An Ahimsa Crisis: You Decide: What Is The Fate Of Male Chicks?

Published: 01.08.2016
Updated: 02.08.2016

Another problem inherent with all egg production involves the disposal of unwanted male chicks at the hatchery. Because male chicks won’t eventually lay eggs and because these breeds (as opposed to broilers, raised specifically for the production of meat) of chickens don’t grow fast enough to be raised profitably for meat, the baby male chicks are discarded shortly after hatching. There is no incentive for producers to spend time and money to euthanize these chicks, which they consider to be a liability. Hence, male chicks are killed by the cheapest and easiest means available. Typically these methods include suffocation or being ground up alive. All egg hatcheries commit these atrocities whether they provide hens for factory farms or “free-range” farms.

Recently I came across the following information about the Egg industry;

Twelve Egg Facts the Industry Doesn’t Want You to Know; By Free From Harm Staff Writers | July 29, 2014 Male chicks are most commonly suffocated or ground up alive. Consider the following 12 egg facts, most of which are common to all forms of egg farming:

  1. The global egg industry destroys 6 Billion newborn male chicks every year.

  2. Male chicks born to egg-laying hens cannot lay eggs, and are not the breed used for meat. Hatcheries separate males from females through a process known as “sexing.” Since males are worthless to the egg industry, they are disposed of like trash, either suffocated to death or ground up alive in large industrial macerators.

  3. Eggs sold under organic, free-range, and humane labels, and even chicks sold to backyard chicken keepers, also have their origins in these killing hatcheries.

  4. Newborn chicks are more intelligent, alert, and aware of their environment than human toddlers, according to recent scientific studies. In fact, many traits that were previously thought to be exclusive to human / primate communication, cognition and social behavior have now been discovered in chickens.

  5. Female chicks are sent to egg farms, where, due to decades of genetic manipulation and selective breeding, they produce 250 to 300 eggs per year. In nature, wild hens lay only 10 to 15 eggs annually. Like all birds, they lay eggs only during breeding season and only for the purpose of reproducing.

  6. This unnaturally high rate of egg-laying results in frequent disease and mortality.

  7. 95% of all egg-laying hens in the U.S. - nearly 300 million birds - spend their lives in battery cages so small they cannot even stretch their wings. Packed in at 5–10 birds per cage, they can only stand or crouch on the cages’ hard wires, which cut their feet painfully. In these maddening conditions, hens will peck one another from stress, causing injury and even death.

  8. Rather than give them more room, farmers cut off a portion of their sensitive beaks without painkiller. A chicken’s beak is loaded with nerve endings, more sensitive than a human fingertip. Many birds die of shock on the spot.

  9. Most hens on “cage-free” or “free range” operations are also debeaked, as these labels allow producers to confine thousands of birds inside crowded sheds.

  10. In a natural environment, chickens can live 10 to 15 years, but chickens bred for egg-laying are slaughtered, gassed or even thrown live onto “dead piles” at just 12 to 18 months of age when their egg production declines.

  11. During transport, chickens are roughly stuffed into crates and suffer broken legs and wings, lacerations, hemorrhage, dehydration, heat stroke, hypothermia, and heart failure; millions die before reaching the slaughterhouse.

    In the “kill cone” method, considered the most “humane” form of slaughter, fully conscious birds are stuffed down cones and have their necks slit while they thrash and cry out.

  12. At the slaughterhouse, most chickens bred for egg-laying are still conscious when their throats are slit, and their hearts are still beating as the blood drains out of their mouths. Millions of chickens worldwide are still conscious when plunged into the scalding tank for feather removal. They drown while being boiled alive.

What Can You Do? There are delicious and “just like the real thing” plant-based alternatives for every egg dish, from scrambles and omelets to quiche and sunny side ups. It’s also very easy to replace eggs in baking.

Sources
Title: An Ahimsa Crisis You Decide
Author: Sulekh C. Jain
Edition: 2016, 1st edition
Publisher: Prakrit Bharati Academy, Jaipur, India
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