Time and again there are pictures of vibrating grievances to the public in livestock farming. It is important that these photos get daylight, so that consciousness and remedy can be made. But now there may be an enforcement of the law that punishes them.
There are hardly any more opposing interests than those of the farmers and those of animal rights activists. In the middle is the consumer, who wants to eat a cheap Schnitzerl, but is furious about the circumstances with every new scandal in factory agriculture.
But would something ever change if you close your eyes when you have shown grievances? The “Association Against Animal Fabrices” (VGT) are regularly admitted from stalls, which are also published in the suspicion of cruelty towards animals. So you want to show what some people want to run under the carpet.
The farmers are naturally a thorn in the side. Last August the styricic young farmers caused a sensation with their campaign “Stop Breakdowns!” “Nobody wants strangers to break into their own living room at night. We are no different with our pig stables, “says Kurt Tauschmann, chairman of a producer group of pig farmers.
The purpose of the resources?
There are broken stable doors, hidden cameras and circular drones – for the judiciary this is no longer a Cavalier – crime. For several years, politicians have been developing a proposal to expand the paragraph against entering the Criminal Code, which provides for two years in prison for the hidden films in the stables of farms.
The VGT animal rights activists are now justified that this project will be put into practice under a black and blue government in the crowds of the farmers. “Time and again, grievances and cruelty for animals are discovered in animal factories by being secretly filmed – that is a thorn in the side of the FPö, no one is allowed to learn about the quality of the animals,” the association writes in a broadcast.
Protest campaign with symbolic power
On Wednesday morning, the VGT activists want to present a photo gallery for parliament with shots of pigs on full columns. An activist disguised as a “folk Chancellor” Herbert Kickl will disrupt the animal welfare rally and try to prevent animal suffering.
The VGT will remain standing for the publication of images of stalls and sees it as an opportunity to inform consumers uncensored. There must still be room for this in our society. VGT chairman Martin Balluch regards it as an important task that is ‘undertaken and tries to prevent the animal industry’.
Source: Krone

I am Wallace Jones, an experienced journalist. I specialize in writing for the world section of Today Times Live. With over a decade of experience, I have developed an eye for detail when it comes to reporting on local and global stories. My passion lies in uncovering the truth through my investigative skills and creating thought-provoking content that resonates with readers worldwide.