Its an odd way to look at it, but would you rather a 20year life followed by execution, or non-existence?
I think we should be tolerant of the Indonesian Muslim culture and invite them to come and live in Australia. I for one would be proud to have anyone and everyone who wants to live here come and be my neighbor. You're all being racist. Australia is the great melting pot, free for all to ruin.
Well sorry to break it to y'all, but this is what meat is. Animals are bred purely for the purpose of eating, which often involves them living in miserable conditions, and ends with them getting viciously butchered.
And don't give me that 'it can be humane' stuff, that is just to make the butchers and the consumers feel better about the whole thing. The animal is still 'executed' for its meat in either way, it is only the time taken to perform the execution that changes.
But keep in mind two things - (1) few animals below the top of the food chain suffer 'humane' deaths. Some animals suffer deaths that are genuine horror stories (example being deaths involving paralysis and slow and drawn out consumption by a larvae), and (2) the 'feeding purpose' actually gave these animals life in the first place, they would not exist otherwise. Its an odd way to look at it, but would you rather a 20year life followed by execution, or non-existence?
People are shocked, rightly so, that the live animals exported are being brutalised.viciously butchered
Well sorry to break it to y'all, but this is what meat is. Animals are bred purely for the purpose of eating, which often involves them living in miserable conditions, and ends with them getting viciously butchered.
Halal food requires the humane killing of livestock with proper Islamic prayers beforehand, and one quick stroke in the jugular area to guarantee the least amount of pain to the animal.
- Mahatma GandhiThe greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated
Completely agree.I am struggling to see how this could even remotely be labelled a racist issue. You will need to clarify if you are joking and if not then how do you make a racist connection with the real issue which is the unecessay tourture of animals.
The issue is the disgusting and torturous treament of the animals, we know that animals have to be killed to be eaten. In Australia (generally) animals are not People are shocked, rightly so, that the live animals exported are being brutalised.
If people choose to eat meat then they have an obligation to treat the animals in a respectful manner.
pixel, according to several accounts in the media in recent days, Muslim authorities have emphatically denied that the accounts of the torture of animals shown in the 4 Corners program have anything at all to do with Hal Al killing. They have unreservedly condemned the brutality.It may not be a racist issue, but certainly a cultural one.
Muslims - at least those in underprivileged countries - have been told for over a thousand years that's the way animals have to be slaughtered: Hearing the name of Allah when their throat is cut. It doesn't matter to them whether an animal has been raised in Australia, Anatolia, or Argentina. Our cattle and sheep are not in any way more or less "precious" than those raised anywhere else.
Really? Are you seriously saying you think the massive outcry about what happens in these sickening abbattoirs is just Western over-sensitivity????Westernised countries, with an increasingly urban population that has lost connection to most things rural, find the idea appalling. As soon as a TV team turns it into a sensational story, the collective urbane soul boils over.
Killing an animal humanely that has been bred for people to eat is one thing.As long as nobody spoke about unsavoury facts, showed what's going on inside abattoirs, talked about how chickens are mass-produced and mass-processed, etc, we all could enjoy our steaks, chicken breast, or lamb chops oblivious to the fact that all meat we eat comes from an animal that has been killed.
It may not be a racist issue, but certainly a cultural one.
Muslims - at least those in underprivileged countries - have been told for over a thousand years that's the way animals have to be slaughtered: Hearing the name of Allah when their throat is cut. It doesn't matter to them whether an animal has been raised in Australia, Anatolia, or Argentina. Our cattle and sheep are not in any way more or less "precious" than those raised anywhere else.
Westernised countries, with an increasingly urban population that has lost connection to most things rural, find the idea appalling. As soon as a TV team turns it into a sensational story, the collective urbane soul boils over.
As long as nobody spoke about unsavoury facts, showed what's going on inside abattoirs, talked about how chickens are mass-produced and mass-processed, etc, we all could enjoy our steaks, chicken breast, or lamb chops oblivious to the fact that all meat we eat comes from an animal that has been killed.
IMHO the present uproar says more about the alienation of our urban culture from the basics of food production, than it helps bridging the cultural gulf between Indonesian reality and Western humanitarian Utopism.
So, you think a "single clean cut" doesn't hurt the animal? Doesn't leave it gasping for breath? Doesn't leave its brain alive for the last eternity of pain, while the blood slowly drains its life away?It wouldn't bother me if I had to kill, skin, slice and dice the cow. As long as the stun part was done properly I don't see an issue.
I found it a bit hypocritical of Hal Al slaughter men wouldn't use the stun gun thingy because it wasn't how they interpreted how it should be done (it isn't alive how the want it) but Hal Al is supposed to be done with a single clean cut and not hacked.
Just a question, how many people in Australia would eat meat if they had to kill, slaughter, gut and clean the animal themselves before consuming the meat.
While I can see the outrage about this practice in a foreign country, we all go to our local butchers or supermarket and purchase meat for consumption. A far distant cry from the reality of where the meat came from, it was once a living, breathing creature with emotions like the rest of us.
How many Brians have you consumed in your lifetime?
So, you think a "single clean cut" doesn't hurt the animal? Doesn't leave it gasping for breath? Doesn't leave its brain alive for the last eternity of pain, while the blood slowly drains its life away?
That's what I cannot understand - how people can somehow condone one and condemn the other, as if a gradual difference would make it right.
So, you think a "single clean cut" doesn't hurt the animal? Doesn't leave it gasping for breath? Doesn't leave its brain alive for the last eternity of pain, while the blood slowly drains its life away?
I find it difficult to understand how some people construe a different opinion as condoning cruelty.I find it difficult to understand how some people on this forum can actually condone this sort of cruelty.
No doubt you recorded this event and have watched it over and over many times. Maybe you could organise a rally, send a letter to the Prime Minister or at least go over there to the abbatoir and deal with them a-hole Indo's directly.One particularly distressing part video was where the hapless cow was tethered and lying on it's side, after being tripped, repeatedly flogged and kicked by the slaughterer. The highly distressed beast followed him with his head and eyes and with a feeble bellow seemed to be appealing to the man "Why are you doing this to me?"
I find it difficult to understand how some people construe a different opinion as condoning cruelty.
I don't condone cruelty, neither to animals nor to humans. I find the Hal Al method just as appalling: It's a barbarous relic from a far-away time and place when/where tribal life was governed by much harsher battles for survival. Urbanised society has advanced some. But vast regions of the world are still held back - mainly by religious leaders (of all "Religions of the Book") - and the peoples remain condemned to lives in squalor.
But I can't condone the splashing of blood and guts across TV screens either. By all means, send a copy to the Indonesian department that's in charge of abattoirs and to their clerics. If the imams are just as appalled as their colleagues are now that the stink is in the open, they will take swift action.
That won't lift TV ratings. But it won't deepen the rift between two neighbouring "cultures" either.
PS: boofhead, no offence intended; I didn't mean you personally; "you" was addressing the participants in this debate in general.
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