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1. Battery Cages
One of the most egregious aspects of egg production is the
extreme confinement of hens. Most hens live out their lives in barren battery
cages with less living space than the size of a sheet of notebook paper.
2. Macerators (Grinding
Machines)
Because male chicks do not lay eggs or grow quickly enough
to be raised profitably for meat, they are often killed within hours after
hatching. Some are ground up
alive while others are gassed or suffocated.
3. Debeaking
When they are just babies, egg-laying hens have their beaks
seared off with a hot blade. This is an extremely painful procedure and many
chickens die from starvation because it’s too excruciating to even eat.
4. No Federal Laws
Unfortunately, not a single federal law provides protection
to animals during their lives on factory farms, and the law that protects cows
and pigs at the slaughterhouse—the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act—does not
extend to birds, leaving chickens with virtually no protection from abuse.
5. Unnaturally Short Lives
While hens can live an average of 10 to 12 years, on modern
farms they are killed when their egg production declines around their second
birthday.
6. Barn Fires
Sadly, there has been a shocking number of fires at egg
factory farms around the country that have resulted in the mass deaths of an
astonishing number of birds.
The intensive confinement of animals on factory farms also
makes them vulnerable to other deadly horrors, such as floods and collapsing
barns.
7. Restriction of Natural
Behaviors
Egg-laying hens are denied nearly everything that comes
naturally to them. They are kept in cramped wire battery cages and can never
fully spread their wings, walk, perch, or build nests.
8. Broken Bones
In addition to severe mental and social deprivation, forcing
a naturally active bird to spend her life in a cramped and nearly stationary
position causes numerous health problems, including lameness, bone brittleness,
and muscle weakness. Nearly 30 percent of hens have broken bones at the time
they are slaughtered.
9. Little to No
Veterinary Care
As countless MFA investigations have documented, many hens
are left to suffer from open wounds, serious untreated injuries, and infections
without proper veterinary care.
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As long as factory farmers’ top priority is profit, not
animal welfare, animals will pay the price. To withdraw your support from an
industry that treats animals as mere commodities, get your FREE Vegetarian Starter Guide here.