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Will the Farm Bill Nullify Laws Against Animal Cruelty?

Posted: 07/21/2012 6:50 pm

In the last few years, California and several other states have enacted legislation to prevent some of the worst abuse of farm animals. But last week Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) successfully introduced an amendment to the farm bill that would not only jeopardize those laws, but also any laws passed by any other state that might seek to restrict factory farm cruelty.

The current Farm Bill expires at the end of September, so Congress has to cobble together a new one in a hurry. King's amendment was introduced near midnight at the very end of a marathon session. It was debated for a grand total of 20 minutes, and then passed by the House Committee on Agriculture.

If the Senate follows suit, it will become law.

Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) President Wayne Pacelle says the measure could nullify "any laws to protect animals, and perhaps... laws to protect the environment, workers, or public safety." The amendment is worded so broadly, he notes, that it could even prevent states from enacting laws that would prevent the sale of food produced by forced labor.

But Congressman King is proud of his amendment because, he says, it "will ensure that radical organizations like the Humane Society of the United States... are prohibited from establishing... restrictive state laws." King doesn't want anyone, particularly anyone associated with animal welfare causes, telling America's farmers how to raise and care for their animals. "My [amendment] language wipes out everything they've done [to ban the most cruel practices] with pork and veal."

King is particularly peeved with California. In 2008, California voters passed a ballot measure requiring that by 2015, no eggs can be sold in the state that come from hens housed in cages so small they can't begin to lift a single wing. The act was a repudiation of the livestock industry's practice of keeping animals in conditions that violate their natures and frustrate almost all of their natural instincts. And this month a state law banning foie gras took effect. "Foie gras" literally means "fatty liver." To produce it, workers ram pipes down male ducks' or geese's throats several times a day, pumping otherwise impossible amounts of fat into the animals' stomachs. Their livers bloat to up to 10 times their normal size, and are then sold as an expensive delicacy.

King doesn't like these kinds of bans. His amendment, called the "Protect Interstate Commerce Act," says that states that object to the way a food product is produced in other states cannot ban the sale of that product.

Paradoxically, King is normally an outspoken proponent of states' rights, so much so that he has expressed strong support for states' rights to ban contraception. Reporter and blogger Zack Beauchamp points out the irony. Congressman King would permit states to ban birth control, but not foie gras.

Perhaps the contradiction can be explained by the fact that King's current bid for re-election depends on the financial backing of agribusiness interests in his state, and these interests are vehemently opposed to California's laws. Bowing to the dictates of industrial agriculture and factory farms, King's home state of Iowa has virtually no restrictions on the conditions that can be imposed on egg-laying hens or other farm animals. This is one of the reasons the state has been responsible for some of the worst outbreaks of salmonella poisoning in U.S. history.

Congressman King's views are often extreme. Last year, he said that providing free birth control to women could make us a "dying civilization." And just in the last few months: He has made headlines by saying there would be no discrimination against gays in the workplace if gays would simply keep their sexual orientation secret. He has compared detention for immigrants to holiday resorts. And he has equated janitors in House office buildings to the East German secret police for installing energy-efficient light-bulbs.

But King's amendment to the Farm Bill isn't just outrageous talk. It's designed not only to block California's animal safety laws, but also to prevent any state from imposing its own animal welfare standards on producers from other states. And it's now part of the Farm Bill that has been approved by the House.

Another Republican Congressman, Abraham Lincoln, once said "I care not much for a man's religion whose dog or cat are not the better for it." But Steve King takes a different approach.

Neither King nor Lincoln ever graduated from college. But that's about as far as the likeness goes. For unlike Steve King, Abraham Lincoln understood that how we treat animals says something about the kind of human beings we are.

John Robbins is the author of many bestsellers including The Food Revolution, No Happy Cows: Dispatches From The Frontlines of The Food Revolution and Diet For A New America. He and his son, Ocean Robbins, are co-hosts of the 32,000 member Food Revolution Network. He is the recipient of the Rachel Carson Award, the Albert Schweitzer Humanitarian Award, the Peace Abbey's Courage of Conscience Award, and Green America's Lifetime Achievement Award. To learn more about his work, visit JohnRobbins.info

 
 
 

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In the last few years, California and several other states have enacted legislation to prevent some of the worst abuse of farm animals. But last week Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) successfully introduced a...
In the last few years, California and several other states have enacted legislation to prevent some of the worst abuse of farm animals. But last week Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) successfully introduced a...
 
 
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05:36 PM on 07/27/2012
While this issue is obviously very important, people should also be aware that there are ALREADY laws in place threatening other animal protections. For example, the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA) of 2006 criminalizes First Amendment activities and even labels animal activists as terrorists! Obviously, such consequences have a serious chilling effect on the activities of animal activists, and potentially hinders the efforts of those seeking to better the lives of animals throughout this country.
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SusanElizabeth1949
My micro-bio may be empty but my head isn't.
03:43 PM on 09/08/2012
There have been firebombings and other terroristic activities both in Los Angeles and Santa Cruz -- in LA one of the firebombs was set at the wrong house endangering an elderly woman. I'm sorry but firebombs and razors in envelopes is not more free speech then writing a check is.
09:54 PM on 07/26/2012
AG, Farm Bureau, USDA are all bad news for Americans they are Americas real terrorist.. Why because they protect and support criminals.. These same organizations protect Leroy Baker an Auctioneer that owns and operators sugar creek auction in Ohio that has several fines totaling over $172,000 for abuse, neglect, and false paper work and is still in business and fines unpaid.

For more info visit http://www.kaufmanzoning.net
05:41 PM on 07/23/2012
I want to point out the horrors of factory farming and emphasize the need to stop these horrific practices. Animals on factory farms are treated as widgets on an assembly line when clearly they have different needs and standards than assembly line products. Chickens and turkeys are literally put on a moving belt to have their beaks and toes seared off while cows that are too sick and diseased to stand are dragged with chains to transportation and slaughter. All too often, this is the norm now and even when the media reports on these horrific events, we shake our heads and assume this is only a small percentage of the abuse. Well, it is not! Conditions will not improve until we as consumers demand better treatment of animals. That is exactly what we have started to do and now Congressman King wants to remove the small say we have in the matter.
02:19 PM on 07/23/2012
Anyone concerned about the abuse of animals on factory farms should OPPOSE recently introduced egg industry legislation (HR 3798 and S 3239) that would keep laying hens IN battery cages forever, and eliminate the rights of states and voters to do anything about it! Visit http://www.StopTheRottenEggBill.org to learn the facts and take action.
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FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:58 AM on 07/24/2012
Seems to me that the answer to battery cages is more backyard chickens. If enough people in a community kept backyard chickens the demand for grocery store eggs would shrink. And if you have enough space to put in a small pond, nix the chickens and get some backyard ducks. Duck eggs are more nutritious than chicken eggs and (in my opinion) more flavorful. They're also one of the cutest critters on this planet. ;-)
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Romper7
My stalker is a protagonist
05:57 AM on 07/27/2012
Yeah, that should solve the problem of battery cages once and for all. Thanks for a comprehensive solution!
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batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
12:50 PM on 07/23/2012
Are we as a species prone to cruelty, or only some of us? Is "Vulture capitalism” & those whose morality (or lack of it) so malleable that any hideous for-profit act is acceptable? Have we no sense of decency? Has our so-called representative government & representatives become so criminally beholden to campaign-contribution cash & those relative few who control the majority of wealth in this nation, that any despicable or destructive policy can be enacted into law in the dark of night; wolves, bears, large cats, wild mustangs, bison & many other species driven to the brink, subject to extreme cruelty in the name of profits?

Until we end the power of money to control our electoral processes & buy loyalties (time & energies that are ostensibly to be spent doing the “people’s business” & we pay for), we will remain a corrupt wholly-owned subsidiary of the 1% & depraved, subject to “legal” outrage & cruelty.

"We are the most dangerous species of life on the planet, and every other species, even the earth itself, has cause to fear our power to exterminate. But we are also the only species which, when it chooses to do so, will go to great effort to save what it might destroy." -- Wallace Stegner

"Only when the last tree has died and the last river been poisoned and the last fish been caught will we realize we cannot eat money" -- Cree Native American Proverb
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William Graham
Librarian, botanist, and programmer
08:56 AM on 07/23/2012
Iowa farmers used to want to do things right, not rightwing.
Bellla
Trans & Proud
08:49 AM on 07/23/2012
I object to banning Pate' de Fois Gras! It is natural, delicious and does no harm to the birds, who would be slaughtered for food anyway.
I object to most of what HSUS does anyway, they aren't protecting animals, they are another fund raising tool of Big Ag that tries to prevent folks from farming sustainably and being self sufficient.
I raise chickens and ducks for meat and eggs, and I believe I have the right to do so, despite those who scream "animal slavery". I object to the disneyfication of our food supply!
11:17 AM on 07/23/2012
While I would agree that HSUS is a money generating machine, there is no reason for any animal to suffer or be tortured, even if it is meant for the dinner table and force feeding IS torture...if you doubt it, try it.

It is people, who believe that animals are here for us to use as we see fit...pleasure, food or profit, regardless of what they have to endure, that are the problem. We as humans, supposedly the more intelligent and compassionate species need to learn to respect all the other species on this planet as we would not be able to survive without them, all of them. We are the only species on this planet that hasn't learned to live WITH nature but instead feels it is our "right" to change it or even destroy it for our own needs and that's inherently wrong on all levels.When we finally get "it", only then will we have progressed as a species to become what our egos already think we are.
Bellla
Trans & Proud
11:59 AM on 07/23/2012
Ducks and geese store fat in their liver and will willingly gorge themselves, "Forcefeeding" waterfowl with a funnel is not cruel to a goose even if you wouldn't enjoy it. Remember these farmyard species were bred for use and consumption by humans, their entire "raison d'etre" as a species is actually to be our food and bedding. I see my place in terms of my entire ecosystem, as a steward. The goats and sheep I raise could not survive in the wild (well perhaps the goats could). I feed water and care for them, why shouldn't I be part of their entire life cycle, since they exist to serve my needs. Why shouldn't I eat them too? My sheep and goats, ducks and chickens turn things I can't eat into things I can eat, fertilizing the garden besides!
Farming involves a variety of natural cycles that interlock, and the intelligence of a human steward is to harmonize those cycles to the good of all.
Many species created by man would go extinct, having no purpose, if veganism were imposed on humanity. I see veganism as a basic denial of human's part in the natural world, predatory sapient apes that we are.
Your descendants are welcome to evolve back into herbivores! My kin will value what we are and remain predators, on the top of our food chain rather than devolving back into plant eaters. Australopithicus Robustus was a vegan, and is extinct!
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kidrocker
Alaska Rocks
01:34 AM on 07/23/2012
I would pay $100,000.00 to see Rep. King put into a veal box and let me stick sharp sticks into him until I get tired.
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Inkosi
The gods themselves rage against stupidity
11:28 AM on 07/23/2012
kidrocker! fanned and faved! Can I play too?
11:36 AM on 07/23/2012
I would up the ante here with you....
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pl1224
lifelonglefty
01:11 AM on 07/23/2012
I guess the takeaway from this is that Steve King will write and support laws for whomever pays him the most. What a representative of the noble process of Democracy!

steve King
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
12:26 AM on 07/23/2012
I think if you want to stop animal cruelty, stop eating em. Nature will continue her carnivorous ways, but we enlightened humans can find other ways to sustain ourselves, and maybe if the folks down at the bio-labs would hurry up with that test-tube food, we could have synth-steak, synth-chicken/fish/etc. 7 billion people is going to turn into 8 billion people here PDQ, because people are going to keep madly boinking away and turning out that next taxpayer demographic-unit-thing, you know, little .5, there, 'half-pint', we call him/her/it-thing, anyway, there's going to be more bipeds with their omnivorous inclinations, so the Big Food Labs are going to have to bustle up the hustle with the Soylent Green, there.
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11:43 PM on 07/22/2012
I have to understand something here ... there is an obvious separation between what is "right" and what is "required" within the "green" community. Not driving an SVU would be "required" and not banning "Foie Gras" would be "right" right? It would be nice if you laid down the rules so we could understand them.
11:42 PM on 07/22/2012
King has proven himself to an animals worst nightmare and in doing so ensure that the food people put on their table, to feed their families will be wrought with illness and disease. This is about making money, pure and simple. We truly are what we eat and what we eat eats and how it's treated. If you've any doubt, just look at the health rate of the citizens of this country since big agri business took over (ie: ran them out of business) smaller family farms and instituted the narrow minded mentality of more is more. We are no longer eating food that nourishes our bodies, we now consume "food type" products that are contributing to obesity, illness and death...all in the name of the almighty dollar. Please watch the following films for the truth...Food, Inc., Forks Over Knives, Corn King, The Real Dirt About Farmer John and The Future of Food.
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radiobob65
Stewart & Colbert - Intellectuals at work!
02:12 AM on 07/23/2012
The beef industry is so powerful that they have stifled the information about mad cow disease that is running rampant and causing alzheimers in humans that eat beef.
Bellla
Trans & Proud
09:01 AM on 07/23/2012
Banning industrial feedlots could only be good, but don't prevent smallholders from doing things traditionally and organicly.
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Inkosi
The gods themselves rage against stupidity
11:54 AM on 07/23/2012
Fish are also factory farmed!
11:00 PM on 07/22/2012
vote the nut out now! karma will pay him back and the rest of the greedy rich.
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Inkosi
The gods themselves rage against stupidity
11:45 AM on 07/23/2012
Hopefully, it will not pass the Senate.
10:58 PM on 07/22/2012
vote all the bought and paid for by cor porations repubs out now, and that is every single one of them. why else are corp.s spending millions to put repubs in office. and to get rid of democrats and any competition or threat to their power. they will do whatever it takes, all they have to do is spend a few mil. to do it.
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Geauterre
Writer, Author, Commentator and Humorist.
10:57 PM on 07/22/2012
I love my meat, but the idea of some food animal frightened and suffering as he or she is put on my plate . . . raises the hackles at the back of my neck . . . and creatures like Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), who will not let me sleep easy at night, deserve the kind of whipping their momma and poppa never handed out with judicious lessons in being decent and caring human beings.

Y'oughta be ashamed of yourself Mr. King, you cretinous beast.
11:41 AM on 07/23/2012
Will all due respect, its not "some food", its the majority in this country. factory farms have taken over, and all these animals are suffering horribly. I use to love my meat too, but I could't do it anymore. I recently gave up dairy too. It wasn't near;y as hard as I thought, and I am eating so many other things now and cooking more and I fell great. No more guilt putting the fork to my mouth. I just couldn't bare it, knowing what I knew was happing to these innocent lives.
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Geauterre
Writer, Author, Commentator and Humorist.
03:58 PM on 07/23/2012
To eat meat, or not to eat meat, that is the question.
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Inkosi
The gods themselves rage against stupidity
11:48 AM on 07/23/2012
Meat has been in the human diet for eons - it will not disappear. You can still get real food - Frank Reese Good Shepherd Farms (chickens and turkeys) Naiman farms (beef, pork, chickens). In NJ we still have a few family farms.
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Geauterre
Writer, Author, Commentator and Humorist.
03:57 PM on 07/23/2012
As long as putting down food animals is humane. It's the only way I can have my hot dogs without feeling guilty.