When a baby chick is born from an industrial large incubator, they are then moved through a factory full of conveyor belts. Here various hard working Americans examine each chick as the chick passes through. If the chick appears defective or is just simply too small, the chick's head is placed on a little metal pad that shoot electrical volts so extreme the chick dies instantly on contact. The others that make the cut, literally, because they get their beaks cut off which stops them from plucking each other.
It's not like they completely tortured the chicks. They made sure the ones who were "defective" died painlessly. Imo, I'd rather die on contact with something than slowly die from whatever other cause. As for the chicks that made it, yes, their beaks were cut off, but that's so they don't peck each other. Plus, if humans can have parts of their foreskin on their penis cut off at birth (for whatever reason), taking the beak off a chick is kinda the same thing. They're both really painful, but, assuming that chickens can understand and remember pain and whatnot, when they grow up, they won't remember.
They go into huge containers that are sealed shut with no light, but air holes of course. They are then shipped to the countless chicken farms in America.
*The Largest Chick Industry is Tyson*
When they are delivered they are simply placed into these huge cylinder containers where the chicks barley ever see day light. The chickens are so tightly packed that they can not even move around without a great valiant effort. They feces where ever they are standing, regardless of the other chickens. They stand in their own feces for their whole life.
They can breathe. I mean, considering that they're just chickens and for the purpose they will serve, they don't need light. They just need to live. The chickens aren't saying to each other, "dude, you're stepping in feces! ahaha!" "YOU ARE, TOO, DUDE!"
They are fed corn. Feeding corn isn't that bad for a chicken, until you say Industrial Corn, but that comes later.
Everyday the manager of the containers will go in and pull out all the dead ones.
I'll wait for the argument, and yeah, it makes sense to take out the dead ones.
It only takes these industrial chicks seven weeks to mature! An organic chicken would take about 3 months to mature. The reason for this is that these Industrial Chicks are fed the wrong foods, have been genetically modified, and honestly don't have a choice.
They are then slaughtered and processed into meat. Regardless of the diseases they carry.
Well, they may not be organic, but, like NAMKCOR said, to satisfy the great demand, they need to put out.
Now let's move on to Cows.
Much like the Chickens, Cows are compacted tightly into a small pin. An acre can hold hundreds of cows. They are fed corn which is really bad for a cow. The corn makes them very fat and which makes a less quality meat. This corn also gives them many diseases like E-coli (to get reduce E-Coli, they have to cut a hole into the stomach of the cow and pull out all the E-Coli, they do this once while they are alive).
They are full of countless diseases that we don't even know about when we eat meat. They like the chickens just feces every where. Luckily for them though, the feces is flushed down into a huge reservoir of just cow manure. The sad part is, this cow manure can't be used as a fertilizer for the high amount of chemicals from the corn, the high amount of antibodies that are given to the cows to hide away diseases, and the E-coli. This manure flows down into the Gulf of Mexico where there are miles of dead zones because of this manure.
Basically, this is a problem with diseases, if I read correctly. However, we're not dead from eating that meat so I don't know if it's just me and my apathy, but as long as my desire for meat is satisfied and I'm still alive, I'm fine.
As for the corn that makes them fat and less quality meat, that's a pretty bad argument. You're really against this thing so you'd WANT more meat and less quality, making the number of cows that are killed in the process less.
As for the manure, it might be good to reuse it as fertilizer or w/e, but hey, where do you think
our poop goes?
The cows are then processed into meat, dead or alive.
Like the corn thing, this gets the most out of the cows.
Corn is gross now. It is almost every processed food. From noodles, to meat, to candy, to donuts, to granola bars, to chips, to dips, to juices, and even non food items.
Corn is planted in fields of high nitrogen level fertilizers. Nitrogen helps speed up the process of growing.
This isn't just the same corn you would buy from the store to eat. This is Genetically Modified Organism corn. They genetically modified the corn to resist certain pesticides that kill bugs and to resist common corn disease. They use E-Coli to genetically modify corn.
Farmers use over twenty different chemicals through out the whole process of growing the corn. The idea is to get the most bushels in one acre. The average is around 170-200 now but back in the day the average was 80 - 100.
Idk what to say. Isn't it good that the corn resists diseases? Kinda like what I said before about apathy, I'm still alive after eating the cow that eats this corn so I'm fine. Seems like it did more good than harm.
I am trying to brief because this is getting lengthy, but we eat all this food. My opinions are as follow;
1. Put a label on foods saything they contain Genetically Modified Organism substances.
2. Better living conditions for the animals.
3. and basically that this is wrong. I think these practices should be monitored better and these industries should be shut down. This grosses me out just thinking about these claims.
Oh, you shoulda put your opinions at the beginning.
1. Usually people will put that they DIDN'T use it to make them seem cooler and get those "YEAH, ORGANIC" people buying it. Like me, I pretty much always buy organic milk. It's not like the people said they
don't use Genetically Modified Organism substances.
2. They're going to be slaughtered anyways. Might as well make them comfortable? They're not humans. If you want to get into extreme animal rights (if you're that kind of guy), we might as well give them all names, social security numbers, and homes. Oh, count them in for the next census, too. >_>
3. So monitor the processes a bit better then shut them down? >_> Choose one, sir.
EDIT: Reading that you're not a vegetarian, I assume you'd want the processes a bit better. I'll agree, but yeah.
The problem is that most of these presidents are also the presidents in the government's food regulation agencies.
Yeah, this can be bad; corruption is bound to happen. But corruption happens everywhere (not to say we should just leave it alone).