Calves
raised for veal -- the male offspring of dairy cows -- are the most cruelly
confined and deprived animals on factory farms. Taken from their
mothers only a few days after birth, they are chained in stalls only 22
inches wide with slatted floors that cause severe leg and joint pain. Since
their mothers' milk is usurped for human consumption, they are fed a
milk substitute laced with hormones but deprived of iron: anemia keeps
their flesh pale and tender but makes the calves very weak. When they
are slaughtered at the age of about 16 weeks, they are often too sick
or crippled to walk.
One out of every 10 calves dies in confinement.
"Factory Farming," p. 2.
Solitary Confinement
The
veal crate is a wooden restraining device that is the veal calf's
permanent home. It is so small (22" x 54") that the calves cannot turn
around or even lie down and stretch and is the ultimate in high-profit,
confinement animal agriculture.(1) Designed to prevent movement
(exercise), the crate does its job of atrophying the calves' muscles,
thus producing tender "gourmet" veal.
A Fate Worse Than Death
About
14 weeks after their birth, the calves are slaughtered. The quality of
this "food," laden with chemicals, lacking in fiber and other
nutrients, diseased and processed, is another matter. The real issue is
the calves' experience. During their brief lives, they never see
the sun or touch the Earth. They never see or taste the grass. Their
anemic bodies crave proper sustenance. Their muscles ache for freedom
and exercise. They long for maternal care. They are kept in darkness
except to be fed two to three times a day for 20 minutes. The calves
have committed no crime, yet have been sentenced to a horrible fate of
torture.
"Feeding" Time
The
calves are generally fed a milk substitute intentionally lacking in
iron and other essential nutrients. This diet keeps the animals anemic
and creates the pale pink or white color desired in the finished
product. Craving iron, the calves lick urine-saturated slats and any
metallic parts of their stalls. Farmers also withhold water from the
animals, who, always thirsty, are driven to drink a large quantity of
the high-fat liquid feed.
Because
of such extremely unhealthy living conditions and restricted diets,
calves are susceptible to a long list of diseases, including chronic
pneumonia and "scours," or constant diarrhea. Consequently, they must
be given massive doses of antibiotics and other drugs just to keep them
alive. (The antibiotics are passed on to consumers in the meat.) The
calves often suffer from wounds caused by the constant rubbing against
the crates.