OK, finally got the time to see the video.
This link here expresses a lot of my opinion:
https://hojunester.wordpress.com/2012/1 ... arthlings/Interestingly, I found very little honest criticism. For something produced in 2005, that is more than a little suspicious. Basically, about the only way that would happen is if either no body, literally nobody saw it or if all criticism was being actively removed. Now, why would any honest organization run so swiftly from any and all criticism?
To the above, added with your comments, isn't it interesting that one of the primary solutions was CASTRATION/fixing of people's pets to reduce the population (something with which I firmly agree), yet here you are claiming that castration in farming is somehow abuse. To put an emphasis on this, let me say that one of the greatest biological threats we face here in the US right now, its so-called wild hogs. They are not truly wild (indigenous), but rather are escaped farm animals.
Per the specifics -- the claim that its "common" for animals to still be alive after being hit with the bullet-bolt is plain ridiculous. Similarly, this person shows a hallal butchery where basically every rule put forward for Kosher/Hallal butchering is violated. AND... seriously tries to claim that this is typical.
Here is the REAL problem. The REAL problem is twofold.
A. folks like you are now so removed, so ignorant of animal behavior, true welfare that you can look at what are actually GOOD practices and claim them as "abuse" -- not because they truly are abuse, but because you anthropomorphize in the extreme. BUT.. let me clarify something. I have been to slaughterhouses, worked on farms most of my life. I have ALSO worked in hospitals. And.. the real truth is that a lot of people would far prefer the death the animals experience to their own experiences!
B. Too many, like the producer of this film, pretend that only the worst practices, often truly abusive situations are "normal". In this film, they meld the two -- legitimate, honest practices, with abuse in such a way that only someone who is actually involved in the industry would recognize the distinctions.
So, let me clarify -- slitting throats, a bullet in the brain, electroshock are all used because
when properly applied, they are essentially painfree. These are, I will add, the same methods used for human executions. (throat cutting is not used in the west any longer, but once was). Medication, a more common method of human execution, is not used because we don't want lethal drugs in things we eat. Chickens get their head cut off. A chicken will run around afterward, because their nerve system is so undeveloped that it still functions after. If you call that alive... well, I don't.
Overcrowding -- this is probably the closest to an accurate criticism. It is also being changed, AND is one of the biggest differences between a factory farm and a smaller, holistic farm.
Things like cutting off chicken's feet while they live, prodding animals with electric shock for what seem to be pure random cruelty, etc, etc, these are not at all normal practices. Nor is using animals for target practice, hitting them and laughing about it, etc, etc.
As for what they say about seafood.... again, they take some legitimate criticism i.e. contamination, but then blow it up into something unreasonable. Factory trawls, overfishing -- these are real issues.
And, finally, here is the irony. The primary result of all this pressure to change conditions is to make farming more difficult in Europe, the US and Canada. But, then what? Then more and more farming is done in Mexico, other places where regulations are less. Further, in many cases these operations don't arise from regular farmers pressured to produce more, but still with the fundamental understanding/base of farming. These operations are created as nothing more than living machinery operations, with workers and animals alike treated as commodities. THAT is where you get the worst of abuses.
In other words, all this pressure you and yours are putting on "the industry" is actually making it worse, not better. To create positive change you cannot just attack, you have to actually support good, legitimately sustainable operations. AND, that includes crop production, not just animals!