An Argument for the Basic Legal Rights of Farmed Animals
Author(s) -
Steven M. Wise
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
derecho animal forum of animal law studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2462-7518
DOI - 10.5565/rev/da.205
Subject(s) - agriculture , value (mathematics) , animal agriculture , geography , agricultural science , socioeconomics , political science , agricultural economics , archaeology , biology , sociology , economics , machine learning , computer science
The most abused beings in the United States are those whom we raise and kill for food. The numbers of dead are staggering. Most are victims of the severe and almost entirely unregulated practices that Americans permit on their factory farms. According to the United States Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, in 2007, a total of 10.4 billion land-based animals were killed by the American food industry. These included 9.4 billion broiler chickens, 450 million laying hens, 317 million turkeys, 121 million pigs, 39 million bovines, 28 million ducks, 10 million rabbits, and 4 million sheep and goats—fifty times the number killed in biomedical research, for sport, as pests, and for all other reasons combined, carrying a value of hundreds of billions of dollars a year. The degree to which animal enslavement is embedded in our society is difficult to calculate or fathom. In commenting on human slavery, slave historian David Brion Davis wrote in the New York Times that
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