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intensive farming and giving herbivour animals grounded dead animals to eat and leaving them in such poor animal welfare

2007-03-13 09:52:53 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Food & Drink Other - Food & Drink

The word herbivour means that an animal only eats plants

2007-03-13 10:08:47 · update #1

When you give a planteating animal meat or when animals live in huts,cages,barns with rotton and maggot infestation, you will get adverse effects

2007-03-13 10:14:57 · update #2

5 answers

i never thought of that but now that you brought it up i do blame them and ranch owners too! i mean does anyone really know where they put their animals when they die?.... they just throw them off on the side of the road for tourist to see and have them call animal control or whatever and have them coean it up. hmm....

2007-03-13 10:01:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I don't blame the farmers at all but neither do I think they should get any form of compensation, let me explain.

All businesses have risks and that is part and parcel of business, if a manufacturer makes a batch of products that fail to meet the required standard then they have to bin them and take the loss out of their margin, eg. a car recall. If a food supplier has an infestation they have to destroy the affected products, eg a salmonella outbreak in a food factory. Neither of these businesses would get support from the Government, and you can probably think of many other examples ourself.

Farming is a business as any other and unexpected, or perhaps even expected failures such as Bird Flu etc should be taken account of and a risk factor budgetted into the business plan. It may even be possible to get Business Contingency / Continuity insurance? but of course this would be incurr a high cost for something that the business would hope never to have to use.

Treat farming as any other business, evert business to be self sufficient or the farmer should leave it to someone else!

2007-03-13 17:10:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Nope. I doubt the farmer held a gun to a cow's head and demanded that it eat another animal.

2007-03-13 17:01:09 · answer #3 · answered by csucdartgirl 7 · 0 0

Nope... I blame it on Nature.

The farmers did not create these viruses. They're naturally occurring.

2007-03-13 16:56:17 · answer #4 · answered by Dave C 7 · 1 0

NO! I BLAME FEED MILLS THAT PRODUCE THE FEED. i PROMISE YOU THAT FARMERS DO NOT LEAVE ROTTING DEAD ANIMALS AROUND.

2007-03-13 17:13:07 · answer #5 · answered by p h 6 · 0 0

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