WHY I AM
JOINING PETA IN SUING THE CALIFORNIA MILK BOARD OVER THEIR "HAPPY
COWS COME FROM CALIFORNIA" AD CAMPAIGN
John Robbins
As the only son of the founder of the Baskin-Robbins ice cream empire,
I grew up eating plenty of ice cream and being groomed to take over
the family business. However, I became aware of the tremendous suffering
of dairy cows and their calves and the devastating impact dairy
production has on the environment. Instead of following in my father's
footsteps, I turned away from the family business and committed
myself to working for a more compassionate and environmentally responsible
world.
In my books, including Diet for a New America and The
Food Revolution, I detail the horrific abuses suffered by dairy
cows and their calves and the detrimental impact that large-scale
animal operations, particularly those in California's dairy industry,
have on human health and the environment. The books are international
bestsellers, which reinforces my belief that these are issues of
great importance to people. And the issues are nowhere more fully
exemplified than in California.
The average size of a California dairy herd is more than ten times
the national average. The amount of milk produced yearly by the
average California cow is now nearly 3,000 pounds more than the
national average. This increased production is achieved at great
cost to the animals. The vast majority of California's dairy cows
are kept on dirt and mud. They're repeatedly impregnated in order
to keep them producing milk. Their male calves are taken from them
and slaughtered or condemned to languish tethered within the small
confines of veal crates. And when dairy cows can no longer produce
the unnaturally high amounts of milk required of them, they are
slaughtered.
The life of the California cow today is not a happy one. It is
a life filled with difficulty and misery. Are we going to hold our
advertisers accountable to reality? Are we going to ask that what
they tell us bare some resemblance to the truth? The California
Milk Advisory Board has built an advertising campaign that portrays
the life of these animals as one of ease and comfort. By its very
name, "Happy Cows," the ads deceive consumers and betray
any sense of moral or responsible stewardship that the industry
has toward these animals.
The ads present the California dairy industry as a bucolic enterprise
that operates in lush, grassy pastures. This is completely false.
Most California dairy cows are kept in dry feedlots that are a far
and painful cry from the green pastures the ads portray. The ads
show calves in meadows talking happily to their mothers. This is
completely false. The calves born to California dairy cows typically
spend only 24 hours with their mothers, and some do not even get
that much. The defendants employ the slogan "So much grass,
so little time," implying that the living conditions of California
dairy cows are luxuriant with grass. This is completely false. A
more accurate slogan would be "So many cows, so little space."
The ads propagate the image that California dairy cows live in
natural conditions and the practices of the dairy industry are in
harmony with the environment. Once again, this is completely false.
The amount of excrement produced each year by the dairy cows in
the 50-square mile area of California's Chino Basin would make a
pile with the dimensions of a football field and as tall as the
Empire State Building. When it rains heavily, dairy manure in the
Chino Basin is washed straight into the Santa Ana River and some
makes its way into the aquifer that supplies half of Orange County's
drinking water.
The 1,600 dairies in California's Central Valley produce more excrement
than the entire human population of Texas. About 20 million Californians
(65% of the state's population) rely on drinking water that is threatened
by contamination from nitrates and other poisons stemming from dairy
manure. Nitrates have been linked to cancer and birth defects.
Many consumers today are willing to pay extra for products that
have been produced humanely and with respect for the environment.
If you are selling eggs from free-range chickens, you can sell them
for a higher price than conventionally produced eggs. If you are
selling bread made from organically grown wheat, you can get a higher
price for it. But if you were to tell the public that your eggs
were free-range when this was false, or if you were to tell the
public that the wheat in your bread was organic when this wasn't
true, your actions would be dishonest and criminal. You would be
attempting to take advantage of the people who place great value
on and are willing to pay more for humanely raised animal products
and Earth-friendly food. In much the same way, the Milk Board's
"Happy Cow" ad campaign portrays California dairy products
as humanely produced in harmony with the environment, when this
is not the case.
The
Milk Board defends the ads by saying they are entertaining, and
are not intended to be taken seriously. However, the Milk Board
is not in the entertainment business. It is not spending hundreds
of millions of dollars on this ad campaign to amuse the public,
but in order to increase the sales of California dairy products.
The Milk Board says the ads show talking cows, and no one thinks
cows talk. This is true. But there are a large number of consumers
who are willing to pay extra for humanely raised animal products,
and products raised in Earth-friendly ways. There is not a similar
movement of consumers demanding animal products from talking animals.
The Milk Board knows that showing calves being ripped away from
their mothers and confined in tiny veal crates won't sell their
product. Neither will showing emaciated, lame animals, who have
collapsed from a lifetime of hardship and over-milking, being taken
to slaughterhouses and having their throats slit. But this is the
reality of the California dairy industry. Covering up this misery
with fantasy ads of happy cows is irresponsible, and, we contend,
unlawful.
I am joining with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals in
a lawsuit that challenges the Milk Board's ads as unlawfully deceptive.
It is inhumane to inflict widespread suffering on cows and their
calves. It is inexcusable to poison the state's ground water basins.
It is dishonest to deceive consumers about this animal suffering
and environmental devastation. And it would be irresponsible to
sit by and do nothing while the Milk Board continues in this deceptive
course of action.
Question: Don't you think the ads are funny?
I think they are clever, but they are only funny if you don't take
animal suffering seriously. There's nothing funny about cruelty,
and misleading the public does not become legitimate when it is
done in an "entertaining" way.
Question: You are joined in this lawsuit by PETA. Aren't your
complaints about the ads something that only vegetarians and animal
rights advocates would make?
The consumers who want the animal products they buy to be from
humanely raised animals can be found in every segment of society.
McDonald's has recently increased the size of the cages in which
their chickens are kept, and decreased the number of birds in the
cages. They have made this change at considerable cost, because
they recognize the strength of the market demand from their customer
base for more humanely raised poultry. Burger King and Taco Bell
have made similar changes. The customer bases for these fast food
franchises are not primarily vegetarian, nor are they made up of
animal rights advocates. On the contrary, they are composed of mainstream
Americans. Consideration for the plight of animals is a central
part of the American character. It is an essential part of who we
are as a people. Abraham Lincoln was not speaking only for vegetarians
or for animal rights advocates when he said, "I care not much
for a man's religion whose dog or cat aren't the better for it."
Question: Are you joining this lawsuit because you are a vegetarian?
No. Being a vegetarian is a personal choice. It is not a personal
choice whether you tell the truth about products you are marketing
to the public. That's obligatory. It's not a personal choice whether
you abide by the law and tell the truth. That's mandatory.
In fact, it is the non-vegetarian population that is more the victim
of this ad campaign. Many vegetarians do not consume any kind of
dairy products, so this kind of false advertising actually affects
them less.
Question: Aren't all ads like this? When I buy a beer, I don't
expect to get two women in bikinis standing next to me.
Many ads exploit the desires of people for happier and more exciting
lives, and some do cross a line and become ethically marginal. But
the "happy cow" campaign is uniquely irresponsible and
deplorable. Our society is not experiencing a concerted and serious
social movement composed of people from all walks of life demanding
that commercial beer products come with women in bikinis. There
is, however, exactly that kind of movement demanding that dairy
and other animal food products come from humanely treated animals
and environmentally sustainable practices. The "happy cow"
ads are an insult to the legitimate humanitarian concerns of millions
of people.
Question: Are California cows treated any better than cows in
other states?
No. The reality is actually the opposite. California's dairy industry
is concentrated for the most part in the dry Central valley, which
is now the number one milk-producing area in the United States.
Here, the cows are typically kept in dirt feedlots, unlike the green
pastoral fields common in Wisconsin, for example, where there is
much higher annual rainfall. California dairy cows are kept in larger
numbers in smaller areas than anywhere else in the country. In 1998,
when the national average dairy herd size was 60 cows, California
herds averaged 650 cows.
Furthermore, California dairy cows are pushed to produce more milk
per cow than cows in other states. In 2000, the nationwide annual
average milk production per cow was 18,204 pounds; in California,
the average was 21,169 pounds - nearly 3,000 pounds greater.
When
dairy cows are made to give vastly more milk than their bodies are
designed for, nutrients such as calcium and magnesium that would
otherwise be used for the animals' nutritional needs are diverted
to the milk the cows produce. As a result, California cows suffer
from brittle, broken bones, and many forms of disease, or emaciation
and weakness to the point that they cannot stand up.
Question: The Milk board says that PETA has already filed this
complaint with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), and it was rejected.
Are you and PETA just fishing for someone who will take it on?
No. Earlier this year, PETA filed a complaint with the FTC over
the deceptive dairy ads. On October 7, 2002, the FTC sent PETA a
letter making the historic finding that the humane treatment of
farm animals is, in fact, an important issue for consumers. The
FTC declined to allocate its resources to take formal action against
the Milk Board, but stated that its decision "should not be
construed as a formal Commission determination of whether or not
the challenged advertising campaign complies with FTC advertising
law."
Question: What are you trying to accomplish with this lawsuit?
My ideal goal would actually not be to ban the ads. My preference
would rather be to see the dairy industry reconcile the discrepancy
between the conditions portrayed in the ads and the actual reality.
If the industry treated cows in the manner exhibited in the ads,
I'd drop the suit in a heartbeat.
However, since I think this is unlikely, I am expecting the court
to take animal suffering seriously, and put a stop to these deceptive
ads. Furthermore, I would like to see an effort made to rectify
the damage done by the ads. For example, I would like to see the
Milk Board pay fines at a level commensurate with what they've paid
for the "happy cow" campaign; I'd like to see them required
to pay for announcements in which they apologize for defrauding
the public. And I'd like to see a public service educational campaign
undertaken to educate people of all ages about preventing cruelty
to animals, and the importance of compassion for all life.
Further information about the lawsuit can be found at PETA's website
www.unhappycows.com.
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