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STOP ANIMAL CRUELTY
Endangering Life: Working at a Slaughterhouse - P2/2
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The images
in the following program
are very sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However,
we have to show the truth
about cruelty to animals.
Compassionate viewers,
this is
the Stop Animal Cruelty
program on
Supreme Master Television.
Last week
we presented the first
in a two-part series on
the extremely hazardous
workplace conditions
found in slaughterhouses.
Today we’ll present
the second half
of the series, focusing on
the even more traumatic
mental and emotional toll
taken on slaughterhouse
employees and
the people around them.
Participating daily in
violence and destruction
would desensitize
any person.
Former pig abattoir worker
Ed Van Winkle,
an interviewee
for Gail Eisnitz’s book
“Slaughterhouse,” recalled,
“You may look a hog
in the eye
that’s walking around
down in the blood pit
with you and think,
‘God, that really isn’t
a bad-looking animal.’
You may want to pet it.
Pigs down on the kill floor
have come up and
nuzzled me like a puppy.
Two minutes later
I had to kill them –
beat them to death
with a pipe.
I can’t care.”
Tommy Vladak, another
slaughterhouse employee
interviewed for the book
stated,
“When you’re standing
there night after night,
digging that knife
into those hogs,
and they’re fighting you,
kicking at you, squealing,
trying to bite you ….
And then it gets to a point
where you’re
at a daydream stage.
Where you can think
about everything else
and still do your job.
You become
emotionally dead.”
These people that
work in these facilities
oftentimes
become desensitized to
what’s taking place there,
because they have to,
for the sake of their job,
participate in this abuse
and as a result oftentimes
take out their anger
and frustration
on these animals.
Virgil Butler, a former
chicken abattoir worker
who became a vegan,
regularly witnessed
absolutely horrific scenes
at the facility
where he was employed.
I saw people rip the heads
from them (chickens),
throw them on the floor
and stomp on them,
and rip them in half.
Pull their heads off and
put them onto their finger
and go around like this…
Loss of empathy
not only causes brutal
and savage behavior
toward animals,
but also fosters
a violent mentality
toward other people.
Mr. Van Winkle
related to Ms. Eisnitz
how the job fundamentally
changed him as a person:
“Sometimes
I looked at people
that way too.
I’ve had ideas of hanging
my foreman upside down
on the line and sticking him.
I remember
going into the office and
telling the personnel man
that I have no problem
pulling the trigger
on a person –
if you get in my face
I’ll blow you away.”
“Every sticker I know
carries a gun,
and every one of them
would shoot you.
Most stickers I know
have been arrested
for assault.
A lot of them have
problems with alcohol.
They have to drink;
they have no other way
of dealing with killing live,
kicking animals
all day long.
If you stop
and think about it,
you’re killing several
thousand beings a day.
It happened
every single night,
every single night
that I worked there
for years and years, and
in more than one plant.
We saw fights
at the back dock
on a regular basis.
The psychological impact
for people
who work in an industry
that requires them to
exist in a death-saturated
environment,
day in and day out,
in the killing fields
is tremendous.
Slaughterhouse workers
have high rates of
developing addiction.
Violent behavior
is not uncommon
toward the animals and
toward other humans.
It really kind of begs
the question of
what kind of industry
requires people to develop
anti-social behaviors,
violent behaviors as a norm.
Witnessing violence
traumatizes people,
whether that’s violence
toward humans or
violence toward animals.
After studying more than
500 federal and regional
crime reports from the USA,
criminologist
Dr. Amy Fitzgerald
found a direct correlation
between the number of
slaughterhouse workers
in a community
and the incidence
of murder, rape and
other aggressive crimes.
In December 2007,
former Canadian
pig farmer Robert Pickton
was sentenced to life
in prison without parole
for 25 years
for killing 26 women.
Studies also show
that abattoir workers
have higher rates
of domestic violence.
Even in less abusive
relationships,
family functions
are severely impaired.
Mr. Vladak disclosed the
following to Ms. Eisnitz:
“The worst part, even
worse than my accident,
was what happened
to my family life…
I’d blow up
at the drop of a hat,
come home every night
and find something
to complain about,
take my frustrations
from work out
on my family.
Mentally stressed
slaughterhouse employees
often indulge
in alcoholism and
other forms of addiction.
Ed Van Winkle was
no different.
“A lot of the guys …
just drink and drug
their problems away.
Some of them end up
abusing their spouses
because they can’t
get rid of the feelings.
They leave work
with this attitude and
they go down to the bar
to forget.
Only problem is,
even if you try to
drink those feelings away,
they’re still there
when you sober up.”
“I’ve taken out
my job pressure and
frustration on the animals,
on my wife
– who I almost lost –
and on myself,
with heavy drinking.
I actually thought I was
going crazy at one point.
I’d hit the bar after work
every day, pound down
four or five beers,
come home and just sit
and stare off into space
through three or four more.”
Stop Animal Cruelty
will return
after this brief message.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
You’re watching
Stop Animal Cruelty
on Supreme Master
Television.
Due to the gristly
working conditions
they endure,
abattoir employees
often suffer from injury,
sickness, alcoholism,
and a high rate
of violent crime.
The meat industry
has long been known
for having
low employee retention.
Nobody is going to stay
in that plant that long,
even maintenance
personnel because
they get paid so little.
So you have a lot of people
coming and going,
coming and going,
so they don’t waste a lot
of time training people.
They have what they called
a training program.
I was considered a trainer;
the trainers job wasn’t
to teach the new hire
how to work,
how to do the job,
it wasn’t to teach them
how to do it more humanely.
It was to catch
what he missed
until he managed
to either get it right
or they fired him,
one or the other.
Slaughterhouse workers
are constantly at risk
of losing their jobs,
and so are afraid
to express their opinions
or even talk about
their injuries or ailments.
The supervisors are
telling them straight up
“This plant has to run,
these chickens
have to be run.
You can either do it, or
we’ll find somebody else
that will, and you can
go back to the line
and bust your hump.”
As soon as you become
no longer useful,
they get rid of you.
If you go to the doctor and
you complain too much,
they’re going
to drug test you, knowing
that you are going to fail,
because if you manage to
work there any time at all,
you’re going to do it
by doing drugs, absolutely.
That’s the only way
you can keep up,
night after night after night.
If they have a person that
they want to get rid of,
but they want them to quit,
so they don’t have to
pay unemployment
or at least don’t have to
pay it as soon,
they will do things to
force that person to quit.
They take
the urine analysis, and
they use that selectively;
as long as
you’re not causing them
to spend any money,
they are not going
to mess with you.
They use it as a tool to
get rid of those in the plant
that they don’t want.
Or in the case of
somebody that is injured,
that is going to need
a lot of doctor’s care,
they’ll do it
to get rid of somebody
so that they don’t have to
pay that.
“Well this person was
using drugs on the job,
therefore
we don’t have to pay.”
Abattoirs in the US
often hire undocumented
immigrants, because
they are more likely
to endure the low pay
and not complain
about their suffering
as they are afraid of
being reported
to the authorities
and face deportation.
One of the largest meat-
production companies
in North America
was indicted for 36 cases
of human trafficking
in 2001 alone.
Use of child labor is also
associated with
the meat industry.
During a 2008 raid
of a slaughterhouse
in Iowa, USA,
officials detained
388 immigrant workers,
among whom were
26 minors hired from
Mexico and Guatemala.
Investigators found
that these teenagers
had to work
up to 90 hours a week
handling power saws
and sharp knives
in an environment
rampant with
highly toxic chemicals.
Many female immigrants
become victims
of assault and abuse
while working at
these types of facilities.
Again,
out of fear of deportation,
incidents are not reported
to the police.
Despite the meat industry’s
notorious record
with respect to injury,
infectious diseases,
violent crime, labor
and human rights issues,
the gruesome practice
of producing meat
continues.
Cheaply priced and
aggressively marketed
as “essential”
for people’s health,
the cleanly wrapped corpses
which are sold in markets
hardly reflect
the torturous agony
of countless animals
and abattoir workers.
Calculated moves
are made to minimize
public knowledge about
what really happens
behind the concrete walls
of slaughterhouses.
The people
that work in those places,
most of them are
very uneducated,
some of them can’t
even read a comic book
without some help.
They also have
a lot of Hispanic people
that can’t speak English.
So you’ve got
a bunch of people here
that really
couldn’t possibly hope
to get a really good job.
They (the industry)
pick rural communities
for that reason.
The meat industry
systematically exploits
its voiceless line workers
for profit, and
each hamburger or
chicken patty produced
is loaded with the blood,
suffering and anguish of
both innocent animals and
our fellow human beings.
By not consuming meat
and other
animal products,
we can eliminate
the extreme cruelty
imposed on our fellow
brothers and sisters
around the world and
on our animal friends.
On the way home one night,
me and Laura
were driving along and
we were talking about
the chicken plant,
and I had taken her in
and showed her
what the hanging room
looked like that night
and she was appalled
and I realized
for the first time in my life
that I was actually
ashamed of the way
I made my living.
I turned vegetarian and
I realized that chickens
weren’t the only animals
that suffered because of
this factory farming thing.
I realized
it was spread across
the entire animal spectrum,
so I decided just
to quit eating all meat and
I feel better because of it.
Virgil Butler,
the courageous
former abattoir worker
turned animal advocate,
passed away in 2006,
however, his work exposing
slaughterhouse practices
and the rampant violence
occurring
in these workplaces
still remains
of great importance.
May his soul
rest peacefully in Heaven.
We also respectfully
salute Ms. Gail Eisnitz
and others for showing
how abattoirs
destroy communities.
Blessed be your
noble endeavors to
remind our fellow humans
to always choose
a compassionate,
animal-free way of life!
Merciful viewers, thank you
for being with us today
on Stop Animal Cruelty
on Supreme Master
Television.
Enlightening Entertainment
is next after
Noteworthy News.
May humankind soon
create a peaceful world
through love
for all animals.
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