Factory Farming

 

Humans' Beef with Livestock: A Warmer Planet
Brad Knickerbocker, The Christian Science Monito — February 2007
Livestock are a major emitter of greenhouse gases that cause climate change. And as meat becomes a growing mainstay of human diet around the world, changing what we eat may prove as hard as changing what we drive...

This Little Piggy Can Turn
The News & Observer, Editorial — February 2007
But if we're going to eat animals' flesh, it seems as if the least we can do is raise them under conditions that don't just add misery and insult to the "injury" they soon enough will experience at the slaughterhouse...

Boss Hog — The Nation's Top Hog Producer is Also One of America's Worst Polluters
Jeff Tietz, Rolling Stone, feature — December 2006
America's top pork producer churns out a sea of waste that has destroyed rivers, killed millions of fish and generated one of the largest fines in EPA history. Welcome to the dark side of the other white meat...

Cows, Pigs and Sheep: Environment's Greatest Threats?
Catherine Brahic, New Scientist — December 2006
dustry is degrading land, contributing to the greenhouse effect, polluting water resources, and destroying biodiversity. In summary, the sector is "one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems at every scale"...

The Reality of Feed at Animal Factories
Union of Concerned Scientists, feature — September 2006
Over the last 50 years, the way food animals are raised and fed has changed dramatically — to the detriment of both animals and humans...

One Thing To Do About Food: A Forum
The Nation, Forum — September 2006
The National Uniformity for Food Act of 2005, passed by the House and now before the Senate, is a fine example of how food companies and their allies work hard to keep consumers in the dark... There is one very simple thing that everyone can do to fix the food system. Don't buy factory-farm products...

Slow Food Nation
The Nation, feature — September 2006
By now it is generally conceded that the food we eat could actually be making us sick, but we still haven't acknowledged the full consequences--environmental, political, cultural, ocial and ethical--of our national diet...

The Reality of Feed at Animal Factories
Union of Concerned Scientists, feature — September 2006
To save money, they've redefined what constitutes animal feed, with little consideration of what is best for the animals or for human health. As a result, many of the ingredients used in feed these days are not the kind of food the animals are designed by nature to eat...

Another Inconvenient Truth
David Steele, PhD., Canadian EarthSaver, feature — August 2006
There are no two ways about it. Eating meat, dairy and fish is just plain incompatible with sustainability. If this planet is going to be  saved, we must change our eating habits. Go see Al Gore's movie. Do what he suggests. And give up animal products...

Meat Too Tough to Eat
Neal Barnard, Hartford Courant, editorial — August 2006
And there is no strawberry flu or avocado flu, either. But bird flu has emerged as a potential pandemic...

Meat is a Global Warming Issue
Dan Brook, E Magazine, feature — August 2006
"In a nutshell," according to the Center for International Forestry Research, "cattle ranchers are making mincemeat out of Brazil's Amazon rainforests"...

So Who's Really to Blame for Bird Flu?
Joanna Blythman, Guardian Unlimited, commentary — June 2006
A growing number of non-governmental organisations, bird experts and independent vets are pointing the finger at the global intensive poultry industry...

Stink Rises in Ag Circles Over Pollution Lawsuits
Philip Brasher, Des Moines Register, feature — May 2006
Environmentalists say there's no reason toxic chemicals should be treated differently whether they come from a farm or factory, especially given that farms can have bigger emissions than a factory when it comes to a chemical like ammonia...

A Virus Stalks the Henhouse
Charles Piller, KTLA News, feature — December 2005
"When you grow up on a ranch, you know about predators — coyotes and such. But I didn't imagine the main predator would be like this," he said, indicating a microscopic speck between thumb and forefinger. "A virus"...

Chemical Farm
John Feffer, AlterNet, feature — November 2005
From testosterone and tetracycline to zeranol and genetically engineered bovine growth hormone, enough chemicals circulate in our animal products to stock a medicine cabinet. Because our meat and dairy are still over the counter, though, Americans remain largely oblivious to the intrusions of the pharmaceutical industry into our kitchens...

Farmers May Be Losing Battle with Animal Rights Activists
Janet Kubat Willette, AgriNews, feature — November 2005
If animal agriculture hopes to win it must establish the moral high ground and tell people about it relentlessly...

Avian Influenza: Action Alert
Karen Davis, United Poultry Concerns, essay — November 2005
If there is any doubt that the human species has violated the privilege of sharing the earth with the other creatures, the spread and handling of avian influenza dispels it. People ask, what can we do? The answer is, we can stop eating birds and their eggs and we can try to help as many birds as we can...

Agency Targets Animal Damage
Brodie Farquhar, Star-Tribune, feature — Sepember 2005
"Wildlife Services killed more than five animals per minute in 2004,"said Wendy Keefover-Ring of Sinapu, a wolf advocacy group. "The toll on ecosystems wrought by this one agency is jaw-dropping"...

Agro-ecosystem: Tannery and Leather Industry
Shafiq-ur-Rehman, Greater Kashmir, feature — July 2005
Almost all the world output of leather produced is from cattle hides and calfskins, goatskins and kidskins, and sheepskins and lambskins. Other hides and skins used include those of the horse, pig, kangaroo, deer, reptile, seal, and walrus, but they amount significantly fewer...

Corporate Hog Farms
Mike Owens, KSDK, feature — July 2005
Tens of thousands of corporate hogs are being bred and fed in Missouri, with thousands more expected, as one of the nation's biggest hog producers plans an expansion.
But detractors say the booming hog business has a downside: it hurts the environment and the family farm...

How Pigs Could be Launchpad for Bird Flu Pandemic
James Meilde, The Guardian, feature — June 2005
A virologist from Hong Kong warned pigs could provide a launchpad, even if birds carrying the virus, which is causing havoc in Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand, failed to do so...

Animals, Slavery, and the Holocaust
Charles Patterson, Logos, essay — June 2005
Where does all the war, racism, terrorism, violence, and cruelty that's so endemic to human civilization come from? Why do humans exploit and massacre each other so regularly? Why is our species so violence-prone? To answer these questions we would do well to think about our exploitation and slaughter of animals and its effect on human civilization...

Do We Need Large-Scale Confinement Animal Feeding Operations?
John Ikerd, The Pig Site, feature — April 2005
But, the elements of truth in these cases are not sufficient to validate the truth of the popular claims regarding CAFOs. No one really needs CAFOs...

Farmers Study Future Without Confined Feeding Operations
Danya Cain, The Tribune, article — March 2005
The premise of his lecture, part of the Indiana Forage Council’s annual meeting, is that the confinement system is not an enduring system, Zartman said. “The change is coming,” Zartman said. “Whether or not I’ve said it right tonight or not, it will be enormous. If CAFOs survive, they won’t be as we know it”...

They're Gonna Die Anyway
Michelle Rivera, essay — February 2005
If we stopped using leather products, and gelatin, and other animal by-products, the cost of meat would soar to an unattainable level for most people, effectively crippling the beef industry...

Group Targets 'Animal Care Certified' Label
James Drew, Toledo Blade, feature — February 2005
But last year, the national advertising division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus referred the Animal Care Certified logo on egg cartons to the Federal Trade Commission for possible law-enforcement action...

Bio-pharming Begs Closer Scrutiny
Benjamin K. Sovacool, The Roanoke Times, commentary — December 2004
One type of industrial biotechnology frequently overlooked in discussions about the dangers of genetic engineering is bio-pharming, or the genetic altering of plants and animals to produce pharmaceuticals...

Factory Farms "Start of Killer Diseases"
Amanda Brown, IC Wales, investigation — November 2004
Factory farming poses dangers to human health and animal welfare, particularly in developing countries, according to a report out today...industrial animal agriculture has acted as a "launch pad" for diseases such as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), avaian flu and Nipah virus...

Foie Gras — Luxury or Cruelty
Greg Atkinson, Seattle Times Magazine, feature — November 2004
But while most high-end chefs and slow-food aficionados remain enamored of this foodstuff, a sea change may be under way...

Dirty Farm Secrets Revealed
Robert Cohen, essay — October 2004
What do farmers do to sentient creatures, and what devices of torture do they use?
... The evidence is included in the 2005 Nasco Farm Ranch catalog advertised as "The Largest Farm Catalog in the World"...

Morgan Spurlock's Food Fight
Chris Betros, Japan Today, feature — October 2004
I wanted to make a film [Super Size Me] that would empower people to think about eating better, exercising more...

Big Farms, Big Problems?
Manure From Large-scale Dairies Creates Environmental Issues

Fran Henry, Cleveland Plain Dealer, investigation — August 2004
While Mother Nature easily manages a cow pie here, a cow pie there, enormous amounts of liquefied manure are another story. The 22,600 cows housed by northwest Ohio's 22 new dairies produce about 2.8 million pounds of manure a day...

Meat-eaters Soak Up the World's Water
John Vidal, The Guardian, feature — August 2004
The consensus emerging among scientists is that it will be almost impossible to feed future generations the typical diet eaten in western Europe and North America without destroying the environment...All that water has to come from somewhere...

Crimes Unseen:
Can Consumers Rewrite the Dark and Brutal Story of America's Big Slaughterhouses?

Dena Jones, Orion Magazine, investigation — July 2004
That's 27,397,260 animals every day, 1,141,553 every hour, 19,026 every minute. Most Americans, largely disconnected from their food supply, assume these animals met a painless end, if they think about it at all...

Animal Rights and the Myth of "Humane" Treatment
Tom Regan, Minnesota Daily, commentary— April 2004
Comparatively speaking, few people are animal rights advocates. Why? Part of the answer concerns our disparate beliefs about how often animals are treated badly. Animal rights advocates believe this is a tragedy of incalculable proportions. Nonadvocates believe mistreatment occurs hardly at all...

45 Days:
Animal Suffering in the Broiler Industry

Compassion Over Killing, investigation — April 2004
Each year in the United States, more than 8 billion chickens are raised on these farms. In the 1950s, it took 84 days to raise a five-pound chicken. Due to selective breeding and growth-promoting drugs, it now takes only 45 days...

Into the Frying Pan: Virginia's Egg Business Heats Up — But Is There a Difference Between Factory and Farm?
Laura LaFay, Style Weekly, feature — April 2004
But when you pull into the parking lot, there is not a chicken to be seen or a cluck to be heard. To the left of the lot stands the egg-processing plant. To the right, five long windowless “chicken houses." Except for the sound of an American flag snapping in the wind, all is silent...

Assume No Animal Products Are Safe
Karen Davis, United Poultry Concerns, feature — February 2004
Talk about "isolated cases" is nonsense regardless. Agribusiness is global, and for this reason alone the synergies of animal and human diseases elude exactitude...

The Oil We Eat —
Following the Food Chain Back to Iraq

Richard Manning, Harper's Magazine, investigation — February 2004
Farming did not improve lives. [But, I think that] agriculture was not so much about food as it was about the accumulation of wealth. It benefited some humans, and those people have been in charge ever since...

Could Mad Cow Disease Already be Killing Thousands of Americas Every Year?
Michael Greger, MD, investigation — January 2004
The incubation period for human spongiform encephalopathies such as CJD can be decades.74 This means it can be years between eating infected meat and getting diagnosed with the death sentence of CJD...

The Cow Jumped Over the U.S.D.A.
Eric Schlosser, New York Times, feature — January 2004
The Agriculture Department has a dual, often contradictory mandate: to promote the sale of meat on behalf of American producers and to guarantee that American meat is safe on behalf of consumers. For too long the emphasis has been on commerce, at the expense of safety...

The High Price of Cheap Food
Emily Green, Los Angeles Times, feature — January 2004
Our understanding of the way our food is produced is so out of date that it takes a mad cow for Christmas to force our gaze to the farming world beyond the refrigerator case...

 

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