Human Health & Zoonotic disease

Geese heading for the gas chamber, apparently there are too many geese so we must murder them.


It’s not a question of IF its WHEN

This is not a conspiracy;
This is science 


Feathers from all countries come from factory farms, where thousands of birds are crammed into a small space and live among their waste for weeks on end. chicken, duck, turkey, and ostrich and emu farming, environments create the perfect conditions for the next zoonotic disease.

Factory farm animals also consume approximately 80% of the world’s antibiotics. Feeding animals antibiotics has the potential to create antibiotic-resistant diseases [read more].


More bird flu infections in people and new mutations in the virus are worrying scientists.

Health professionals and scientists believe a new disease from facilities such as these could have a greater impact than the current Coronavirus pandemic, as the disease will jump to wild species and spread through meat products [read more].


Did you know that Influenza (the flu) started as an intestinal bug in ducks?

The virus sits in their intestinal lining and as they secrete, it enters the water and is consumed by other ducks, spreading the virus in a more natural order

As opposed to …..

Industrial Animal Farming, animals are confined in close quarters, which restricts movement and creates an environment for airborne viruses to spread rapidly, increasing the risk of contagion between animals and humans.


When ducks mixed with land-based avian species – chickens – the disease infected them and then mutated to infect humans, the video HISTORY & PREVENTION explains in more detail.


Other common disease outbreaks include salmonella, Escherichia coli, and Pasteurella multocidia, and Rimerella (Pasteurella) anatipestifer , which causes tremors and incoordination [read more].


The bird flu virus is mutating to infect mammals more easily raising concerns of a pandemic threat


"Many workers on these feather-plucking plantations either die from disease or endure a life of suffering due to the high demand for these feathers.

It appears that we are responsible for both human and animal cruelty, and if we don't slow down or stop this practice, we risk bringing further harm, including disease, upon ourselves."

Says Wild

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