News item: In early January an arson fire heavily damaged 14 cattle trucks at Harris Farms in Fresno County, Calif. The Animal Liberation Front, an underground group that the FBI identifies as a domestic terrorist organization, claimed credit for the fire in a statement sent to the Fresno Bee newspaper.
The arson attack was intended to inflict damage on California’s largest beef processor and to presumably “reveal the horror and atrocities committed against animals,” as stated in ALF’s objectives. The fire caused over $2 million in damages, but fortunately no one was hurt. No arrests have been made in the case.
News item: In Ohio late last month, a woman who is a self-proclaimed animal-rights activist was arrested and charged with soliciting a hit man to kill a random person wearing fur, either by shooting the individual or slitting the individual’s throat. You read that right — she allegedly didn’t care who the target was as long as they were wearing fur!
Fortunately, the plan was easily uncovered by the FBI since the woman allegedly used Facebook to search for a hit man. The agency subpoenaed Facebook to uncover details about the woman’s profile, and an FBI agent contacted her posing as a would-be hit man. Federal marshals arrested her and she is awaiting a hearing.
News item: A British hog farmer targeted by animal-rights activists apparently committed suicide a few days after undercover video was released showing animal cruelty on his farm. The British press called the video “shocking,” and the farmer was quoted as saying he was “absolutely gutted.” There was no suggestion in the reports that the farmer was directly involved in the cruelty — his employees were apparently the culprits — but the man was allegedly harassed and the publicity may have been more than he could bear.
Increasingly, it seems, news items such as those are becoming common occurrences. The decades-old animal-rights movements in Europe and America have undoubtedly had an impact on the population as a whole and become an all-consuming focus of a select few.
Setting arson fires and plotting a random murder- for-hire are illogical means by which to further a cause. But we can’t apply logic to illogical or deranged thinking. No, what we must do is seek voices of reason and spokesmen and women for agriculture whose voices are capable of being heard over the steady drumbeat of those who seek to take agriculture back to the hunter-gatherer days.





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