• Snapz@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Not how comfortable their life is, how much you buy their industry’s marketing spin about the option for a chicken to stand in a pool of chicken shit, hormones and antibiotics or to be forcibly laying in it for the entirety of its life.

    • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      Maybe in the US. Here you get what you pay for. You CAN get good eggs from “happy” chicken. They just cost a lot more. Like 5-10x. Only thing missing is like the name of the chicken that shat out your egg 😁

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Eh, there’s also substandard:

        • conventional - absolutely horrific - stuck in cage
        • “cage free” - regular horrific - able to walk around, but they’re packed wall-to-wall
        • “free range” - substandard - can go outside and walk around, but still usually overcrowded

        The best option is to raise them yourself. But almost nobody does that, so I guess you pick how much you want to spend for the chicken to have a better life.

        • Wisas62@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          This is obviously something you saw on Reddit and didn’t bother fact checking.
          If you buy from any producer of chicken, there is no such thing as cage free. All the chickens get transported to the slaughterhouse in cages. That being said, conventional chickens are not stuck in cages. Maybe some mom and pop shops do this? Not the major producers, the sheer amount of cages needed would be profit prohibitive. They’re raised in a chicken house but they are packed in side by side. USDA defines free range as 2sqft per chicken. A chicken is give or take 30x smaller than a human so equivalent is if you grew up with a 60sqft personal bubble. Pasture raised is 108aqft per chicken, but the thing to remember is chickens are a family pack animal, so even if they have all the space in the world they won’t use it. They’ll stay near their home.

          Chickens are essentially a brainless animal and their body can continue to function without a head. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_the_Headless_Chicken

          Also the species of chicken has a significant impact on quality of life and taste. I don’t know if there is any actual data but modern broilers cannot live long just due to their genetic breed. They’re a generic breed that grows super fast and has health issues as they age.

          Chickens don’t live a great live in any production arena, but the worst is the transport and the slaughter which doesn’t change regardless of their free range designation. If it’s really something that bothers you, the only real solution is just to stop eating chicken products.

          • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            2 months ago

            Broilers aren’t kept in cages generally, but if you don’t keep layers in cages then it’s a lot more labor to collect the eggs and make sure they don’t just eat them or break them. So the lowest quality eggs will come from chickens that live in cages stacked several rows high, with an incline in the bottom of each cage, so that when they lay the egg will roll onto a sort of conveyer belt that moves the eggs over to be packaged.

            Source: my rural ass high school had ag classes and we went to some of these places. I guess it’s possible this has changed in the past 20ish years, but from what I know it hasn’t changed that much. If you didn’t grow up down wind of some of these places, consider yourself lucky.

        • potpotato@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          “Go outside” for free-range is also a tiny little pen that chickens don’t really know how to use.

          There’s another option: Pasture-raised, certified humane. They have >100SF of outdoor space per bird, shelter, and eat a mix of insects and supplemental feed.

          Aldi sells them for about 75% more than conventional eggs.

    • Blaat1234@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Eh, good thing factory chicken is a thing of the past in The Netherlands, it’s okay vs decent vs good.

      Rondeel is decent: https://youtu.be/zwleQLKU-UI?si=kh7T6b_bV0HMXjzO

      Label Rouge (France) is good: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=aHlCEIAOpEk

      Yeah sure it’s €4 to €5 per 10 eggs instead of €2.50 but there’s a big difference in quality. You get watery whites, tasteless yolks and paper thin shells with the cheapest eggs. Same for chickens, the Label Rouge ones are really small at 1.5 kg in comparison to faster growing ones.

  • sek96@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    As a Chinese, I know there are organic and non-organic type on the market. But I never thought of choosing eggs based on their life. Just mind boggling.

    • khannie@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I’ve spent a decent bit of time there on a few work trips. Never saw differentiation of eggs in supermarkets (or restaurants). Eggs be eggs.

      A huge number of folks are just coming into non-poverty since the turn of the century so it would seem entirely plausible to me that chicken comfort wouldn’t be a thing there just like it wasn’t in the west until comparatively recently and still isn’t for a huge part of the population.

      Apart from that it’s really very different culturally. They just view things through an entirely different (and interesting) lens.

      • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Eggs be eggs.

        I wouldn’t be so sure about that. A Chinese buddy of mine sent me this a few years ago. Apparently counterfeit eggs are an actual problem in some parts of China. I cannot possibly fathom how this is cheaper than an actual egg, but apparently it’s a thing and can make people sick if they eat them.

        https://youtu.be/bcgH6fgedoA

        • Imacat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 months ago

          The first section looks a lot like alginate spherification. It’s a fun demo to make a fake egg with it but it would be very obvious it isn’t an egg when you cooked it. It wouldn’t set or act like an egg at all when heated. I’d also be very curious to see how they make the shell if it really is a fake egg.

          For the second section, those are previously frozen eggs. Freezing them turns the yolk rubbery but doesn’t do much to the white.

        • khannie@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I have actually heard about that. Google “gutter oil” if you want some nightmares. They are working on food safety hard though.

        • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          I remember a story of someone adding plastic noodles to their cheap noodle packs. I also thought that there was no way in hell they were saving money by doing that - the only way it makes sense is if the market is growing faster than production, so there’s a “demand” for totally fake product, which I suppose has been true of most of China for the last fifty years. It’s why the current government makes anti-corruption into such a big deal.

    • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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      2 months ago

      I mean, it’s still a largely rural country, I imagine in the majority of the country (geographically) people or their neighbors raise the chickens that lay the eggs they eat

      • khannie@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I mean, it’s still a largely rural country

        Not so. Wikipedia has a decent article but here’s the crux of it:

        By the end of 2023, China had an urbanization rate of 66.2% and is expected to reach 75-80% by 2035

        The cities are massive and really densely populated. Shenzhen and Guangzhou are about 90 minutes apart by car if memory serves and account for about 35M people. Hong Kong is an hour south of Shenzhen by train and that’s another ~8M.

        • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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          2 months ago

          More than a third of the country by population, especially when that population is in the billions, is still pretty large. Not majority rural obviously, but still a large percentage.

          But I was speaking geographically. Isn’t half the country almost completely empty? Or am I confusing something I read somewhere?

          • khannie@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Yeah Western China is basically empty. It’s very mountainous and the land is not fertile.

  • HaleHirsute@infosec.pub
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    2 months ago

    I live in Shanghai and in all supermarkets in big cities above average neighborhood ones, you do have options for higher grade and organic eggs, fyi.

    • KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      The more expensive eggs taste better and only cost a quarter more. Would you pay 50¢ to make your breakfast taste better? You should.

    • Curly722@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Sometimes, while having breakfast, you relish in the fact that a chicken struggled to push something jumbo out of its anus.

  • gearheart@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    So… keep in mind I stumbled on this.

    Free-range eggs in grocery stores are painted/dyed.

    Whatever the grocers are advertising regarding chicken conditions have been a lie… It’s just there to make sure they keep selling it and for more. Unsure how to legitimately check which ones aren’t simply marketing make-up

    • eatCasserole@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      When I worked for a guy who kept chickens in the back yard, the eggs came out in every shade from dark brown to white, and some had freckles. I don’t know how they get them to be just two uniform colours (brown/white) in the grocery store, but I assume the white ones must be bleached. Some are naturally brown, others may be dyed.

      But I agree that we should be suspicious whenever marketing is involved.

  • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    It is pretty fuckin creepy that it’s become a standard in all grocery stores that ‘cheap torture’ is an option at all and it’s only because of capitalism flexing that it could the choice to not be evil and we should be grateful for it with more $$

  • AlsaValderaan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 months ago

    They ought to force them to put photos of where the eggs came from on the packaging, like with cigarettes. Photos of the actual plant/range/etc. Might make people consider not picking the cheapest option.

  • OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Peter Singer is ‘the godfather of animal rights’ or whatever and he has a metric for ethical chicken farming, like a certain number of chickens raised per acre, free range.

    It’s way fewer chickens than currently raised but I think that’s an interesting way to think about it…if we didn’t have demand for eating chicken, many of these chickens wouldn’t exist. Is that better than living a close-enough approximation of your wild life? Kind of a hard question.

    • The Picard Maneuver@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      I’ve always fallen on the side of no, it’s not better. If we compare actions taken toward them vs non-existence, almost anything could be justified.

      We (rightfully) wouldn’t accept that logic for ourselves if a similar question came up.

      • OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        It’s not that any life is better than nothing, it’s that a good-enough life is better than nothing, and there has to be some level at which it can be said a chicken had a good-enough life.

        Obviously he doesn’t think factory farm chicken lives are worth living, but he thinks there is a possible chicken life that is.

        We actually do make this calculation for humans. A lot of countries traditionally get abortions if a fetus has down syndrome, that is a decision saying that life is not worth living. The US doesn’t do that as much but there are conversations around euthanasia, that’s the same idea but for humans. There is a level of a good-enough life and we weigh life and death decisions around that.

        I think the real argument against this is just that the whole idea doesn’t track and killing any animal for sustenance when you don’t have to is just wrong at the core. THAT is where I disagree, but I can’t math my way into changing your mind on it because I’m accounting for the quality of life for potential future beings, and you’re just not. I don’t think there’s a “right” way to account for that inherently.

  • selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    I call them “free-will eggs”. It sounds better in Spanish as opposed to “cage-free eggs”.

      • Eheran@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Better than keeping them around under atrocious conditions because their meat has a low value. Like they did in Germany once killing the males was illegal: Just deport to Poland.

        Now all the people that got their law are crying again, because it is far more cruel now. I mean what did they expect?

    • UsefulIdiot@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      I went to an egg farm in wales this summer and it was pretty nice. Lots of chickens but they go out to roam every day. Eggs were delicious and bright orange yolks.

        • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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          2 months ago

          Dunno where you live, but those things exist in great quantity. You just have to pay a lot more. And if there are no eggs available, there are no eggs available. Simple as that. We actually shop there more to pet the chickens than to buy their period 😁

  • Sibbo@sopuli.xyz
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    2 months ago

    Ironically, you cannot choose how comfortable the human’s life is for most products.