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I can't pet them and scratch them and then butcher. I get too attached if I do that. I wish I could, but we'd end up with really expensive, useless pets if I did. I have to stay detached from the start. Besides, the pigs and poultry are perfectly happy not to have me pet them. It's not like those species have a natural longing for affection from humans, like dogs and cats. That's something we condition them to accept. They don't feel deprived if I don't pet them. They don't care. They're still happy to see me coming with the food bucket.
If one of the few "pet" layer hens gets badly injured or killed, (I've had a few get hit by cars, or have other mishaps) as long as I get to her quickly and she's still fresh, I'll go ahead and dress her out. Out of the 68 or so birds we have right now, about 6 have "permanent resident" status. The rest are all only here until time to butcher, or they quit laying well.
Now, a dairy animal that I intended to keep for a long time, and handle daily, that's different. She'd be my baby. Her offspring may be bound for the freezer, but the dairy beast would be petted and fussed over. I haven't kept a milk cow or goat yet, but it's in the plans for the next year or so, when ever we get things ready for one. Or a pair of them, more likely, they need another for company. Herd animals do better if they aren't alone. My DH thinks I might not be able to have a milk animal that I'd get attached to, then eat her babies. I won't know either, until I do it. I think I can.
I think even a dairy animal, when she outlives her usefulness, I could eat. If she seemed to be getting to be in pain or discomfort, I'd definitely butcher and make hamburger, rather than let her suffer. But that's a future dilemma.