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Eating: The Reality Of Farm Animals In Factory

1671 Words7 Pages

Yulee Kim
Professor Ozkilic
Expository Writing
11/14/2017
The Reality Of Farm Animals In Factory
Eating is unquestionably an important part of our daily lives. Every day, he or she makes a decision what to eat. These decisions completely defined that they choose and thus determine how it was produced. Every day, people makes a decision what to eat and these decisions completely defined that they choose. Food plays a big role in all of lives and the way that people eat greatly influences how they feel. Although most of the population believes that meat is necessary to human health and survival. But this is not right anymore. In today’s society, there are millions of people who consume meat everyday. This results millions of animals being …show more content…

This is the most well-known problem frame- the cruelty and suffering of farmed animals. There are full of visual and verbal descriptions of land animals’ extreme mental and physical suffering in confinement and painful transport and slaughtering process. AROs cite scientific evidence and frequently compare farmed animal feeling to those of cats, dogs, or other popular mammals, sometimes humans in order to make sure the public that farmed animals experience pains. All AROs focus on the worst cruelties in factory farming, “specifically the extreme intensive confinement of battery cages (hens), gestation crates (pigs), and veal crates (calves), where the animals can hardly move and the pictures are particularly pitiful, showing bars excrements, chains, and inflamed raw skin” (Freeman 2010). And almost every factory farming discussion describes the many standard procedures and manipulations performed without anesthesia including: debeaking, branding, castration, dehorning, toe clipping, ear and tail docking, and teeth clipping. This is an evidence of the poor living conditions and lack of individual medical care, AROs also cite the high mortality rates on the farm or in transport, showing carecasses rotting among the living. (Freeman 2010). Videos from FS and PETA reveal workers beating to death animals who are sick or “runt” and it is …show more content…

The ethical problems are the mistreatment of farm animals that torturing in order to produce the meat product inhumane way. Another is factory animals living conditions which is contain a variety of viruses and bacteria that can harm both human and animals. However, fortunately, this unethical problem can be solved in a time phasing. First, a future phase, containing major legislative program to regulate all intensive farming. Second, planning phase, propounding consumer education and practical alternatives to factory farming as means of creating the climate to enact legislative reforms. Last, the present phase, consisting of court actions and, if necessary, civil disobedience to challenge factory farm abuse (Derrida

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