ENSPIRING.ai: See the True Cost of Your Cheap Chicken - NYT Opinion

ENSPIRING.ai: See the True Cost of Your Cheap Chicken - NYT Opinion

The video investigates the hidden cost behind cheap chicken in the United States, shedding light on the industrial farming practices that prioritize profits over animal welfare and farmer independence. The narrator guides viewers through various stages of chicken production, exposing the dire conditions in which chickens are raised and how this impacts their health and quality of life. Factory farms dominate the industry, enforcing strict controls over farmers who often incur significant debt to maintain the operations mandated by these large corporations.

This is crucial viewing as it brings awareness to the power dynamics within the poultry industry that impact both animals and farmers. The narrative reveals the control exerted by a few mega-companies, often leaving farmers as powerless middlemen financially burdened and beholden to the demands of these corporations. The video also touches on the environmental and moral implications of these practices while considering the feasibility of more sustainable and humane alternatives.

Main takeaways from the video:

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Industrial poultry farming involves significant animal suffering and environmental degradation.
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Farmers are financially trapped in contracts with major corporations, burdened with debt and limited control.
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The narrative suggests a shift toward buying more ethically sourced chicken, but at a higher cost.
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Key Vocabularies and Common Phrases:

1. ammonia [əˈmoʊniə] - (n.) - A colorless gas with a pungent smell, used particularly as a cleaning product and refrigerant. - Synonyms: (nitrogen compound, gas, cleaner)

I am not prepared for the smell, for this wall of ammonia that hits you and it stings your eyes.

2. barren [ˈbærən] - (adj.) - Lacking vegetation, empty or desolate. - Synonyms: (desolate, empty, infertile)

It's the most barren environment possible.

3. defecating [ˈdefəˌkeɪtɪŋ] - (v.) - The action of discharging feces from the body. - Synonyms: (excreting, voiding, expelling waste)

All of these birds, tens of thousands of birds, are defecating.

4. selective breeding [sɪˈlɛktɪv ˈbriːdɪŋ] - (n.) - The process of choosing specific animals for reproduction to enhance desired traits in the offspring. - Synonyms: (artificial selection, controlled breeding, genetic selection)

Alongside decades of selective breeding, this means they now grow six times faster.

5. incinerating [ɪnˈsɪnəˌreɪtɪŋ] - (v.) - Burning something completely to ash. - Synonyms: (burning, cremating, reducing to ashes)

In the name of maximizing profits, this farmer is incinerating his own income.

6. collater damage [kəˈlætərəl ˈdæmɪdʒ] - (n.) - Unintentional damage caused as a consequence of an action. - Synonyms: (side effect, unintended damage, blowback)

And the ones that don't, well, they're just collateral damage.

7. exploitative [ɪkˈsplɔɪtətɪv] - (adj.) - Making use of a situation or people in an unfair or unethical way to benefit oneself. - Synonyms: (unfair, abusive, manipulative)

...they trap thousands of farmers into exploitative relationships burdened by debt.

8. cervical dislocation [ˈsɜrvɪkəl dɪsloʊˈkeɪʃən] - (n.) - A method of killing animals by dislocating the cervical vertebrae. - Synonyms: (neck breaking, manual euthanasia, humane killing)

So today's industrial chicken farmers, their job is to walk through their house one to two times a day and find sick, dead or dying chickens and hand kill them. And it's called cervical dislocation.

9. indignities [ɪnˈdɪɡnɪtiz] - (n.) - Circumstances that cause one to feel shame or lose dignity. - Synonyms: (humiliations, insults, affronts)

There's a slow progression of humiliations and indignities that these farmers go through that actually robs them of their humanity.

10. biological limits [ˌbaɪəˈlɑʤɪkəl ˈlɪmɪts] - (n.) - The natural boundaries of physical capability or genetic expression. - Synonyms: (genetic limits, physical thresholds, natural boundaries)

Bred to their biological limits, they trap thousands of farmers into exploitative relationships burdened by debt.

See the True Cost of Your Cheap Chicken - NYT Opinion

Gotta walk the dog. What time do we need to pick up Andy? There's nothing in the fridge for dinner. Again. Come on, just pick something. You haven't got time to hang around hot dogs. No. Not healthy lasagna. Nope. Adam won't eat burnt noodles. Wait. Of course. Chicken. Natural, organic, antibiotic free, and, mama, look at that price.

Hold on. Not so fast. Huh? Wait, who are you? Uh, I'm the narrator. You think chicken's cheap? I mean, I never really. Come on. Let me show you the true cost of your cheap chicken. Mm. I'm actually kind of busy. Fantastic. Let's go. No way. I. What I'm about to show you is very rare. It's almost impossible to get inside one of these buildings.

Where are we? On a farm, raising chickens for Pilgrim's pride, one of the biggest poultry producers in the country. When I enter one of these houses, it's like you're entering a nuclear waste site. This is Leia Garces. She's on a mission to end factory farming. She's going to take us inside. It's going to smell really bad. I am not prepared for the smell, for this wall of ammonia that hits you and it stings your eyes. You start coughing. It is a sea of white. No natural light, no fresh air. It's the most barren environment possible.

All of these birds, tens of thousands of birds, are defecating. And the ammonia produces burns on their chest and on the pad of their feet. That's a burn from pneumonia on his foot. And, you know, red, raw, bedsore looking belly from laying on the litter like that all the time. It's very hot to touch. You'd only go a few steps before you'd see a bird with the leg splayed out to one side or back, deformed. And they have very labored. Breathe. You can see their eyes are glassy. There's a really bad one up here. I don't even wanna. If you eat cheap chicken in America today, this is almost certainly how it lives. These are the birds that are going to supermarket, to restaurant chains, to wherever you're eating chicken.

If you've eaten one of these chickens, you've eaten an animal that had burns somewhere on their body. These conditions are the byproduct of a system designed to maximize profits and satisfy your appetite for cheap chicken. Notice the dim light. It's carefully regulated. More light makes the birds excited and burn more calories. Alongside decades of selective breeding, this means they now grow six times faster than a century ago with lots of juicy breast meat. But look at this. Their small bodies struggle to support the extra weight. Something's wrong with her legs and she can't find her balance. A typical thing you will see is a flipped over bird. So they're on their back, wings up, and they've had a heart attack because their heart has been exhausted by this growth.

Yeah, chickens die before they even make it to the slaughterhouse. A lot of them. About 4000 on this one farm alone in a six week period from dehydration, heart attacks and disease. That's a mortality rate of about 5%. And, you know, that's the average across the whole country. Add up every factory farm in the US, and you have around 450 million chickens dying every year. They just burn millions of chickens. That doesn't sound like a good business model. Oh, that's part of the reason the cheap chicken business model works so well. But to show you why, I need you to meet one of the farmers.

The guy who runs this farm doesn't want to talk. He's scared for reasons you'll understand in a few minutes. But this is a very typical farm. The farm. It could be anywhere. It could be in Georgia, it could be in Arkansas, it could be in Alabama. Anywhere where chickens are grown, in the United States especially. So here's another farmer who will talk to you. My name is Greg Carey. I've been a poultry grower for 22 years now. He runs a farm in Georgia, and he fell in love with chicken farming when he was just seven years old. There is a certain amount of exhilaration in getting 100,000 birds and day old chicks and then raising them.

Greg's a hard working american and an experienced poultry farmer. It doesn't make sense that he'd tolerate animal suffering like this. Well, here's the thing. He doesn't have a choice. You can't control how much feed you get. You can't control when they send it. You can't control whether you run out of feed or not. Wait, if the farmers aren't running their farms, who is? Oh, glad you asked. The real reason all of this chicken is so cheap is because the whole process is managed by a small handful of big companies. You've probably heard of a few. Tyson chicken quick is today's old fashioned chicken golden plum. Good chicken is our mission. In fact, more than half of America's chicken is produced by just three mega companies. Pilgrim's pride, Sanderson Farms, Tyson chicken nuggets.

The birds you saw earlier, they're owned by Pilgrim's pride, producer of almost one fifth of all chicken eaten in America. Chicken that has been sold and continues to be sold to places like KFC, chick fil a, Walmart, and, yep, your local supermarket. You mean the farmer doesn't even own his own chickens? No, he's more like a babysitter. The companies control almost everything. They tell the farmers exactly how they want the chickens raised, what temperature to keep the houses at the static pressure, to keep the houses at the wind speed.

Who's this? Oh, this is Tyler Whitley. He spent four years answering calls from poultry farmers like Greg on a crisis hotline. He knows this system inside out. The farmers don't have independent control over how the chickens are raised. The farmers can't even decide how much light to give, how many chickens to put in. They can't give the birds windows if they want to. There's almost nothing farmers like Greg can do to improve the lives of his flock. I don't get it. How does treating these farmers so badly make my chicken cheap?

Well, the industry invented a genius scheme that squeezes every last drop of ruthless efficiency out of both chicken and farmer. Companies only pay the farmer for the chickens that make it to the slaughterhouse. And the ones that don't, well, they're just collateral damage. In the name of maximizing profits, this farmer is incinerating his own income. And that's not the only burden offloaded onto him. See this multimillion dollar farm? Guess who took out the loan to pay for it. The farmer upgrading this equipment. Guess who had to pay for that. The farmer. And when footage like this finds its way into the world, guess who gets punished.

Yeah, okay, I get it. But if I were him, I wouldn't stand for this. Like I said, they have no choice. They cannot get out of the contracts because they have taken out enormous loans which are tied to the land, tied to their property, and require them to keep growing chickens in order to pay off this loan. So if they stop growing chickens, they lose everything. And so America's poultry farmers, they're trapped in this cruel system.

That's why the guy who runs this farm wouldn't speak on camera. He's got a lot to lose. The industry, meanwhile, works hard to make sure you never see pictures like this. Theyve gone as far as to make filmy on commercial farms a crime in some states. Think how much of a powerful lobby you need to make that happen.

What do you want me to do? Stop eating chicken? I mean, come on. Cant we fix this broken system? Its not broken. Its working how its supposed to, and its working extremely well, extremely well. Here are some poultry farmers begging for legislation. Twelve years ago. John, we need y'all's help. We need the rules passed, but we need you to be watchdogs for us as farmers. But we really need these rules, and we need them quick. But no help ever came.

By investing their huge profits into lobbying the companies. Keep an iron grip on the status quo to get you your dinner. Both the chicken and farmer have lost their freedom and their dignity. So today's industrial chicken farmers, their job is to walk through their house one to two times a day and find sick, dead or dying chickens and hand kill them. And it's called cervical dislocation. And they pull the legs and the neck and they kill them. The inevitable byproduct of a system that puts profits over dignity for people and animals.

There's a slow progression of humiliations and indignities that these farmers go through that actually robs them of their humanity. You know, regardless of how tough you think you are, you know, inside, mentally and physically and all that stuff, you eventually just get worn down. Last year, the poultry company that controlled Greg's livelihood terminated his contract. He's left in debt with no other way to make money from chickens.

Just bear. All natural chicken. All natural. Natural literally means nothing. Nothing. There's nothing natural about your cheap chicken. While a few companies are proving it's possible to produce humane, affordable chicken, the overall industry still condemns billions of chickens to shorten miserable lives.

Bred to their biological limits, they trap thousands of farmers into exploitative relationships burdened by debt, devoid of agency. And they spin a story to the rest of us that what we feed ourselves and our families is natural. And guess what? The poultry industry is making billions from it. Alright, okay, enough. I get it. I want to feed my kids organic chicken that's been raised in good conditions, not these Frankenbirds. And I want it from a farmer who leads a dignified life. Is that really gonna cost much more?

Leah, in order for both the chicken and the farmer to have a more dignified life, chicken should be closer to $6 a pound, not a dollar a pound. I guess it's lasagna after all. Sadeena, our.

Economics, Agriculture, Farmers, Animal Welfare, Poultry Industry, Technology, The New York Times