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'Ag Gag': Why Whistleblower Suppression Laws Are A Bad Idea
Almost everyone opposes cruelty to animals. In fact, 97 percent of Americans (according to Gallup) say that animals should be protected from harm, and encouragingly, a poll by Ohio State researchers found that 92 percent want farm animals to be treated well. It’s hard to imagine any topic with more bipartisan support than the humane treatment of animals.
Last year, meat and egg factory farms pushed these “whistleblower suppression” (aka: “Ag Gag”) bills that criminalize taking photos of factory farms without owner permission in four states (Florida, Iowa, Minnesota, and New York) and it looks like they’ll be coming back in all four of these states, and maybe more. The industry’s guiding philosophy appears to be “what the public doesn’t know won’t hurt us.” So in response to investigations that document abuse, the industry is not trying to stop the abuse; instead, it’s trying to stop the investigations by proposing laws that would make it illegal to investigate factory farms and slaughterhouses. (Photo Credit: Mercy for Animals)
But if you’ve been paying attention, you know that the will of the American people on humane treatment is not in alignment with reality; the most recent evidence comes courtesy of Mercy for Animals and Brian Ross’ investigative team at ABC News, which exposed a large egg operation that supplied McDonald’s and other big corporations. MFA’s investigators documented dead and decomposing hen carcasses in cages with live hens, workers gratuitously abusing animals in myriad ways, and (of course) the standard abuses of modern poultry farming (e.g., burning off beaks without pain relief and cramming 5 hens into tiny wire cages, where they spend their entire lives).
This was just one more in a long line of investigations by animal protection organizations; every year, we see 3-4 of these investigations, and sadly, every investigation finds new and horrific abuses—abuses that shock the conscience of all kind people.
Responsible industries would meet this stream of horrid undercover investigations with a serious commitment to change their behavior; they would promulgate strong regulations to protect animals and implement “no tolerance” policies for (at least) the sadistic abuse. And they would, as Dr. Temple Grandin has suggested, put video cameras onto their factory farms and into their slaughterhouses to monitor animal treatment. They would hire independent inspectors to review the video and make sure that there was no gratuitous abuse.
Sadly, the industry does not believe that the customer is always right. Instead, the industry’s guiding philosophy appears to be “what the public doesn’t know won’t hurt us.” So in response to investigations that document abuse, the industry is not trying to stop the abuse; instead, it’s trying to stop the investigations by proposing laws that would make it illegal to investigate factory farms and slaughterhouses.
You read that right: Last year, meat and egg factory farms pushed these “whistleblower suppression” (aka: “Ag Gag”) bills that criminalize taking photos of factory farms without owner permission in four states (Florida, Iowa, Minnesota, and New York) and it looks like they’ll be coming back in all four of these states, and maybe more.
Another high-profile investigation makes clear why these bills are counter-productive to the good of the American people: In 2008, the Humane Society of the United States investigated a dairy cow slaughter plant that had passed all of its USDA inspections going back years and in fact had won USDA’s “supplier of the year” award. Their investigation uncovered horrid cruelty to animals and unsafe meat that led to the recall of 143 million pounds of potentially dangerous meat, much of which was destined for our nation’s schools. If California had one of these whistleblower suppression bills, HSUS’s investigators could have been prosecuted; of course the much more likely scenario is that the investigation would not have happened, and children would have eaten those potentially lethal burgers.
So these whistleblower suppression laws would (if enacted) literally make it a crime to save human beings from dying from contaminated meat, and would also criminalize video investigations that led to employer indictments for worker safety violations, violations of civil rights and sexual harassment laws, and any other potentially illegal activity of a corporation. These are the sorts of investigations that companies and the government should be doing, but if they won’t, the last thing we want to do is criminalize charities for doing them.
At Farm Sanctuary, we provide sanctuary for farm animals who have escaped the factory farming system, and we know these animals as individuals. For the same reason we would never eat cats and dogs, we also would never eat chickens, pigs, or any animals—they are individuals.
However, we also fight for an end to the worst abuses, and that’s where whistleblower protection and the need to legitimately criticize the worst abuses in animal agriculture come in. If your company is so afraid of being “exposed” that you feel the need to criminalize taking pictures of your work, perhaps it’s time to make changes so that you are engaged in work you can be proud of.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllSoon, your local dog pound will be the best delicatessen for miles.
Yesterday, I had a Turkish kid tell me that meat is single biggest reason for human evolution and larger brain size in humans.
The poor killer whale's brain size has not prevented it from being eaten.
And intelligence has nothing to do with brain size anyway.
If you stop sucking in the pounds of meat, your lack of dementia might let you think cohesively for a while.
Corporate rules already disallow taking "proprietary" information outside of their jurisdiction. We have to separate copyright laws from Corporatism.
Or we can continue to be Anne Franks in this Nazi era.
"Yesterday, I had a Turkish kid tell me that meat is single biggest reason for human evolution and larger brain size in humans. "
Is there a reason the kid's race was important to the discussion?
I believe in celebrating everyone's ethnicity.
I mean, don't you want to give credit where credit is due?
Even if it is for hypocrisy?
You mentioned Race.
Is that what you really intended to say?
Or did you want to bring up religious back ground?
I am proud of Californians for passing Prop 2 in 2008. It's just too bad it doesn't take effect until 2015. Big Ag may be successful in getting it repealed by then.
"Big Ag may be successful in getting it repealed by then."
Not happening.
"So in response to investigations that document abuse, the industry is not trying to stop the abuse; instead, it’s trying to stop the investigations by proposing laws that would make it illegal to investigate factory farms and slaughterhouses."
Ah yes, just the way that we fixed those Abhu Garaib problems.
Ask Bradley Manning about revealing the truth. On the bright side, there are millions of tiny cameras snapping pictures of just about everything.
Since we started keeping chickens last year, we have not eaten chicken.
Our son, realising how chicken's behave if let their nature's live as free as legally possible, did a school study on chicken factory farming. He now will not eat chicken and challenges us not to either. Now if we could only keep a pig and a cow!!!!!!
Seriously, it has made a big change to how we eat, realising just how different animals are treated.
Also, our chickens forage as much as possible and supplemented with commercial feed. Their yolks are so orange. Even those eggs we are forced to buy from our local Co-op that are cage-free-pasture raised organic are pale by example.
I hear you, Aberfan. I ate meat and never thought about it until we moved to the country and I had the chance to see cows in the pasture next door to our house. I saw the close relationships between cow and calf, the fear and sadness when the truck came around to carry off a herd member. No more meat for me. I went vegan twenty-five years ago and it breaks my heart when i see a cattle truck hauling off these living feeling beings for the "benefit" of human appetite.
On one hand this illustrates once again, how our government is owned, and has nothing to do with public service.
With the world going to hell, people might be more appropriately concerned about human rights, human killing, and torture; than about chicken rights. Just a wild thought.
The only societies that survive will be those whose resources match their populations. Will life be worth living?
I may not have this quote exactly right but, in effect, Gandhi said, The level of civilisation of a nation can be judged by how it treats its animals.
Animal abuse happens first; when people don't fight that the human abuse begins. It's all part of the same crime.
I think it's a big mistake to pit concern for one group, human or not, against the other, as though there is only so much compassion to go around. Disdain for animals, who experience pain, suffering, and fear, is the basis for the disdain we afford other "lesser" humans. Indeed, dehumanizing our human "enemies" and comparing them to animals is one of the most effective tools used to justify the killing and torture you claim to be concerned about. It is basic mental construct that perpetuates heirarchy and power realtionships. Perhaps if we extended respect to ALL life instead of elevating humans to an exalted status we would go a long way to ending that killing and torture.
This trend of criminalizing those who dare to tell the truth about all the insidious things happening is nothing short of totalitarian. How many government records are turned over with all the data redacted when requested by what once served as a Freedom of Information Act? Note how the "trials" against the alleged guilty (before proven innocents) at any number of offsore prisons don't allow lawyers to see vital information. The States' Secret clause being invoked. Thus naturally, as the state merges with the corporate benefactors, their trade secrets conveniently become State Secrets, too.
You have to marvel not only at the callous disregard for human rights on display, but the type of cowardice that would game the legal playing field to the point where the big money interests not only have the dream team lawyers, but they manage to get 90% of the relevant truths thrown out before the "case" stands trial.
Unbelievable... this IS a Dark Age.