Chemical Concoctions
Life on the "Farm"
Laws & Secrets
Costs & Consequences
100

Stress hormones and increased likelihood of contamination in inhumanely raised animals can make food less safe and reduce this.

What is nutritional value or food quality?

100

This term describes the dense, unsanitary living conditions that prevent natural movement in factory farms.

What is overcrowding or confinement?

100

The common nickname for laws that restrict recording inside industrial farming facilities.

What are ag-gag laws?

100

This gas, emitted in large quantities from livestock and their waste, is a major contributor to global warming.

What is methane?

200

These chemicals, applied to feed crops like corn, can end up in animal products and the human food chain.

What are pesticides or herbicides? (Acceptable: glyphosate, neonicotinoids)

200

Beak trimming and tail docking are examples of these, often performed without pain relief.

 What are painful procedures or mutilations?

200

These individuals are specifically targeted by ag-gag laws for entering facilities to document conditions.

Who are undercover investigators or whistleblowers?

200

 Large amounts of this byproduct from factory farms can contaminate local water supplies.

What is animal waste?

300

These substances, like zinc or copper, are added to feed not as drugs but to promote animal health and growth.

What are minerals or vitamins?

300

Animals in these systems often never get to do this, such as nesting for hens or rooting for pigs.

 What are natural behaviors?

300

Critics say ag-gag laws primarily function to prevent this from reaching consumers and regulators.

What is information about harmful practices? (Acceptable: transparency)

300

Normalizing farm animal cruelty risks doing this to society's sensitivity toward animal suffering.


What is desensitizing?


400

This is one of the two main pathways through which farm chemicals affect the general public who don't work on farms.

What is consuming contaminated meat/milk/eggs? (Acceptable: indirect exposure through food)

400

Beyond physical illness, this condition in animals, caused by poor conditions, can negatively affect meat quality.

What is stress? (Acceptable: high stress)

400

 The U.S. Constitutional amendment that critics argue ag-gag laws violate by limiting free speech and press.

 What is the First Amendment?

400

This broad concern is raised by viewing animals merely as commodities for production.

What are ethical concerns or animal rights?

500

 Reproductive harm, neurological problems, and cancers are potential outcomes of this type of long-term, low-dose chemical exposure.

What is chronic disease or chronic effects?

500

This is the primary motivation (often at the expense of welfare) cited for modern factory farming practices.

What is efficiency and profit?

500

Supporters of ag-gag laws argue they protect farms from these two things: people entering without permission and false claims.

What are trespassers and false accusations?

500

While lowering short-term costs, the factory farming model creates these long-term issues, including disease outbreaks and environmental degradation.

What are public health risks and sustainability challenges?

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