The Humane Society's Battle With Farmers Began Right Here in Florida

Around about the lunch hour in Vale, South Dakota, on February 5, a 33-year-old cattle rancher finished a morning of blogging, then stepped outside with a bottle of wine and a Flip video camera.

Cattle rancher Troy Hadrick, with wife Stacy, went on an internet rampage against Yellow Tail.
Kristen Hinman
Cattle rancher Troy Hadrick, with wife Stacy, went on an internet rampage against Yellow Tail.
New Florence, Missouri, sheep farmer Dave Hillebrand practices old-fashioned animal husbandry but worries about the Humane Society’s intentions.
Kristen Hinman
New Florence, Missouri, sheep farmer Dave Hillebrand practices old-fashioned animal husbandry but worries about the Humane Society’s intentions.

"Hello, my name is Troy Hadrick. I'm a fifth-generation United States rancher in South Dakota," the man ad-libbed to the camera while standing amid a small clutch of cattle. "I recently found out that Yellow Tail wines is going to be donating $100,000 to the wealthiest animal-rights organization in the world, the Humane Society of the United States — a group who is actively trying to put farmers and ranchers out of business in this country. That being said, I cannot and will not support a company who is doing such a thing. This is the only thing I know to do now with this last bottle of Yellow Tail wine that was in our house."

In his cowboy hat and Carhartt jacket, Hadrick paused to cock the bottle of white at shoulder height, flick his wrist and send the contents pouring to the snow-covered earth like a stream of piss.

"I hope you will do the same," he concluded. "Thank you for supporting American agriculture and the family farmers and ranchers in this country."

Five minutes later, his 54-second "Yellow Tail Is Now Fail" clip posted to YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, Hadrick finished his chores and skedaddled with his family to the Black Hills Stock Show & Rodeo. Back online that night, he was shocked at the viewing stats for his maiden voyage on Internet video.

First it was 500. Then several thousand. The tally kept climbing until, as Jim Klinker, the Arizona Farm Bureau's chief administrative officer, terms it, "Yellow Tail done turned its tail and run!"

Within two weeks the Australia-based wine giant announced it was rescinding the remainder of its $300,000 pledge to the Washington, D.C.-based Humane Society.

The frustration shared by Hadrick and others had been bottled up for some time, but not in recent memory had a Humane Society donor buckled under such public pressure. Only a week later, Tennessee-based Pilot Travel Centers announced it would stop collecting Humane Society donations at its chain of roadway rest stops. Then the Dallas-based Mary Kay cosmetics company publicly clarified that a personal donation by an employee's wife to the Humane Society had been misconstrued by the group as a corporate sponsorship.

Hadrick's social-media sensation seemed to represent a tipping point in a battle that has had modern food producers playing defense for nearly a decade. It's farmers vs. activists. Agriculture vs. animal rights.

On one side: a phalanx of corporation- and family-owned farms that operate on large economies of scale, raising 10 billion animals a year and producing an affordable food supply for hundreds of millions of people around the world.

On the opposite side: the Humane Society, founded in 1954 as a protector for all animals, from dogs and cats to seals and whales to hens and cattle.

Never known for radical tendencies, the nonprofit had a mild-mannered reputation when it came to farm animals until its president and chief executive officer Wayne Pacelle grabbed the bull by its horns about a decade ago and launched an "End Factory Farming" campaign to wipe out the practice of lifelong livestock confinement in densely packed or restrictive crates and cages.

Under Pacelle's direction there have been no protests, no threats to human life or other such fur-flinging, none of the shock and awe that has earned notoriety for other animal-rights groups such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).

Instead the Humane Society has favored a more political route. One strategy has been that of "shareholder activism": purchasing minority stakes in publicly traded businesses such as Steak 'n Shake, then pressuring management to alter its buying practices.

But the group's primary m.o. is even more direct: Ask American voters whether, in Pacelle's words, "animals built to move should be allowed to move."

Pacelle (pronounced puh-cell-ee), who got the first so-called factory farm law passed in Florida eight years ago via a ballot initiative, has since chalked up wins in six additional states. Others are taking note: Last year lawmakers in four more states introduced copycat legislation.

Groups like the National Rifle Association have been using the political system for decades with a lot of success, observes Peter Singer, a professor of bioethics at Princeton University and author of the seminal Animal Liberation, published in 1975. "I think the Humane Society finally thought: We're as big as them in terms of public support; why don't we use some of that political clout?"

The state-by-state offensive is considered far more winnable than getting a law passed through congressional agriculture committees or a regulation adopted by the United States Department of Agriculture. "[That agency is] concerned primarily with food safety," Marcia Kramer, legislative director of the Chicago-based animal-advocacy group National Anti-Vivisection Society, says of the USDA. "It's easier to convince a voting population that this should be changed than a committee and an industry whose livelihood depends on producing as much as fast as they can and for the least possible cost."

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  • Bett 05/30/2010 1:45:00 AM

    People should educate themselves about the Humane Society. In 2008, they paid themselves (555 employees) 38 million dollars in salaries and benefits. That's right suckers - keep donating. http://activistcash.com/organization_overview.cfm/o/136-humane-society-of-the-united-states

  • lin 05/27/2010 6:08:00 AM

    The humane society's ONLY goal is the elimination of all animal agriculture. Purcell wants an entirely vegan world. he will use every emaciated or abused animal he can find for pictures to solicit funds to promote that goal. what he won't do is spend any of the millions these pictures generate to actually feed or care any animal. read the truth about hsus by typing in humane society of the united states funding sources.

  • Amanda 04/19/2010 11:14:00 PM

    The Humane Society of the United States is notorious for misleading consumers by showing "worse case scenarios" and playing it off like that's the norm. Only 1/2 of 1% of HSUS donations actually go directly to animals for their care...all other goes to lobbying efforts or to fatten their own pockets....don't believe, check out their 2008 tax filing! Over 40 execs were paid well over 100K while your local & not related humane societies struggle to keep their shelter open daily. Want to help animals, donate local!!! CAGED HENS ARE HUMANE AND HERE'S WHY: Cage-free and free range are exposed to many more potential problems than caged....for instance: in free-range they are open to predators such as hawks, foxes, etc., also open to the weather (blazing hot, freezing cold, rain, etc) so their mortality can be around 3 times higher than caged. While cage free are better than free range they still face issues such as disease and an unforgiving "pecking order." In caged the hens are kept separate from manure, if cage free they walk around in it, lay their eggs in it, and unfortunately eat it and can get coccidiosis which will basically make their insides bleed. So while caged limit their freedom, if the producer is UEP certified the birds are kept in a humane manner so that they can stand up, turn around, move freely and hav access to food and water 100% of the time and be closely monitored so that each bird can get adequate care. HSUS loves to say they can't stretch their wings....1) that is false if they are UEP certified 2) do we as humans stand around w/ our arms extended all day long? I think not so to act like we all (and chickens) need to stand around all day w/ their arms extended is just plain silly. Simply put mortality is 2 and 3 times higher in cage-free and free-range. Happy healthy chickens don't die!!!

  • Marge Peppercorn M.D. 04/16/2010 10:41:00 PM

    Shame on the wine company and the people who buckled under pressure from the ranchers. Humans are supposed to be compassionate and thoughtful and whether or not they eat meat, condoning factory farm practices is inexcusable. Cows and chickens are feeling creatures and not meat machines. They do not deserve cruelty any more than your dog or cat do and the concept of allowing them minimal space to turn around and stretch is not rocket science. It's about time someone stood up for humane treatment of farm animals. People should educate themselves about the truth behind factory farm methods before being so quick to criticize the Humane Society.

  • Eden Springs 04/16/2010 8:30:00 PM

    The HSUS likes you to think that 1) they're humane, 2) they rescue animals, 3) they somehow run or support shelters in the USA. In fact, they do none of those things. They use pitiful ads to raise huge amounts of cash to finance lobbying to pass laws that will achieve their REAL agenda: The end of animal ownership and a forced vegan lifestyle for every American. Find out the truth at www.HumaneWatch.com.

  • 04/16/2010 3:59:00 AM

    I thought this was a really well written piece that shows everyone in a neutral light. I have yet to hear any farmer admit that under current practices, it's true that not all animals are able to "stand up, lie down and turn around freely, and fully extend all limbs." In fact, I hear mostly from ranchers, which is strange, because cattle are not kept in cages. Sows, hens, and veal calves are. I don't see anything radical about the modest reforms the Humane Society is proposing. I'm glad that animals have someone like Wayne Pacelle with the testicular fortitude to stand up for them. People keep coming up with all these stupid reasons to oppose the HSUS, and yet 99% of them are BS. The fact of the matter is, these industries don't want to change. Ask yourself why anyone would be adamantly opposed to giving a sow a big enough space to turn around in, and see if you can come up with any reason besides money. And don't try to tell me it's the only way to keep a sow safe, because it's not. There are alternatives. It's time to see the light, people.

  • HillaryHSUS 04/14/2010 7:30:00 PM

    Thanks for a great article. This debate isn't about demonizing farmers but rather exposing the inherent cruelty of various housing systems including battery cages and gestation crates. Surveys (including those by farming groups) consistently show that consumers value animal welfare and want farm animals to be treated humanely.

  • alice in lala land 04/13/2010 11:04:00 PM

    When the HSUS opens its first "farm" or "ranch".. and shows the world how to raise animals "humanely" and up to their standards ( what ever those are) and then opens a slaughter house and shows the world what they consider to be "humane" slaughter for those same animals.. then shows the world how they will be able to afford to eat.. then opens a dog and cat breeding business that shows the world how to raise pets in a manner acceptable to the HSUS.. then.. and only then might I change my mind.. but until then.. I am not holding my breath..Pacelle "pro farmer"??.. LOL.. yeah sure he is...and I am the Pope... Animal Rights = No Animals Left. Friends Don;'t let Friends Donate to the HSUS or its 'sister' PETA.

  • Jack Lani 04/13/2010 10:53:00 PM

    Unfortunately the article left out the cost of globalization which HSUS and all its clones and spin-offs are furthering. Do the math on how large a square foot area would be required for animals. HSUS insists on all animals contained together being MAXIMALLY able to spread their limbs to fullest possible extension simultaneously. If human beds were required to be proportionate in size to animals pens virtually all human adults would be required to have larger than king sized beds. And what sane person would ever argue for boar hogs to be left loose running through the streets or a schoolyard? Pacelle and the ethicists have real personal moneymakers by the short hairs. Both begin with the assumption that farmers need to be microgoverned by one or the other group. Both desires are beyond insane. Meanwhile, China's ramping up animal production and would be delighted to have a monopoly on offshored US animal production. We saw where that ended with the melamine contamination. Radicals are termed radicals for real cause. We have enough problems in the US for now. Animal radicals of any ilk we have zero need for.

  • skippy 04/13/2010 9:38:00 PM

    I wish I could say the animal rights movement was a good movement but I can't. Very few know that both the ar movement and the organic movement was started in 1933 by Hitlers Nazi Army. The mission was (and I believe still is) was started to gain control of a population. Now I'm not saying they are all bad because that isn't the case. But when you have a group bringing laws that remove freedoms then I call that group bad. When you have a humane group that knows nothing about animals then tells the public that farmers are evil then I call the animal rights movement evil. My question is, why is the government sleeping? Why arent these animal rights groups being shut down? PETA raised money by saying they were helping abused animals then they took the publics money and gave it to a scientist. They gave him one million dollars to develope meat from human stem cells. Fund raising for not for profits is very tight. What PETA did was illegal. Where is the law.

  • Jim Gager 04/13/2010 7:09:00 PM

    An excellent article, in depth and unbiased. It was a treat to read. Thank you.

 

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