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Chicks Being Ground Up Alive Video

First Posted: 10/17/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:55 PM ET

(AP) WASHINGTON — An undercover video shot by an animal rights group at an Iowa egg hatchery shows workers discarding unwanted chicks by sending them alive into a grinder, and other chicks falling through a sorting machine to die on the factory floor.

Chicago-based Mercy for Animals said it shot the video at Hy-Line North America's hatchery in Spencer, Iowa, over a two-week period in May and June. The video was obtained Monday by The Associated Press.

Hy-Line said in a statement it has started an investigation "of the entire situation," adding that it would have helped their investigation "had we been aware of the potential violation immediately after it occurred."

The video, shot with a hidden camera and microphone by a Mercy for Animals employee who got a job at the plant, shows a Hy-Line worker sorting through a conveyor belt of chirping chicks, flipping some of them into a chute like a poker dealer flips cards.

These chicks, which a narrator says are males, are then shown being dropped alive into a grinding machine.

In other parts of the video, a chick is shown dying on the factory floor amid a heap of egg shells after falling through a sorting machine. Another chick, also still alive, is seen lying on the floor after getting scalded by a wash cycle, according to the video narrator.

Hy-Line said the video "appears to show an inappropriate action and violation of our animal welfare policies," referring to chicks on the factory floor.

But the company also noted that "instantaneous euthanasia" – a reference to killing of male chicks by the grinder – is a standard practice supported by the animal veterinary and scientific community.

According to Mercy for Animals, male chicks are of no use to the industry because they can't lay eggs and don't grow large or quickly enough to be raised profitably for meat. That results in the killing of 200 million male chicks a year.

The United Egg Producers, a trade group for U.S. egg farmers, confirmed that figure and the practice behind it.

"There is, unfortunately, no way to breed eggs that only produce female hens," said the group's spokesman, Mitch Head. "If someone has a need for 200 million male chicks, we're happy to provide them to anyone who wants them. But we can find no market, no need."

Using a grinder, Head said, "is the most instantaneous way to euthanize chicks."

Hy-Line says on its Web site that its Iowa facility produces 33.4 million chicks. Based on that figure, Mercy for Animals estimates a similar number of male chicks are killed at the facility each year. Hy-Line did not comment on that estimate.

Mercy for Animals says it will call on the nation's 50 largest grocery chains to include labels on their eggs that say, "Warning: Male chicks are ground-up alive by the egg industry."

Head called that proposal "almost a joke," saying the group had no credible authority, and had questionable motives. "This is a group which espouses no egg consumption by anyone – so that is clearly their motive." The video does in fact end with a call for people to adopt a vegan diet, which eliminates all animal products – meat, eggs or dairy.

Nathan Runkle, executive director of Mercy for Animals, said most people would be shocked to learn that 200 million chicks are killed a year.

"Is this justifiable just for cheap eggs?" he said.

As to more humane alternatives to disposing of male chicks, Runkle said the whole system is inherently flawed.

"The entire industrial hatchery system subjects these birds to stress, fear and pain from the first day," he said.

___

On the Web:

Mercy for Animals video: http://www.mercyforanimals.org/hatchery

Hy-Line International: http://www.hyline.com/

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(AP) WASHINGTON — An undercover video shot by an animal rights group at an Iowa egg hatchery shows workers discarding unwanted chicks by sending them alive into a grinder, and other chicks falli...
(AP) WASHINGTON — An undercover video shot by an animal rights group at an Iowa egg hatchery shows workers discarding unwanted chicks by sending them alive into a grinder, and other chicks falli...
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06:56 PM on 09/11/2009
I'm intrigued by the following statements in the text above: "had we been aware of the potential violation immediately after it occurred... appears to show an inappropriate action and violation of our animal welfare policies." What violations? The actions depicted in the video are clearly violations of human decency and compassion. What else? If the company has animal welfare policies, it would be interesting to know what they include and which actions are vioaltions and which actions are perfectly acceptable. There ARE animal crulety laws in this country, but I don't know the details of thse laws or how they might be different in Iowa. If these action violates the law, who is slacking on enforcement? If these actions are legal, who do we pettiont to make better laws?
12:00 AM on 09/06/2009
All of us watch the chicks as though we were separate from what is happening to them. Guess what, you are on another conveyer belt heading for a meat grinder just like the chicks. Your chances as a woman are 1 in 3 that you will get cancer, for men its 1 in 2. Given a little more time and getting cancer for everyone will be 100% (I remember a time when it was 1 in 1000 do you). Modern medicine is a profit business like the chicken factory that can see no profit in cures that is why there has not been a cure for even the simplest disease like herpes in over a half a century. Their business is squeezing more money out of dying people via treatments not cures (Yet they still ask for our money to find a cure, ironic huh). Anyway you are on a conveyer belt it is just fancier. But it is just as horrible and inhuman. Right now thousands of your fellow human beings are screaming their lungs out because there is not a drug strong enough to stop the pain. There is one way to avoid this fate and that is become what you really are. And what is that you ask? If you are a human being you are a vegan plain and simple. If you are not a human being you are on that conveyor belt heading for that cancer treatment bed. May God have mercy on your soul?
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04:54 PM on 09/08/2009
There is no god.
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KristinNoelle
02:49 AM on 09/05/2009
To all those who believe animal products need to be eaten regularly as part of a healthy diet, I urge you to check out the following link:

http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/what-should-you-eat/pyramid/

Harvard School of Public Health developed their own version of the food pyramid based on the latest science and, more importantly, without taking the interests of agribusiness into consideration. Here are some highlights:

"Eating a plant-based diet is healthiest. Choose plenty of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and healthy fats, like olive and canola oi"

"Red meat, refined grains, potatoes, sugary drinks, and salty snacks are part of American culture, but they’re also really unhealthy. Go for a plant-based diet rich in non-starchy vegetables, fruits, and whole grains. And if you eat meat, fish and poultry are the best choices" (Note how it says IF you eat meat)

Same with dairy, IF you enjoy dairy, stick with low fat and 1-2 servings per day, not three like the USDA recommends.
08:50 AM on 09/05/2009
I'm not going to spend long arguing for or against meat eating. I subscribe to a whole food (traditional) diet of pastured meat and organic produce. I also subscribe to Weston Prices philosophies on diet.

http://www.westonaprice.org/mythstruths/mtvegetarianism.htm

With that said, I am a proponent of changing conventional food production, as I'm sure you are too. Unfortunately from your perspective, to adopt sustainable organic practices animals need to be brought back onto an integrated farm. Their manure is what nourishes the land to grow all those delicious vegis, beans, grains, etc. These animals would obviously be raised in the correct proportion of animal to land and would be fed the correct feed. Cows on grass!!! followed by chickens....etc. pigs routing the hen house.... So, unless you like your vegis with a lot of petroleum you'll probably have to be okay with some humanely raised animal poop (which means some delicious rib eye's and tenderloins) (obviously, meat should be eaten in moderation and soy should be completely avoided.)
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KristinNoelle
10:31 AM on 09/05/2009
Manure makes a good fertilizer, but it isn't essential. If one chooses to raise animals and use their manure, they certainly don't have to kill them.
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KristinNoelle
10:45 AM on 09/05/2009
As far as soy, I've seen no compelling evidence that it should be avoided unless you are allergic. Personally, I would go for the organic, non-GMO soy.

You really have to read the full, original research to draw an accurate conclusion on this and other nutrition-related topics. Nutrition research studies are quite tricky and many methods do not have very high external validity. Unfortunately, many health publications written for the public are written by people who read only the abstract and conclusion and thus, they falsely generalize the findings.

My general rule of thumb is that if humans have been eating it for thousands of years, I will assume it is safe until proven otherwise. If a food has recently been created or altered, I assume it could be dangerous until there is significant evidence that it is safe.
02:18 AM on 09/05/2009
To those who say this is humane - maybe a gigantic, superfast grinding machine in a central location would be the quickest way to carry out capital punishments. If so, how would that sit with you?
10:35 AM on 09/05/2009
For those who support capital punishment, i imagine it would sit just fine.
02:01 AM on 09/05/2009
The bloody ground-up chick output from the grinder, is sold as "hatchery byproduct" and used for dogfood. Thing about that next time you're giving Fido his supper. Buy him or her vegetarian dogfood instead. Dogs do GREAT with grain-based foods.

If you buy chickens/eggs, buy certified free-range chicken that lived a happy life while they lived and were raised by their mama keeping them warm underneath her wings.
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savvysearch
01:38 AM on 09/05/2009
What else can the industry do? Release them in the wild? Put 200 million chicks on Craigslist for adoption? I, personally, can think of no faster way to kill 200 million chicks other than the time consuming and costly act of putting a bullet through their heads individually.

There's a clear agenda for this type of video. It's not to show how inhumane this treatment is (it's actually pretty humane if you consider the lack of viable alternatives). It's to exploit the ignorance of the general public who are so disconnected with where their dinner comes from. And hope they can ban eating meat at all.
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DissedBeliever
07:36 PM on 09/16/2009
I would really not like to know you, or be your friend
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12:08 AM on 09/05/2009
Hmmmmm. Chicken Nuggets.

Is it just me or don't they all look just like Peeps on Easter?
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12:07 AM on 09/05/2009
Well this is the problem when you have 7 billion people on earth. To feed this many people you have to mass produce food. Animals are now birthed, feed, grown, and killed all on an assembly line like in any other automated system. As disgusting as it may be there is no other option. With as many people we have on this planet there is not enough space to grow bio fuels, grow food for animals, grow the animals, have land for us, have land for the wild animals. The earth is only so big and we have outgrown our nest.

We are faced with a tough choice especially since the population is still growing. If you are complaining I'm not interested. What is your solution?
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mreaid
02:15 AM on 09/05/2009
Well, something like a third of all the grains grown in the world are used to raise livestock.

The US alone pours something like 75% of all its grains into feeding livestock. It takes like 8 pounds of grains to produce a single pound of beef. And that's not to mention all the water used to raise the grains and the cows, or the waste produced, or the clear-cutting, etc. Forget the ethical issue, just look at it from a kind of business stand point. It is a crappy deal...8 steps backwards for one step forward seems to be the wrong direction!

And the argument goes well beyond what is brought up in this video alone. It is one of a hundred videos showing what happens on these factory farms.
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mreaid
02:15 AM on 09/05/2009
How about cows being butchered while still alive and conscious? Or the pigs and chickens being tossed into boiling water and having to be beaten back into the pool because they try to get out? Or the workers who routinely "shoved a broomstick down the throat of one turkey and laughed as it choked and died," or "who take those stunners - they're about as long as a yard stick - and shove it up a hog's ass...and in their ears, their eyes, and down their throat," or "take that big ole' meat hook and shoved it right up that hog's ass and dragged it to the kill floor, it just squeelin' all the way there."

And even if we were, it's not just about the method of slaughter, but the conditions these animals are forced to endure before they are slaughtered. Yes, in this video, these male chicks aren't even given a chance to inhabit any conditions, which actually is probably for the better. But the chickens spend an entire lifetime - admittedly painfully shortened lifetime - suffering. And not just chickens. Give this a little read. And yes, it is from PETA, and I know what kind of hate that word stirs up, but it's not about the group, it's about the undeniable information in this article:

http://www.peta.org/mc/factsheet_display.asp?ID=103
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KristinNoelle
02:58 AM on 09/05/2009
It's so horrible the way they treat animals. I watched some PETA videos a few years back and became a vegan the next day. The fur one was especially horrible, I actually cried and I NEVER cry. People always argue that this isn't the norm, but if the meat industry's practices are better than what's being portrayed, wouldn't they want to open their doors to reveal the truth?

Anyways, check out the PETA link in mreaid's post. PETA has gotten a bad rap from a few extremists, but they are really just trying to educate people about where their food comes from.
10:03 PM on 09/04/2009
This is upsetting. Unless humans have been stripped of humanity and kidness, this should count as an atrocity. yes, i do realize that we are going to eventally eat them. but if you knew you were going to eventually die you would still want a nice life wouldnt you? if there was a helpless human infant on the floor crawling around, with burns and broken bones, you would not sit there and let it die would you? yes, i understand that people are meant to eat them, but that doesnt give us the right to make other beings suffer. those people running those factories need to find another, more humane way to run those places.
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KristinNoelle
02:35 AM on 09/05/2009
Human have only raised livestock for a few thousand years. This is nothing compared to how long humans have been around. So no, we are not "meant" to eat them. We actually evolved on a diet of mostly nuts and fruit. If we were meant to eat animals we would have claws and sharper teeth to hunt and kill them ourselves.
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Snowspot
Weary Apocalyte
09:55 PM on 09/04/2009
It's too bad they have to die... but it's really easy to sit here on a message board than actually do something. Welcome to the internet age.
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KristinNoelle
03:00 AM on 09/05/2009
In this case, NOT doing something happens to be the solution. And the thing we should NOT do, is eat eggs. I'm working on it right now....
08:16 PM on 09/04/2009
So where does all that ground chick go? I thought of two options. The first is cat food, but I can't imagine that the cat food companies can process that much chick meat in one day, even though the consistency seems about perfect. I did, however, think of one customer that might be able to absorb and sell that much mashed chick meat in one day, every day. Now I know where mcnuggets come from.
11:42 PM on 09/04/2009
Humans have also ra ped and had sl aves throughout our history. Are we "meant" to do that too? Are we meant to type on the internet and drive cars?

Rethink "natural." We also have the capacity to choose differently. I'm vegan.
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12:13 AM on 09/05/2009
Good for you. So what's your plan? Are you going to use Stalinistic methods to force everyone to be like you?

I was a vegan for three years and I got sick. My system simply does not work without animal protein and here is the irony. I actually like vegetables more than meat and I outright hate beef. But it doesn't matter what i like. If I don't eat protein preferably chicken breast and fish I get sick. So for me it is not a matter of choice rather one of health.
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Laura Walker
07:19 PM on 09/04/2009
About ten years ago I shopped a flea market as it was about to close for the weekend. Some guy was selling chicks 50 cents a piece and he had a lot left. I asked him where they came from. The hatchery, I remarked the market was about to close what was he going to do with the remaining chicks who would be considerably less cute by the following weekend. He told me feed them to his snake. I couldn't stand it. I bought evey remaining chick he had. My sister in the country agreed to take them but she and I had no idea what to do with them and were completely unprepared for our new charges. For a few days she kept them in her laundry room. Very cute....this fluffy wave of yellow every time you opened the door. Eventually they were moved outside to what we thought were secure digs near her stable. Within a week every chicken had been torn to shreds and consumed by foxes, hawks, owls, cats?, we're not really sure. All we know is every morning we were missing some and had a trail of feathers left by the culprit.

This video shows a methodology that by human standards seems horrible. But in reality it is not more cruel than what my chickens suyccombed to in the natural world with natural predators..
09:15 PM on 09/04/2009
well said
11:41 PM on 09/04/2009
They're not "natural" and they wouldn't succumb to this "in nature." We have engineered them to have certain characteristics, taken them out of any "natural habitat" they might have had....and in your case, they didn't have a mother to protect them.
12:32 AM on 09/05/2009
That is exactly right. They are domesticated animals. They are not wild animals and unable to rely on defenses from wild animals.
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Bea Elliott
05:08 PM on 09/04/2009
And I don't kow what the huff is all about with labeling the carton and advising people. Sure, the industry's "experts" says "its the right thing to do". But if this is so, why such a secret for so long? And why the hesitancy to not at lease let people know what's involved in the choices they're making?

No one is forcing anyone to stop buying or eating eggs... Just simply to share the information of what's involved. There are those who may not know but should. This is not a matter of "food health or safety" - but rather one that cannot and should not be decided in the complete domain of those who profit from such secrets and abuses. Letting people choose for themselves is the right thing to do...

And on other questions: "Animals don't feel pain", "do plants suffer", "God put them here for us", etc. These are all denial based... All in a effort to avoid the unavoidable - We DON't NEED eggs, grinding newborn chicks to eat them is like being an ogre! We are all horrified at this! This is the proper response - To feel really awful about the cruelty done to little peeps. It's okay to feel bad... It's not okay to do nothing about it.
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Bea Elliott
05:07 PM on 09/04/2009
plinko14 said "About the only thing I could think of more humane than throwing them in a grinder, is to drop them all onto a large metal plate and crush them instantly with some sort of heavy hydraulic press." BOY! Aren't you the life of the party!

No one "needs" eggs to survive. Yes, you can cook and bake and live without them! It's easy to use more healthy and compassionate alternatives.

"Alternatives" are not "free range", "organic" or cage free, etc. All places which sell eggs do so as for profit. Even hens on a smaller "family" farm - obtains hens from a hatchery too... Unless they are "pets" they too will be sent to the butcher's and have it's short but "unproductive" lifes ended. Confining and killing sentitent beings for "frivolous" wants and greed - can never be thought of as "humane slaughter".

What would happen to all the chickens (and animals) if we didn't "keep" them and eat them? I'm sure no one is proposing that this cultural shift is going to be instanteous... But as time progresses more people will stop eating eggs (or the spent hens) and the industry will gradually make less and less of these "victims". We won't be "over-populated" with animals once the industry stops breeding/hatching more.
06:48 PM on 09/04/2009
I applaud vegetarians and vegans who have made the decision to not eat meat or animal byproducts, but I myself am a meat eater. I believe that we are responsible for the land and the animals who dwell in it, and with that responsibility comes taking care of them while also letting them be used for food. Yes - I used the word "used". That doesn't mean I don't believe they have any value and shoudn't live a healthy life. I only get my meat from local butchers who get their meat from local and small farmers. I'm still working on the egg thing.

I think many people are careful (and then there are those who buy agrifactured meat and food out of spite). I believe it will be a problem until the day that the world ends and it's very sad. But it's up to each person to make the right decision to do the right thing and support others who do the right thing.

As for the male chicks, I wish that there were another way. I personally can't think of a solution to solve the large problem, but I can do my part. I'm glad urban chicken farming is coming back so that people can raise their own roosters and hens and let the humane thing be done when it comes to collecting eggs AND butchering for meat.
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mreaid
01:54 AM on 09/05/2009
I'm sure those animals appreciate your "letting them be used for food..."
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houstonbch
10:23 PM on 09/04/2009
I would prefer meat eaters to over quoters. Why should I be forced to live in a world of double entendres and hidden meanings? Why can't words be used the way the dictionary defines them?

Actually, Bea, I have no problem with your vegan lifestyle and applaud anyone who takes a stand on an issue in which the believe. As a meat eater I see no reason to stop using chicken or their eggs. Both are great sources of protein and delicious. I think what we should all team up against is the un natural products being used in today's food. The preservatives and HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP. Nothing, including meat, is more harmful to your body than HFCS. Meat has not been accused of contributing to autism or the continuing rise in youth obesity.

And, to be very clear, I am just as angered at the cruelty towards animals in the food industry.
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Steve Albert
04:54 PM on 09/04/2009
mmm,...please pass the Barbecue sauce,....