SAVEZ VOUS QUE LES PORCS SONT SOUVENT PLONGES ENCORE VIVANTS DANS UN BAIN BOUILLANT A CAUSE DE LA RAPIDITÉ DE LA CHAÎNE D' EXÉCUTION ET PRÉPARATION
D' AUTRES ANIMAUX PEUVENT ÉGALEMENT SUBIR LES MÊMES TORTURES.
CETTE PÉTITION DEMANDE 100 000 SIGNATURES POUR TENTER D' OBTENIR UNE AMÉLIORATION
SIGNER ICI
Target: DEFRA Farm Animal Welfare Commitee & USDA Animal Welfare Information Center
Sponsored by: Vic Bostock
BOILED AND SKINNED ALIVE? If you eat chicken, ham, bacon or beef, then you probably eat an animal that was boiled or skinned alive at least once a week. Shockingly, slaughterhouse workers admit to deliberately beating, strangling, boiling, or dismembering animals alive. "Today’s slaughter line does not stop for anything: Not for injured workers, not for contaminated meat, and least of all, not for sick or disabled animals. Due to meteoric line speeds, workers are often unable to stun or bleed animals adequately, and, as a result, animals proceed through the butchering process fully conscious. In the words of one worker: "These hogs get up to the scalding tank, hit the water, and just start screaming and kicking. I'm not sure whether the hogs burn to death before drowning. The water is 140 degrees." Poultry, exempt from coverage under the Humane Slaughter Act, are routinely conscious when immersed in the scald tank as well. Following long government paper trails, it is revealed that contaminated meat and poultry are pouring out of federally-inspected slaughterhouses. Records document major meat packers that marinate rancid meat to disguise slime and smell. Plant employees miss hide, hair, ear canals, and teeth in product approved by the facility. Chickens and hams are soaked in chlorine baths to remove slime and odor, and red dye is added to beef to make it appear fresh."
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BOILED AND SKINNED ALIVE? If you eat chicken, ham, bacon or beef, then you probably eat an animal that was boiled or skinned alive at least once a week. Shockingly, slaughterhouse workers admit to deliberately beating, strangling, boiling, or dismembering animals alive. "Today’s slaughter line does not stop for anything: Not for injured workers, not for contaminated meat, and least of all, not for sick or disabled animals. Due to meteoric line speeds, workers are often unable to stun or bleed animals adequately, and, as a result, animals proceed through the butchering process fully conscious. In the words of one worker: "These hogs get up to the scalding tank, hit the water, and just start screaming and kicking. I'm not sure whether the hogs burn to death before drowning. The water is 140 degrees." Poultry, exempt from coverage under the Humane Slaughter Act, are routinely conscious when immersed in the scald tank as well. Following long government paper trails, it is revealed t...
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