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[Marxism] Video Reveals Violations of Laws, Abuse of Cows at Slaughterhouse




And why exactly am I so reticent to finally give up meat? More to the
point, should we really be so surprised that cattle, kept in squalid
overcrowded pens in faint resemblance to conditions in our
overcrowded prisons, are also being subjected to electric shock and
the slaughterhouse version of waterboarding?

Greg McDonald


Published on Wednesday, January 30, 2008 by The Washington Post

Video Reveals Violations of Laws, Abuse of Cows at Slaughterhouse

by Rick Weiss

Video footage being released today shows workers at a California
slaughterhouse delivering repeated electric shocks to cows too sick
or weak to stand on their own; drivers using forklifts to roll the
“downer” cows on the ground in efforts to get them to stand up for
inspection; and even a veterinary version of waterboarding in which
high-intensity water sprays are shot up animals’ noses — all
violations of state and federal laws designed to prevent animal
cruelty and to keep unhealthy animals, such as those with mad cow
disease, out of the food supply.0130 01

Moreover, the companies where these practices allegedly occurred are
major suppliers of meat for the nation’s school lunch programs,
including in Maryland, according to a company official and federal
documents.

The footage was taken by an undercover investigator for an animal
welfare group, who wore a customized video camera under his clothes
while working at the facility last year. [ View the video on the
Humane Society Web site ] It is evidence that anti-cruelty and food
safety rules are inadequate, and that Agriculture Department
inspection and enforcement need to be enhanced, said officials with
the Humane Society of the United States, which coordinated the project.

“These were not rogue employees secretly doing these things,” the
investigator said in a telephone interview on the condition of
anonymity because he hopes to infiltrate other slaughterhouses. “This
is the pen manager and his assistant doing this right in the open.”

The investigator and Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society,
said the footage was taken at Hallmark Meat Packing in Chino, Calif.
Hallmark sells meat for processing to Westland Meat Co. in Chino,
according to Westland President Steve Mendell, who is also Hallmark’s
operations manager.

Over the past five years, Westland has sold about 100 million pounds
of frozen beef, valued at $146 million, to the Agriculture
Department’s commodities program, which supplies food for school
lunches and programs for the needy, according to federal documents.

In the 2004-05 school year, the Agriculture Department honored
Westland with its Supplier of the Year award for the National School
Lunch Program.

In an interview, Mendell expressed disbelief that employees used stun
guns to get sick or injured animals on their feet for inspection.

“That’s impossible,” he said, adding that “electrical prods are not
allowed on the property.”

Asked whether his employees use fork lifts to get moribund animals
off the ground, he said: “I can’t imagine that.”

Asked whether water was sprayed up animals’ noses to get them to
stand up, he said: “That’s absolutely not true.”

“We have a massive humane treatment program here that we follow to
the n{+t}{+h} degree, so this doesn’t even sound possible,” Mendell
said. “I don’t stand out there all day, but to me it would be next to
impossible.”

California law and USDA regulations do not allow disabled animals to
be dragged by chains, lifted with forklifts, or, with few exceptions,
to enter the food supply, all of which happened at Hallmark during
the investigator’s time there last fall, he said.

Video images show those activities, as well as a trailer with
Hallmark’s name on it.

One reason that regulations call for keeping downers — cows that
cannot stand up — out of the food supply is that they may harbor
bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease. It is caused by
a virus-like infectious particle that can cause a fatal brain disease
in people.

Another is because such animals have, in many cases, been wallowing
in feces, posing added risks of E. coli and salmonella contamination.

The Humane Society and other groups have for years urged Congress to
pass legislation that would tighten oversight at slaughterhouses.

Kenneth Petersen, assistant administrator of the Food Safety and
Inspection Service’s Office of Field Operations, whose 7,600
inspectors monitor the nation’s 6,200 slaughterhouses and meat-
processing plants for the Agriculture Department, said he had not
seen the video. He added that he would have preferred that the Humane
Society contacted the agency directly.

But he said use of a Hot Shot — a brand-name electric device used to
get dawdling cows to move along — is “not allowed” as a means of
getting a downer on its feet.

In the video, handlers repeatedly apply powerful shocks to the heads,
necks, spines and rectums of immobile cows.

“That’s certainly not a way to have them stand up or a correct way to
move them,” Petersen said.

Raising a cow on the prongs of a forklift is also not allowed, he said.

“We’ve made it clear that mechanical means to try to elevate an
animal is not considered humane,” Petersen said.

If he had evidence that the practices in the video were going on at a
slaughterhouse, “I would immediately suspend them as an
establishment,” he said. “You’re done. You’re suspended. Everything
stops. That’s what we call an egregiously inhumane handling violation.”

Temple Grandin, a professor of animal science at Colorado State
University and an expert in slaughter practices, called the Humane
Society footage “one of the worst animal-abuse videos I have ever
viewed.”

The investigator said a USDA inspector appeared twice a day, at 6:30
a.m. and about 12:30 p.m., to look at each cow to be slaughtered that
day. The practices occurred before the inspector’s appearance, he
said, with the goal of getting the animals on their feet for the
short time the inspector was there.

“Every day, I would see downed cattle too sick or injured to stand or
walk arriving at the slaughterhouse,” he said. “Workers would do
anything to get the cows to stand on their feet.”

USDA regulations say that if an animal goes down after it is
inspected but before it is slaughtered, then it must be reinspected.
But that rarely, if ever, happened, according to the Humane Society.

“They wanted to do whatever they could to get them into the kill box,
including jabbing them in the eye, slamming into them with a forklift
and simulating drowning or waterboarding the animals,” Pacelle said —
all practices that can be seen in the video.

Mad cow disease is extremely rare in the United States, but of the 15
cases documented in North America — most of them in Canada — the vast
majority have been traced to downer cattle. When the United States
had its first case a few years ago, 44 nations closed their borders
to U.S. beef, Pacelle said, costing the nation billions of dollars.

To sneak downers past inspectors, Pacelle said, is “penny-wise and
pound-foolish.”

© 2008 The Washington Post

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