You’re more likely to go to prison for exposing animal cruelty than for committing it

jeffw@lemmy.world to politics @lemmy.world – 864 points –
You’re more likely to go to prison for exposing animal cruelty than for committing it
vox.com

Not really sure what to put here...I usually put relevant excerpts, but that got this post deleted for doing that

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Are slaughter houses secretive?

I was raised in an agriculture focused community and did the whole FFA thing in highschool. I've since moved to another state and am now living the life of a city slicker, so maybe I've just become out of touch, but back then none of the "how the sausage is made" stuff was hidden from us. Hell we had a whole field trip to tour a pair of meat processing plants (one for poultry, one for beef).

Have things changed over the last 5-10 years? Is my experience just an outlier?

I think they’re referring to this:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ag-gag

Not necessarily the slaughtering part, but the living conditions that these animals are stuck in, sometimes for years, is barbaric. Imagine being in a cage where you can’t walk and you have to stand in your own shit for days on end.

The ethics of animal slaughter and how it’s done are almost a separate conversation imo. No living creature deserves to be tortured (and outright torture does occur, see Earthlings or Dominion for the details)

The ethics of animal slaughter and how it’s done are almost a separate conversation imo

It is a separate conversation, and I'm glad you pointed it out because it's an important distinction and one that is far too frequently overlooked.

Bringing an animal into the world with the intent of later killing it when it is entirely unnecessary to do so seems a bit wrong no?

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