
So I know it has been a while since I made a post, and it's not due to lack of ignorance on PETA's part. It's been a busy few months and I just haven't had time, but I thought this was worth mention.
It is no secret in the south that Pilgrim's Pride is having some financial trouble, and recently they have begun to shut down poultry processing plants in Arkansas and Louisiana. In light of this Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has put together an emergency task force to attempt to provide a solution that would not end in the termination of the Pilgrim's Pride northeast Louisiana operations. If the plant closings go ahead as planned an estimated 1,300 jobs will be lost and those don't include the some 300 poultry farm owners (Many $1,000,000+ in debt to pilgrims due to cost of chicken houses) that would be left bankrupt if Pilgrims closes.
Personally, I feel uneasy about the whole situation. I have worked for Pilgrims in the past and have multiple friends and family members that have been employed in one way or another through the poultry industry in this area. Many people don't understand the devastation that this would bring to Louisiana, PETA stands among those people.
PETA made a proposal to "assist" the people of northeast Louisiana that can be defined as little more than an out-and-out mockery of the whole situation. A letter was sent to the office of Governor Jindal requesting to purchase the processing plant in Farmerville, Louisiana, and turn it into a museum to show the suffering that chickens have endured. This is as a slap in the already beaten face of Louisana - - the Chicken Emapthy Museum would not save jobs as PETA claims. It takes many more people to run a poultry plant than a museum. Governor Jindal understands the needs of the people in Louisiana and has refused PETA's offer saying, "This issue is about the future of our people. Not chickens. I'm from Louisiana, we think of the chicken first and foremost as an eating animal. I think this is a lot of squawking about nothing." This is honestly a flawless response from a man that knows that this kind of blatant gloating message does nothing but harm the people and enconomy that it encounters.
PETA tries to further their argument to save chickens by claiming, "Most people don't realize that chickens are sensitive animals who are as intelligent as cats, dogs, and even primates." Samuel Clemens once said, "There are lies, there are damn lies, and then there are statistics." This is another example where PETA has their friends do "research" to prove their point. There is almost no research on chicken intelligence. What evidence they do have is nonspecific bird intellegence. There is evidence that shows that parrots and corvids may have mammalian cognitive ability, but this doesn't transfer to all birds. Besides, intelligence or unintelligence should not be the factor of who lives or dies, if is then I have a lot of friends who are goners.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for this buyout if PETA agrees to keep all 1,300 Pilgrims employees and take financial responsibility for the poultry growers; but not even PETA with it's seemingly endless supply of financial resources can do that. This is just another example of PETA putting animal rights over the wellbeing of people.






