Published Letters and Op-Eds from COK’s Writers Group
Chickens Live in Misery
Nichols residents have good reason to be concerned about a planned factory
farm, but let's not overlook a larger issue: Most of the chicken meat we find
in grocery stores and restaurants comes from "broiler" chickens raised
in precisely the kind of concentrated animal feeding operation proposed.
To maximize profits, factory farmers force chickens to live in severely overcrowded
and filthy conditions, with each bird receiving about 130 inches of living space.
While it used to take 84 days to raise a five-pound chicken, corporate agriculture
has used selective breeding and growth-promoting drugs to reduce this to only
45 days.
Such fast growth causes these birds to suffer from a number of chronic health
problems, including leg disorders and heart disease.
Chickens also frequently succumb to heat prostration, infectious diseases and
cancer, all while living amidst their own excrement.
Each year in the United States, more than 8 billion chickens are treated in
this manner.
One of the best ways to help eliminate the pollution and misery is by leaving
chickens and eggs off our plates and adopting a healthy, delicious plant-based
diet.
Mark Hawthorne
Rohnert Park, CA
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