Kedgeley Speech on Animal Welfare
Sue Kedgley's speech to the Australia and New Zealand
Council for the Care
of Animals in Research and Teaching,
Wellington, 18 November, 1999.
There is a view of the
world - and it's been a fairly mainstream view for
some
time - that the earth is a pool of resources that exists
solely in
order to be exploited by human beings; it is,
essentially, a giant factory
producing things for human
consumption.
In this view of the world, other species such
as animals have no intrinsic
value. They are basically
biological machines that can be manipulated in
various
ways to become ever more efficient producers of meat for
humans.
According to this view, humans have a God-given
right to use animals,
manipulate them or destroy them as
they please to satisfy their wants and
needs, so long as
it increases efficiencies and therefore profitability.
If
animals and other life forms are not sufficiently productive
to meet
human needs, the solution is not to moderate
human wants; it is to develop
new technologies such as
genetic engineering which can redesign animals or
create
entire new species of animals, which can be owned by
companies and
used as robot like machines to produce
whatever products we want.
Inevitably, genetic
engineering will escalate the exploitation
and
mechanisation of animals by humans.
This view of
the world has been the driving force, and indeed
the
justification for, the industrialisation of
agriculture which has taken
place over the past 50 odd
years.
Ever since the 1950s when scientists discovered
that pesticides could kill
insects and eliminate the need
for labour intensive weeding, there has been
an
underlying assumption that any and every invention, any and
every new
agricultural technology is justified, provided
that it helps make food grow
more quickly and produces
higher yields.
As a raft of new technologies, new
inventions, new chemicals changed the
face of modern
agriculture, almost no thought was given to animals, or
how
they might suffer from these various new
technologies. No thought was given
either, to the
consumer, or how the consumer might feel about some of
the
practices that were being introduced.
When the
discovery of vitamins and d made it possible to raise
animals
indoors without sunlight or exercise, poultry and
pig farmers switched to
indoor farming, and invested
heavily in capital equipment etc, without
apparently
giving any thought to how the consumer might feel about some
of
the techniques they were using such as sow crates and
cages. I suspect their
main thought was how long they
could keep these practices hidden from
the
consumer.
Once it was accidentally discovered that
chickens grew faster if they were
fed antibiotics in
their feed, poultry farmers embraced this practice
to
save on poultry feed, with no apparent thought about
the long term health
effects of feeding millions of tons
of antibiotics to perfectly healthy
animals, and no
thought either about what consumers might think about
the
practice or whether they even had a right to know
about this widespread
practice.
Like to quote from
Lyman, mad cowboy
He personifies the underlying attitude
of the industrial farmer.
This then was the basis of
intensive industrial agriculture; it was producer
led,
based on maximising efficiencies for the producer, rather
than consumer
led, based on making product that consumers
wanted to buy. It is based on
the idea that animals are
biological machines or economic units, not
fellow
creatures that we should respect.
For many years
this sort of intensive factory farming thrived, but
only
because it was hidden away from the public, and most
consumers had no idea,
when they bought their nice pieces
of diced chicken in the supermarket, of
the conditions
it had been reared on.
But in the last decade, all this
has changed, as consumers have gained
access to more and
more information in the information age, and become
more
interested in food and how it has been
produced.
And as animal welfare consciousness has grown,
as animal welfare groups have
exposed factory farming to
the glare of publicity.
New Zealand consumers only really
became aware of the fact that large
numbers of animals
are grown in factories 6 years ago, with the
referendum
on phasing out battery hens. Although the
referendum didn't succeed it was a
watershed because it
lifted the veil of secrecy that had previously
surrounded
factory farming in New Zealand, and made consumers aware of
the
cruel truth of factory farming --- that unlike
animals on conventional farms
who have fresh air,
exercise, rest, natural feed, the ability to range
around
in paddocks -some degree of what humans call freedom -
The environment of animals in factory farms consists of
cages, steel bars,
dusty air and fluorescent lights.
Consumers became aware for the first time
that animals on
factory farms are treated like machines, kept in cages,
sow
stalls where all their natural instincts are
suppressed, have their beaks
and tails cut off, and live
on a diet that is almost totally foreign to any
food
animals have ever found in nature -instead of foraging
around for it
themselves, their feed is concocted in
laboratories and factories, and
arrives on an automated
conveyor belt.
More recently the anti sow stall campaign
has been very successful in
educating New Zealanders
about how pigs are reared. 75,000 New Zealanders
have
signed a petition calling for the phasing out of sow
stalls..
Videos about have been showing in 16 Body Shops around the country.
For producers, the protests of the
animal welfare activists must be like one
of those
annoying car alarms that just wont shut off.
Even more
annoying, no doubt, are the questions they ask -questions
that the
industrial agriculture does not want to address:
questions that are almost
taboo. Is it ethical to treat
animals in ways that would be considered
torture if done
to humans or even pet dogs and cats.
How do animals feel
in their confinement. Do animals, like other
living
creatures, feel pain and suffer from boredom and
frustration on factory
farms. And the answer, obviously
is, yes, as can be seen from a short video
i will show at
the end of my speech. Pigs for example are
intelligent,
curious, highly social animals who have a
heightened capacity for suffering,
and literally go mad
with boredom and despair when locked in their
sow
crates.
While some hope that the protests of animal
welfare activists will subside,
this is a vain hope. The
protests outside this conference are but a hint of
things
to come, as interest in animal welfare grows. Animal
welfare, like
genetic engineering, is one of those
underlying issues that people feel very
passionately
about. Although N Z is way behind Europe on this issue,
its
almost inevitable i suggest that new Zealand will
follow the lead of England
and Europe where animal
welfare is no longer a fringe issue but a
serious
political and consumer concern.
England banned
the dry sow and tether system earlier this year, and all
of
Europe committed itself a few months ago to prohibit
the use of conventional
battery cages by 2012, and to
make it illegal to install any new ones
after
2003.
It's only a matter of time before the same
thing happens here. Animal
welfare bill is a step in the
right direction, with its stipulation that
animals should
be able to express normal patterns of behavior
-
nevertheless, the animal welfare act is seriously
flawed, it has legalised
many forms of animal abuse, it
has failed to address many of New Zealand's
animal
welfare problems, including factory farming which is the
greatest
contributor of animal abuse in New Zealand,
causing millions of animals to
suffer extreme
cruelty.
On the positive side, if this provision was
strictly enforced many of the
practices used on factory
farms today would be illegal.
In the next three years as
the different codes of practice, which have been
given
the force of law, come up for review, there will be intense
pressure
to make sow stalls and battery hen farming and
other practices which flout
the spirit of the act -that
animals should be able express normal patterns
of
behavior -illegal. The green party certainly intends to take
a lead in
the next parliament in making sow stalls,
battery farming and other cruel
farming practices which
prevent animals from expressing normal patterns
of
behavior illegal under the act. Phased out
But
perhaps even more significant, from producers point of view,
is the way
consumers are voting with their wallets and
making food purchases in the
supermarkets based on animal
welfare, as well as health and safety concerns.
In the
future, all the trends indicate, consumers will want to know
how
animals have been treated, and what conditions they
were reared in. Farmers
who treat their animals cruelly
will face consumer boycotts and a growing
consumer
backlash against their products. Already we see this
happening in
England where most major supermarkets no
longer stock hens that have been
grown in cages and
freedom foods, from animals that live in freedom,
are
being promoted.
In New Zealand, boycotts against
pork and the recent announcement of the
RNZSPCA 's
endorsement of barn eggs are a sign of things to come
as
consumers begin to exert their power, and use their
knowledge to influence
the market.
It is not only
animal welfare activists who don't want meat from
factory
farms. Consumers generally want safe, wholesome,
unadulterated foods, and
many are shocked when they
discover that the meat they buy comes from
animals that
have been fed antibiotics, the ground up remains of
other
animals, or genetically engineered
feed.
Consumers don't want to eat meat from animals that
have been fed antibiotic
growth promotants every day of
their short and miserable lives, or the
ground up remains
of other animals, or genetically engineered soy meal.
We
want safe, wholesome, natural food, and will use their
purchasing power to
buy it and to avoid meat from factory
farms.
As we move ever further into the information age,
experts are warning that
producers, whether they like it
or not, will have to be consumer, rather
than producer,
driven, as they have been in the past. However galling
they
may find consumer concerns, they will have to listen
to them, for the
consumer as ray winger says in his
paper, is the determinant of the food we
produce-as even
a giant multinational corporation like Monsanto has
recently
found to its cost.
Finally, of course, factory
farming is not only the greatest contributor by
far of
animal abuse, causing millions of animals to suffer, it is
simply not
sustainable. It is not sustainable to continue
feeding animals antibiotics
every day of their lives,
when officials have confirmed that this practice
is
contributing to the upsurge in superbugs in hospitals, and
when health
officials warn that antibiotic resistance is
going to be one of the most
serious problems confronting
consumers in the next century.
Nor is it sustainable to
continue feeding animals the ground up remains of
other
animals, as the bse crisis demonstrated. Which is why the
practice is
illegal in Europe.
The genetic engineers
think they can create new super pigs and super sheep
and
super salmon which will solve some of these problems, but
aside from the
ethics of what they are doing to animals,
it is doubtful that these
laboratory created animals will
be healthy or sustainable. Already reports
coming in from
Ruakura suggest that clones of dolly, the sheep,
are
abnormal, 8 times more likely to die prematurely, may
not be able to graze
in the paddock, and has serious
health and other problems which raise
questions about
whether these animals lives should be sustained.
Like the
factory farmers of yesteryear the genetic engineers are
doing their
experiments in secret, obsessed with the idea
that anything that makes
animals more productive and
therefore more profitable, is acceptable, with
no
apparent concern, apparently, for how the animals, or
consumer will feel
about the new life forms they create.
I am particularly disturbed by the trend of the crown
research institute
Agresearch into genetic engineering
and cloning of cows and sheep, producing
unnatural
animals which are treated like machines, some of this
research is
classed officially as laboratory work which
needs no public input before
behind the scenes official
approval, and it is continuing without public
scrutiny
and debate.
Examples include work at Ruakura near Hamilton
to add human and other genes
to dairy cows. According to
written details of the research, scientists work
on young
calves aged six to nine months to induce lactation well
before the
calves are naturally ready for this. The
government scientists also take out
and insert various
embryos and fetuses, including in very young
animals.
Scientists continually operate to obtain skin
and other body samples.
Scientists in recent years
created deformed mice by taking out whole gene
sequences.
Some of these mice are barely alive, with loss of
liver
functions, walking difficulties, no hair, failed
immune systems, and failed
pregnancies. The scientists
have been talking about similar knock out gene
sequences
in sheep and cattle and are likely to have produced these
animals
already in secret.
An Agresearch report in
1997 about a particular 'knocked out' gene
sequence
regulating muscle growth said this New Zealand
discovery had opened the
flood gates for work on sheep to
greatly boost the amount of muscle. The
green party has
had an anonymous message from Ruakura staff saying
staff
have been sworn to secrecy about GE sheep which
have ongoing problems
retaining bodily fluids and which
the messenger says should not be
kept
alive.
ends