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The Rural Voice, 1983-06, Page 7"Society must be willing to re -think its philosophies regarding the value we place on animals and animal welfare. We ought not to cause unnecessary suffering." Dr. Garnet Norrish, Program Manager of OMAF Advisory Services, has been working with the OPPMB since 1980 to help put together an Ontario Code of Practice for swine. Dr. Hugh Lehman, Professor of Philo- sophy at the University of Guelph, has been serving on the University's animal care committee since the late 1970's. "I think the development of a code has pulled together all segments of the industry: livestock and poultry producer organizations; the livestock division of Ontario Truckers' Association; the Meat Council of Canada and the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies." The Animal Welfare Movement: A brief history The best way to assess the issue and its possible effect on the future is to look at the history of the animal welfare system. In 1964 British author Ruth Harrison published a book called "Ani- mal Machines: The New Factory Farming Industry" which was so well received by the public that within a very short period of time the British Parliament was forced to form a technical committee (similar to a Royal Commission in Canada) to inquire into the well-being of animals kept in intensive livestock husbandry systems. For the first time in history someone was asking the farmer how he is treating his animals. Prior to this farmers had been left alone on the farm to do as they pleased with their animals. The report which this committee published in 1965 established five basic freedoms for all animals which are the freedom to (1) get up, (2) lie down, (3) turn around, (4) groom itself and (5) stretch the limbs. Whatever technology or management practices used, each animal is entitled to these five freedoms. The findings in this report were widely used in British and European legislation to do with animal welfare. And all of this happened one year after the publication of Harrison's book. In 1970 the movement gained the attention of several authors, the most famous one being Peter Singer, a vet and animal behaviorist, who published "Ani- mal Liberation, a New Ethic for our Treatment of Animals". Singer talks about speciesism as an attitude of bias favouring our own species against the concept of other species. He compares this to racism and sexism. According to Singer we should not use the fact that an animal has four legs and heavy skin as a factor to justify how it is treated, but rather if an animal can experience "pain" or "joy". "If we stop and think about it," Dr. Frank Hurnik said, "this principle is in line with the evolution of human ethical thinking." Singer says in his book that we must bring non -human animals within our sphere of moral concern and cease to treat their lives as expendable for whatever purposes we might have. THE RURAL VOICE, JUNE 1983 PG. 5