A life is a unit thing. One unit is worth exactly the same as the next. An elephant doesn't have more life than a chicken, or a human.
If one is going to take the view you've described then logic dictates that one would apply this to humans as well. It's not a view I would take just because it happens to be an Ex Battery hen and therefore worthless.
Agree. And to clarify my feelings of sadness and desolation when I see the big truck rumbling by filled with chickens going to be slaughtered, it's not their deaths I'm grieving over. Everything dies. It's the manner of the death and much more so, the hellish quality of the life that preceded it. No creature deserves that.
In more natural circumstances, every animal has its place in the circle of predator and prey. I say circle because even the mightiest predator like the lion or shark eventually becomes the prey of the soil microbe or plankton. The human who hunts and kills the wildebeest can just as easily be killed by the crocodile.
I'm not a vegan, or even a vegetarian. I also dislike much of the animal rights movement. But the way that humans have turned their protein consumption into a causal 3x per day affair with absolutely no thought to the lives that inhabited that flesh is preposterous and speaks of a desensitization that I believe will be the downfall of our civilization, if not our species.
I will house and care for these rescues and Ex Battery hens as best I can and that will include treating those illnesses and pathogen/pest problems to the best of my ability.
Also agree. We do not have vets that will see or treat chickens here. A healthy pullet costs about $10. A milk cow costs $500. Vets here treat cows and horses. Even finding a vet who knows how to treat a dog is very difficult (dogs are a dime a dozen here).
The pathogens and pests I mostly treat are parasites, internal and external. This is the tropics, the home of dengue, malaria, leishmaniasis, sticktight fleas, bot flies, and a especially lethal variety of hookworm that causes a persistent and deadly pneumonia of the lungs. In January, our 18 month old puppy died from pneumonia transmitted by this hookworm. I had dewormed her in her first year, but should have continued until she was three. The vet we did take her to was in the capital city, in a dry climate in the mountains, and did not even test for this parasite until it was too late. I still feel terrible about it.
As a result of these circumstances, I've been left to do my own researches.
I do add herbs and spices to the chickens feed to aid digestion and boost immunity. We grow both tumeric and ginger on the farm and I've read promising studies about the effects of both. But when I see the signs of parasites, I use Flucozonale or something like it. I rely a lot on sulphur soap for lice or small mites, but for red mites or sticktight fleas, I'll use permethrin. I lost a 2 yr old hen named Joanie to sticktight flea infestation two years ago (before I knew what they were and what to do). She was a lovely hen and probably would have lived much longer had I known.
I invite anyone who feels that antiparasitic treatments are unhealthy for chickens to walk in my shoes for a season. If I didn't deworm or treat external parasites, I would lose all my chickens in one year. They wouldn't get stronger, they would die horrible but easily preventable deaths. Capillaria in the lungs is a big threat to chickens health in our climate. To me, it seems an act of cruelty to stand there with a perfectly effective antiparasitic at my disposal and watch a chicken slowly choke to death because "oh, woe, exactly how much of that ends up in the egg?"
I also find the discussions on the forums about how much antiparasitic or antibiotic ends up in eggs hilarious. These are people who have probably ingested more eggs from antibiotic treated chickens -- along with vegetables and grains drenched in Roundup and dicamba -- than they can even imagine who suddenly turn into paragons of bodily virtue because they have hens in a box in their yard.
With antibiotics, it's a tougher call. Because viruses can be mistaken for bacterias and antibiotics do have more knock on effects for the chickens re their gut and crop flora. But if it's an external injury that is getting infected, I don't hesitate. We botched Cleo's first bumblefoot surgery and she got a secondary infection. I gave her three injections of oxytetracycline and she recovered completely. That was three years ago. She's gone on to lay countless eggs and become my most valuable hen in terms of personality and leadership.
I am also thinking of my own time and energy. The whole brooding and hatching thing, while I think it's important, is a time consuming way to replace chickens. I've been fortunate with integrating new pullets smoothly, but it's still an time and money investment. Sure, there's billions upon billions of chickens on the planet, but the ones I keep are valuable to me. I find it worthwhile to save a chicken that is already part of the tribe if I can.
I also have to acknowledge within myself that by not letting "nature take it's course" that I am interfering with the cycle, especially where parasites are involved. Parasites are here to control populations of birds and mammals, including us. But if I were dying of a parasite (and I have been extremely sick from leishmaniasis) I wouldn't and didn't hesitate to seek treatment to preserve my own life unit. Why are chickens lives worth less?
It's quite the mindthing to grapple. Everyone can only make his or own choice, but that's mine.
Long post tax. Homage to Cheri, who was not a nice hen, but a very good mother. Auntie Cleo in the foreground.