Recently, video of a young woman viciously kicking three geese   in a public park surfaced both, on the Internet and television   news:
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The woman has since been identified and rightly charged with   animal cruelty.
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But, what makes this story unique is the amount of public   outrage expressed and shared, when the truth is that similar cruelties (and   much worse) occur everyday on factory farms across the country to a variety   of animals, including millions of chickens, turkeys, cows, calves, pigs,   lambs and many more.
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On the same day I posted the above story to    (61) Call of the Canada Geese Facebook page,   I also posted another story of more than 20 domestic ducks and geese who   were shot and beaten to death in another public park (presumably with   authorization). 
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It was, however, the story of the individual woman acting   in cruel and despicable manner that was widely shared and commented   upon.
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But, wasn't the other story actually worse in terms   of blatant cruelty ending in violent death to numerous   animals?
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And is it not worse, the torments and cruelties that millions   of animals suffer everyday both on factory farms and in   slaughterhouses?
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What is it exactly that compels our outrage to rise up in one   instance and seemingly go to sleep in others that are in fact, far more   pervasive and egregious?
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Is it the fact that we are better able to discern   clearly, those instances of civilian and individual animal cruelty, as   opposed to industrial, corporate or governmental?
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Is it the fact that we are able to be more objective   in identifying cruelty when we are not either directly or indirectly   connected to it and derive no personal benefit?
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A couple of weeks ago, I shared on this blog my puzzlement   when meeting two birders in Central Park who, though seemingly unhappy   when witnessing two migratory geese chased and harassed out of Harlem   Meer by Geese Police, were nevertheless resigned and accepting of the   action.  I could not understand their seeming casualness with something   that was obviously cruel and unnecessary under the   circumstances.
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Now I wonder what the couple's reaction might have   been had it instead been two rowdy teenagers or cruel adults perpetrating the   action and terrorizing birds out of a park?
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Suspicion is, the couple would have complained to   authorities.
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But, because the perpetrators of cruel action wore identifying   and authoritarian uniforms, the action was therefore, rendered   acceptable. 
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Here is the question to ask however: 
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Isn't cruelty, cruelty regardless of the victims or the   perpetrators?  Are we not talking about actions resulting in   pain, distress, torment or death to others?
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An infamous Russian dictator once said, "The death of one   is a tragedy, the death of millions, a statistic."
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Unfortunately, that seems true in terms of us being able to   "identify" or empathize with victims of injustice, cruelty or   tyranny.
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It is easier to visualize and empathize with the pain of one,   rather than millions.
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But, that should not discount or nullify our roles (if   any) in the tyranny of millions. 
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Nor should we excuse and accept cruelty because it is   committed by someone in a uniform.
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In less than two weeks, millions of us will celebrate a   national holiday over the bodies of animals who have been mercilessly   treated throughout their short, unnatural lives, often brutalized and   cruelly slain for our supposed "celebration" and benefit:
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But, few of us will protest or even think about that.   
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A couple of weeks ago, the Washington Post ran a story about   how new USDA regulations will speed up slaughter lines likely resulting in even   more than one million chickens and turkeys being annually boiled   alive:
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But, there was not nearly the outrage over this news   story as the one of the deranged woman kicking geese in a public park.   
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That is because too many of us apparently sanction   industrialized abuse of animals and support it with our purchase dollars,   whereas virtually no one condones individual animal cruelty that does not   immediately benefit us.
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Humans appear to be the only species capable of infinite   denial of reality. 
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Non-human animals exhibiting such denial of realities would   surely be dead and/or headed for rapid extinction.
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Still, there are small glimpses of hope on the   horizon:
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That hope, I personally believe, is in the hands of the   photographers, videographers and everyday people who take the time to bring   the natural world into the homes of millions via National Geographic   documentaries, YouTube videos, undercover videos from factory farms and   slaughterhouses, nature blogs and the like. 
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For example, this story on the CBS Evening News with Scott   Pelley last night:
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Aside from the breathtaking photographs, its the statement of   the photographer at the end of the video that is the most powerful and   profound.
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From the video:
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"With just 3,200 tigers left in the wild, Winter's become   an advocate. His new book will help explain why they're   disappearing.
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"'But it goes back to the viewer,''' he said. '"Do you   value a tiger walking the face of this earth? And if you do, let's get   involved.'"
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Of all Winter's hundreds of thousands of images, an image   of a mother and cub brought him to tears, almost asking that very   question"  What is the value of tigers walking the face of the earth?"   
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And so we too must ask ourselves, "What is the value of the   cow in the meadow, or the turkey roosting in a tree or the dog chasing a ball or   the ducks swimming in a pond or the goose flying in the sky?"
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An evolved and enlightened world will hopefully one day   answer," "They (like us) are value in and unto themselves as they are (like   us) one strand in the inexorable and forever fragile web of   life."
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The woman viciously kicking at geese in a public park has been   arrested and has to account for her crime.  Presumably (unless seriously   mentally ill) she will never commit such crime again. 
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But, it is all the unlabeled and unidentified crimes against   animals everyday that we must truly acknowledge and atone for -- the ones that   too often are result of and connected to us either directly or indirectly   through blind acceptance of authority, consumer demand and/or purchase dollars.   
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If we truly value, we must act to protect, not necessarily by   ganging up on those individuals caught committing isolated and egregious acts,   but through simple, everyday actions and decisions such as what to wear and what   to eat, etc, etc. 
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We have to once and for all, be willing to let go of our   denials and rationalizations and learn respect without prejudice. 
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Animals' place on earth was never for our entertainment,   appetites or abuse.
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Like us, animals are simply entities caught up in the delicate   web of life and (like us) cherishing that life and forever acting jealousy to   guard and protect it, as well as the lives of their offspring.  --   PCA
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