Industrial
farming is one of the worst crimes in history
The
fate of industrially farmed animals is one of the most pressing
ethical questions of our time. Tens of billions of sentient beings,
each with complex sensations and emotions, live and die on a
production line
Yuval Noah Harari
Friday 25 September
2015 07.59 BST
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/sep/25/industrial-farming-one-worst-crimes-history-ethical-question?CMP=fb_gu
Animals are the main
victims of history, and the treatment of domesticated animals in
industrial farms is perhaps the worst crime in history. The march of
human progress is strewn with dead animals. Even tens of thousands of
years ago, our stone age ancestors were already responsible for a
series of ecological disasters. When the first humans reached
Australia about 45,000 years ago, they quickly drove to extinction
90% of its large animals. This was the first significant impact that
Homo sapiens had on the planet’s ecosystem. It was not the last.
About 15,000 years
ago, humans colonised America, wiping out in the process about 75% of
its large mammals. Numerous other species disappeared from Africa,
from Eurasia and from the myriad islands around their coasts. The
archaeological record of country after country tells the same sad
story. The tragedy opens with a scene showing a rich and varied
population of large animals, without any trace of Homo sapiens. In
scene two, humans appear, evidenced by a fossilised bone, a spear
point, or perhaps a campfire. Scene three quickly follows, in which
men and women occupy centre-stage and most large animals, along with
many smaller ones, have gone. Altogether, sapiens drove to extinction
about 50% of all the large terrestrial mammals of the planet before
they planted the first wheat field, shaped the first metal tool,
wrote the first text or struck the first coin.
The next major
landmark in human-animal relations was the agricultural revolution:
the process by which we turned from nomadic hunter-gatherers into
farmers living in permanent settlements. It involved the appearance
of a completely new life-form on Earth: domesticated animals.
Initially, this development might seem to have been of minor
importance, as humans only managed to domesticate fewer than 20
species of mammals and birds, compared with the countless thousands
of species that remained “wild”. Yet, with the passing of the
centuries, this novel life-form became the norm. Today, more than 90%
of all large animals are domesticated (“large” denotes animals
that weigh at least a few kilograms). Consider the chicken, for
example. Ten thousand years ago, it was a rare bird that was confined
to small niches of South Asia. Today, billions of chickens live on
almost every continent and island, bar Antarctica. The domesticated
chicken is probably the most widespread bird in the annals of planet
Earth. If you measure success in terms of numbers, chickens, cows and
pigs are the most successful animals ever.
Alas, domesticated
species paid for their unparalleled collective success with
unprecedented individual suffering. The animal kingdom has known many
types of pain and misery for millions of years. Yet the agricultural
revolution created completely new kinds of suffering, ones that only
worsened with the passing of the generations.
At first sight,
domesticated animals may seem much better off than their wild cousins
and ancestors. Wild buffaloes spend their days searching for food,
water and shelter, and are constantly threatened by lions, parasites,
floods and droughts. Domesticated cattle, by contrast, enjoy care and
protection from humans. People provide cows and calves with food,
water and shelter, they treat their diseases, and protect them from
predators and natural disasters. True, most cows and calves sooner or
later find themselves in the slaughterhouse. Yet does that make their
fate any worse than that of wild buffaloes? Is it better to be
devoured by a lion than slaughtered by a man? Are crocodile teeth
kinder than steel blades?
What makes the
existence of domesticated farm animals particularly cruel is not just
the way in which they die but above all how they live. Two competing
factors have shaped the living conditions of farm animals: on the one
hand, humans want meat, milk, eggs, leather, animal muscle-power and
amusement; on the other, humans have to ensure the long-term survival
and reproduction of farm animals. Theoretically, this should protect
animals from extreme cruelty. If a farmer milks his cow without
providing her with food and water, milk production will dwindle, and
the cow herself will quickly die. Unfortunately, humans can cause
tremendous suffering to farm animals in other ways, even while
ensuring their survival and reproduction. The root of the problem is
that domesticated animals have inherited from their wild ancestors
many physical, emotional and social needs that are redundant in
farms. Farmers routinely ignore these needs without paying any
economic price. They lock animals in tiny cages, mutilate their horns
and tails, separate mothers from offspring, and selectively breed
monstrosities. The animals suffer greatly, yet they live on and
multiply.
Broiler chickens,
which are reared specifically for their meat, often suffer lameness
due to overcrowding. Facebook Twitter Pinterest
Broiler chickens,
which are reared specifically for their meat, often suffer lameness
due to overcrowding. Photograph: PA
Doesn’t that
contradict the most basic principles of Darwinian evolution? The
theory of evolution maintains that all instincts and drives have
evolved in the interest of survival and reproduction. If so, doesn’t
the continuous reproduction of farm animals prove that all their real
needs are met? How can a cow have a “need” that is not really
essential for survival and reproduction?
In order to survive
and reproduce, ancient wild cattle had to communicate, cooperate and
compete effectively
It is certainly true
that all instincts and drives evolved in order to meet the
evolutionary pressures of survival and reproduction. When these
pressures disappear, however, the instincts and drives they had
shaped do not evaporate instantly. Even if they are no longer
instrumental for survival and reproduction, they continue to mould
the subjective experiences of the animal. The physical, emotional and
social needs of present-day cows, dogs and humans don’t reflect
their current conditions but rather the evolutionary pressures their
ancestors encountered tens of thousands of years ago. Why do modern
people love sweets so much? Not because in the early 21st century we
must gorge on ice cream and chocolate in order to survive. Rather, it
is because if our stone age ancestors came across sweet, ripened
fruits, the most sensible thing to do was to eat as many of them as
they could as quickly as possible. Why do young men drive recklessly,
get involved in violent rows, and hack confidential internet sites?
Because they are obeying ancient genetic decrees. Seventy thousand
years ago, a young hunter who risked his life chasing a mammoth
outshone all his competitors and won the hand of the local beauty –
and we are now stuck with his macho genes.
Exactly the same
evolutionary logic shapes the life of cows and calves in our
industrial farms. Ancient wild cattle were social animals. In order
to survive and reproduce, they needed to communicate, cooperate and
compete effectively. Like all social mammals, wild cattle learned the
necessary social skills through play. Puppies, kittens, calves and
children all love to play because evolution implanted this urge in
them. In the wild, they needed to play. If they didn’t, they would
not learn the social skills vital for survival and reproduction. If a
kitten or calf was born with some rare mutation that made them
indifferent to play, they were unlikely to survive or reproduce, just
as they would not exist in the first place if their ancestors hadn’t
acquired those skills. Similarly, evolution implanted in puppies,
kittens, calves and children an overwhelming desire to bond with
their mothers. A chance mutation weakening the mother-infant bond was
a death sentence.
What happens when
farmers now take a young calf, separate her from her mother, put her
in a tiny cage, vaccinate her against various diseases, provide her
with food and water, and then, when she is old enough, artificially
inseminate her with bull sperm? From an objective perspective, this
calf no longer needs either maternal bonding or playmates in order to
survive and reproduce. All her needs are being taken care of by her
human masters. But from a subjective perspective, the calf still
feels a strong urge to bond with her mother and to play with other
calves. If these urges are not fulfilled, the calf suffers greatly.
This is the basic
lesson of evolutionary psychology: a need shaped thousands of
generations ago continues to be felt subjectively even if it is no
longer necessary for survival and reproduction in the present.
Tragically, the agricultural revolution gave humans the power to
ensure the survival and reproduction of domesticated animals while
ignoring their subjective needs. In consequence, domesticated animals
are collectively the most successful animals in the world, and at the
same time they are individually the most miserable animals that have
ever existed.
The situation has
only worsened over the last few centuries, during which time
traditional agriculture gave way to industrial farming. In
traditional societies such as ancient Egypt, the Roman empire or
medieval China, humans had a very partial understanding of
biochemistry, genetics, zoology and epidemiology. Consequently, their
manipulative powers were limited. In medieval villages, chickens ran
free between the houses, pecked seeds and worms from the garbage
heap, and built nests in the barn. If an ambitious peasant tried to
lock 1,000 chickens inside a crowded coop, a deadly bird-flu epidemic
would probably have resulted, wiping out all the chickens, as well as
many villagers. No priest, shaman or witch doctor could have
prevented it. But once modern science had deciphered the secrets of
birds, viruses and antibiotics, humans could begin to subject animals
to extreme living conditions. With the help of vaccinations,
medications, hormones, pesticides, central air-conditioning systems
and automatic feeders, it is now possible to cram tens of thousands
of chickens into tiny coops, and produce meat and eggs with
unprecedented efficiency.
The fate of animals
in such industrial installations has become one of the most pressing
ethical issues of our time, certainly in terms of the numbers
involved. These days, most big animals live on industrial farms. We
imagine that our planet is populated by lions, elephants, whales and
penguins. That may be true of the National Geographic channel, Disney
movies and children’s fairytales, but it is no longer true of the
real world. The world contains 40,000 lions but, by way of contrast,
there are around 1 billion domesticated pigs; 500,000 elephants and
1.5 billion domesticated cows; 50 million penguins and 20 billion
chickens.
In 2009, there were
1.6 billion wild birds in Europe, counting all species together. That
same year, the European meat and egg industry raised 1.9 billion
chickens. Altogether, the domesticated animals of the world weigh
about 700m tonnes, compared with 300m tonnes for humans, and fewer
than 100m tonnes for large wild animals.
This is why the fate
of farm animals is not an ethical side issue. It concerns the
majority of Earth’s large creatures: tens of billions of sentient
beings, each with a complex world of sensations and emotions, but
which live and die on an industrial production line. Forty years ago,
the moral philosopher Peter Singer published his canonical book
Animal Liberation, which has done much to change people’s minds on
this issue. Singer claimed that industrial farming is responsible for
more pain and misery than all the wars of history put together.
The scientific study
of animals has played a dismal role in this tragedy. The scientific
community has used its growing knowledge of animals mainly to
manipulate their lives more efficiently in the service of human
industry. Yet this same knowledge has demonstrated beyond reasonable
doubt that farm animals are sentient beings, with intricate social
relations and sophisticated psychological patterns. They may not be
as intelligent as us, but they certainly know pain, fear and
loneliness. They too can suffer, and they too can be happy.
It is high time we
take these scientific findings to heart, because as human power keeps
growing, our ability to harm or benefit other animals grows with it.
For 4bn years, life on Earth was governed by natural selection. Now
it is governed increasingly by human intelligent design.
Biotechnology, nanotechnology and artificial intelligence will soon
enable humans to reshape living beings in radical new ways, which
will redefine the very meaning of life. When we come to design this
brave new world, we should take into account the welfare of all
sentient beings, and not just of Homo sapiens.
• Buy Sapiens by
Yuval Noah Harari (Vintage) or Animal Liberation by Peter Singer
(Bodley Head) now from bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333
6846. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only. Phone orders
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