There is no such thing as a "farm factory" nor a "factory farm." Also, majority of animals in CAFO operations are not abused at all. To those who know next to nothing about agriculture and are from the outside looking in make it look like animals are abused and have to "endure" abuse "all their lives."
because its funny
Animals are tortured because of several possible reasons. They could be tortured because it is funny to some people and because they may be used for the testing of human body products (shampoo, hair gel, lip stick,.....). Animal torture is very wrong because you are taking a life of a poor innocent animal and corrupting it. My dog for example was tortured by her previous owner and now she is scared of loud noises and large moving objects.
Vast majority of people do not nor will not abuse animals on these so-called "factory farms." If a person is working there and looks after animals that are depended on for the farm's income and existence, there is no doubt that that person would be asked to seek work elsewhere. Animals are not cheap, neither is it cheap to care for and raise animals. Labor isn't cheap either, so those who know what they're doing and how to care for animals last longer than those who do not. A farmer cannot afford to have a hired hand that does not care about animals nor can take up the responsibilities to care for such animals. And the farmer him/herself cannot afford to have animals that are always starving, dehydrated, sick, in pain, injured or their overall well-being compromised because they would either go out of business very quickly, or get caught by animal control and be an example of an excuse for animal rights activists to further push their agenda.
Animal abuse is inhumane because there is no reason whatsoever that an animal should get harmed or killed just because you don't like the animal or you just want to hurt it
It is not legal to abuse farm animals or any animals.
All types of animals that people eat. Pigs, cows, chicken, fish, and other animals are in factory farms.
There are none; PETA simply fabricates evidence and calls all farms above about 250 animals "factory farms".
the difference between regular frames ands factory farms are in regular farms we take care of are animals factory farms the animals there get disuses and more same die from it thee farms are mostly brick an d concrete regular farms are fields and dirt so they can eat and have fun but when that get sick on regular farms we take care of them give them medicines and make sure their OK then we take them back to the Field's so that can run around in factory farms that let them get sick and then they do no thin for them there are Meany maybe thousands factory farms in America that is so mean to the animals and do nothing for them so say now tho factory farms say yes to farms in ameraca
Only three: Chickens, Pigs, and Cattle.
Factory farms make the majority of our food. That is why it is so important to learn about factory farms and support alternatives for them.
1. China - furfarms, live animal eating, factory farms, bear baiting, zoo cruelty2. United States - rodeos, hunting cruelty , factory farms, circus3. Spain - bull cruelty, factory farms,4. Australia - hunting cruelty, probably horse racing can cause some incidents5. UK - Fox hunting used to be legal, fortunatly its not but, you can find some videos of people still killing foxes, boars, and deer with dogs, just sick.6. Middle East - soldiers push puppies off cliff, kill animals for fun, set animals on fire.7. Japan.. dolphin and whaling abuse, live animal eating - mostly seafood8. Africa - hunting lions, elephants, rhinos etc. canned hunting, poaching.etc..
Most confined animal feeding operations (NOT factory farms) that have animals in an enclosed barn often have the barns at room temperature or a little cooler. Animals kept outside are not in a temperature-controlled environment, so they're kept according to whatever the outside temperature would be at the time.
factory work paid wages in cash, which was not always the case on farms.
It's estimated that there are approximately 580,000 people employed by factory farms in the US, including workers involved in various aspects of animal agriculture such as feeding, breeding, and processing.
People left family farms to move to the city for economic opportunities, such as higher wages and a wider range of job options. Additionally, cities offered better access to education, healthcare, and social services that were often lacking in rural areas. The promise of a more modern and convenient lifestyle also attracted individuals to urban areas.
factory work paid wages in cash, which was not always the case on farms.
factory work paid wages in cash, which was not always the case on farms.