Saturday, December 4, 2010

So what can we do?

You may be asking yourself, "What can we do to stop factory farms?" Well, there is many suggestions to helping to stop factory farms. Some are for people who do not want to change their ways and some for people who are up to a little change in their lives.

For instance, people who do not want to change their lifestyle can do little things even and that would help stop factory farms. They can start shopping at the organic section in their supermarket that they usually go to. Or even go to an all organic supermarket and find a lot of the same options there.

For people who are looking for change or just even want to try it, there are many options for you as well. For example, you can start looking into organic restaurants such as chipotle. To do this though you would have to cut out bad restaurants such as McDonald's. In addition, you can only go to an organic supermarket and try out many new foods there. Most importantly, you can get the word out there that factory farming is wrong, and we need to make changes.

Friday, December 3, 2010

So what are some factory farming alternatives?

All of these stores and or restraunts that I have talked about are great factory farming alternatives. They show that you do not need factory farming to make good money. All you need is a product that is of good quality. Plus, they are even healthy for you which a lot of people would actually prefer. Yes, fast food and factory farmed food is cheaper. However, after awhile organic food and such will go down because of supply and demand. Also, the cost of medical bills will be less because you will be healthier. If you eat organic food, it will actually save you money in a long run.

If we get rid of factory farming, we have a lot of alternatives that we can turn to. I know that in a lot of city's it would be hard to get rid of the factory farms because there is a lot of people and not as much space for farms. My idea is that we can ship food across america. A lot of states have a lot of farm land. We have a great transportation system that we can use.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Why are these stores important?

Whole Foods Market and Raison Rack stores are very important to have in our society. These stores represent whole organic foods that are needed in our world. They present that eating organic foods is possible in your local community. You just have to do a little researching before hand to figure out what you need to look for.

These stores have a potential to hopefully grow in the future. If these stores grow, I hope that a lot of factory farms will begin to diminish in time. If factory farms start to diminish than our food will potentially be a lot healtheir for us to eat. Also, it will help protect our planet.

Of course, these goals of factory farms and actually accomplishing them are going to take a lot of hard work and a lot of time. This is why we need everybody to help and not give in to factory farming. Yes, the food is cheaper, but our health in a long run will pay off the difference in medical bills.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Raison Rack

For another example of where you can get organic foods, I will introduce you to Raisin Rack. It is a store that is locally run in Ohio. It sells lots of organic groceries, gluten-free foods, fresh fruits and vegetables, dairy, meats, vegan, beverages, water, grains, nuts, seeds, and herbs.

In addition, they also sell many varieties of supplements, minerals, vitamins, herbals, and personal-care products. They are also apart of the American Electric Power's green product program. They save about 100,000 kilowatt hours per month. As well as this, they recycle their plastic and cardboard bags.

For more information on these stores go to: http://www.raisinrack.net/retailer/store_templates/shell_id_1.asp?storeID=13T859V47NGF9N44EB2PFAB7J308BJT1

Whole Foods Market

You might be asking, where can I buy organic foods? Whole Foods Market is a great place to start! At Whole Foods Market, they search for the least processed and best tasting. They believe in food with no artifical ingredients such as: sweetners, coloring, and presertatives.

Also, they want to take care of our world. They are actively supportative of organic farming and good agriculture to help protect our planet. In additon, they also donate food to food banks, sponsor neighboorhood events, and donate to local non-profit groups.

For more information and for locations of Whole Foods Market go to: http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/company/

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Why are organic foods so important?

Organic foods can be very important to someones diet. They are foods that do not contain added pesticides or chemicals. Therefore, they do not have any harmful substances going in to your body. If you eat organic foods, you are potentially making your body healthier.

It is especially important for children to eat organic food because they are highly more vulnerable to diseases and toxins. It is important that are children are taught how to eat healthy from the beginning, so they can live healthy for the rest of their life. If they do this, they can live a long, happy life.

Also, eating organic food can be a lot better for our environment. We need to protect our air and water from the horrible chemicals that leak and spread into both of these. It is becoming a growing problem in North America. In some places, the herbicides actually evaporates in to the air and has an effect on plant life when it spreads!

I will give you more information on why eating organic foods is important when I find more information out.

Source:
Ostrander, Chris. "Organic Foods - What's the big deal?" 07 Nov 2010. <http://www.thefutureisorganic.net/tenreasons.htm>.

Friday, November 5, 2010

What are Organic Foods?

Organic meat, poultry, dairy, and eggs are things that come from animals that do not have hormones or antibiotics added to them. They are not produced with pesticides or fertilizers that use synthetic ingredients. Organic foods are a lot healthier and more nutritious than foods that are not raised the same way.

Organic can only be certified if it is checked and inspected. Places that certify their food as organic are checked by certified government officials to ensure they approved USDA organic standards. They double check that they use organic standards, and that they are not contaminating anything with pesticides or anything else possibly dangerous.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

More Information About Factory Farms

In my freshman seminar class on Thursday, I leaned a lot more about factory farming. We watched videos from the meatrix. It is a website where you can learn a lot about factory farming, we watched the videos from the website and I actually learned a few things that I didn't know.

One thing I learned is that factory farms have been trying to take over family farms for a long time to try and grow and earn more profit. They have been packing animals so closely together that they give the animals so much antibiotics just to stay alive. Now, antibiotic resistant germs have been starting to occur. Many of the animals also never see daylight or get a breath of real fresh air.

In dairy factories, the cows are kept in small sheds that many never move or leave. Even with the antibiotics, the cows still become sick, and they get their tails cut off. In addition, the cows are given a RBGH growth hormone that Canada and the European Union have both banned. The calves of the cows are also separated from them at birth. They are given a formula that is partially made from cows blood which can cause spreading of mad cow disease.

In contuation, I found out about the actual slaughtering house where they slaughter the animals. The workers who work here are very risky. Meat packing is the most dangerous job in the nation. Manure also gets into the meat at these packing stations spreading E. Coli.

For more information or to see the meatrix videos go to: http://www.themeatrix.com/

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

What makes Chipotle important?

Chipotle combines everything that a fast food restaurant could be, but with food that actually is made right. Chipotle has been actually trying to make things change. They have started a good example for our world to follow. Hopefully, they can keep it up and eventually get all of their meat 100% from local family farmers.

The economy in The United States has been low, so I know it is hard for a lot of families to afford food that hasn't been inhumanely processed. This is why Chipotle is a great alternative. If a family makes a few budget cuts, they can easily afford to buy Chipotle and easily have the potential to save an innocent animal's life. One day it will be amazing if all families could afford to feed their families like this. It is definitely a more healthy option due to the chemicals and hormones being added to the processed food.

If Chipotle keeps running, I hope that one day that they can take control of the fast food chain. They could have the power to make all fast food places want to change. It just takes us, people, to make them make the change.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Chipotle

Chipotle has become really popular in many parts of The United States. It combines the quick, cheap service of fast food, but it has a little secret. Chipotle has a little saying that they maintain, "food with integrity." This means they use the best sustainably raised food with great taste, nutrition, and value. They support family farmers who take care of their animals.

In addition, they try to not use animals that have had hormones or antibiotics put in to their system. For instance, they try to find dairy cows that do not have synthetic hormones put in to them. They want to use organic products when possible as well.

Chipotle tries their hardest to get the best meat. Their pork is 100% from farmers who raise their pigs humanely. Their beef is 85% naturally raised, but it is very hard now a days to find someone that meets their standards. They do not want to stop til they reach 100%. Their dairy products come from 35% pasture-raised cows. The chicken is also 100% hormone and antibiotic free.

For more information about chipotle, you can go to their website:  http://www.chipotle.com/en-US/fwi/fwi.aspx

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Why was Issue 2 so Important?

Issue 2 was a key debate in the 2009 election, many people who love animals were a key in the Issue. Many livestock on Ohio farms are very poorly mistreated, animals have feelings too and should be treated as such. Just because it will be costly to farmers does not mean that animals should be punished. Issue 2 passes because of space, inhumanity, and creation of unfair disabilities to the animals.

In many Ohio farms birds, pigs, and calves are so cramped in crates that they can not move to turn around. The hens on these farms can not even spread their wings or even try to get comfortable. The pigs and calves are so tightly cramped in crates that sometimes they can not even stand or take one step forward. Also, the animals are so packed together that they become aggressive and start to fight amongst themselves, sometimes resulting in death.

In addition, animals are given hormones, steroids, or antibiotics to improve their growing process. Chickens in certain areas are given growth hormones to improve the size of their thighs and breasts for more meat and of course more profit. As a result, the chicken can not even support it's own weight. Likewise, turkeys are given growth hormones that before the age one they die if not slaughtered in time. In order to save money on the farm, many livestock are just not fed or given the proper nutrition to survive as well. Further more, livestock are supposed to be stunned before slaughtering. However, this is not always the case. They are skinned alive, still able to feel the pain.

In conclusion, farm animals should be treated fairly and kindly even if they are raised for just meat. Their moments of life should be worth living, not remembered as suffering and torture. The rule "treat others as you would want to be treated" should be applied here to some extent. Issue 2 was very important to pass because of the lack of room provided, unfair treatment, and harmful consequences to animals.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Issue 2

In Ohio, Issue 2 came in to the ballot in 2009 for mistreated animals on factory farms. It created thirteen Ohio Livestock Care Standards Board to establish standards for governing the care of livestock and poultry. It requires minimal standards, approved by the Humane Society of the United States to maintain food safety, encourage locally grown and raised foods, and protect Ohio's farms and families. The board includes thirteen Ohio residents including representatives of family farms, farming organizations, food safety experts, veterinarians, consumers, someone from the agriculture department from an Ohio university or college, and a county humane society representative. The board will consider agricultural best practices for care and well-being, disease prevention, animal morbidity and mortality data, food safety practices, and the protection of local, affordable food supplies (Ohio 1).

Issue 2 did pass in Ohio. I am very glad it did, but it is still going to take a long time to change anything. The board is going to have to work very hard at it. I hope everyone cooperates to these new regulations. Of course, I know not everyone will, but I hope eventually we can live in a fair, humane world for factory farm animals.

"Ohio Livestock Care Standards, Issue 2 (2009)." Ballotpedia.org. 17 Oct 2010 <http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Ohio_Livestock_Care_Standards,_Issue_2_(2009)>.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Why do I think Factory Farms are wrong?

Factory farming is wrong in my opinion because it disregards parts of nature. It's a cruel way to make money, and people do not care about the animals as individuals. They keep them in confinement and pretty much torture them to make a profit. Yes, they may need money. Does this mean you can just ruin an animal's life though?

Everyday many animals die during the process of factory farming, but it still continues. I believe that this should not happen ever. Animals suffer because of the debeaking, intensive confinement, and disease in these factory farm conditions.

Factory farms can also be harmful to human beings whether you eat meat or not. The hormones and antibiotics used on the animals to make them be immune to disease and to grow bigger are ate by us. When you buy meat, it's more likely that you are eating factory farm meat. All of this can be potentially dangerous to human beings. Also, just because animals get medicine to not become sick does not mean that they work. A lot of animals still get sick and it's put out to the consumer market. If you do not eat meat, factory farms can still have an effect on you. Many of the bacteria and hormones come out as animal waste which sometimes makes its way to our waterways. It pollutes are water and can harm all of us.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

More on Factory Farming

As I stated in my last post, there are many other animals in factory farms. Cows, hogs, and many more. I found more information about the different kinds of cows and some about hogs, and they're life within a factory farm.

Cows give us humans so much already. For instance, milk, cheese, and yogurt. We do a horrible job at returning the favor. Cows are given growth hormones and extremely rich diets. Dairy cows give milk when pregnant. Because it takes a lot of energy, they are given more high-energy feed. The feed could have metabolic consequences including several illnesses that could kill the cow. Downed cattle, also called sick cattle, were abandoned for hours at faculties in Maryland, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Texas. They were in horrible health. Downed cattle have higher risks of contamination by E. Coli, salmonella, and mad cow disease because they are in fences and their immune systems are weak. Cows when big enough to be slaughtered are rounded up and put into feeding lots, large pens that hold hundreds of cows to be slaughtered. At the slaughterhouse, cows are hit unconscious by a stunning blow to the head. Then, hung by the back legs and throats are cut (Morse 1).

Hogs are another animal commonly mistreated in factory farms. Hogs are normally smart, social creatures, but their pins are so overcrowded that they usually fight each other sometimes resulting in death. Because of the agressiveness, hogs have their tail docked to prevent it from being bitten off. In addition, hogs are removed from their mother as soon as one week after birth. They are then put in to pens with hundreds of other hogs. The mothers of the baby hogs give birth in a crate that is usually two feet wide by seven feet long.

As you may already know, there are many more problems going along with animal abuse at factory farms. These are just a few examples. I am sure that not everything has been found, but these are definitely reasons enough to make it stop. 

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

What goes on behind the doors of a factory farm?

Now I shared the basic definition of factory farming, but I want to know what actually happens at a factory farm. I want to learn what happens to the animals, and what kind of consequences they experience everyday. Many animals I know go through this kind of treatment since the day they are born to the day they are killed. I've always wanted to research more about what happens to them, and this is a way I can let other people know what goes on as well.

First, people should know there are many different kinds of factory farms. For instance, chickens can be used for their egg production or for their meat. Cows can be used for their meat or for their milk. Hogs and other kinds of animals are mostly to be used for their meat.

Chickens and hens are raised in conditions that do not allow them to lie down, turn or extend their limbs or wings. When in confinement, chickens can be aggressive which can be fatal, so farmers end up debeaking the chickens. An egg ranch in California killed about thirty thousand hens that were no longer productive by throwing them into wood chippers. Broilers, chickens that are used for meat, live in huge pins forty feet wide by five hundred feet long that is holding approximately thirty thousand birds. The broiler birds are also given growth hormones, so the birds will have large thighs and breasts. It makes the bones so heavy that sometimes their bones can not even support them. The slaughtering process of the broiler chicken is absolutely horrific. They are hung by their feet on racks and pulled through a bath of electrified water to stun them. Keeping the birds alive is for the most desirable meat. After the stun bath, their necks are sliced to bleed them to death. Last, they are placed in scalding hot water to loosen their feathers. Three million of the seven million chickens killed in 1993 were put into the scalding tank of water alive (Morse 1).

These are only a few things that I have found so far. There are many others, and I will continue to post what I find as I go along in my research.

Morse, Sherry. "Mistreatment of Farm animals." Buzzle.com. 6 Nov 2010 <http://www.buzzle.com/editorials/6-2-2003-41131.asp>.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

What exactly is Factory Farming?

As I write this blog, some may read it and have no clue what I am talking about. Therefore, I decided my first post about factory farming should be about what factory farming actually is.

The web definition of factory farming says it is, "the modern practice of raising animals or crops for food in extreme confinement, in order to maxamize profits" (Dorris 1). Yes, this is true. In my words though, factory farming is a very cruel harsh way to earn money reguardless of how the animals feel. The animals in these factory farms are treated very poorly. In the factory farm, the animals are packed together and given chemicals, hormones, pesticides, and antibiotics. A lot of these will cause negative effects to the animals physically and mentally.

In addition, factory farming is just not about the poor treatment to farm animals. Factory farms can also include crops. Crops are often given pesticides and fertilizers as well. These chemicals can cause bad health to humans as well. Crops with chemicals can also be bad for the environment as well. They cause pollution from run off and then contaminate the soil, water, and wildlife.  

Sources

 Dorris, Fin. Factory Farming FAQ. 3 October 2010  <http://animalrights.about.com/od/animalsusedforfood/tp/FactoryFarmingFAQ.htm>.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

About Me

Who am I?

Hello, my name is Tabatha Mullins. I am eighteen years old and currently enrolled in a local community college in Ohio. I want to become a nurse. I chose this profession because I want to make something with my life. In addition, I am a huge animal lover; my reason for writing this blog. In America, people have become obsessed with factory farming. I want to look at the alternatives to this horrible choice. My picture is important to this blog because it shows just one of the innocent animals effected by factory farming.

What do I know?
  • I know some about the horrible conditions animals live in due to factory farming. 
  • A lot of animals have consequenses that they have to deal with for the rest of their life. For instance, the animals have such little room that they can not even stand up. Therefore, they lose function in their legs from not being able to move them.
  • In factory farms, animals are give chemicals and hormones that are horrible for their health and ours.
What do I not know?
  • I don't know about a lot of alternatives out there, or what we can do to stop factory farming.
  • I do not know about all of the conditions, or what each factory farm does to uphold certain standards.
  • When the animals are given the hormones and chemicals, I do not know exactly what they are for, or what they are called.
  • I do not know all of the different kinds of animals that are in factory farms. For example, a dairy cow.
What do I want to learn?
  • I want to learn about more alternatives to factory farming and what I can do to get what I think out there.
  • I want to learn more about what I can do help.
  • I want to see what other kinds of diets there are to stray away from eating factory farm meats.
  • I want to learn more about the chemicals and hormones the animals are given and the side effects of them.
  • I want to learn what other people think about factory farming and want to hear what they know.
What are interesting facts about me?
  • I love playing card games when I have nothing to do. In person or online, http://www.pogo.com/. Card games that are my favorite are euchre and phase ten.
  • I also love being outdoors. I like taking walks outside or taking a bike ride along with my dog.
  • I work part-time at a nursing home as a STNA, State Tested Nurse Aide, as well as being a full-time student. It will help me a lot in my nursing carrer as I get older. I get a lot of different experiences and meet a lot of interesting people.