Animals are loved one way or another by most human beings. Whether it is loving them because they are a source of food or adoring them because they consider them family. As a result of this, many people start to contradict one another saying animals should not have rights while others say they should. Animal Activists are exacting that animals should have rights that protect them from discrimination, abuse, and neglect that are mostly targeted towards home animals. In the end there is a difference between how you treat a domestic animal and a farm animal. Animals having rights should greatly depend on who the animal is. Creating a “Bill of Rights” for animals should be limited to domesticated animals and few should be guided towards farm animals. …show more content…
Domestic animals need to be protected from human cruelty, but animals that are a food source would have to be killed because it is human's nature. Creating a bill of rights that protect all animals would cut down our main source of food: meat. Meat is the way most human get proteins, even though some may believe it is wrong, eating animal meat has been passed down from generations and most humans now eat meat every day.The animals are going to be slaughtered anyways, such that it would not matter how they are treated, but whether if the environment is cleansed from viruses so that the people that consume them do not get viruses themselves. In the documentary Food Inc. they talk about and show how chickens live in an environment that is unbearable. The environment in which these animals live in would have to change regarding the bill of rights. The animals living in the enclosed place get sick and they mix with healthier ones, so in reality, no one knows what kinds of bacteria they are receiving when they go to the …show more content…
With the major corporations such as Tyson gaining money dramatically each year, it has become a major importance to the way the government runs the money.Not only would it hurt our economy, but if humans stop killing animals then we would have to raise the thousands of animals.On a website called Can you afford a horse it talks about how someone who raises one healthy 15H horse would need roughly about $375 to $500 to maintain it for a month. Now imagine having chickens, cows, horses, and even a dog to maintain. People would then want to stop raising farm animals, and then where would the animals go? The animal population would grow increasingly and farmers would not know what to do with them. Soon the farmers would have no choice but to let some loose or the abuse of the animals would start to