Turkey Factory Farms
http://www.goveg.com/factoryFarming_turkeys.asp
Turkeys are packed together so tightly that they often can’t even
spread their wings.
Every year in the United States, 300 million turkeys are killed for
their flesh.5 Almost all spend their entire lives on factory farms and
have no federal legal protection.
Turkeys raised on factory farms are hatched in large incubators and
never see their mothers or feel the warmth of a nest.6 When they are
only a few weeks old, they are moved into filthy, windowless sheds
with thousands of other turkeys, where they will spend the rest of
their lives. To keep the birds from killing one another in such
crowded conditions, parts of the turkeys’ toes and beaks are cut off,
as are the males’ snoods (the flap of skin under the chin). All this
is done without any pain relievers—imagine having the skin under your
chin chopped off with a pair of scissors.7 Millions of turkeys don’t
even make it past the first few weeks of life in a factory farm before
suc***bing to “starve-out,” a stress-induced condition that causes
young birds to simply stop eating.8
Turkeys are bred, drugged, and genetically manipulated to grow as
large as possible as quickly as possible to increase profits.
According to one industry publication, modern turkeys grow so quickly
that if a 7 pound human baby grew at the same rate, the infant would
weigh 1,500 pounds at just 18 weeks of age.9 Turkeys are now so obese
that they cannot reproduce naturally; instead, all the turkeys who are
born in the United States today are conceived through artificial
insemination.10 Read “My Day Working as a Turkey Breeder,” a first
hand account of this cruel process.
The large amount of feces in the shed causes an ammonia buildup that
severely burns turkeys’ skin.
Their unnaturally large size also causes many turkeys to die from
organ failure or heart attacks before they are even 6 months old.12
According an investigative re****t in the Wall Street Journal about the
miserable conditions on turkey farms, “It’s common in a rearing house
to find a dead bird surrounded by four others whose hearts failed
after they watched the first one ‘fall back and go into convulsions,
with its wings flapping wildly.’”13 When they grow so obese that their
legs can’t even sup****t their own weight, turkeys may become
crippled—some of these birds starve to death within inches of water.
When turkeys fall ill because of the filthy conditions or become
crippled under their own weight, farmers walk through the shed to cull
the slow-growing animals (so that they don’t eat any more food). A
PETA investigation in Minnesota, the number-one turkey-producing state
in the country, revealed that the manager of the farm repeatedly used
a metal pipe to bludgeon 12-week-old turkeys who were lame, injured,
ill, or otherwise unsuitable for slaughter and consumption. The
injured birds were thrown onto piles of other dead and dying birds
then tossed into a wheelbarrow for disposal. Birds who were overlooked
were kicked or beaten with pliers or had their necks wrung—all in full
view of other terrified birds. When the Minnesota Turkey Growers came
to the defense of the farmer, the local district attorney refused to
prosecute. Learn more and watch the video.
Learn more about trans****t and slaughter.
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5 Ibid.
6 Patrick Martins, “About a Bird,” New York Times, 24 Nov. 2003.
7 Jodie Karrow and Dr. Ian Duncan, “Starve-Out in Turkey Poults,”
University of Guelph, Dec. 1999.
8 University of Guelph, “Farm Animal Welfare Research,” 1998-2000.
9 John Robbins, The Food Revolution, Conari Press: Boston, 2001, p.
195.
10 Rick Weiss, “Techno Turkeys,” The Wa****ngton Post, 12 Nov. 1997,
11 Christina Duff, “If You Think Surviving Tomorrow Is a Turkey’s Only
Worry, Read On,” The Wall Street Journal, 27 Nov. 1991, B1.
12 Jan Falstad, “Plucked by the Big Boys: No Fresh Turkeys From
Ballentine Turkey Farm This Season,” Billings Gazette, 2 Nov. 2003.
13 Duff.
14 Robbins, p. 195.


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