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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

When PETA Came to Town

Below is an article about when PETA came to town. I didn't have the chance to go but there was a pretty good article in our local paper so I thought I'd share. Let's just say they didn't go over to well in our community.
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PETA on campus to preach no-meat gospel

Maryville Daily Forum Volume 103, Number 184  
9/19/13

By: Tony Brown

The People for the ethical treatment of Animals arrived on the Northwest Missouri State University campus Wednesday morning, setting up shop in a large tent designed to look like a barn and erecting signs bearing photographs of cute farm animals and slogans like “Pigs are smarter than your children.”

Photo Credit: Tony Brown
Alana Wagly, a PETA intern from Florida, passed out pamphlets, vegetarian cookbooks and samples of soy jerky Wednesday to students on the campus of Northwest Missouri State University.

 
Staffed by a cadre of stylish slender looking 20-somethings, the day-long display was intended to spread the word about the social, moral, and physical benefits of adopting meatless and dairy-free lifestyle.

The exhibit was brought to campus by a local student organization Northwest Advocates for Animal Awareness.

Still, it was an odd message to encounter at a college situated in the heart of cattle country whose R.T. Wright Laboratory Farm prides itself on a prize-winning beef herd, top-of-the-line market lambs and a farrow-to-finish swine operation.

PETA’s Stephanie Maddox, however, refused to offer up any controversial stance with regard to an organization that farmers and stock producers usually regard, at best, with distrust and, at worst, open scorn.

Maddox, who at age 23 has been a vegetarian for ten years, sidestepped all questions smelling of politics with a request that such matters be referred to PETA’s public affairs office.

She was more than happy; however, to share information about how people can eliminate meat from their diet, even in a town like Maryville that savors its beef.

Stores like Hy-Vee and Wal-Mart, she said, are offering a wider variety of meatless products these days, everything from soy-based “chicken” patties and hot dogs to protein staples like lentils and black beans.

Still, in a meat-loving culture she admits that going vegetarian –let alone vegan, the word for people who eschew all animal-based foods, including fish, milk, and eggs—is a challenge.

“it can be difficult if you don’t know where to look, she said.

Which was one of the main purposes of the PETA display, where passerby got to choose from a section of charts, DVD’s and stickers, most offering tips on how to avoid the consumption of beef, swine, fish, and fowl.

Food samples included animal product-free cookies and meatless “jerky” soaked in soy sauce.

But if Maddox and her crew had instructions from PETA headquarters to steer clear of controversy, displays inside the tent made the message clear. Killing animals for food is inhumane and quite possibly immoral.

To anyone who has spent time on a farm, or even at a county fair, the exhibits looked harmless enough, even a little hokey.

But dim lighting, dire words, and elegiac music from a documentary produced by ex-Beatle and vegetarian Paul McCartney appeared designed to make a swine gestation crate—a contraption that keeps a sow from killing her young—appears ominous.

Northwest students were invited to lie down inside the crate so they could experience the discomfort and fear, according to PETA, that such devices cause. Another display consisted of a two-foot-square wire cage stuffed with a half-dozen fake chickens.

Some of the college kids wandering through the tent had the look of true believers, or at least wannabees. Others most defiantly did not.

Clint Bornemeier, an agronomy major from Elwood, NE, and Joe Hegeman, an animal science major from Savannah both grew up on family farms. The two young men—Bornemeier proudly wore an FFA t-shirt—were clearly skeptical about both the display’s and PETA’s claims regarding the inherent cruelty of commercial livestock operations.

“It’s frustrating,” Hegeman said. “I think it’s just that some people aren’t informed about agriculture. As an Industry, we need to do more to project our image and tell our side of the story.”

Hegeman admitted there is a debate within the Ag community itself with regard to the merits of “factory farming” and large-scale confined animal operations. But he said accusing farmers of cruelty simply because they produce meat for human consumption is misguided.

“Our goal is for the animals to be as healthy and as productive as possible,” he said “not to harm or mistreat them.”

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing! I was wondering what happened when PETA came to town. Very interesting.........

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    1. Your Welcom! I wished I would have went and got better info from them but oh well it was probably better I didn't!

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  2. I am still beyond annoyed about them going to an aggie campus! I have several friends that GO to Northwest or are Alumni, I actually was accepted to NW but choose not to go. Now I'm glad I didn't waste my money there. Congrats to you and the rest of the aggies for not killing them :)

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    1. Yeah It was probably a good thing I didn't go because it could have got rough :) I did have a friend who walked up to their booth and the PETA people asked him "Would you like to learn about what ever they were talking about" and he turned to leave and said "No I think i'll go eat something at Chick-fil-a." LOL

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