However, reading these chapters also gave me more respect for the small-town farmers out there who do things like slaughtering chickens everyday of their lives. They have to almost numb themselves to the fact that they're taking life for the benefit of humans to have a better tasting meal. While being on the Salatins' farm Pollan has to numb himself too to the inhumane treatment of the animals. Although the purpose in raising these chickens was to eventually kill them and send them off to the masses, it's still a concept that you have to move past and get over before you can actually accomplish it.
Another part of these chapters that threw me a little bit were the rules and regulations that the USDA sets for small-town farmers along with big industries. Is it really necessary for the USDA inspector to have his own bathroom? What kind of rule is that? Pollan quotes Salatin when he says that the rules are "one-size-fits-all" basically for the industries, not taking into account the individual farmers. Finally, the references to religion at the end of chapter 13 completely lost me when it came to relating them to food.
I think you made a really good point when you stated that you gained respect for the farmers that must endure this work on a day to day basis. I never really considered how emotionally, and physically hard this type of work would be. These farmers must deal with dispicable conditions and horrible sights of dead animals, just to make a living and provide this country with poultry.
ReplyDeleteGood points about the USDA having a "one-size-fits-all" policy for slaughterhouses; how could this policy be adapted to respond to the needs of small farms?
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