Retaining a thick Brooklyn accent Bernie (as he is known by his students) is a
force to be reckoned with. A proud
weightlifter and connoisseur of Harley Davidson motorcycles, you might not peg
him as a Columbia-educated University distinguished professor. My first encounter with this giant of animal
welfare came as he guest-lectured a bioethics class I was taking in the fall of
2006. His plea for students to embrace
logic, critical thinking, and practice “weight-lifting with your mind” was
imprinted on us with his use of punctuating profanity as he lectured. He is what you would consider a “Rock Star”
professor on par with Temple Grandin in reputation among students.
Bernie has published several widely read books including Animal Rights and Human Morality (1981), which helped set up a
logical framework for the animal rights movement. For nearly a decade between
the mid 1970’s and early 80’s he worked to make key amendments to the U.S. Animal Welfare Act. The amendments concern
treatment of research animals; such as controlling pain and prohibiting repeat
use of animals like cats for research procedures at vet schools and research
institutions. Up until these amendments
passed students in vet school were required to operate on the same dog or cat
up to 20 times. The animals were kept alive and “worked on” over the course of
several weeks with little to no attention paid to pain relief or after-care. Much focus was placed to the nuts-and-bolts
of animal anatomy with little to no attention paid to minimizing animal
suffering. In a particularly gruesome lab exercise cats were fed cream and
later their intestines sliced open, while conscious, to instruct students how
food passed through the digestive tract. The cats were given ketamine at a low
dose to render their brains dissociated from sensation; mostly to prevent
flinching during surgery. However the drug wore off and the pain would be fully
felt by the animal for days until it’s next round of surgery. Bernie’s 1985 amendments to the Animal Welfare Act ended this and other horrific
practices in vet schools and research labs around the country. His current work has been focused on the
welfare of farm animals, an organic transition at an institution with deep roots
in agricultural understanding. His most recent book Putting the Horse before
Descartes is an autobiography that chronicles his 41 years at Colorado State
and his wielding of the battle ax for animal-welfare awareness.
After years passing since my first encounter with Bernie I
felt it time to go to his office and sit down and have a joint “weight-lifting”
session on these issues. So, one week
before classes started for the fall semester of 2010, I did just that.
Kristopher Hite: After watching Food Inc. and other “foodie” themed documentaries, and reading the Omnivore’s Dilemma, I’m wondering what
your perspective is on how animal treatment in the meat industry is portrayed
by these authors and producers.
Bernie Rollin: There’s a certain bias but it’s basically
true. We’re in a transitional moment because part of the (meat) industry, I’d
say 25%, has taken heed to things like prop 2 in California – that was the
thing three years ago that was passed 2 to 1. The proposition made it illegal
to raise chickens in cages, pigs in boxes, or veal calves in boxes. It passed
by considerably more than anything else on the ballot and that was the year
that Obama got elected. It tells you that, at least in California, Arizona,
Michigan, Ohio (after a bunch of posturing) and Florida (which had a referendum
that capitulated) that the industry is becoming aware. I just talked to an industry
guy for this new book I’m writing and he said “we made a serious mistake when
we gave each chicken 48 inches.” You see
they’re beginning to get it. You wouldn’t have heard that five years ago from
an industry person.
KH: Do you think that this “Real Food” advocacy
has had an influence?
BR: Oh yeah, it’s all
had an influence; the animal welfare movement has had an influence too.
This book we’re doing is very interesting and it wouldn’t
have been done before the PEW commission.
Do you know about the PEW commission?
KH: No
BR: Write this down “P – C
– I – F – A – P, Pew Commission on
Industrial Farm Animal Production dot ORG.”
KH: Briefly, what is the PEW charitable trust?
BR: They are the SUN oil company fortune; 6 billion dollars
plus or minus. You wouldn’t expect these
studies from oil money, but they are fairly left wing. They did a study on “biotech,” they did a
study on the pollution of the oceans, all this kind of stuff. Shit, maybe ten
years ago they were approached by John’s Hopkins who had done some Delaware, Maryland,
Virginia epidemiology of microbes in the soil in the water and they found all
kinds of shit; fluoroquinolones in drinking water – these are cutting edge
anti-biotics, you know, kind of the last resort for hospital nosocomial
infections and things like that. And
Hopkins has a good relationship with PEW and so they said “Why don’t you
fund a commission looking at industrial agriculture “ so they funded a $3 million commission. There were 15 of us on the commission
including the former secretary of agriculture, former governor of Kansas, dean
of a vet school, two deans of public health, an executive from Cargill, and we
all looked at the affect of industrial agriculture on the environment, on human
health, on animal health, on animal welfare, and on rural community health. And
we had specific, very specific indictments of industrial agriculture. In fact I
couldn’t believe that the other 14 people didn’t know anything about animal
welfare. But by the time the commission finished in 3 years they voted unanimously
to demand the abolition of animal confinement in 10 years. Which just fuckin’
amazed me.
This report is available online and since its publication in
2007 it has had an enormous influence on congress, because PEW does, and they
are going to phase out antibiotic use in animal feeds. So that is a good place
to start reading if you want to understand the major criticisms of industrial
farming. And as I said, I think about 25% of the industry has already taken
heed. We had 800 editorials in response to the published commission report. Of
the 800 two were negative. The two that were negative were puppets of the
industry.
We know they’re fighting a losing battle, so I think you’re
going to see a change in industrial agriculture. This book I’m doing is being done by two
icons in animal science, old guys, very senior. They were trying to do kind of
a “response” to the PEW commission, but they didn’t know what the hell they
were doing and so they called me up and they said “will you help us?” Well I looked at the thing and realized there
was a theme they couldn’t articulate.
Namely, how does the industry respond to these concerns? But not how do
they whine about it, but how do they change in response to it. I figured if I could get in there and turn
the book in THAT direction, it would be fairly subversive, you know. The first
thing I did was try to find industry people to provide responses, but none of
them could or none would. Not a single one in any of these areas. I said fine. I went to the people on the PEW
commission and said, Would you indicate what the problems are and make some
suggestions for immediate progress, not pie in the sky, and they all said
yes. So essentially, this will be a
mainstream industry book with a bias in the direction change. I was sort of proud of orchestrating that. I imagine the book will be out within two years. I was happy about doing this because there’s
absolutely no fucking reason that you have to raise animals the way they do.
KH: That brings me to my next question. If the operating
mantra of all corporations in the United States is money, money, money – sell
what the “free market” wants to buy, how much of the responsibility of this
change in the meat industry falls on consumers and their being more
conscientious? One statistic that
slapped me in the face from Food Inc.
was that the average American eats 200 lbs of meat every year. If the goal is to reduce animal suffering,
then how much responsibility falls on us?
BR: A lot of it. A lot of it is general taste. But, if you try to take Americans’ hot dogs
away you’re going to get a revolution. You can give them all the data you want
on rat shit and carcinogens. One way to
ensure something happens in America is to tell Americans – NO. In Marin County,
California they passed a “no breeding without a license” law. Breeding
immediately proliferated. You don’t tell
Americans what to do. You motivate them. We have a huge tradition of freedom in
this country. To me, the emblem of this is bikers. If you travel like I do all
over the west people greet you. “God bless you young man” that kind of shit,
because they see bikers, however pathetic that may be, as continuing the
tradition of freedom.
There was a guy 15-20 years ago who was poaching small game
in Utah. Didn’t have a license and didn’t believe he had to have a
license. He was kind of a mountain man,
lived off nature. He was caught by a game warden and he killed the game warden…
And he was a hero in Utah. He wasn’t a villain. They wrote songs about him.
People told him about the cops coming. That is huge and people don’t fucking
get it. The left wing liberals don’t get that independence is a wild streak in
America. It’s a crazy streak. It’s not like Sweden.
KH: I just watch the Documentary - Gonzo - about the life of Hunter S. Thompson, and I was amazed at
the people who sat down to interview and discuss his life, Jimmy Carter, George
McGovern, Jimmy Buffett and so on. I bring up this film as it pointed out how
he got his start in journalism spending time with the Hell’s Angels biker gang
all over California in the 60’s. I realized how intertwined the “freedom” carried
by the Hell’s angels was intertwined with the Merry Pranksters and how that
association kind of led to the reemergence of the “freedom movement.” But, from my perspective, being born in the
1980s, I see the back end of all that, the residual energy from that movement
being co-opted by the sell-outs.
BR: That’s classic though.
See you didn’t live through the 60’s and I did. The 60’s created a
counter-culture like psychedelic art, Peter Max, that kinda shit. Well, within
a year 7-up had psychedelic commercials. It’s very much like Hinduism, the
history of Hinduism. It doesn’t fight intruder religions. It swallows
them. My colleague, Jim Boyd had a
tapestry in his office of a lot of the Hindu gods, and one of them is Jesus.
You see, capitalism is very clever that way. You don’t beat ‘em you join ‘em.
KH: Where is the forefront of the fight for farm animal
welfare?
KH: What is the driving force behind state referenda such as
the famous prop 2 in California?
BR: The Humane Society of the United States - HSUS. They campaign and inform people about
current industrial farm animal production practices then assist bringing forth reforming
referenda for state-wide voteWhen this was attempted in Colorado then-Governor
Bill Ritter did not want language like "No hog houses allowed in
Colorado" to show up as an amendment to the State Constitution
(unfortunately that is how Colorado's referenda process works: only
constitutional amendments can be voted on by the public). BUT, it ended up
alright because Senate bill 201 was passed in 2008 in lieu of the
constitutional amendment. This came to be after the humane society came together
with the ag lobby and hashed out the terms of senate
bill 201.
The passage of this bill in Colorado set a precedent for the rest of the country showing that both sides (animal rights activists, and industrial farming operations) can work together whereas many times people say there is no room for compromise on farm animal welfare issues.
The passage of this bill in Colorado set a precedent for the rest of the country showing that both sides (animal rights activists, and industrial farming operations) can work together whereas many times people say there is no room for compromise on farm animal welfare issues.
END of interview - see summary of a follow-up conversation below.
A more market-driven change-maker Bernie brought to my attention is the Global Animal Partnership or GAP. Bernie was just appointed to the board though he has not attended any meetings yet. GAP is the organization Whole Foods uses to rank its meat in terms of animal welfare, the 1-5 scale you see in their butcher shop. A detailed outline of criteria used to judge an animal’s lifelong welfare is available in the GAP pamphlets at whole foods butcher-shops. Mostly, these criteria involve maximum transport time, frequency of electric prod use in beef raising, clipping of beaks in chickens, and tail removal in pigs. At a minimum, animals must have enough space to move freely without in obstruction according to their “natural behavior” to make it onto the bottom rung of this scoring ladder. One point Bernie emphasized about this scale is that any animal raised on a ranch automatically gets a four out of five ranking. Considering they are not confined and have freedom to move as they please for the majority of their lives. The practices that get a piece of meat from a 4 to a 5 on the scale have to do with the branding and castration policies of the respective ranch, and the top score goes to the animal who spend their entire life on the same farm including slaughter.
Perhaps it is naïve for me to assume that the general
taste Americans have for meat consumption will change which I think is what
Bernie was trying to tell me throughout our conversations. According to the Humane Slaughter Act passed
in 1958 all cattle, calves, horses, mules, sheep and swine must be rendered “insensible to pain” before being chopped up
into pieces. This really is as far as we have come on a national level to agreeing
on any kind of “animal welfare.” When I consider that this act does not apply
to chickens, and that chicken meat makes up nearly 90% of overall meat consumption
in the US I see we have really come nowhere on a national level. These facts are discouraging and make me lose
hope that less per-capita meat consumption can somehow be legislated. But, perhaps we the people CAN be motivated
to acquire alternative tastes by public criticisms and indictments such as documentaries, books, national commissions and publically visible interviews with subversive insiders like
Bernie. In a recent lecture presented by one of Bernie’s animal welfare
compatriots – Temple Grandin – mentioned something that might truly
revolutionize the way meat consumption happens in the United States. Real-time
streaming video at all stages of farm animal production to facilitate USDA
auditing. As chief justice Louis
Brandies once said “sunlight is the best disinfectant” so too might
transparency and the open-access philosophy lift the proverbial curtain on the
more dubious practices inherent in current industrial farm animal
production.
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