Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals

Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals
by Catherine Johnson, Temple Grandin

Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals
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Book Summary Information

Author: Catherine Johnson, Temple Grandin
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2009-01-06
ISBN: 0151014892
Number of pages: 352
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

Book Reviews of Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals

Book Review: Grandin is on 'Their' payroll.... and it shows.
Summary: 1 Stars

Dr. Grandin's book "Animals Make Us Human" was a disappointment to this animal rights/vegan. I can only justify the reason for its apparent popularity, in part, to the underlying supposition being similar to Mr. John Mackey's (CEO of Whole Foods) Humane Meat premise. One that is predicated on an attempt to give readers some "guilt relief" in their consumption of animal flesh and secretions and minimizes the responsibility to really consider the consequences of their actions on animals, the environment and health.

Grandin's work (paid for by the meat industry) involves reforming the quality of life of food animals and their horrific living conditions - in what is commonly known as Factory Farms or Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO's), and slaughterhouses. This kind of reformation is impossible due to the numbers of animals slaughtered - in the US alone, annually totaling 10 billion and rising. The USDA has proven it impossible to produce uncontaminated and/or safe meat (i.e. Westland/Hallmark's 143 million pound beef recall in 2008) due to these massive numbers. The tracking of sick animals and the required inspections needed to stop production is humanly impossible. Reform? There are not enough people on our planet.

Grandin assures the reader as well, that treating the billions of factory farmed animals kindly, starting with training the "hands on" slaughterhouse and factory farm workers to stop beating, kicking, slamming, electrically prodding, neck wringing, hanging, throwing in the trash - and everyday barbaric cruelty on assembly lines, will make these animals lives better prior to slaughter. She also suggests that removing fear from the animals destined to die by making the metal shoots and crates more tolerable and less fearsome will assist in a better life for them, before they are brutally killed.

One of the main difficulties with her idea of training slaughterhouse and factory farm workers to be kinder is that employee turnover in slaughterhouses in the US each year approaches 100%.... nobody stays on to kill animals for long - and that alone should send a strong message that what Grandin is selling, nobody should be buying. Slaughtering animals is a gruesome job and continually proven to be emotionally and psychologically damaging.

Grandin goes on to state that in her reformed slaughterhouses, cows walk quietly to their death and gladly take the stun gun to die for us humans. After all, we bred them, raised them, paid for their food - the least they can do is die for us.

Considering the childlike nature of animals, I've pondered what a human child would feel if presented with this outcome.

Leo Tolstoy wrote of a visit to a slaughterhouse in 1909 in his essay titled "The First Step" and among his numerous objections, stated it was "horribly revolting." Linda McCartney declared, "If slaughterhouses had glass windows, everyone would be vegetarian".

Slaughterhouses are not kind, loving places, nor will they ever be. Killing is not a kindly act. It is violent and some experts even claim murderous - in taking a life that fights with everything it has to live. Therefore, Grandin's claim that cows walk quietly and calmly to their death is simply not accurate. There are dozens of recorded cases of cows escaping slaughterhouses in terror and fear due to the smells and screams from the unlucky bovines who couldn't flee. Miles of film footage have also proven the horrors cattle and all other food animals endure in slaughterhouses. See: [...]. This is just one example of many.

Grandin's claim that being autistic somehow gives her deeper `insight' into animals than the average person seems questionable. For instance, from the Journal of Autism: "Difficulties in the cognitive processing of emotions--including difficulties identifying and describing feelings--are assumed to be an integral part of autism." (1).

Since animals are known to be feeling, emotional creatures, very similar to humans as scientists have proven - I have trouble understanding how someone who has difficulty in expressing, showing and identifying emotions and feelings could actually have a better connection to animals. Why wouldn't a person with normally developed emotions have the possibility of a deeper relationship, being more closely matched to those elements displayed by animals?

Grandin's outlook is sadly insulting to anyone who truly loves animals, and who shows that love daily by doing the least harm possible, including not forcing them to die for us. (Grandin still eats animals).

I am deeply saddened by this book and it's author. These types of books hinder the ultimate move towards a more peaceful world without violence.

More insightful books on this topic are: The Face on Your Plate, by Jeffrey Masson; "The Inner World of Farm Animals", by Amy Hatkoff or Diet for a New America, by John Robbins.

Summary of Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals

How can we give animals the best life-- for them? What does an animal need to be happy?
 
In her groundbreaking, best-selling book Animals in Translation, Temple Grandin drew on her own experience with autism as well as her experience as an animal scientist to deliver extraordinary insights into how animals think, act, and feel. Now she builds on those insights to show us how to give our animals the best and happiest life-- on their terms, not ours.
 
Knowing what causes animals physical pain is usually easy, but pinpointing emotional distress is much harder. Drawing on the latest research and her own work, Grandin identifies the core emotional needs of animals and then explains how to fulfill the specific needs of dogs and cats, horses, farm animals, zoo animals, and even wildlife. Whether it?s how to make the healthiest environment for the dog you must leave alone most of the day, how to keep pigs from being bored, or how to know if the lion pacing in the zoo is miserable or just exercising, Grandin teaches us to challenge our assumptions about animal contentment and honor our bond with our fellow creatures.

Animals Make Us Human is the culmination of almost thirty years of research, experimentation, and experience. This is essential reading for anyone who?s ever owned, cared for, or simply cared about an animal.

Product Description
How can we give animals the best life--for them? What does an animal need to be happy

In her groundbreaking, best-selling book Animals in Translation, Temple Grandin drew on her own experience with autism as well as her experience as an animal scientist to deliver extraordinary insights into how animals think, act, and feel. Now she builds on those insights to show us how to give our animals the best and happiest life--on their terms, not ours.

Knowing what causes animals physical pain is usually easy, but pinpointing emotional distress is much harder. Drawing on the latest research and her own work, Grandin identifies the core emotional needs of animals and then explains how to fulfill the specific needs of dogs and cats, horses, farm animals, zoo animals, and even wildlife. Whether it's how to make the healthiest environment for the dog you must leave alone most of the day, how to keep pigs from being bored, or how to know if the lion pacing in the zoo is miserable or just exercising, Grandin teaches us to challenge our assumptions about animal contentment and honor our bond with our fellow creatures.

Animals Make Us Human is the culmination of almost thirty years of research, experimentation, and experience. This is essential reading for anyone who's ever owned, cared for, or simply cared about an animal.



A Q&A with Temple Grandin, Author of Animals Make Us Human

Q: In Animals Make Us Human, you discuss a wide range of animals, from dogs to pigs to tigers. Which animals do you enjoy studying and working with the most?

A: I've worked with cattle the most, so I really enjoy cattle. I always liked to sit in the pen and let the cattle come around me and lick me--they're really peaceful animals when they're not afraid. But the thing about cattle is they're a prey-species animal and they get scared really easily--and I can relate to that because as a person with autism, fear is my main emotion. So I can relate to how cattle are always hypervigilant, looking for rapid movements, looking for little signs of things that might be danger.

Q: How has autism helped you in your work with animals?

A: I'm a total visual thinker. And you've got to think about it: animals don't think in language. If you want to understand animals, you must get away from language. Animals are sensory-based thinkers; they think in pictures, they think in sounds, they think in touches. There's no other way that their brains can store those memories.

Q: How has your work affected the treatment of animals?

A: I've been working on improving the treatment of cattle for years. When I started out in the seventies, people were incredibly rough and abusive with cattle. The thing that kept me going was that there were some really nice people who handled their cattle well, and their cattle had a great life, and so I could see that it was possible to handle animals right. And today many more people are now involved in teaching low-stress stockmanship and good cattle handling. When I started in the early seventies, I was a pioneer in the U.S. on this; nobody else was working on these things.

Q: How will this book be useful to people working with cats and dogs in animal shelters?

A: People often don't recognize emotions in these animals. I went to a very nice animal shelter recently that had group housing for cats that had tree-like things with platforms and cubbyholes for the cats to get in, and a very astute worker there noticed that you can have a situation where a cat seems very calm in a shelter, but he's not really sleeping, he's constantly keeping an eye out for another cat. And people need to watch for that kind of situation, because even though it looks peaceful, that one particular cat that never sleeps is going to be stressed out.

Also at this shelter, I was very pleased that the amount of dog barking was way less, and I think one of the reasons for this is that every day, every dog is taken out for an hour of quality time, playing and being walked and interacting with a person. That's going to help lower the stress. Dogs need to be taken out every day for quality interaction with a person, exercise, and fun play.

Q: What are the things you really like about creating a book like Animals Make Us Human?

A: I really enjoyed getting into all the neuroscience information. Another thing I talked about in the book are the problems with not having enough people working out in the field to implement things. We've got policymakers who never work out in the field, and some of the policies can backfire. We need to have more people working in the field. In the wildlife chapter, I talk about who's going to be the next Jane Goodall--we need a lot more of that kind of on-the-ground work.

Q: You mention Dr. Nicholas Dodman and some other people in your field. Has anyone in particular been a great inspiration for you?

A: One of my big inspirations when I was starting out was a scientist named Ron Kilgore, who studied sheep handling and sheep behavior. At the same time that I was working on cattle handling in the U.S. in the early seventies, Ron Kilgore was doing the same sorts of things in New Zealand. I discovered one of his papers early on, and that really was an inspiration.

Q:What do you think of the more extreme animal activists?

A: Violence I'm totally against--that's very counterproductive. All that does is make the animal industry go and get more lawyers and more security systems. Demonstrations--sometimes there may be a place for that. In some situations we might have philosophical differences. I eat meat. I get hypoglycemic if I don't eat animal protein. But I feel very strongly that we've got to give the animals a decent life. A woman working at Niman Ranch said that we've got to give animals "a life worth living." These cattle can have a decent life: the cows and the bulls, out on a ranch eating grass. The calves spend half their lives in a feed yard, but they're still outside. Another way I look at it is, those cattle would have never been born, would have never existed, but now that we've made them exist, we've got to give them a decent life.

Q: If you could give your book to one person or one group of people so that they could learn more about animal care, who would that be?

A: I think any kind of person who works with animals, whether it's a pet owner, a cat owner, people who work with horses, people who work on farms--anyone who works with animals on a daily basis is going to like Animals Make Us Human, and they're also going to like Animals in Translation.

Q: Proposition 2 in California just passed. Its aim is to reduce the inhumane confinement of farm animals by giving them enough room to stand up, turn around, and stretch. What do you think of this, and what do you think the real effects will be?

A: Veal stalls and sow stalls we need to get rid of, plain and simple. Putting a sow in a box where she can't turn around for most of her life, that's absolutely not acceptable. Two-thirds of the public have problems with it. With hens and chickens, that's a more complicated issue. It's so much more expensive to put them in systems that are cage-free, and what I'm worried about is the egg industry migrating to Mexico and being a real mess, where we have no controls at all. What people don't realize is that half of the egg industry is liquid egg, which can be easily shipped in those stainless-steel tanks. It's the eggs that go into bread, the eggs that restaurants use...And I'm concerned that that might migrate to Mexico.

There needs to be a lot more thought going into how we're going to implement things. What's happening in a lot of fields now--with any issue, not just animal issues--is we're getting more and more policymakers totally separated from the reality of what's happening on the ground, where ideology takes over from practicality.

Q: What are your future plans relating to animal advocacy? What is the next issue that you would like to tackle?

A: I'm an implementer. Somebody has to work on implementing things. I want to continue working with people on practical guidelines that will result in improvements. I spend a great deal of time working with large meat buyers, because economic forces can often bring about great change. One of the things that should be a major criterion in judging welfare is when there are too many lame animals. And lameness is something I can measure. I want things I can measure. Too often we've got our best and brightest going into policy, and they haven't done anything practical. All I can say is, whatever field you're in, whether it is animals or something else, you need to get out in the field and find out what's going on in the trenches, so that you don't make policies that might have unintended, bad consequences. Get away from the lobbyists, get away from all that, get out and visit farms, visit ranchers, because with a lot of issues, the truth is somewhere in the middle.

(Photo © Joel Benjamin)




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