Nov 23 2010

Pacelle’s “Blackmail” Backfires

One of the odder consequences of HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle’s “town hall” meeting show in Lincoln, Nebraska this weekend has been a new spirit of cooperation among the various Cornhusker State agriculture groups. Instead of squabbling among themselves, pork producers, egg farmers, cattlemen—heck, everyone suddenly seems unified against their common foe.

Nebraska Farm Bureau officer Mark McHargue (himself a pork producer) appeared on Monday’s “Agritalk” radio program, and his reaction to Pacelle’s road-show is instructive. Not just for how easy farmers find it to see through Pacelle’s humane-than-thou façade, but also how farmers are slowly getting the courage to stand up and say that they—not animal rights carpetbaggers from Washington, DC—know what’s best for the animals they take care of every day.

The audio below is a condensed version of McHargue’s interview. The whole show is available in a podcast on the Agritalk website. (His appearance begins at the 30:00 mark.) Quotable bits are after the jump. The interviewer is Agritalk producer John Herath.

  • “The practices that we’re using are actually more humane … I believe that on my farm, the animals that are in gestation stalls are treated better. They have less health issues, their life is longer … If an outside interest group like this comes in and asks us to do some things, I think we’d actually be taking a step back.”
  • “That’s the reason that they’re a 100-plus million-dollar organization. They work on sensationalism. They work in areas that people just have really no idea what happens [on the farm].”
  • “[Pacelle] was trying to convey the fact that they are not against animal agriculture—that would be his message that he put out there—and that he wants to work with farm groups. But when you look at their actions, it just seems like their actions do not demonstrate the message that he was trying to put out there.”
  • “It’s always kinda funny when people start talking about ‘working together’—typically, when you work together, there’s some give and take on both sides. But it seems like the way that HSUS—it almost seems more like blackmail, that if you don’t do this, this is what we’re going to do. And it just doesn’t seem like that’s a real productive way to ‘work together’ with people.”
  • “The very best thing that has happened out of Wayne Pacelle coming to Lincoln, Nebraska: It has opened a dialogue with the livestock interests in Nebraska.”

Related People

Related Organizations

Posted on 11/23/2010 at 10:00 AM by the HumaneWatch Team

Audio & VideoAnimal AgricultureDairyEggsMeat • (2) Comments

Share

Comments 

THIS MAN HAS GOT THEIR NUMBER!!

Posted by Mary Lou on 11/23 at 01:06 PM

Very perceptive. Maybe these open dialogues between the various ag venues can start to include dog breeding? We can hope. It seems obvious that Pacelle’s ‘lecture’ was intended to widen the rift between the various production groups, and soften the ground for a Prop. B-type initiative in Nebraska soon. In Ohio, dog breeders were thrown under the bus by the farm groups, and in Missouri, most ag groups abandoned the breeders who are a significant part of the Missouri ag economy. Mr. McHargue did not play the HSUS game of defense in this interview. Very refreshing. Pacelle’s friendly host Kevin Fulton could learn a thing or two - maybe he should go back to last year and read this cattle producer’s blog post: http://ypcblog.beefusa.org/post/2009/12/09/First-Hand-Account-of-HSUS.aspx

. . . then ask for HSUS’s endorsement of his production methods, see what happens.

Posted by Charlotte Allmann on 11/23 at 01:13 PM

Comments are moderated, and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive. Extremely lengthy comments and those that contain obscenities may be edited before they are posted.

Add a comment:

Name:

Email: (will not be displayed)

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

« Back to blog homepage