

    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.…

    • 978 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    home, the hunters who are supposed to look after it were too focused on hunting the pig for…

    • 602 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    There has been many others, such as oraflex causing liver failure, flenac causing liver failure as well, butazolidin liver disease as well as bone marrow disease, cylert causing liver failure in children and even death, rezulin caused liver failure, propulsid caused over 300 deaths in children due to unnatural heart rhythms, inocor caused heart failure, and baycol caused fatal muscle wasting. All at a point where proven to be safe when they were tested on animals, but ended up being harmful to humans. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has noted that 92 percent of drugs tested and were shown to be safe and effective on animals failed in human trials due to them being unsafe or ineffective . John J. Pippin, M.D., and Kristie Stoick, M.P.H., state, “According to some estimates, adverse drug reactions are responsible for 2.2 million hospitalizations and 106,000 deaths annually.” In making this comment, Pippin and Stoick argue that animal testing isn’t always reliable with the results they get from animals and how the animal reacts to a drug so when a human uses the new drug which is made to seem to be harmless humans end up with horrible side effects sometimes even leading to death.…

    • 566 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays