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<blockquote data-quote="soberups" data-source="post: 800195" data-attributes="member: 14668"><p>The "stun guns" you mention are used in industrial factory farms <em>not</em> because they are more "humane" but because they are <em>cheaper and easier </em>to employ than a real gun.</p><p> </p><p>I am not a fan of factory farms and I refuse to buy meat from them. My wife and I buy all of our beef from a small local farmer who raises his cattle humanely and only feeds them grain and grass. No antibiotics, no hormones, no corn, no being trucked to a slaughterhouse and herded into chutes for processing. The local butcher who slaughters these animals does so in the <strong>most humane way that it can possibly be done</strong>; he drives his mobile butchering truck out to the pasture where the cattle are grazing and uses a scoped, high-powered hunting rifle to shoot the animals in the head. They are dead and on the ground before they ever even hear the noise of the gunshot. He does hogs the same way, except they are generally in a barn or a chute rather than a pasture so instead of the high-powered rifle he uses a .357 handgun to the base of the neck at point-blank range. This may seem barbaric to those who are offended easily but the <em>reality</em> is that it is a <strong>far</strong> more humane method of dispatch than what is used in the factory farms.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="soberups, post: 800195, member: 14668"] The "stun guns" you mention are used in industrial factory farms [I]not[/I] because they are more "humane" but because they are [I]cheaper and easier [/I]to employ than a real gun. I am not a fan of factory farms and I refuse to buy meat from them. My wife and I buy all of our beef from a small local farmer who raises his cattle humanely and only feeds them grain and grass. No antibiotics, no hormones, no corn, no being trucked to a slaughterhouse and herded into chutes for processing. The local butcher who slaughters these animals does so in the [B]most humane way that it can possibly be done[/B]; he drives his mobile butchering truck out to the pasture where the cattle are grazing and uses a scoped, high-powered hunting rifle to shoot the animals in the head. They are dead and on the ground before they ever even hear the noise of the gunshot. He does hogs the same way, except they are generally in a barn or a chute rather than a pasture so instead of the high-powered rifle he uses a .357 handgun to the base of the neck at point-blank range. This may seem barbaric to those who are offended easily but the [I]reality[/I] is that it is a [B]far[/B] more humane method of dispatch than what is used in the factory farms. [/QUOTE]
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