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ANIMALS KILLED FOR FOOD:
Ducks/Geese
Foie Gras
Foie
gras is made from the grotesquely enlarged livers of ducks and geese
who have been cruelly force-fed. Although France is the primary
exporter (and consumer) of this so-called “delicacy,” producing
16,000 tons of it a year, the inhumane force-feedings take place on
factory farms in the United States, too.
While foie gras has historically come from force-fed geese, many
farms now raise ducks as well—mule, muscovy, and genetically
manipulated, sterile animals called “moulards.” Farmers have found
that they can sell more than just the ducks’ fattened livers: Ducks’
legs, breasts, fat, and skin are all marketed for (mostly French)
specialty foods. The bodies of geese, however, age too quickly to be
used for some of these foods. Today, in France, only 6 percent of
foie gras comes from geese. It is common, however, for geese to be
raised for their down as well as for foie gras, and birds with white
feathers are preferred for this purpose.
Force-Feeding
Birds raised for foie gras spend the first four weeks of their lives
eating and growing, sometimes in semi-darkness. For the next four
weeks, they are confined to cages and fed a high-protein,
high-starch diet that is designed to promote rapid growth.
Force-feedings begin when the birds are between 8 and 10 weeks old.
For 12 to 21 days, ducks and geese are subjected to “gavage”—every
day, up to 2 pounds of grain and fat is forced down the birds’
throats by means of an auger in a feeding tube. The Washington Post
reported that the tube “is pushed 5 inches down their throats and
more food than they want is gunned into their stomachs. If the mushy
corn sticks … a stick is sometimes used to force it down.” The
birds’ livers, which become engorged from a carbohydrate-rich diet,
can grow to more than 10 times their normal size (a condition called
“hepatic steatosis”). Birds have difficulty standing, and they tear
out their own feathers and cannibalize each other as a result of
stress. The mortality rate of birds raised for foie gras has been
found to be as much as 20 times higher than that of birds raised
normally, and carcasses show wing fractures and severe tissue damage
to the throat muscles.
Investigations Reveal Further Cruelty
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
did an investigation of a foie gras production facility at
Commonwealth Enterprises in New York revealed that workers were
expected to force-feed 500 birds three times a day. A worker told
one of PETA’s investigators that he could feel tumor-like lumps,
caused by force-feeding, in some ducks’ throats. One duck had a
maggot-covered neck wound that was so severe that water spilled out
of it when he drank. Workers routinely carried ducks by their necks,
causing them to choke and defecate in distress.
One veterinarian who accompanied the police on their raid of
Commonwealth noted, “Many of the ducks … were lame or unable to walk
without using their wings for support. Some ducks moved by pushing
their bodies along the floor. Healthy ducks spend much of their time
on their feet, constantly investigating their environment.” This
same veterinarian said, “All of the birds in the force-feeding area
had dirty, ragged, incomplete plumage, yet none were attempting to
preen. Only severely stressed or ill ducks allow their plumage to
deteriorate to [such a] degree. … Normal ducks keep their feathers
in near-perfect condition.”
A New York state wildlife pathologist who examined ducks from
Commonwealth expressed horror at the birds’ “greatly enlarged
livers, the product of overfeeding by force (livers are easily torn
by even minor trauma)” and at one duck’s “laceration of the liver
with hemorrhage into the body cavity.” He went on to say, “This type
of treatment and farming of waterfowl is outside the acceptable
norms of agriculture and sane treatment of animals.” And he later
told PETA, “If this kind of thing was happening to dogs, it would be
stopped immediately.”
A New York Times reporter who visited Sonoma Foie Gras found that
young ducks had their beaks clipped and that birds “were so fat
[that] they moved little and panted.” The reporter also noted that
at the age of 12 to 15 weeks, birds were confined to dark sheds that
had “standing water … deep enough to suggest a drainage problem.”
Please visit
www.gourmetcruelty.com to view
footage and to learn more about this investigation.
Domestic Geese and Ducks
Geese are very social animals who establish hierarchies in their
flocks and love to forage. They prefer to be monogamous, and both
parents care for their young. One breeder says that “geese tend to
vary more from one individual to another in terms of personality
traits than any other form of domestic poultry.” Ducks also like to
forage, swim, and raise their young. Because most birds raised for
foie gras are kept in cages or in very small groups, their social or
normal grooming activities are limited or impossible.
Domestic ducks and geese usually enjoy being hand-fed by humans, but
birds subjected to force-feeding “kept away from the person who
would force-feed them … the birds were less well able to move and
were usually panting but they still moved away.” Even ducks confined
to cages “moved their heads away from the person who was about to
force feed them.”
High Fat, High Cholesterol
Foie gras is unhealthy for humans. It derives 85 percent of its
calories from fat: a 2-ounce serving contains 25 grams of fat and 85
milligrams of cholesterol.(19)
Nations Ban Foie Gras
The Israeli Supreme Court has ruled that foie gras production
violates the country’s cruelty-to-animals laws and could be banned
by 2005. Germany and other European nations have prohibited the
production of foie gras, and force-feeding birds is prohibited in
the United Kingdom and in Switzerland, where foie gras packages are
required to carry labels to inform consumers that the birds were
force-fed.
In the United States, the Smithsonian Institution canceled a lecture
seminar on foie gras, the Boston Symphony Orchestra removed foie
gras from its Tanglewood Wine and Food Classic, and Williams-Sonoma
stopped selling foie gras in its catalog.
Residents of Sonoma, Calif., submitted a petition to their City
Council, asking that foie gras not be sold within the city limits.
What You Can Do
Urge restaurants and stores that sell foie gras to halt sales of
this cruel product and to sell vegetarian pâté instead. (Vegetarian
brands, such as Bonavita, are often sold alongside liver pâtés in
food stores.) Organize demonstrations at restaurants and stores
where foie gras is sold. Contact
PETA for a foie gras action pack
and for information on how you can support legislation to prohibit
cruel force-feeding.
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What
You Can Do
Begin learning about becoming a vegetarian or a vegan. A
vegetarian is someone who does
not eat the flesh of any living being including chickens,
turkeys, geese, ducks, crustaceans, or fish. A vegan
is someone who makes every effort to avoid eating,
wearing or using all animal products.
Try the many new and flavorful “meat” alternatives, or mock
meats, now available at health food stores and at many regular
supermarkets. Delicious soy and rice “milks” are now available
at all grocery stores. Keep trying new animal-free foods.
When you see veal on a menu, always speak to the manager or
owner of the restaurant to complain about the particularly
brutal treatment of calves for this dish. If told their veal
is “free range,” tell them there is no such thing. By
definition, veal must be kept in certain conditions to produce
this type of meat. If it is “free range,” it cannot be called
“veal.”
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