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lauratiara
08-31-05, 10:53 PM
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/08/20/un_american_about_animals/

'Un-American about animals
By Peter Singer | August 20, 2005

WHAT COUNTRY has the most advanced animal protection legislation in the world? If you guessed the United States, go to the bottom of the class. The United States lags far behind all 25 nations of the European Union, and most other developed nations as well, such as Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. To gauge just how far behind the United States is, consider these three facts:


Around 10 billion farm animals are killed every year by US meat, egg, and dairy industries; the estimated number of animals killed for research every year is 20 million to 30 million, a mere 0.3 of that number.


In the United States, there is no federal law governing the welfare of animals on the farm. Federal law begins only at the slaughterhouse.


Most states with major animal industries have written into their anticruelty laws exemptions for ''common farming practices." If something is a common farming practice, it is, according to these states, not cruel, and you can't prosecute anyone for doing it.

Together these last two points mean that any common farming practice is legal. If you hear farm industry lobbyists trying to tell you that there is no problem in the United States because unhappy animals would not be productive, ask them how it can be good for a hen to be kept with four or five other hens in a cage so small she couldn't stretch her wings even if she had the whole cage to herself.

To measure how far ahead other countries are, we can first look at British animal protection legislation. British law makes it illegal to keep breeding sows in crates that prevent them from walking or turning around -- the way in which about four out of every five US sows are kept. In Britain, law does not allow veal calves to be denied adequate roughage and iron, as is common in the United States to help produce the gourmet veal often served in restaurants.

Nevertheless, it is not Britain but Austria that has the most advanced animal protection legislation. In May 2004, a proposed law banning the chicken ''battery cage" was put to a vote in the Austrian Parliament. It passed -- without a single member of Parliament opposing it. Austria has banned fur farming and prohibited the use of wild animals in circuses. It has also made it illegal to trade in living cats and dogs in stores and deems killing an animal for no good reason a criminal offense. Most important, every Austrian province must appoint an ''animal lawyer" who can initiate court procedures on behalf of animals....'

benkees
09-01-05, 01:00 AM
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/08/20/un_american_about_animals/
Most important, every Austrian province must appoint an ''animal lawyer" who can initiate court procedures on behalf of animals....'

I loved this. :)

isowish
09-02-05, 06:09 AM
WHAT COUNTRY has the most advanced animal protection legislation in the world?
I guessed Switzerland. I don't know why, it was just a guess :D
Go Austria :up:

Ramona
09-04-05, 01:15 PM
Way to go Austria! :up:

jbphburg
09-04-05, 06:31 PM
The US isn't #1 at much of anything, sorry if that's insulting, but in many ways they've fallen behind other countries, animal care being one, but education and medical care being a couple other major areas where other nations have passed them.

Amy323
09-04-05, 07:10 PM
Go Austria! I wish the US could adopt some of those laws!

tkrk
09-12-05, 01:27 AM
Wow, I hope other countries follow suit. It's nice to know that more and more people are opening up their eyes to what is going on.

Meidi
09-20-05, 09:06 PM
I'm moving to Austria.