EGGS: The Hard-Boiled Truth & How to Crack the Cruelty
By Erica Meier
Newsletter for the Vegetarian Society of D.C., Spring 2007
When most people think about where eggs come from, they’re likely to conjure
up idyllic images of Old MacDonald’s Farm with happy hens roaming freely
outdoors with a backdrop of lush green pastures. The dismal reality, however, is
that behind nearly every “incredible, edible” egg sold in grocery stores
today is a hen crammed inside a wire battery cage so restrictive, she can barely even
move. Denied the opportunity to engage in many important natural behaviors, she will
never build a nest, forage for food, or even scratch the earth. Instead, she is treated
like a mere egg-producing machine. After her exhausted body becomes too battered and weak
to continue laying a profitable number of eggs, she’ll finally be plucked from her
cage—and her first breath of fresh air will be on a truck bound for slaughter. That
is, if she doesn’t die first or isn’t killed on the farm.
Egg-laying hens are subjected to some of the worst abuses imaginable. They are arguably
the most intensively confined animals in agribusiness today. With virtually no laws
protecting them, these birds can be—and routinely are—treated in ways that
would result in criminal prosecution in all 50 states if those same abuses were inflicted
upon cats or dogs.
The Hard-Boiled Truth
Every year in the U.S., nearly 300 million hens are raised for their eggs, approximately
95% of whom are forced to spend their lives intensively confined inside wire battery cages.
A typical battery cage facility consists of multiple windowless sheds that run the length of
a football field, each one warehousing tens of thousands of hens. Inside, row upon row of
cages are often stacked four levels high with up eight birds stuffed in a single cage. At best,
each hen is afforded a meager 67 square inches of living space—that’s less space
than the size of a sheet of notebook paper.
Undercover video and photos taken inside these egg factories reveal overcrowding, severe
feather loss, untreated illness and injuries, birds immobilized in the wires of their cages,
and dead birds left in cages with live hens (visit EggIndustry.com).
What the images are unable to capture, however, is the stench of thousands of pounds of excrement
collecting in the manure pits below the cages—a stench the birds cannot escape.
Undercover egg factory farm investigations conducted by animal advocacy organizations
across the country, including in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Minnesota, New York,
South Carolina, and California, confirm that cruelty to animals is standard business
in the egg industry.
The Sunny Side
As the painful reality of egg production increasingly gains the public’s attention,
a growing number of people are choosing to express their compassion for animals by removing
their support from this cruel industry. Indeed, the most important step each of us can take
to help end the suffering endured by laying hens is to simply leave their eggs out of our
shopping carts.
And with so many animal-friendly options available in grocery stores today, eating delicious
egg-free foods is easier than ever! For easy egg-free recipes to help you crack the egg habit,
visit VegRecipes.org.
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