This Letter to the Editor was submitted to the Alberta Farmer by Neil Peacock. The first time I read it (outloud to a friend of mine), I admit I cried.
This is how I feel about taking care of our animals also. We have a duty to them, and we have a responsibility to not let their lives be wasted. The carcasses dumped in the landfill at Brooks were tested for ecoli and the results were negative - this was not "recalled" potentially tainted meat"... It is a disgrace to see happen in this day and age.
LTE
On the morning of Oct. 22, I
woke up, and on my favourite
TV news channel the first thing I
saw was the story on the landfill
at Brooks, Alberta and the truckloads
of meat being buried there.
My first reaction was shock
as to what a million pounds of
beef is in terms of volume. Then
it brought a tear to my eyes as I
realized what it really meant. It
meant that nearly 1,333 head of
cattle were wasted, and some of
those wasted animals could have
been ones that I raised.
As a rancher I have a social
contract with my animals. I provide
feed, water and shelter to
them and in turn they provide
their young to feed Canadians.
As part of the contract I am
to be humane to them, not to
abuse them or mistreat them, to
care for them if they are ill, to
provide assistance if they need
it during birth and above all,
to ensure their young are cared
for and that their short lives are
not wasted.
We have a moral responsibility
to ensure we do not mistreat
or waste these animals.
They deserve better. Canadians
must get involved and demand
accountability for this wanton
waste and demand our food system
be restructured so that no
more XL’s occur. Write your MLA,
MPP, MP and county and city
councilors and demand change
— and demand to be part of that
change. And yes please light a
candle and place it in your window
for those 1,333 wasted lives.
Neil Peacock
NFU board member
Cattle Rancher
Sexsmith, Alta.
This is how I feel about taking care of our animals also. We have a duty to them, and we have a responsibility to not let their lives be wasted. The carcasses dumped in the landfill at Brooks were tested for ecoli and the results were negative - this was not "recalled" potentially tainted meat"... It is a disgrace to see happen in this day and age.
LTE
On the morning of Oct. 22, I
woke up, and on my favourite
TV news channel the first thing I
saw was the story on the landfill
at Brooks, Alberta and the truckloads
of meat being buried there.
My first reaction was shock
as to what a million pounds of
beef is in terms of volume. Then
it brought a tear to my eyes as I
realized what it really meant. It
meant that nearly 1,333 head of
cattle were wasted, and some of
those wasted animals could have
been ones that I raised.
As a rancher I have a social
contract with my animals. I provide
feed, water and shelter to
them and in turn they provide
their young to feed Canadians.
As part of the contract I am
to be humane to them, not to
abuse them or mistreat them, to
care for them if they are ill, to
provide assistance if they need
it during birth and above all,
to ensure their young are cared
for and that their short lives are
not wasted.
We have a moral responsibility
to ensure we do not mistreat
or waste these animals.
They deserve better. Canadians
must get involved and demand
accountability for this wanton
waste and demand our food system
be restructured so that no
more XL’s occur. Write your MLA,
MPP, MP and county and city
councilors and demand change
— and demand to be part of that
change. And yes please light a
candle and place it in your window
for those 1,333 wasted lives.
Neil Peacock
NFU board member
Cattle Rancher
Sexsmith, Alta.
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