
Karen Davis & expert witness make a case for turkeys in front of the White House. (Franklin Wade photo)
Both turkeys awaiting presidential “pardon” simply had the misfortune of having been born turkeys
WASHINGTON D.C.––U.S. President Barack Obama will on Wednesday, November 26, 2014 “pardon” a pair of turkeys in commemoration of Thanksgiving––turkeys who had never been arrested, tried, convicted, or even been accused of committing any crime.
United Poultry Concerns founder and president Karen Davis, 70, acting in the capacity of defense attorney for all turkeys, on Sunday, November 23, 2014 spent the day across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House, with other UPC members and supporters, pointing out that both turkeys awaiting presidential “pardon” had simply had the misfortune of having been born turkeys in the first week of July 2014, meaning they had reached slaughter weight by Thanksgiving.
Those turkeys’ luck changed when the National Turkey Federation donated them to the White House, to become the subjects of the 10th turkey pardon during the Obama presidency.
The 2014 “pardoned” turkeys were to be retired to Turkey Hill, described by Jennifer Harper of the Washington Times as “a historic turkey farm located at the home of former Virginia Governor Westmoreland Davis in Leesburg.”
Consumption ritual
But as many as 46 million of the 65 million turkeys consumed in the U.S. each year will be eaten during the Thanksgiving holiday celebration––a consumption ritual seen in much of the rest of the world as a form of animal sacrifice, not much different from the curbside “Feast of Atonement” slaughters celebrated in the Islamic world.

The 2014 UPC demonstration outside the White House. (Franklin Wade photo)
Davis, author of More Than A Meal: The Turkey in History, Myth, Ritual, and Reality (2001), would like to see the whole turkey-eating motif for Thanksgiving rethought and abandoned. Indeed, as a longtime vegan, Davis would like to see the whole practice of human meat consumption rethought and abandoned. Meanwhile, pre-Thanksgiving protests outside the White House have become something of an annual tradition for her––and have become, as well, a slightly delayed birthday celebration for United Poultry Concerns, recognized by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) charity on October 3, 1990.
Davis at the time was a 46-year-old English teacher at the University of Maryland. “Several prominent people in the animal rights movement discouraged me from starting an advocacy organization for chickens and turkeys,” Davis told ANIMALS 24-7. “While a couple of people back then said ‘Go for it,’” most notably Animal Rights International and Coalition for Nonviolent Food founder Henry Spira, who died in 1998, “some others warned that an organization focusing on chickens and turkeys would never survive, let alone thrive. How totally wrong they were! UPC has influenced every single farmed animal activist in our movement,” Davis contends, “and our influence and inspiration are worldwide.”
Re-purposed the White House ceremony
Davis recites a long list of accomplishments toward helping to make the treatment of poultry prominent on the animal advocacy agenda, focal in recent years to the work of many much larger organizations.
But perhaps Davis’ most prominent achievement has been her indirect influence in re-purposing the annual White House event at which the U.S. President accepts a gift of turkeys, then redirects them to a zoo, a sanctuary, or some other public institution at which they will live out their usually brief lives, instead of being eaten.

United Poultry Concerns bus placard. (UPC photo)
Originating out of an event meant to promote turkey consumption, the annual presidential turkey “pardons” have ironically become probably the first and only time each year that most Americans even transiently think about turkey welfare, or consider––even fleetingly––that raising and killing turkeys for human consumption may be inhumane.
National animal advocacy organizations have made use of Thanksgiving hoopla for far longer than the tradition of presidential “pardons” of turkeys has verifiably existed. And, to give credit where credit is due, several have annually made a public case for not eating turkeys for much longer than United Poultry Concerns has existed.
“Gentle Thanksgivings”

(Farm Sanctuary photo)
The Farm Animal Rights Movement, for instance, has promoted “Gentle Thanksgivings,” taking a variety of forms, almost since inception in 1981. PETA, also founded in 1981, likewise promotes veganism each year with some sort of Thanksgiving event. In 2014 PETA staff writer Rachelle Owens sent as open letter to Obama’s daughters Malia and Sasha, urging them to become vegan.
Farm Sanctuary has delivered rescued turkeys to adopters nationwide and celebrated Thanksgivings with dinners at which guests feed turkeys since 1987, the first year that a presidential “pardon” of turkeys was mentioned but two years before it was actually done.
By 1987, an annual White House media event featuring turkeys was already a long-established tradition, but taking a very different form.
National Turkey Federation
“Back in 1947,” recounted Brad Plumer for Vox.com two days before the 2014 ceremony, “the National Turkey Federation began donating turkeys to the White House because they were alarmed by Harry Truman’s proposal to promote ‘poultryless Thursdays,’” as part of an economic austerity program.
“Truman accepted this lobbying morsel and ate the birds, as did his successor Dwight D. Eisenhower,” Plumer continued. “Some accounts claim that John F. Kennedy invented the turkey pardon in 1963, but this appears to be yet another over-sentimental Kennedy myth. JFK simply thought his turkey was too scrawny and sent it back to the farm. It’s also true,” Plumer allowed, “that Abraham Lincoln once spared a turkey destined for Christmas dinner after his son Tad intervened, but this wasn’t a formal pardon. Formally ‘pardoning’ a turkey appears to have originated with Ronald Reagan in 1987,” Plumer wrote. “Journalists had been asking the president whether he would grant presidential pardons to key Iran-Contra figures like Oliver North and John Poindexter. Reagan changed the subject by quipping that he would have pardoned that year’s Thanksgiving turkey had it not been on its way to a petting zoo already. Two years later, in 1989, Reagan’s successor George H.W. Bush made the turkey pardon an official White House event.”
Influence of Henry Spira
United Poultry Concerns was already an idea in the back of Davis’ mind. Davis spent hours brainstorming about her idea with anyone influential in animal advocacy who would listen, but except for Spira, not many did. Spira, arguably the most accomplished anti-vivisection crusader of the 20th century, had argued since 1985 that the animal rights movement should logically refocus from anti-vivisectionism to dietary change, since after the passage of the Animal Welfare Act amendments of 1985, dietary change offered the next most promising opportunity to effect a steep reduction in what he termed the universe of suffering.

Henry Spira with chicken. (United Poultry Concerns photo)
Spira was not alone in making this case, nor was he the first to make it. Beginning with the Dorilites of central Vermont in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, there had been vegetarian and even vegan communes in the U.S. more than seventy years before anyone founded a humane Society. And others shared Spira’s belief that it was time for the animal rights movement to refocus on farmed animals, specifically by promoting the idea of not eating them.
Already integral to the animal rights movement when Davis formed UPC were, besides the Farm Animal Reform Movement, the Humane Farming Association (1985), and Farm Sanctuary (1986). Both were, and are, heavily oriented toward encouraging veganism––but both emphasized compassion for cattle and pigs, not out of indifference to poultry, but because public opinion research indicated that most people could be persuaded to respond to the suffering of fellow mammals before they thought about birds.
Spira recited like a mantra during his last 13 years that poultry do more than 95% of all the human-caused animal suffering and dying in the world, and therefore should hold a far higher moral claim on humane movement consciousness than they had ever received. Spira showed the way with full-page newspaper ads pushing poultry baron Frank Perdue (1920-2005) to make animal welfare reforms, most of which were not forthcoming within either man’s lifetime.
PETA took up Spira’s campaigns on behalf of poultry after Spira died. Says the PETA web site, “Frank Perdue is remembered by PETA as the man directly responsible for more animal suffering and deaths than perhaps any human in history.”

1977 Paladin edition of Animal Liberation, by Peter Singer.
Big groups “chickened out”
Also before Davis formed United Poultry Concerns, authors Peter Singer, Jim Mason, and John Robbins had already pointed out the astronomical numbers of chickens and turkeys killed for human consumption in their opuses Animal Liberation, Animal Factories, and Diet For A New America.
But there had never been strong big-group support for campaigns on behalf of poultry. While real-life chickens are not cowardly, as Davis is quick to point out, the wealthiest and most influential animal advocacy groups had ignominiously “chickened out” of campaigns on behalf of poultry almost as soon as they started. The Humane Society of the U.S. circa 1986 introduced a campaign decrying the “breakfast of cruelty,” featuring bacon and eggs, then backed away as if splashed with hot grease. American SPCA president John Kullberg spoke in favor of vegetarianism in 1991 and was promptly fired, after 14 distinguished years in office.
The Little Red Hen
Who would stand up for the chickens, turkeys, ducks, and geese?
“Not I,” said one big-group executive after another.
“Then I will,” said Davis, flapping her arms and thrusting her beak at Vegetarian Times founder Paul Obis at the AR-1991 conference like one furious Little Red Hen––with jet-black hair––after Obis accepted an ad for a prepackaged chicken pilaf mix.

Karen Davis & turkey. (UPC photo)
Except for Obis, who could not get away on that occasion, hardly anyone took the Little Red Hen seriously at first. She had no money, no major political connections, and was even by her own admission an extreme eccentric, reportedly allowing rescued chickens to run in and out her windows and across her desk in the middle of the few very important mass media interviews that came her way.
But the Little Red Hen turned out to be the right person for the job. Reporters left those strange interviews saying to themselves––and to me, in calls seeking further perspective––“Karen Davis is a chicken! She is telling us what chickens would, if they could.”
After talking to Davis, fellow journalists often could not help realizing that chickens are much more intelligent and sensitive than they had ever imagined. They found Davis likably charismatic, perhaps because of her oddness, and eventually she began getting more ink than many of the supposed animal rights movement superstars.
More important, some reporters confessed––in print––that they could no longer eat chicken. Somehow the Little Red Hen had gotten to them.
Speaking for turkeys
Those who know chickens really well are aware that that chickens do not limit their circle of compassion to their own kind. They can practice cannibalism, and roosters notoriously fight to the death, the trait that makes cockfighting possible, yet a hen will faithfully sit on any eggs she is given, and will mother the hatchings to the best of her ability whether they are close relatives, reptiles, or even a neonatal kitten placed in the nest to keep warm––and not because hens are too stupid to know the difference. On the contrary, many hens will somehow know enough to lead ducklings and goslings to water, will lead other birds to whatever they need, and will even try to lead a kitten to kibble, skipping the nursing stage perhaps because they simply lack the means to nurse.
Such an instinct may be why The Little Red Hen wrote More Than A Meal on behalf of turkeys and made it probably her most gripping of many books, beginning with Prisoned Chickens, Poisoned Eggs: An Inside Look at the Modern Poultry Industry (1996, updated in 2009.) Davis did some first-rate investigative reporting to chase down the origins of myths about turkeys, and the origins of turkeys themselves. For me, on a flight from San Francisco to Seattle, More Than A Meal was a page-turner, opened at takeoff and completed right at landing.
As my flight taxied to the gate, the young man across the aisle and one row back tapped me on the shoulder, and asked if he could have the title, in order to buy his own copy. He had been reading along with me, he explained, and got hooked.
Handing him my card, I expected to hear that he was an animal rights advocate and militant vegan.
Not at all. He was a second-generation wildlife biologist. His dad was restoring huntable turkey populations not far from Davis home in Virginia. Still, the young man never knew before that there was so much to know about turkeys, and he sounded as if the Little Red Hen had ensured that he would never see turkeys the same way again.

Beth & Merritt Clifton.
(Geoff Geiger photo)
This was Davis’ goal, both in writing More Than A Meal and in beginning her annual White House demonstrations. Presidential “pardons” for turkeys donated by the National Turkey Federation are only a small step toward ending human poultry consumption––after all, dozens of other turkeys will be eaten on Thanksgiving by the White House staff and their families––but the transition of the White House turkey ceremony to symbolically saving some turkeys’ lives is more than just a beginning.
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This article recounts some of United Poultry Concerns’ many projects and accomplishments since UPC’s inception in 1990, and UPC appreciates the coverage as we enter our 25th year of dedicated activism for chickens, turkeys and other domestic fowl, in 2015. Anyone wishing to learn more is encouraged to visit UPC’s website at http://www.upc-online.org and Karen Davis’s profile at http://www.upc-online.org/karenbio.htm.
UPC’s 13th annual conference and 4th Conscious Eating Conference is being held in Berkeley, California on April 4, 2015. We hope to see you there.
While a majority of Americans still eat turkey for Thanksgiving, it is becoming harder and harder to feign ignorance about the cruelty behind it. I have had more omni acquaintances asking me if I’ll be having a Tofurky this year, indicating that awareness of alternatives is also increasing.
Davis’s “alternative” celebration is a joyful contrast to all of the social network photos of bird carcasses in provocative positions and other ugliness we see around this time of year. It seems that people have to make jokes and crude comments because they know in the back of their minds that something is wrong.
I’ve been a vegan and animal rights activist since 1989 and trust me (please!) that there is not another human being on the planet who knows more about birds than Karen Davis. I have told her oftentimes that I don’t know how she sleeps, knowing what she knows about their sentience, their individuality, the brutal consequences of laying hens living on wire as evidenced in the impact on their leg muscles, their livers, their ovaries, their spines, etc., etc…, the impact on laying hens and “broiler chickens” from having their beaks and toes chopped off with no anesthetic……Karen does not deal with chickens, ducks, turkeys, “fowl” as victims or as commodities; she ALWAYS deal with them as individuals worthy of our utmost compassion and respect. Vegan isn’t just about food……..it’s about honoring and saving REAL LIVING BEINGS.
I stayed home today and did not participate in any thanksgiving dinner by choice. Instead I read ANIMALS 24-7 and worked.
This is my heartfelt letter to the editor of our local newspaper. Will see if they publish it.
Thanksgiving Day! Can we not be thankful in a more humane manner? Why is it OK to kill millions of turkeys and other so called “food” animals, and yet it is a crime to kill other animals?
Am I the only one who sees the moral disconnect here? It is getting more and more unbearable to celebrate thanksgiving each year.
We had a guinea hen show up out of the blue at the farm – she has been here for years now & her intelligence amazes me!!!