Animal Cruelty

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Animal cruelty is defined as “the crime inflicting physical pain, suffering or death on an animal, usually a tame one, beyond necessity for normal discipline. It can include neglect that is so monstrous (without food and water) that the animal has suffered, died or been put in imminent danger of death” (“Argument in favor of Animal Research: Using Animals Ethically as Research Subjects Yields Valuable Benefits”). In other words, animal cruelty, which is also referred to as animal abuse, is human infliction of pain or any other harm to an animal, for all intentions besides self-defense. There are two distinct groups of animal abuse, active abuse and passive abuse. Animals who are abused unintentionally is the passive form of animal abuse. On the other hand, active abuse is intentionally and deliberately causing harm to an animal which can be done so by being killed and slaughtered in an inhumane manner, beaten, tortured, starved, and caged for most of their life (“These Types of Animal Cruelty Will Surely Make Your Heart Bleed”). These examples of active abuse describe the life of an animal …show more content…
Factory Farms are one of the cruelest forms of animal abuse. Thousands of animals are crammed into very small and grimy spaces such as sheds, crates, or cages, where they won’t be able to move around or even experience the sun until the day they are shipped off to a slaughterhouse, where they face even more cruelty. These animals are deprived of the natural experiences they are meant to have from the second they are born such as raising a family or building a nest. The factory farm business is focused on increasing revenue while minimizing their costs, at the expense of the animals, by cramming them into small disease-ridden places, which will cause many of them to die (“Factory Farming: The Industry Behind Meat and