If you’ve ever owned or worked around cattle, you’ve
probably had occasion to wonder what they’re thinking.
What is this heifer thinking as I capture her image? |
For instance, we’re backgrounding two pens of calves on the
ranch this year. Each morning – and most evenings – when I feed them their
grain ration, there are three calves outside the west pen. It’s always the same
three calves.
“Hey, look! The corn’s back!” Human thinking. Not bovine
thinking. Loose cables on the feed rack, too.
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I know how they get out. There are a couple of loose cables
along the feed rack, and they simply inch their way through the loose spots as
they try to find one more morsel of corn or bite of hay. Little by little they
push their way through. First the head, then a foreleg, then another foreleg,
and hey-presto, they’re through the feed rack, on the outside looking in. So to
speak.
They’re not trying to escape. They never stray from their
pen-mates, nor from the feed rack, where they continue to placidly feed, nose
to nose with their fellows. They’re comfortable in the feeding pen. They’re
with their peers in a mini-herd, there’s plenty of food and fresh water close
at hand, they have shelter from the cold December wind and plenty of warming
sunshine, and there are no predators to be found.
Returning the three amigos (amigos y amiga, two steers and a
heifer) to the pen is a breeze. I simply open the gate and get out of the way
and they file back in, usually kicking up their heels and seemingly pleased to
be back where they belong.
I can’t help but wonder why, if they want to return to the
pen and their pen-mates, they don’t crawl back in the way they crawled out.
Calves tucking into their morning ration. |
But that’s human thinking, and when I apply it to the three
amigos, I’m anthropomorphizing their behavior, thinking of them as creatures
who possess the same thinking and reasoning set that I have. I’m humanizing
them, to use a less scientific word.
It’s something we all do, to a greater or lesser extent. For
an over-the-top example of anthropomorphizing non-human creatures, check out
the web-sites of PETA or the Humane Society of the U.S. (HSUS) and see what
they have to say about farm animals. Ingrid Newkirk, the founder of PETA,
famously said “A rat is a pig is a dog is a boy.”
In the sense that rats, pigs, dogs and boys are living
organisms, she’s right. And I agree completely with both PETA and HSUS that
animals should always be treated humanely. Of course, plants are living
organisms, as are bacteria, biting flies, disease-laden mosquitoes,
rattlesnakes, dust mites, cold and flu viruses, city pigeons, zebra mussels, flying
carp, cane toads, etc. By Newkirk’s reasoning, surely these organisms deserve
human rights as well. The phrase “hoist on her own petard” comes to mind.
We differ completely, however, on the definition of
humanely.
By humanely, PETA means human; that all animals are endowed
with the same fundamental rights as people. HSUS is no different, though they
come across as less radical. Both PETA and HSUS profess to believe that humane
treatment means giving all animals basic human rights and allowing them to live
completely wild, natural lives. But why not plants, pathogens, and bugs? Why
not dangerous or “icky” animals? One can argue that rather than providing for
animal rights, PETA and HSUS are far more interested in exercising control over
people.
Agricultural producers, and most reasonable people in
general, do not believe that animals are human and are somehow deserving of
basic human rights. They do believe that livestock and wildlife should be
husbanded, though. That is, mankind should respect animals and ensure that they
are cared for or managed in the ways that suit their different natures.
When it comes to food animals, this means seeing to the
health needs of livestock through preventative health programs and veterinarymedical intervention when animals become ill. It also means keeping livestock
well fed and watered, sheltered as necessary, and humanely slaughtered when the
time comes.
When it comes to wildlife, this means population control
through hunting, to stave off overpopulation and starvation, as well as habitat
management.
The difference in the two approaches lies in the basic
assumptions we make about the nature of animals. PETA and HSUS, as well as
millions of non-activist people, anthropomorphize animals. A few do this in the
extreme, but most humanize animals to a lesser extent.
Pet owners are a good example. Most think of their pets as
members of the family, and most tend to treat their pets as nearly human –
talking to them, ensuring that they have adequate (sometimes elaborate) nutrition
and shelter, and seeing to their health needs. Some pet owners spend thousands
or even tens of thousands of dollars on very high level veterinary care such as
advanced diagnostic tests and surgeries. But nearly all pet owners, even though
they genuinely love their animals and tend to think of them in human terms,
understand that they are animals and not people. They feel a big responsibility
to care for their pets, and struggle mightily with emotion-laden end of life
issues. But when their pets are suffering, be it from the infirmities of age or
from disease or accident, and recovery is unlikely, most choose to have their
pets put down. It’s the humane thing to do.
They, like you and I, would never have Granny euthanized
because of old age, nor a sick or injured family member, no matter how dire the
circumstance or how poor the prognosis.
We recognize the fundamental difference between humans and
animals.
But many others struggle when it comes to understanding the
basic differences between people and pets – and by extension – other animals.
As the world-famous “Dog Whisperer” Cesar Millan famously said, “The most
common mistake in America is that we humanize dogs. There's nothing wrong with
loving a dog like a human, but it's important for them to become dogs first and
become fulfilled as a dog. I rehabilitate dogs, and I train people. That's what
I do.”
Here is where a problem lies for livestock producers.
Because there are so few of us, we find it difficult to get our animal
husbandry message out to the population at large. We are at most two percent of
more than 300 million people. The animal rights activists are organized and
well funded, and they flood the media and airwaves with anti-livestock
production propaganda. The 98 percent of Americans who’ve rarely, if ever, set
foot on a farm or ranch feel a tug on their heartstrings in response.
But most, as I’ve noted, understand the fundamental
difference between animals and humans. Most understand the utility of food
production, which they depend upon for survival, and most enjoy and embrace the
availability of safe, abundant, and nutritious meat.
What they don’t understand is the level of respect shown to livestock by producers,
feeders, and processors. For the producer, this respect is quite similar to the
feelings pet owners have for their dogs, cats, and other pets. The vast
majority of producers care deeply about the well being of their livestock and
take seriously their responsibility to husband their herds. Though there are
still some in the food animal industry who do not care about or who mistreat
livestock, and a few examples get wide play in the media, these people are a
tiny minority and do not represent the industry as a whole. Just as the murders
and child molesters covered extensively by the media do not represent humanity
as a whole.
The livestock industry is slowly getting better at getting
their positive message out, but it will be an ongoing struggle. We are so few,
and the people we feed – who are mostly two or more generations removed from
the farm and ranch – are so many.
Producers should try to keep this in mind as they interact
with their non-ag friends, neighbors, and visitors. And they should consider
showing off their operation when the opportunity presents itself. As is often
said, seeing is believing, and visitors will go away with a new appreciation
for the livestock producer and the way he cares for his animals.
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