It's very simple. The animals on real organic farms (and all the small farms I knew were organic before that became a big buzz word) eat what they are supposed to eat, have shelter, aren't pumped full of hormones or forced into small cages. They've been bred so much to be accustomed to this they wouldn't even run away. The fences are just to keep them out of roads and off other peoples property.
The animals we raised ourselves were just like that. If I would have let them free they just would have died anyway. It's not like we are talking about caging up wild beasts here...
If you treat them humanely they have it pretty good. No better or worse than a pet except that you are going to eat them.
Seems to me that certain animals just got accustomed to humans. They leached off us for food and protection and we took their milk, eggs and eventually meat. It was a lot easier than stalking and killing the wilder ones.
And I have no issues with hunting either. Deer, for instance, in this area, are horribly overpopulated. They just wind up dying from disease and starvation that way. Seen as how there are no wolves, which normally would have controlled the population, humans do. And even then because of political reasons we can't do it very well. There are stores of deer that hide out in places that can't be hunted (they don't want to be shot anymore than they want to be eaten by wolves). But the ecosystem can't support them and they starve and go to waste. I'd rather people eat them.
Even so I'd wager to say any pig on a farm has an easier life than a wild deer. And if you feed the deer and fence them in a big enough area, they don't even know. It's no different than them being isolated by natural boundaries as far as they are concerned.
Anyway, I get why people don't eat meat. But plants and fungi are alive too. And I just follow the laws of nature. My teeth and stomach are adapted to eating animals and plants. If they weren't, I wouldn't crave it or be able to tolerate it. Try to feed a true herbivore meat and see what they do. They couldn't eat it if they wanted, or if so, very little before they became sick.
I'm like the bear. A forager and opportunists
