The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However,
we have to show the truth
about cruelty to animals,
praying that
you will help to stop it.
Today’s Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
will be presented
in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
This is the Stop
Animal Cruelty program
on Supreme Master
Television.
Animal Equality
is an international
non-profit organization
based in Madrid, Spain
that seeks the abolition
of animal slavery.
The group works
to raise awareness
of how animals
are abused and tortured
by humankind and wants
an immediate end
to all animal exploitation.
Key to meeting
their objective
is the promotion
of lifestyles free of
all animal products.
Sharon Núñez
is a co-founder
of Animal Equality
and their president
and spokesperson.
Animal Equality has
three fundamental pillars
that are also in a way the
slogan of the organization,
which is to “Educate,
Research and Rescue.”
We carry out
investigations
in those places where
animals are exploited,
such as pig farms,
slaughterhouses,
mink farms, and circuses.
We rescue those animals
for whom we have found
a home, for example
we held Spain’s
first-ever “open rescue,”
rescuing six pigs
at a farm and
we also use these tools
to inform society
about the terrible
injustices committed
against animals.
Today we present the
first in a three-part series
featuring excerpts from
an Animal Equality-
produced film
entitled “Pig Farms”
which documents
the findings of 60
Animal Equality activists
after investigating
172 different pig farms
across Spain.
We spent two years,
working, doing researching
into pig farms, which
made headlines in all
the Spanish TV news, with
one of our spokespersons,
Javier Moreno,
going on talk shows:
CNNplus and Tele 5,
so very important.
Pig Farms –
An Animal Equality
documentary
For more than two years,
between February 2008
and March 2010,
the Animal Equality
Investigation Team
documented what occurs
behind the walls of
more than 150 pig farms
located throughout Spain.
This is the result
of that work.
The Spanish pig industry
kills more than
40 million pigs a year
to satisfy society’s
demand for meat.
All these animals
are born and live horribly
in some 10,000 farms.
In this film
you will be able to see
what no one has shown
until now,
a new dimension, in
fear, suffering and death.
Gestation
So called “breeding sows”
are used as machines
to produce piglets.
They are
genetically selected
to withstand between
six and eight births, with
12 or more offspring in
each litter, and their lives
are reduced to a state of
permanent confinement
in narrow metal stalls.
Identification
To better keep track
of the exploited animals,
some farms
insert a microchip
in the ears of the sows,
which is very painful.
Insemination
Before
inseminating the sows,
the farmer must check
if they are receptive.
Two methods are used.
The first involves
using a boar
to detect if the sow
is in heat from her smell.
In general,
the presence of a boar
helps to insure that a sow
will go into heat again
after her babies
have been weaned.
In the second method
the farmer himself
will verify her fertility
by using a heat detector
or observing
how the sow reacts when
he presses on her back.
When she is in heat,
she does not move.
Once her state
of her fertility is known
insemination follows.
To force the female into
the required position, the
farmer does not hesitate
to resort to blows, kicks,
tail pulling, shoving
and shouting.
Next the farmer
cleans the sow’s vulva
and inserts semen
of the selected boars
into the female,
by a tube of around
50 centimeters in length.
No physical contact
occurs between the boars
and the sows;
nor is the development
of natural behavior
permitted.
Confinement
and gestation
A sow’s pregnancy lasts
between 110 and 120 days
and the first month
is spent confined
in narrow sow stalls, also
known as gestation crates.
They are unable to move
due to the size of the stalls.
Distressed
by the lack of space, they
desperately try to escape.
The constant friction
of these animals’ bodies
against the bars
of the stalls
causes painful injuries
which become infected
from the lack of hygiene.
These sociable
and curious animals
end up displaying
neurotic behavior.
They bite the bars or bang
their heads against them,
all of which are
symptoms of the severe
psychological distress
they are suffering.
After a month
in the gestation crates,
the sows are transferred
to another area, where
they remain in groups.
This worker can be seen
inserting his fingers
into this pig’s eyes
to get her to turn around.
Maternity
Piglets arrive
into the world
upon concrete,
plastic, or metal floors,
surrounded by excrement
and the bodies
of still-born siblings.
Many of them, roughly
10% die soon after birth,
after hours
or even days of suffering.
Miscarriages
are frequent, although
not all are born dead.
Some premature piglets
agonize for hours
before dying.
Sows who miscarry
are marked
and a recurrence
means they will be sent
to the slaughterhouse.
Again, we see
how blows are used,
this time to force a pig
who has just given birth
onto her feet,
and the farmer checks
if her other babies are
still alive by introducing
more than half his arm
into her uterus.
This worker is collecting
the remains
of miscarriages and
the bodies of dead babies.
Pigs possess a strong
maternal instinct
but the cages
prevent them from
giving any type of care
to their babies.
The suffering of
this mother can be felt as
she watches her baby die
in front of her eyes
without being able to
do anything to help her.
In nature the mother pig
will build a nest
where she can
give birth comfortably
and look after her babies.
This soft bed
would give warmth
and lessen the impact
of any crushing.
On a farm however,
the mother will
frequently crush a baby
due to her lack of space
and the concrete floor.
Many piglets
do not die immediately
after being crushed
but are paralyzed
and spend days suffering.
Due to the slatted floors
used on the farm,
on many occasions
the piglets’ feet
get trapped in the slats
causing bone breakages,
a problem that they will
drag around with them
during the entire process
of exploitation
as broken bones
are rarely treated.
Behavior as natural
as suckling her babies is
also painful for the mother.
Due to the lack of
movement and space,
she isn’t able to lie
comfortably, or get away
from her offspring
when they hurt her,
resulting in injuries
to her teats which can
become infected affecting
both mother and baby.
A life of slavery
and hardship has serious
psychological effects
on the pigs.
Here we have the same,
an eye infection, probably,
that reach the head
and finally the
whole area is necrotic.
The difficulty of the images
is such that practically
no explanation is needed
of the terrible anguish
and terrible suffering
that these animals feel.
But then too, there is
the psychological stress
of being locked in cages
for a lifetime;
which drives them crazy,
they have stereotypical
behaviors, they
go around in the cages.
So well, there are
no words to describe
what we saw
during this investigation.
But I reiterate
how important it is
because these images
came out on Tele 5,
and have appeared
on channel Four,
and have appeared in
many digital media outlets.
And that is our goal and
what we have to be doing.
We deeply thank you
Sharon Núñez
and all others involved
in the production of
“Pig Farms”
for allowing us to
share your documentary
with our global viewers.
By showing the world
the indescribable cruelty
of factory farming
in your film and other
animal advocacy efforts,
may you continue
to reach many people
with your compassionate
message that
animals are our equals.
Let us all
do our part right now
to stop the madness
of animal exploitation
and killing by always
avoiding animal products.
May we instead support
the life-celebrating
organic vegan lifestyle
which allows our pig and
other animal friends to
live in tranquility and joy.
For more details
on Animal Equality,
please visit
www.AnimalEquality.net
We thank you
for your company today
on our program.
Please join us again
for part two of our
three-part presentation of
“Pig Farms”
next Tuesday
on Stop Animal Cruelty.
Enlightening Entertainment
is next,
after Noteworthy News.
May we forever hold all life
as Divine and sacred.
The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However,
we have to show the truth
about cruelty to animals,
praying that
you will help to stop it.
Today’s Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
will be presented
in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
This is the Stop
Animal Cruelty program
on Supreme Master
Television.
Animal Equality
is an international
non-profit organization
based in Madrid, Spain
that seeks the abolition
of animal slavery.
Key to meeting
their objective
is the promotion
of lifestyles free of
all animal products.
Sharon Núñez
is a co-founder
of Animal Equality
and their president
and spokesperson.
Animal Equality
was born in 2006,
and the objectives
of Animal Equality are
to publicize animal abuse
and raise awareness
of “speciesism,”
the discrimination
of someone
based on their species,
and to publicize
animal exploitation,
and put an end to it.
Speciesism is similar
to racism or sexism
in that we believe we can
do harm to animals,
that we can…
for our benefit
because they do not
belong to our species .
Speciesism has all sorts
of terrible consequences
for the animals.
Today we present the
second in a three-part series
featuring excerpts from
an Animal Equality-
produced film
entitled “Pig Farms”
which documents
the findings of 60
Animal Equality activists
after investigating
172 different pig farms
across Spain.
Last week,
we saw how female pigs
in factory farms are turned
into breeding machines,
being continually
artificially inseminated
and then giving birth
to babies they are
not allowed to nurture
as they normally would,
all the while living under
inhumane confinement
and utter filth.
We now bring
your further excerpts
from the documentary
“Pig Farms.”
Pig Farms –
An Animal Equality
documentary
As with the gestation crates,
the farrowing crates also
cause terrible wounds.
The absence of movement
means although
nails grow constantly
they are not worn down,
making it hard
for the pigs to stand up
or keep proper posture
inducing chronic pain.
In this scene
we can see the sow with
her womb hanging out.
This dreadful condition,
known as
a prolapsed uterus,
occurs due to
the high number of births
which these breeding sows
are subjected to.
Infection and diseases
are a constant feature in
the lives of these animals.
Living in all the filth that
builds up on these farms
causes eye infections in
both mother and young.
These infections
can turn into ulcers,
eventually resulting in
the loss of vision.
Some pigs have
untreated open wounds
which can become infected
from the dirt,
and in many cases
this leads to death
for the animal.
Bodies of the pigs
who were not able to
withstand the conditions
they were forced to live
in pile up on the floors
and in the waste bins.
Various piglets died
while we were filming them.
This little piglet has
an infection on her face
which if not properly treated
will spread to
the rest of her body.
This scab,
you see how is lifts up.
And why does this happen?
If you take…
This I believe, happens if
they have been bitten a lot.
This becomes pus…
on her body
and it changes…
And these scabs are
the beginning, and the
piglet’s body eventually
becomes like cardboard.
The farmers have decided
to kill her themselves;
because they do not think
they will make a profit
from her.
And how….and
how would you kill a pig
like this one?
By striking her
with an iron bar.
But like this…?
Look…her little feet
are also swollen…
What, what did you say?
What?
Like this
A scab forms,
one scab that becomes…
Look,
They don’t care
that you grab them
like the way you’re doing?
No, no.
Kill it….
You won’t report this
will you? Oh no!
But I’ll cover my face
Get down from there.
He’s filming
I’ll take a picture also,
Okay?
No, no, I…
Man, this is easy, huh?
In the end I can’t do it, huh?
Okay
Yes, yes.
Within the next two minutes
it won’t be breathing.
She will die
after several minutes
fighting in vain for her life
and drowning
in her own blood.
What we can see here
is not an exception
or an isolated case,
many farmers routinely
kills pigs in this way.
Sick mothers are killed
with a bullet to the head,
some will receive a
lethal injection from a vet,
while others will be
abandoned to fate
and die slowly.
Ironically to try
and reduce the stress
on the pigs, music is played
in the sheds in an attempt
to calm them down.
Due to the overcrowded
conditions and
the lack of hygiene,
pigs suffer from
a range of illnesses and
respiratory problems.
To attempt to bring these
under control, the animals
are given antibiotics
and other medicines
for almost the entire time
they are exploited.
Mutilation and marking
Only a few days after birth
these piglets are
subjected to a number of
mutilations which
cause them terrible pain,
to avoid problems
caused by confinement
or to improve
the meat’s flavor.
Tail Docking
Tail docking also occurs
just a few days after birth.
Sharp pliers cut off
part of the pig’s tail
to avoid tail-biting
caused by the stress of life
in confinement.
Castration
"You make an incision,
and...I clean here..."
Castration is
routinely carried out
on almost all male pigs.
A worker inserts each pig
into a metal brace or
violently grabs each piglet
before making an
incision in the testicles
and pulling them off.
This painful and
distressing procedure
is performed
without any anesthetic.
Teeth Clipping
To clip the teeth,
the piglets are handled
by the farmers as if
they were mere objects.
Canine teeth are cut off
with pliers causing pain
and in many cases
bleeding gums.
Doesn’t it hurt them?
Man! First…
Here they really bleed!
Yes, right at the base…
right at the edge
of the gums.
This is when …
when it has been cut
right at the edge.
Identification
with ear tags and tattoos
Identification is carried out
by perforating the ears
of the animals
with an ear tag,
or using tattoo pliers
fitted with ink-filled spikes.
This is the farm’s number…
so when he is transported
he isn’t taken to the….
the sheet that
goes with the shipment
must list the pig’s code.
The fear and pain suffered
by each and every one
of these animals
is unimaginable.
Weaning
At 21 days after birth
the piglets will be taken
from their mother.
At this point
she will return to
the gestation area to be
inseminated once more.
When it is
no longer profitable
to re-inseminate a sow
she will be sent
to the slaughterhouse
which occurs after
her fifth or sixth litter.
The small ones are…
Her babies whom
she will never see again
will be transported
in crates stacked
on top of each other
to the weaning zone
or directly
to the slaughterhouse.
Sharon Núñez and other
Animal Equality members,
we salute you for
producing “Pig Farms”
to awaken the world
to animal cruelty and
for standing up for rights
of our animal friends.
We share your vision
of a vegan world
soon in coming where
animals and humans live
in happiness together.
For more details
on Animal Equality,
please visit
www.AnimalEquality.net
Righteous viewers,
thank you for joining us
on today’s program.
Please join us
for the final part in our
three part presentation of
“Pig Farm” next Tuesday
on Stop Animal Cruelty.
Enlightening Entertainment
is up next, after
Noteworthy News.
May all beings know
Heaven’s love and grace.
The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However,
we have to show the truth
about cruelty to animals,
praying that
you will help to stop it.
Today’s Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
will be presented
in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
This is the Stop
Animal Cruelty program
on Supreme Master
Television.
Animal Equality
is an international
non-profit organization
based in Madrid, Spain
that seeks the abolition
of animal slavery.
Key to meeting
their objective
is the promotion
of lifestyles free of
all animal products.
Sharon Núñez
is a co-founder
of Animal Equality
and their president
and spokesperson.
Clearly,
society does not know
what happens to animals,
does not know what goes on
behind the walls
of the slaughterhouses.
And the purpose of the
work of Animal Equality,
and we believe of
animal rights organizations,
is so that society sees…
to be the eyes of society
to see the terrible suffering
of those who are victims.
So that they know
these individuals,
the specific stories
of animals
that have terrible lives,
that die in agony
in slaughterhouses,
so that they put themselves
in their place and decide
to choose a lifestyle that
is respectful towards them.
Today we present
the conclusion
of a three-part series
featuring excerpts from
an Animal Equality-
produced film
entitled “Pig Farms”
which documents
the findings of 60
Animal Equality activists
after investigating
172 different pig farms
across Spain.
Pig Farms –
An Animal Equality
documentary
The piglets are crowded
together in pens
with metal or
plastic slatted floors.
Many of them develop
enormous tumors,
infections and illnesses
for which no type of
treatment will be given.
These events are
repeated with frequency
in virtually
all of the farms in Spain.
Fattening
In the fattening houses
the pigs spend
around four months
amid excrement,
suffering from illnesses,
infections, cannibalism
and overcrowding.
This will be their life
until they reach
90 or 100 kilograms
and are sent to slaughter.
Pigs are
very curious animals
when not in captivity
they spend the day
digging in the ground
or exploring
their environment.
Farms are prisons for them
where the monotony
and lack of stimulation
makes them desperate.
The high concentrations
of ammonia
and other gases due to
the accumulation of dirt,
excrement and urine
cause eye infections
that can end up
with a pig losing an eye.
These gases give rise
to respiratory problems
in more than 70%
of the pigs, which
in many cases result in
pneumonia and death.
Contrary to popular belief,
pigs are clean animals
who avoid dirtying
their living areas.
But on farms
they are forced
to live and sleep
in their own excrement.
On occasion, pigs
even eat the excrement
in the sheds
where they are confined
due to the occasional
lack of water or food.
Wounds frequently occur,
and the lack of treatment
leads to ulcerations
and later necrosis sets in.
Due to their weight
and the lack of calcium
induced by the lack of
natural sunlight,
broken bones are frequent.
During their time
on the farm
the pigs develop
huge inflammations
which can become
abscesses of pus
or tumors; in contact
with the ground
open wounds are produced
which become infected.
In this footage various pigs
can be seen with part of
their rectum hanging out,
a very common condition
known as
a prolapsed rectum.
A tube to allow waste
to be expelled
fastened with a zip tie
is the only treatment
these animals receive.
Many sick pigs
who are close to dying
are dragged out
of the fattening pens
so that they die
in the passageway
without access
to food or water.
Some pigs,
while still alive, are
thrown into waste bins
full of corpses where
they lie dying for hours.
Organic meat also
implies suffering,
deprivation and death
for pigs
exploited by this industry.
All these pigs end up in
the same slaughterhouse,
killed by the same
slaughterhouse workers,
and in the same way
as those exploited
on intensive farms.
Transportation
Despite the fact
that pigs in the wild
can live between
10 and 15 years,
pigs exploited
for their flesh are killed
at only six months of age,
while sows used
for breeding are killed
at three years old.
Pigs are transported
in trucks which can
generally carry up to
230 individuals,
with each one weighing
roughly 100 kilograms,
giving each pig less than
half a square meter
of space.
Journeys can last
up to 24 hours.
During transport,
pigs do not receive
food or water,
adding if possible,
more stress and suffering
to the trip.
The slaughterhouse
For these animals
it is the first time
they see sunlight,
and it will be their last.
Many do not even make it
alive to the slaughterhouse.
More than 85,000 pigs
die in Spain each year
inside one of these trucks.
After the stressful
experience of the journey,
they are unloaded
into the pens
of the slaughterhouse.
Workers force them
to move forward
with electric shocks
or by scaring them.
These pens are strange,
squalid places.
From here the pigs are
able to hear the screams
of pigs being slaughtered
for hours.
When pigs suffer stress
they produce hormones
which lower the quality
of the meat
and affect its flavor.
All of which reduces
the profits of the exploiters,
so the animals are
given showers in the pens
before dying.
When their turn arrives,
the terrified pigs try in vain
to resist moving forward.
And the workers react
by kicking, shoving
or dragging them
by their ears.
Pigs are stunned
by an electric shock
to the head which
leaves them paralyzed
so that workers can
hang them upside down
and cut their throats easily.
By contrast,
in other slaughterhouses
pigs are placed
in gas chambers
with carbon dioxide
where they temporarily
lose consciousness.
On many occasions
these animals
are fully conscious
when their throats are cut,
or they recover
consciousness while
they are bled to death
hanging upside down.
In this film
you have witnessed
what life and death is like
for millions of pigs
in Spain.
For many this reality has
remained hidden until now.
But the situation is
equally as sad for many
millions of other animals
of different species
throughout the world.
All this happens because
we are paying for it
to happen because we
want to eat other animals.
All of us know
that animals can feel.
They want to live, and
they do not want to end up
in a slaughterhouse.
None of us would wish
that if we were
in their place.
It is time that we put
ourselves in their place
and understand
the injustice of
what we do to them.
It is in our hands
to put a stop to this.
It does not depend on
anyone else.
We can live perfectly well
without consuming
animal products
or using them in any way.
Think about it.
Put yourself in their place.
Go vegan.
Here are
some final thoughts
from Ms. Núñez
about our animal friends
and how we can
best help them.
Well, if you really
want to respect animals
and want to end
the terrible injustice
they suffer, injustice
for which there are
no words, to describe
the terrible suffering
endured by animals,
what we have to do is
lead an ethical life,
and bring the abolition
of animal exploitation
into our daily lives,
by becoming vegan.
It is perfectly possible,
we can carry on…
have a lifestyle
and optimum health
and happiness and also
let the animals be happy,
which is very important.
Our sincere appreciation,
Sharon Núñez
and all others
who have contributed to
the making of “Pig Farm,”
a film which is a voice
for the pigs
all over the world
trapped in the horrific
meat production system.
We echo the call of
Animal Equality
that we must quickly end
the ghastly nightmare
for pigs and all the other
tortured animals
by embracing the loving
plant-based diet.
For more details
on Animal Equality,
please visit
www.AnimalEquality.net
Thank you
for joining us on today’s
Stop Animal Cruelty.
Enlightening Entertainment
is coming up next,
after Noteworthy News.
May humanity always
be in tune with
the highest vibrations
of consciousness.