Go To MercyForAnimals.org email us About MFA Donate
 
   

 
overview | chickens and turkeys | eggs | pigs | dairy | beef | fish | vegetarians save lives | free range | faq
 

   
   
a dairy cow's life

Dairy cows are often milked by machines in crowded sheds.

Dairy cows are often milked by machines in crowded sheds. Close Move

Sick cows unable to walk, called “downers”, are common in the dairy industry.

Sick cows unable to walk, called “downers”, are common in the dairy industry. Close Move

a veal calf's life

Veal calves are chained by their necks in tiny crates & fed an anemia-inducing diet.

Veal calves are chained by their necks in tiny crates & fed an anemia-inducing diet. Close Move

Calves are often prodded & thrown onto trucks before being shipped to slaughter.

Calves are often prodded & thrown onto trucks before being shipped to slaughter. Close Move

 

Video Footage

Dairy
Windows Media (.wmv)
Quicktime (.mov)
Real Media (.rm)

 

modern dairy cows are forced to produce 3 times more milk than they would naturally

truth or dairy

Cows produce milk for the same reason that humans do—to nourish their young—but calves born on dairy farms are taken from their mothers when they are just one day old and fed milk replacers so that humans can have the milk instead.[1,2]

In order to keep a steady supply of milk, the cows are repeatedly impregnated. Several times a day, dairy cows are hooked by their udders to electronic milking machines, which can cause the cows to suffer electrical shocks, painful lesions, and mastitis.

Some spend their entire lives standing on concrete floors; others are crammed into massive mud lots.

Although cows would naturally make only enough milk to meet the needs of their calves (around 16 pounds a day), genetic manipulation, antibiotics, and hormones are used to force each cow to produce more than 18,000 pounds of milk a year (an average of 50 pounds a day).[3,4,5]

Cows on factory farms suffer from a variety of health problems including mastitis, a painful inflammation of the mammary glands. In order to further increase profits, Bovine Growth Hormone (BGH), a synthetic hormone, is now being injected into cows to get them to produce even more milk. The hormones adversely affect the cows’ health and increase the rate of birth defects in their calves.[6] BGH may also cause breast and prostate cancer in humans.[7]

Cows have a natural lifespan of about 25 years and can produce milk for eight or nine years, but the stress caused by factory farm conditions leads to disease, lameness, and reproductive problems that render cows worthless to the dairy industry by the time they are four or five years old, at which time they are sent to the slaughterhouse.[8,9]

cruelty in a crate

Few consumers realize that veal is a direct by-product of the dairy industry. In order for dairy cows to produce milk, they must be impregnated. While female calves are slaughtered or added to the dairy herd, many male calves are taken from their mothers when they are as young as one day old and chained in tiny stalls to be raised for veal.[10,11]

The confinement is so extreme that they cannot even turn around or lie down comfortably.[12] As author John Robbins notes, “The veal calf would actually have more space if, instead of chaining him in such a stall, you stuffed him into the trunk of a subcompact car and kept him there for his entire life.”

Many veal calves are deliberately kept anemic in order to produce light-colored meat, which fetches higher prices in restaurants. Their liquid-based, iron-deficient diets cause numerous health problems.

Motherless and alone, they suffer from ulcers, diarrhea, pneumonia, and lameness.[13,14] After three to 18 weeks of this deprivation, they are trucked to the slaughterhouse, where their young lives are taken from them.

 

Cows are extremely gentle and affectionate animals, forming strong bonds with one another, particularly between mother and child. As Michael Klaper M.D. recalls “The very saddest sound in all my memory was burned into my awareness at age five on my uncle’s dairy farm in Wisconsin. A cow had given birth to a beautiful male calf...On the second day after birth, my uncle took the calf from the mother and placed him in the veal pen in the barn—only ten yards away, in plain view of his mother. The mother cow could see her infant, smell him, hear him, but could not touch him, comfort him, or nurse him. The heartrending bellows that she poured forth—minute after minute, hour after hour, for five long days—were excruciating to listen to. They are the most poignant and painful auditory memories I carry in my brain.”

 

pigs      beef

References
1 Goldstein, D. (2002, May 30). Up close: a beef with dairy. KCAL.
2 Mad Cow Casts Light on Beef Uses. (2004, Jan. 4). L.A. Times.
3 National Agriculture Statistics Service. (2004, Feb. 17). Milk production. United States Department of Agriculture.
4 Blaney, D.P. (2002, June). The changing landscape of U.S. milk production. Statistical Bulletin Number 978, United States Department of Agriculture.
5 Pace, D. Feeding a bucket calf. Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service, Oklahoma State University.
6 Christiansen, A. (1995, July). Recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone: alarming Tests, unfounded approval. Rural Vermont.
7 McKenzie, J. (1998, Dec. 15). Is cow’s milk additive safe? ABC News.
8 Karpf, A. (2003, Dec. 13). Dairy monsters. The Guardian.
9 Wallace, R.L. (2004). Market cows: a potential profit center. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
10 Kahler, S. C. (2001, Jan. 15). Raising contented cattle makes welfare, production sense. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.
11 Food Safety and Inspection Service, USDA. (2003, Feb.). Safety of veal, from farm to table.
12 Webster, A. J. F. & Saville, C. et al. (1985). The effect of different rearing systems on the development of calf behaviour. British Veterinary Journal, 141, 249-265.
13 Friedlander, L. C. May 23, 2002. Letter to New Jersey Assembly.http://www.njfarms.org/support/friedlander052302.htm.
14 McDonough SP, Stull CL, Osburn BI. (1994). Enteric pathogens in intensively reared veal calves. American Journal of Veterinary Research, 55, 1516-1520.

 

 
 
 

Get Active For Animals

Find Vegetarian and Vegan Friendly Restaurants

 


 

         
 

 
 For the Animals | For Our Earth | For Your Health | Making the Switch | Vegan Recipes | Animal Rights Resources | Site Map