The
Chicken Event: A Public Act of Civil Disobedience
June 16, 2006
When the government fears the people,
you have liberty.
When the people fear the government,
you have tyranny.
—Thomas Jefferson
Fueled by
Joel
Salatin's practical commentary about factory farming
vs. local agriculture in his book
Holy
Cows and Hog Heaven and inspired by the
courage of the
Faillace family of East Warren, VT who stood up to
the US government who accused their sheep of having Mad
Cow Disease, George Schenk of
American
Flatbread will be hosting The Chicken Event: A
Public Act of Civil Disobedience on June 16th at
American Flatbread Restaurant in Waitsfield, VT.

George Schenk, cook and
Hadley Gaylord, farmer. They just want to be able
to work together legally without a lot of cost-adding
regulations.
The purpose of this event is to raise awareness of
the challenges local farmers face competing against
giant factory farms. In a country where cheap food is
considered a right, the local farmer raising and
processing animals in a humane and environmentally
healthy way simply cannot compete. Not only are the
costs of raising food in this way higher for the local
farmer, but the cost of building a facility to comply
with the Vermont Department of Agriculture regulations
that govern how poultry must be processed and how it can
be sold makes it cost-prohibitive for local farmers
operating small diversified farms to sell chicken to
local restaurants or stores or even at farmer's markets.
It is important to note that USDA regulations would
allow a farmer such as Hadley Gaylord to slaughter and
process up to 20,000 birds without a special processing
facility; the additional requirement of a processing
facility is a Vermont Department of Agriculture
regulation. Federal
regulations can be found on-line
here. However, there are exemptions from
these requirements that apply to farms slaughtering
and processing less than 20,000 poultry per year.
This document can be found
here.
At the Chicken Event, American Flatbread will be
offering a special chicken flatbread in the restaurant
that evening. The chicken will be from local farmer and
neighbor Hadley Gaylord. The Gaylord Farm is across the
street and within a half mile of the restaurant. The
chickens from the Gaylord Farm have been raised by the
Gaylord family and processed on the farm by Hadley
Gaylord. State and Federal regulations prohibit American
Flatbread from serving this chicken. But on June 16th
diners will have an opportunity to prove that consumers
are capable of making informed, rational, and
responsible decisions for themselves, without the
government making it for them when they order this
special flatbread.
Doug Flack of Flack Family Farm and outspoken
supporter of the 2006 Vermont Farmer Protection Act that
was recently vetoed by Governor Jim Douglas will speak
at 7:30pm at the Lareau Farm, home of American
Flatbread. Other events will include movies (Sweet Soil
at 5:30pm and 9:00pm) and Fed Up! At 6:00pm. Educational
materials will be provided to help attendees understand
the current meat processing regulations and the
challenges facing local farmers. In addition,
information on the history and purpose of acts of civil
disobedience will be highlighted. Key state officials
including Secretary of Agriculture for the state of
Vermont, Steve Kerr, will receive personal invitations
from George Schenk to attend the event. We hope that you
too can attend the event.
Where:
American Flatbread in Waitsfield, VT
When:
Friday, June 16th 5:30...on
What:
Civil Disobedience and great flatbread Help us publicize this event:
- Download our poster
and display it where others will see it.
- Link to this page from your website.
Learn More
Not sure this event is right for you? Check
this out:
Facts about
Slaughtering and Processing Chicken in Vermont.
Everything I Want to Do is Illegal - A great article
written by Joel Salatin for Acres Magazine in 2003
highlighting numerous activities (farm and other) that
you would think should be a right in a free society, yet
are restricted by government regulations and laws that
are supposed to "protect" us.
The Humane Society A short, informational
slide show about factory farms and the conditions that
animals that we eventually eat live in.
Wegman's
Cruelty How are supermarket eggs produced?
If you don't know, you MUST see this movie.
See a
chicken slaughter house in a factory farm.
Poultry
facts and figures such as 90% of the nation's
poultry production is controlled by 10 companies.
Did you
know that an estimated 70% of all antibiotics in the
U.S. are fed to pigs, poultry and cattle merely to
promote growth and to compensate for the unsanitary and
confined conditions on factory farms. This medically
unnecessary use of antibiotics fosters the development
of antibiotic-resistant bacteria that can spread to
other animals and humans. Click
here
for more facts.
About Civil
Disobedience
|
That government is best which governs
least.
—Henry David Thoreau |
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