The Grief
Behind Foie Gras
Source: www.peta-online.com (references reflect US source).
France produces most of the world's annual 10,000 tons of foie gras
the livers of ducks and geese grotesquely enlarged by cruel force-feeding
(above). But inhumane force-feeding goes on in U.S. factory farms, too
in New York and California.(1)
Cruelty Most Fowl
In 1991, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) investigated
foie Gras production at Commonwealth Enterprises located in the Catskills
of New York. Despite Commonwealth's many prior claims that it made foie
Gras without force-feeding the ducks, PETA's investigators observed
and documented the following:
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Three times a day, workers entered small duck pens in a factory-farm
building. The ducks, knowing what was coming, struggled to get as
far away from the men as possible.
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The workers grabbed the ducks one at a time, held them down, forced
open their bills, and shoved a long metal pipe down their throats
all the way to their stomachs.
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They then squeezed a lever attached to the pipe, and an air-driven
pump forced a third of the day's six-to-seven pounds of corn mixture
into each duck's stomach.
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Each worker was expected to force-feed 500 birds three times a
day. So many ducks died when their stomachs burst from overfeeding
that workers who killed fewer than 50 of "their" 500 received bonuses.
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After four weeks of force-feeding, the ducks were slaughtered,
their livers six to twelve times normal size (2,3) pale,
blotchy melon-sized messes instead of small, firm, healthy organs.
A worker told one of PETA's investigators that he could feel tumour-like
lumps, caused by force-feeding, in some ducks' throats. One duck had
a maggot-covered neck wound 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.
Foie Gras is sold as a "delicacy" which, until Commonwealth was established,
was not obtainable "fresh" in the U.S. only as processed pâté
de foie gras because of import restrictions.
Only male ducks are used for foie gras they produce larger
livers and are considered better able to withstand the four weeks of
torture. Female hatchlings are treated as trash literally. Commonwealth
workers were observed stuffing a nylon feed sack with female ducklings,
tying the bag at the top, and dropping it into a trash can filled with
scalding water. Workers killed the surviving ones by smashing their
heads against the trash can.
Cruelty Charges Against Commonwealth
Based on PETA investigators' evidence, eyewitness accounts, and veterinarians'
statements, New York state police raided Commonwealth in April 1992.
The company was charged with cruelty to animals. Sadly, the district
attorney later gave in to pressure by agriculture groups, withdrew the
criminal charges, and persuaded a judge to seal the case file so the
proceedings which led to the dismissal would remain secret.
What the Experts Say
Veterinarians who viewed PETA investigators' video footage and read
their log notes said such force-feeding would damage the pharynx and
oesophagus so severely that ducks would not be able to eat on their
own after a short period; there is a high chance of infection from using
the same pipe on so many ducks without cleanings; and food is likely
to enter the lungs, causing pneumonia.
One veterinarian who accompanied police on their raid of Commonwealth
Enterprises said, "All of the ducks (in the force-feeding area) exhibited
signs of illness. Many of those ducks were unable to walk or stand.
(Some) exhibited ... bill deformities."(4)
Another stated, "(Force-feeding) can injure the mouth and oesophagus.
... The birds appear to be ill; their eyes are dull and their feathers
unkempt."(5) A third veterinarian who accompanied police noted that
"none (of the ducks) was attempting to preen. Only severely stressed
or ill ducks allow their plumage to deteriorate to the degree seen in
this videotape."(6)
A New York state wildlife pathologist who examined ducks from Commonwealth
said, "If this kind of thing was happening to dogs, it would be stopped
immediately."(7) He expressed horror at their "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 haemorrhage
into the body cavity. This type of treatment and farming of waterfowl
is outside the acceptable norms of agriculture and sane treatment of
animals."(8)
Many New York veterinarians signed a statement that foie Gras production
should be outlawed because foie Gras is nothing but the serious liver
disease hepatic lipidosis: "Animals in this condition would feel extremely
ill .... Foie Gras production, by definition, constitutes clear-cut
animal cruelty."
Nobel Prize-winning goose expert Konrad Lorenz was asked to read to
the European Parliament a report promoting the foie Gras industry. Lorenz
refused, saying he felt "hot with anger" as he read the report. "My
viewpoint towards the 'expert opinion' which further permits forcible
fattening of geese ... can be expressed briefly: The 'expert opinion'
is a shame for the whole of Europe."(9)
Pâté de Folly
Foie Gras and pâté de foie Gras can make people fat and
sick like the unfortunate birds tortured to produce it. Foie Gras gets
85 percent of its calories from fat more than twice as much as
a hamburger! Cardiologist David T. Nash has pointed out, "This fat is
mostly palmitic acid, a saturated fat known to increase cholesterol."(10)
De-Livering
Following PETA's exposé, activists organised protests at restaurants
that serve foie Gras, and PETA sent information to hundreds of restaurants
in the U.S. and Canada. Many, including the San Francisco Hilton, Chicago's
Pump Room, and New York's Loews hotel chain, have removed foie Gras
from their menus. Air Canada and Scandinavian airline SAS have both
agreed to stop serving foie Gras, and American Airlines agreed to stop
selling it in its duty-free catalog. Echoing the sentiments of many
of the restaurateurs who received PETA's information on foie Gras, George
Dareos, owner of La Louisiane restaurant in San Antonio, Texas wrote:
"I cannot thank you enough for providing this information to me. . .
. It is simply appalling! I am discontinuing any further purchasing
of (foie Gras) immediately."
Possibly because of the scandal of force-feeding, Commonwealth became
part of the foie Gras company AGY Corporation, which also does business
as Hudson Valley Foie Gras, New York State Foie Gras, and Ferme de Gourmande,
D'Artagnan.
Legislation Introduced
Since 1993, New York state legislators have introduced bills that
would prohibit force-feeding for foie Gras production. The powerful
farm lobby opposes the legislation, and as this factsheet goes to print,
the Senate and Assembly Committees on Agriculture have been unwilling
to hold open hearings on cruel force-feeding.
Animal Lovers Unite
On April 4, 1995, PETA sent a letter co-signed by 223 animal protection
groups to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
(ASPCA), which has authority to enforce New York's anti-cruelty laws.
The letter urged the ASPCA to investigate and prosecute the New York
foie Gras producers, pointing out that New York law prohibits torturing
or unjustifiably injuring animals and furthering any act of cruelty
to animals. As of this writing, PETA has no word on how the ASPCA plans
to act on this information, but we are hopeful they will opt to enforce
the law to its fullest extent.
What You Can Do
Never buy foie Gras or any foie Gras product. Urge restaurants and
stores that sell foie Gras to halt sales and to sell vegetarian pâté
instead. (In the US, the vegetarian Bonavita brand and others are often
sold alongside U.S. and imported liver pâté in food stores.)
Organise demonstrations where foie Gras is sold.
References
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Collum, Joe, WOR News I-Team report, WOR, New York, April 2, 1992.
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Brawley, Peggy, "Quack Team of New York Farmers Helps Foie Gras
Fly on U.S. Menus," People, Dec. 16, 1985.
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Carson, L. Pierce, "Ducking the Issue," Napa Register, March 18,
1992.
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Hodge, Tatty M., M.S., D.V.M., signed statement, Nov. 18, 1991.
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Dunayer, Eric, V.M.D., signed statement, Nov. 7, 1991.
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Thacher, Wendy, D.V.M., signed statement, Nov. 19, 1991.
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Stone, Ward B., letter to David Cantor, PETA, May 6, 1992.
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Stone, Ward B., letter to Dr. Eric Hartelius, Director, Sullivan
County Animal Control, Nov. 13, 1991.
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Lorenz, Konrad, translation of letter to Dr. Dieter Backhaus,
editor of Grzimeks Tier/Sielmanns Tierwelt, Sept. 1, 1983 (obtained
from Compassion in World Farming, Petersfield, England).
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Nash, David T., M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.C., letter to Wendy Thacher,
D.V.M., Dec. 3, 1991.
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Source: www.peta-online.com
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