
I doubt the free range chickens are THAT much more humane.
I doubt the free range chickens are THAT much more humane.
I doubt the free range chickens are THAT much more humane.

There was one thing I noticed last night on the programme which puzzled me greatly. The spokesman for Tesco that Hugh F-W was talking to had the title:
Head of Government Affairs
Makes you wonder just who is in charge of this country.
No, but we have been buying "free range" for a while now. We're probably going to the next stage now and start rearing our own, the wife's been wanting to for ages.Hands up who is going vegetarian ...![]()
^^ ... I think you are mixing your chickens up WM ... :shrug:
Battery hens, as you (almost) correctly state is the term generally given to the mass produced egg laying variety of chicken.
The debate Hugh is mainly campaigning against is the intensive farmed variety of broiler chicken ... i.e. those bred for food.
Anyone who can watch Hugh's programme and think the process of intensive farming is not a cruel and disgusting practice is burying their heads where the sun doesn't shine ...
There are guidelines for all the forms of keeping of these birds and it would not surprise me if many farms do not actually abide ... making an inhumane process even more despicable ...
IMHGO of course ...
Seen the news? Been watching Channel 4's Hugh programme?
News just said 63% of all egg sales in the UK are from battery farms and not free range - I never knew that.
Don't agree with the battery farms myself - any views?
lol I thought the thread was about eggs, I didn't watch Hugh's program.battery farms to me are egg laying ones.
... I think Vinny is just trying to confuse all us mere mortals ... :shrug: ... the news item is indeed about egg production but Hugh's program is all about intensively farmed broiler birds ...
I can leave rant mode now thenThere was one thing I noticed last night on the programme which puzzled me greatly. The spokesman for Tesco that Hugh F-W was talking to had the title:
Head of Government Affairs
Makes you wonder just who is in charge of this country.
They are birds that are bread to eat? that is their sole purpose - and in the supermarket age we live in they are bread in the most cost effective way?
I think there are two schools of thought here.
Firstly the moral issue which deals with respecting the life of all living creatures. Yes they're bred as food but the argument is that they shouldn't have to suffer a miserable existence just because they are destined to be food. Surely our own humanity is measured by how we treat and respect the world around us?
Edit to add: I'm no veggie, never will be but I won't kill an animal needlessly. Spiders, flies, etc. are always caught and put outside. Maybe I'm a big softie but it breaks my heart to simply kill something because I can.
Secondly, animals that live a good life taste better, it's that simple. These chickens are bred to get as big as possible as quickly as possible. The quality of the meat they produce isn't a consideration. So ignoring the first point completely you still have to ask which you prefer, meat that tastes nice or meat that is cheap?
From a human perspective they have a miserable existence but does the chicken think the same?
If anyone is interested in joining Hugh's very worthwhile campaign you can sign up at his Chicken Out web site and recommend it to friends ...
On a similar tack there is another programme on Channel BBC Three, after Chicken Run, called Kill it, Cook it, Eat it presented by Julia Bradbury ... it endeavours to show the 'humane' side of animal farming from cradle to grave ... as it were ...
Hands up who is going vegetarian ...
I shall go back in time to yesterday and watch that program (I have just got one of those free tiscali set top box things that lets you watch any bbc tv in the last week!)
If it helps, it was on Channel 4![]()
I'm also going free range now after this
If everyone ends up buying free range, then supermarkets and the like are going to end up driving the prices down through buying power, forcing the farms/suppliers to cut costs etc again.
Surely we'll just end up in the same position again?