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Butterball facing Thanksgiving boycott after PETA resurfaces vile turkey abuse allegations


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Butterball facing Thanksgiving boycott after PETA resurfaces vile turkey ****** allegations

Butterball is facing resurfaced allegations of

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, prompting some Americans to boycott the major
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manufacturer just days before
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.

As millions of people across the ******* States

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, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (
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) has drawn attention to its
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of Butterball’s manufacturing plant in Ozark, Arkansas, which took place between April and July 2006.

On November 5, the non-profit organization

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an interview clip with an unidentified investigator, who claimed he witnessed harrowing instances of ******* ******** against the live turkeys at the Butterball plant.

In the graphic video, the undercover worker accused a Butterball employee of shoving his finger up a turkey’s cloaca, or *******. Another worker allegedly “humped” a turkey while it was restrained.

The clip then cut to footage of the Butterball plant, which PETA reported “slaughters approximately 50,000 birds each day.”

Undercover footage also showed a worker sitting on a turkey, while another clip showed an employee kicking the bird. “I kicked the f*** out of the motherf***er,” they said.

Some Americans are boycotting Butterball turkey this Thanksgiving amid resurfaced ****** allegations (Getty Images)

In the investigator’s

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, he claimed to have seen Butterball employees “cruelly slamming live birds in shackles,” while another worker “strangled a bird to ******.”

“One worker said he likes to ***** birds for ‘fun,’ and pointed out one he had punched in the face,” he wrote in the witness log, as another note read: “A worker violently threw birds into the shackles and grabbed one by her neck, and another worker humped a bird whose legs and head he had crammed into the shackle.”

The resurfaced footage has since prompted many people on social media to declare they’ll no longer be purchasing Butterball turkey for their Thanksgiving dinner.

“This absolutely BREAKS MY HEART,” one TikTok user commented under a

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of the PETA investigation.

“Just bought a Butterball turkey today and definitely returning it tomorrow first thing in the morning,” another person wrote.

Meanwhile, a woman posted a TikTok

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of herself returning the Butterball turkey she had purchased “after SA (******* ********) allegations.”

PETA resurfaces footage from 2006 undercover investigation at Butterball plant in Arkansas (PETA)

Speaking to the

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, Amber Canavan — the vegan campaign project manager for PETA — explained that the online response from people boycotting Butterball “is exactly what any animal advocate wants to see right before Thanksgiving.”

“We’re just seeing dozens and dozens of people swearing off turkey this year,” she said. “It’s never too late to go out there and grab that vegan roast. Spare that turkey from the horrors of the slaughterhouse.”

However, Butterball has since refuted PETA’s efforts to initiate a boycott against the manufacturer’s turkey, specifically by pointing out that the undercover investigation took place nearly 20 years ago.

“We are aware of a video from nearly 20 years ago, which is being re-shared across social media. This video is not current and in no way reflects our animal ******** policies,” a Butterball spokesperson said in a statement to The Independent.

“Animal care and well-being is central to who we are as a company, and we are committed to the ethical and responsible care of our flocks. That means maintaining the health and well-being of our turkeys is an ongoing effort.”

The spokesperson explained that Butterball has yearly audits conducted by a third party to make sure facilities are complying with the “200+ science-based standards of best practice for care of turkeys.”

An estimated 293.5 million Americans are planning on eating turkey this Thanksgiving (Getty Images)

They added: “Butterball was the first and ******** the only turkey company that is ********* Humane certified. We are proud to be one of every three turkeys on the table this Thanksgiving.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture

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that 46 million turkeys are eaten on Thanksgiving. That’s about 21 percent of the around 216.5 million turkeys produced in the U.S. each year.

According to the

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, 87 percent of Americans hosting Thanksgiving plan to serve turkey. This means roughly 293.5 million people will eat turkey on Thanksgiving in 2024.

Despite turkey taking center stage on many Thanksgiving dinner tables, some Americans have declared the bird to be their least favorite Thanksgiving dish.

In a

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conducted by the Vacationer, which asked 1,042 ********* adults which traditional Thanksgiving foods they like and dislike, nearly 35 percent of Americans considered turkey to be their least favorite.

Stuffing or dressing ranked the second-least favorite with about 32 percent of participants polled, followed by ham at nearly 32 percent.




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#Butterball #facing #Thanksgiving #boycott #PETA #resurfaces #vile #turkey #****** #allegations

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