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KAMANIYA * May ALL beings be happy & free! *



Last Updated: 10/2/2009

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Thursday, November 08, 2007 
Think that eating organic or free-range eggs is different? Think again. Although many consumers believe that labels such as free-range, free-roaming, or cage-free mean that these chickens spend their days in natural outdoor settings, the label means something entirely different to the egg industry. Hens on commercial cage-free farms are not kept in cages, but they still have their sensitive beaks cut off with a hot blade and are crammed together in filthy sheds where they will live for years until their egg production wanes and they're sent to slaughter. They never go outside, breathe fresh air, feel the sun on their backs, or do anything else that is natural or important to them. They suffer from the same lung lesions and ammonia burns as hens in cages, and they have breast blisters to add to their suffering. Reports from people who have visited free-range egg farms indicate that conditions are no different in these systems. Click here to read more.

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Thanks to Tierra :* ( ~ Abolitionist Vegan for the following posting.

"I'm Just Eating Eggs"

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"There are approximately 300 million egg laying hens in the U.S. confined in battery cages — small wire cages stacked in tiers and lined up in rows inside huge warehouses. Laying more than 250 eggs per year each, laying hens' bodies are severely taxed. After one year in egg production, the 'spent hens' are sent off to slaughter. They usually end up in soups, pot pies, or similar low-grade chicken meat products in which their bodies can be shredded to hide injuries and deformities from consumers."



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In accordance with the USDA's recommendation to give each hen four inches of 'feeder space,' hens are commonly packed four to a cage measuring just 16 inches wide. In this tiny space, the birds cannot stretch their wings or legs, and they cannot fulfill normal behavioral patterns or social needs. Constantly rubbing against the wire cages, they suffer from severe feather loss, and their bodies are covered with bruises and abrasions.

In order to reduce injuries resulting from excessive pecking — an aberrant behavior that occurs when the confined hens are under stress or frustrated — practically all laying hens have part of their beaks cut off. Debeaking is a painful procedure that involves cutting through bone, cartilage, and soft tissue.




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Laying more than 250 eggs per year each, laying hens' bodies are severely taxed. They suffer from "fatty liver syndrome" when their liver cells work overtime to produce the fat and protein required for egg yolks. They also suffer from what the industry calls 'cage layer fatigue,' and many become 'egg bound' and die when their bodies are too weak to pass another egg.



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Osteoporosis is another common ailment afflicting egg laying hens, whose bodies lose more calcium to form egg shells than they can assimilate from their diets. One industry journal, Feedstuffs, explains, "...the laying hen at peak eggshell cannot absorb enough calcium from her diet..." while another (Lancaster Farming) states, "... a hen will use a quantity of calcium for yearly egg production that is greater than her entire skeleton by 30-fold or more." Inadequate calcium contributes to broken bones, paralysis, and death.




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After one year in egg production, the birds are classified as 'spent hens' and are sent off to slaughter. Their brittle, calcium-depleted bones often shatter during handling or at the slaughterhouse. They usually end up in soups, pot pies, or similar low-grade chicken meat products in which their bodies can be shredded to hide bruises and deformities from consumers.



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With a growing supply of broiler chickens keeping slaughterhouses busy, egg producers have had to find new ways to dispose of spent hens. One entrepreneur has developed the 'Jet-Pro' system to turn spent hens into animal feed. As described in Feedstuffs, "Company trucks would enter layer operations, pick up the birds, and grind them up, on site, in a portable grinder... it (the ground up hens) would go to Jet-Pro's new extruder-texturizer, the 'Pellet Pro.'"




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In one notorious case of extraordinary cruelty at Ward Egg Ranch in February 2003 in San Diego County, California, more than 15,000 spent laying hens were tossed alive into a wood-chipping machine to dispose of them. Despite tremendous outcry from a horrified public, the district attorney declined to prosecute the owners of the egg farm, calling the use of a wood-chipper to kill hens a "common industry practice."

In some cases, especially if the cost of replacement hens is high, laying hens may be 'force molted' to extend their laying capacity. This process involves starving the hens for up to 18 days, keeping them in the dark, and denying them water to shock their bodies into another egg-laying cycle. Commonly, between 5 and 10% of birds die during the molt, and those who live may lose more than 25% of their body weight.

For every egg-laying hen confined in a battery cage, there is a male chick who was killed at the hatchery. Because egg-laying chicken breeds have been genetically selected exclusively for maximum egg production, they don't grow fast or large enough to be raised profitably for meat. Therefore, male chicks of egg-laying breeds are of no economic value, and they are literally discarded on the day they hatch — usually by the cheapest, most convenient means available. Thrown into trash cans by the thousands, male chicks suffocate or are crushed under the weight of others.

Another common method of disposing of unwanted male chicks is grinding them up alive. This can result in unspeakable horrors, as described by one research scientist who observed that "even after twenty seconds, there were only partly damaged animals with whole skulls". In other words, fully conscious chicks were partially ground up and left to slowly and agonizingly die. Eyewitness accounts at commercial hatcheries indicate similar horrors of chicks being slowly dismembered by machinery blades en route to trash bins or manure spreaders.
Michael Skowronski
Michael Skowronski

 
Thank you for bringing this to our attention. I did not know this, and needed to know.

This world is full of problems like this. It is frustrating to me to see so many problems being reported and no real way to make the necessary changes. Our governments have become lame and crippled and no longer serve us. So what can we do?

I have proposed a solution that I know will work to solve not only this problem but all of our problems. You can read about it on my blog which you will find here:
International World Government
http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID=277120233&blogID=326669335

Kind and loving regards,
Michael Skowronski
 
Posted by Michael Skowronski on Thursday, November 08, 2007 - 4:36 PM
[Reply to this
KAMANIYA * May ALL beings be happy & free! *

 
I appreciate your comment, Michael, but cannot go along with your statement that there is "no real way to make the necessary changes." Change begins with the individual, & as individuals in the "developed" world, we are empowered to affect change in our direct environment at any given moment.

As consumers, we are also very powerful. Every penny that we spend is a political, social, ethical statement. We vote with our dollars. It's up to us what & who we will vote for. It's up to us to educate ourselves, rather than to buy blindly into the propaganda. We are truly blessed for communities such as MySpace that provide opportunity for relative free-flow of expression & information sharing. There is tremendous strength in numbers, so as individuals we can align ourselves with the appropriate communities in order to affect change on a global scale. I look forward to reading more about your project & your efforts to accomplish this.

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
~ Margaret Mead
 
Posted by KAMANIYA * May ALL beings be happy & free! * on Wednesday, November 14, 2007 - 7:11 AM
[Reply to this
XxMorganxX
Morgan Smith

 
Would these people like it if they were forced to lay eggs stuck in cages and then when they die be grinded up to feed OTHER ANIMALS???!!!!!!!
 
Posted by XxMorganxX on Wednesday, November 14, 2007 - 5:21 AM
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