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Meet Your Meat
Meet Your Meat
Title: “Meet Your Meat”
Author/Producer: People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
Suggested Age Range: Ages 13-18 and College adult
Item Type: Video or DVD
Description: 13-minute documentary showing
typical factory farming and slaughterhouse practices
Price: Free for TeachKind
Network members
Suitable for the Following Subjects: Ethics,
health, humane education, language arts, science, social science
Misc:  
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How to Order: Available
from TeachKind.
Companion Materials: Download a printable PDF of the accompanying lesson plan.
Get
information about downloading “Meet Your Meat.” This documentary shows the routine practices of factory
farms and slaughterhouses and explores the conditions endured
by animals who are raised for meat, eggs, and milk. All the
footage was obtained through investigations at U.S. factory
farms and slaughterhouses in recent years.
“Meet Your Meat” makes a compelling case that
the factory-farming mindset—producing the most “product” (meat, milk, or eggs) with the smallest investment (time,
money, etc.)—is responsible for routine cruelty to animals,
such as confining them to spaces that prevent free movement and
proper hygiene, inflicting mutilations without the use of
painkillers, breeding animals for quick growth or production
as opposed to optimal health, prematurely separating mothers
and their young, rough handling, and slaughtering fully conscious
animals.
This documentary is included on the "Chew on This" DVD as a bonus feature.
TeachKind recommends that educators review all videotapes
before showing them to students.
Suggested Uses: Health educators can use
the video as a starting point for discussions about how the
overcrowded, filthy, and stressful conditions that animals
face in factory farms and slaughterhouses promote foodborne
illnesses; how drugs and hormones that are given to animals
to promote growth affect humans who eat animals; and how keeping
tens of thousands of animals in one location creates huge
environmental problems.
Science educators can use this video to prompt discussions
about issues such as the breeding and genetic engineering
of animals to increase “production” or the environmental
inefficiency of raising animals as opposed to plants.
Social science and English educators can use this video to
study related current events. There has been a lot of recent
activity on this issue—Florida passed a law banning
the crating of pregnant pigs, and large restaurant chains,
like McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s, forced
their suppliers to improve the living and dying conditions
of animals raised for their restaurants. This video can be
used to introduce a discussion, research paper, writing assignment,
or presentation on this important issue. Librarians may want
to keep a copy in the library for students.
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