
1. Advocating for Animals, part 7
Critics of campaigns to reduce animal abuse on farms and elsewhere claim
that financially and politically powerful industries prevent any changes
that would prove costly. Consequently, the only reforms we see are those
these industries want, and animal protectionists are quite irrelevant to the
situation. I don’t think that history bears this out.
There have been significant animal welfare reforms prompted by animal
advocates and opposed by animal agribusiness. One prominent example has been
the movement away from battery cages for egg-laying hens. Though this does
not increase production costs substantially, obtaining eggs from cage-free
facilities tends to be more expensive. A major development in that story was
California Proposition 2 in 2008 that phased out tight confinement of
egg-laying hens, breeding sows, and calves, eliminating any housing that
restricts their ability to stand, turn around, or spread their wings. A
perhaps more effective tactic has been to put pressure on large purchasers
of animal products to adopt “animal welfare standards.” Already, major
buyers such as McDonald’s, Albertson’s, Target, Costco, and Whole Foods are
phasing out or have ceased purchasing eggs from caged hens.
Are eggs from cage-free hens humane? Usually not – the chickens still live
in crowded, inhumane conditions. But, intensive confinement in cages is
extremely abusive, and whenever they are abandoned there is a significant
reduction in animal suffering.
Stephen R. Kaufman, MD
2. This Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and Mary Hoffman