Mallory’s Story
Warning: this post contains graphic and disturbing content
I had spent the morning looking at satellite imagery from Counterglow’s map for pig farms where I could see dumpsters located at the end of their driveways. I was able to see a blob of pink in the middle of a dumpster outside of a nursery- a type of farm where baby pigs are raised- and realized this facility was throwing pigs away no more than ten feet from the public road. I was by myself and I was a little nervous about that, but I planned to stay close to the road so I figured it would be okay. I jotted the crossroads down and headed out with my camera.
When I arrived I could see the CAFO (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation) just up ahead, and the dumpster was overflowing with dead bodies. I drove past once to see if there were any visible humans or vehicles on the property. It was all clear so I turned my car around to park, and ran up to the dumpster. I saw dead piglets who had been thrown on the ground due to the dumpster being overfilled with corpses. It was like something out of a horror movie. I took as many photos as I could in just a few minutes, ran back to my car and drove off.
I remember being shocked about two things. One- even though I’ve seen footage of what happens to animals inside factory farms, seeing them discarded outside the dumpster like trash was still somehow shocking even with my prior activism work. Two- I couldn’t believe how easy it was to find a dumpster full of bodies near the road, and without anyone around to stop me from documenting what I was seeing. I was able to use my experience to create a Papertrail entry on Counterglow’s website, detailing all of the owner’s history exploiting the animals, workers and causing immense destruction to the environment. I also took my story and footage and shared it with the activists in my city and other people I knew.
Not only did it really grab people’s attention that I’d literally been to this place myself, some of my friends and acquaintances told me that they’d never been so close to a facility like that and they were interested in doing a similar visit. Not even two weeks after returning home I had a group of seven people from Kansas City eager and ready to plan a trip to Iowa.
We used the map to find out which counties in Iowa were the most heavily populated with pig facilities and planned a route that maximized the number of farms we’d go by. In just one day driving around two different counties we were able to visit 35 facilities. The first morning, we all packed into one car and headed out before the sun was up. It was a gloomy, very windy and wet day (there were actually active tornados in the area) so that made things even more intense.
Our very first stop, we saw a CAFO which consisted of two long sheds. At the end of each one was a door for the employees to access the buildings. Workers had to walk up six to eight steps in order to get to the door. This made it so there was a drop outside both of the doors- at the bottom of each drop there was a pile of dead pigs. We knew an employee had dragged their bodies out of the building and pushed them off the ledge and onto the ground below them. When we decided to move on to the next facility, we saw an employee dragging a large pig by their leg with a rope to the dumpster at the end of the road. They were all so shocked, and it happened so fast that none of them got footage of the worker. This was our biggest regret as a team, and from there on out we made sure to always have the camera running while at a facility. You never know when something will happen.
When we debriefed at the end of the day, my friends said that, like me, they’d had a life-changing experience. They were leaving with a stronger commitment to focus their lives on fighting for an end to this system, and they felt more confident in and familiar with doing direct action. Several expressed that they’d like to get more involved in fieldwork in the future. Personally I grew a lot, because I’d never taken on a leadership role like that. We were also all excited to use the footage we’d gathered in outreach and to talk to people about what we’d seen with our own eyes, and to add information to Counterglow that would help others in the future. I’m helping one girl plan her own trip she’s going to lead, and I’m excited to see even more people get an opportunity they probably wouldn’t have had otherwise to expose this cruelty.