This is a guest post by a very good friend and long time online coaching client Aron Woolman. For the past five years I’ve spent a weekend in late January in southern Texas hunting hogs and raising money for the kin of fallen special operations forces thanks to Aron’s involvement in the Silent Warrior Foundation. In the wake of one hunt, Aron shared a photo of his freezer filled with meat from this year’s hunting season (including hunting back home in North Carolina). The following was in response to someone criticizing Aron and questioning the morality of his mode of procuring sustenance. His response was so cogent, and so important to understand that I asked if I could post it as a guest post.
I’d like to address your comment about my refrigerator. I am not a trophy hunter, and most hunters do not fall into the category of hunting mainly or completely because of a desire to kill animals. I view hunting as a way to connect on a very intimate and personal level with nature, our own animal instincts, and with my food.
I accept that some people adopt a vegan lifestyle for both ideological and scientific reasons, and I will not argue the scientific merits of that diet here. I also will not try to convince a vegan that his position is ideologically incorrect, and don’t expect a vegan to (successfully) argue that my life as a hunter is ideologically incorrect.
Most Americans are neither vegan, nor hunters. And I can confidently say that my lifestyle as a hunter is ideologically and morally superior to most non-hunting meat eating and vegetarian or pescetarian Americans. I know that is a bold statement, so let me explain.
Most agricultural animals in this country are raised in CAFO (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation) environments, where they are forced to live their lives in close quarters, standing and covered in their own feces, and eating unnatural diets. Pigs and chickens are often kept in large, long buildings with no sunlight, and are bred under conditions that we would think of as being derived from SAW-style torture films. These situations are unnatural, and immensely cruel. Even organic operations, which often market their products with cartoonish pictures or silhouettes of farms, are not living on the farms that we see in the pictures. Cage free chickens can never see the sunlight and be kept in a chicken feces filled warehouse and remain cage free. “Pastured” animals often live in the same environment, but in a building with a door and a small fenced outdoor area. If the animals can find the door, maybe they can spend sometime outdoors. Still, the majority of their lives will be spent indoors, and this is for the animals being raised for premium products.
For those who forsake animal flesh, their store bought butter, milk, and eggs still come from these sources, as well as the foods that are made from these ingredients. For those who do eat meat, every time you buy food with meat in it from a fast food place, or even a high end restaurant that gets it’s food from a large distributor, you are voting with your wallet to support this industry of cruelty. Think about that. Every time most Americans eat, or buy animal protein at the grocery store, they are making a choice to support animal cruelty. The only way around this is to buy from farmers or a farmer cooperative/aggregator, raise animals yourself, or hunt.
Although I am guilty of eating out at restaurants and occasionally buying ingredients that are sourced from CAFO’s, buying from farmers and hunting severely decreases our support of that system. We are lucky here in the Triangle of North Carolina to have great access to farmer’s markets. My wife and I have made a commitment to each other and to our children not to bring meat into the house that doesn’t come from animals we have hunted or from farms we have visited. These animals are raised in the environments that fill the pictures of meat and produce sections of the supermarkets, environments that are where these animals are meant to be. They live happy, unrestricted lives.
When I shoot a deer (or pig, elk, bison, bear, turkey or game bird), that deer has lived its life in a natural environment up to that point in time. It has experienced less stress than any CAFO animal, and will almost certainly die a quick death. (Part of responsible hunting is only taking shots that you are confident will not maim an animal – there’s no maybe or hey lets wing it.) That meat gets processed by a butcher, and fills my freezer. This year was a particularly successful year in terms of harvested game, and as a result my family will be able to eat from that animal protein for much of the year. My children will not have to worry about antibiotics in their meat, and our food will not be recalled because of e-coli outbreaks at one of the 4 food large food processors in the United States. The fat and chemical composition of the game and farm raised meat we eat is highly superior to even the best USDA Prime cut of meat, because it was fed what that animal naturally eats, not a source of abundant grain caused by illogical farm subsidies.
From time to time, people tell me that hunting is cruel. I argue that eating conventional food is much more cruel. Just because you don’t witness the suffering does not mean that it does not happen. The system is set up to remove you from those thoughts, to remove you another step further from your food.
bill says
You provided a comprehensive response to those opposed to hunting and commercial meat enterprises, however I don’t think anything will dissuade a Vegan or other moral
advocator for animal rights from disagreeing with your explanation and lifestyle.
There most likely are hunters out there who enjoy killing things and who probably do not abide by the local laws and some who don’t even eat their prey.
I admire your honesty and commitment to how you choose to get your meat protein.
I believe in honoring every person’s individual opinion and way of life so long as it does not harm others. I also think meat protein is part of what we were meant to eat and in the form you suggest it is healthy for us to consume. As you stated most people do not want to think about where and how the meat gets to the grocery store.
They don’t have an interest in going to the trouble of hunting for it or finding alternate sources for it. I think cost is also a barrier for many people that’s why they buy fast food and super market meat, it’s cheaper and convenient and they don’t have to think about it. Thanks for the article.
Mariana says
Excellent review of why hunting is the most humane way to consume meat. One of the reasons I stopped eating meat is that I don’t think I could bring myself to hunt, skin, debone, cook, and then eat an animal. And if I can’t bring myself to do that… then it’s pretty hypocritical of me to eat an animal that was raised in really cruel conditions.
I linked to your article here: http://www.marianamcdougall.com/vegetarian-diet-reasons-consider/
david says
I liked your piece. Thank you for writing it & linking here.
Mariana says
Thank you so much for reading it.
Angela De Rose says
Thank you for your honesty and for sharing your views. I too stopped eating meat as I couldn’t justify the torture and disease that came from the meat that was available to us. I also cannot hurt another living animal so hunting wasn’t an option either.
Our family have also made the change to eat meat from animals that are raised humanly and respected.
I hope your acticle reaches many.
Thank you.
Jesse says
I recently joined the humane society. Not because I’m against eating animals or giving them jobs, but for the same reasons you bring up here. I hate that animals are raised in ways that don’t give them an opportunity to enjoy their lives. I can’t observe the way animals that are tested on are treated and abused and keep a clear conscience while there are ways to do it that consider their happiness. My only desire (with this) is that animals aren’t treated like they don’t deserve comfort, like they aren’t even living or feeling. I’ve been seriously considering hunting or buying from someone who does. I know it’s been a while so maybe you’ll read :). Anyone who hunts ethically is a hero to animals imo. Your friend is awesome.
Bethuel Njoroge says
This article has been helpful to my understanding whether hunting animals for meat and eating the already raised meat would be more human. I know tend to develop an attitude that hunting would more convinient rather than raising animals for meat. Your article inspired me positively.