Overwhelmingly the products of artificial insemination [industry term: rape rack], 97% of newborn dairy calves are forcibly removed from their mothers within the first 24 hours of their lives. The suffering and loss that this resccued mother had already been forced to endure in the name of 'dairy' is unimaginable to me.
Image from: Blue-Nature-Documentary-Film-YouTube-Thumbnail
Around the world on February 14th, billions of people will indulge in gifts, dinners, flowers and other perfunctory symbols of celebration for their romantic partners. Others will extend the celebration to include beloved friends and family members. All told, this year consumers are projected to spend a total of $25.8 billion dollars on Valentine’s day. In the US alone, that price tag includes more than 60 million pounds of chocolate that will be gifted.
As conversations around food have increasingly centered on ethics in
recent years, more and more people will be looking to buy candy that
wasn’t a product of child labor and slavery, or rainforest
destruction. But what about the dairy that goes into milk chocolate
production and other sweet treats?
If you’ve ever seen one of the heartbreaking videos of newborn
calves being ripped from their mothers in the dairy industry,
leaving their mothers to frantically trail after their babies in
panic, you know that the dairy industry depends on destroying the
mother-child bond. So when I recently encountered a video where a
woman was picking up a clearly just-born calf and carrying them away
from their mother, my heart stopped. I wasn’t ready to watch yet
another disturbing video of this common practice.
Watch the video HERE.
But as I watched a little longer, I noticed the manner in which the
woman gently patted the calf’s face and the mother at the same time.
She was letting the mom know that she was a safe space for her and
her newborn, and I knew that something was different about this
video. The interaction seemed tender and protective – two words that
I would never use to describe the dairy industry, even after touring
over a dozen so-called “humane” dairy farms. As the woman scoops up
the newborn and walks slowly down a hill, you can observe the mother
cow calmly following along. Excited about the new arrival, donkeys
and horses join in on the procession.
At the same time, I felt a pang of sorrow in my chest, as mothers
used by the dairy industry will never know this sort of care and
celebration. In fact, the mother cow featured in this video was
rescued from the dairy industry when and had never before been
allowed to keep her baby. Overwhelmingly the products of artificial
insemination, 97% of newborn dairy calves are forcibly removed from
their mothers within the first 24 hours. The suffering and loss that
this mother had already been forced to endure in the name of “dairy”
is unimaginable to me.
Watch the video
HERE.
....
Please read the ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE.