Denmark’s government has brought in a ban on the religious slaughter of animals for the production of halal and kosher meat, after years of campaigning from welfare activists.The change to the law, announced last week and effective as of yesterday, has been called “anti-Semitism” by Jewish leaders and “a clear interference in religious freedom” by the non-profit group Danish Halal.European regulations require animals to be stunned before they are slaughtered, but grants exemptions on religious grounds. For meat to be considered kosher under Jewish law or halal under Islamic law, the animal must be conscious when killed.Yet defending his government’s decision to remove this exemption, the minister for agriculture and food Dan Jørgensen told Denmark’s TV2 that “animal rights come before religion”.Commenting on the change, Israel’s deputy minister of religious services Rabbi Eli Ben Dahan told the Jewish Daily Forward: “European anti-Semitism is showing its true colours across Europe, and is even intensifying in the government institutions.”Al Jazeera quoted the monitoring group Danish Halal, which launched a petition against the ban, as saying it was “a clear interference in religious freedom limiting the rights of Muslims and Jews to practice their religion in Denmark”.The ban has divided opinions in the country, particularly after it recently made headlines for animal welfare policy after Copenhagen Zoo slaughtered the “surplus” young male giraffe Marius.On Twitter, David Krikler (@davekriks) wrote: “In Denmark butchering a healthy giraffe in front of kids is cool but a kosher/halal chicken is illegal.”Byakuya Ali-Hassan (@SirOthello) said it was “disgusting” that “the same country that slaughtered a giraffe in public to be fed to lions… is banning halal meat because of the procedures”.Mogens Larsen (@Moq72), from Aalborg in Denmark, tweeted: “Denmark bans the religious slaughter of animals. Not even zoo lions are allowed a taste of halal giraffe.”Last year politicians in Britain said they would not be outlawing religious slaughter despite “strong pressure” from the RSPCA, the National Secular Society and other activists.
obviously it's anti-semitic because it specifically rules out Jewish and Muslim practices
Honestly, I think the Jews need to seriously reconsider how they go about slaughtering animals. In a small slaughterhouse, the process is relatively humane and there has been research demonstrating that the animals are largely unaware that their throat was even slit (due to how finely sharpened the knife needs to be), but when attempts are made to industrialize the process it results in a very frightening experience for the animals. I'm not sure how Muslims do it for halal meat, but I imagine they have similar processes. So yeah, obviously it's anti-semitic because it specifically rules out Jewish and Muslim practices, but that doesn't necessarily make it reprehensible.
Honestly, I think the Jews need to seriously reconsider how they go about slaughtering animals. In a small slaughterhouse, the process is relatively humane and there has been research demonstrating that the animals are largely unaware that their throat was even slit (due to how finely sharpened the knife needs to be), but when attempts are made to industrialize the process it results in a very frightening experience for the animals.
Quote from: Mr Psychologist on July 26, 2015, 04:03:11 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on July 26, 2015, 12:05:56 PMHonestly, I think the Jews need to seriously reconsider how they go about slaughtering animals. In a small slaughterhouse, the process is relatively humane and there has been research demonstrating that the animals are largely unaware that their throat was even slit (due to how finely sharpened the knife needs to be), but when attempts are made to industrialize the process it results in a very frightening experience for the animals. It usually takes the animal a few minutes to bleed out, while not stunning them leaves their spinal cord in tact along with their ability to feel pain up until the moment of death.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on July 26, 2015, 12:05:56 PMHonestly, I think the Jews need to seriously reconsider how they go about slaughtering animals. In a small slaughterhouse, the process is relatively humane and there has been research demonstrating that the animals are largely unaware that their throat was even slit (due to how finely sharpened the knife needs to be), but when attempts are made to industrialize the process it results in a very frightening experience for the animals.
Not to go all verbatim here but there's really no humane way to end the life of a complex organism. I'm not saying stop eating meat. I'm not even suggesting kosher and halal are as ethical as other forms of slaughter. But let's not single out kosher and halal slaughter, while we pretend we have some kind of moral high ground just because our cows are stunned before the kill.
there's really no humane way to end the life of a complex organism.