Don't Gift a Goat!
Dec 6, 2007 - The photos are cute: bright-eyed, smiling children
embracing doe-eyed, happy animals. Some of the animals even have digitally added gift tags around their necks for that
extra-special holiday cheer! For $45-500 US dollars, you can put money into a general fund of
an organization who may or may not
take a perfectly intelligent, emotional animal, transport them to a poor family in a far off land who will raise and slaughter them.
Charming.
Here's why not to support animal donation programs like OxFam's, Heifer International's, or MercyCorps'. This is not a complete
list, of course.
If you are an animal
lover: Farm animals are smart. They are emotional. All can suffer,
experience pain and know joy. Why take a nice, happy-go-lucky goat, send her to a place where she may not be fed properly and will definitely have her throat slit? Besides, it should just really offend
your sensibilities when these animals are referred to as "products" and then
portrayed as cheerful participants in their own subjugation and death. It should
at least creep you out.
If you
care about people: Asia and Africa have the highest levels of lactose
intolerance, with upwards of 90% being unable to properly digest milk. In
Zambia, nearly 100% of the population is lactose intolerant. Yet Heifer
International has several dairy cattle projects in Zambia. Sending dairy cows to
areas with a mostly lactose intolerant population is mind-boggling, really.
If you like the environment:
Farm animals are resource freaks. They drink a lot (one of our pigs will drink 5
gallons a day, one of our cows around 25 gallons). They eat a lot (our two cows
could probably munch through a bale of hay a day). Goats especially are known
destroyers of land and creators of deserts. Some of these people have enough
problems with deserts, they don't need more. Since these recipients are already
living on such limited resources, why add another resource-guzzling burden in
the form of livestock?
If you like fine print: Read the fine print of these organizations. Your money isn't going
to buy an animal. It's going to go in a general fund. While this may be common
practice to avoid litigation, it is definitely misleading. If you care about that sort of thing, anyways.
Fine Print:
Instead of donating an animal to an impoverished family in another country, why not check out these alternatives? These
organizations are working to reduce human suffering through programs that are sustainable
and animal friendly:
And of course, rather than making a gift of a goat, consider making a gift for a goat this holiday season.
Support one of Animal Place's residing animals by giving the gift of a foster parent package!
Note: A misunderstanding was made regarding the source of animals for these programs. It used to be common to transport animals from the United States to various parts of the world. Many organizations now maintain herds within, at the very least, the continent on which the animals will be farmed. However, many organizations do not keep an open record on where exactly animals come from or how long they travel before arriving at their destination. Our apologies for any confusion.
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