Very noble Phil but is it worth your own well being?
I am reasonably safe : because I need to take proton-pump inhibitors twice daily, and therefore have very low stomach acid, my gut is far more sensitive than most, and usually excretes anything that might cause me problems within 20 minutes.
Without trying to sound crass, I suspect that the animal would have rather not been killed in the first place, so It's a bit too late to 'respect' the beast after it's left the abattoir.
I don't think that's crass at all, and I completely agree with your first sentence. Indeed, whenever I see the transporter arrive at the local abattoir (which is just two miles from our home) the horror of the reality of what is involved in eating flesh is brought painfully home to me.
But I don't think it is too late to show respect once an animal is dead, which is why I find televised "humour" involving dead chickens particularly distasteful. The Germans (and I think the Norwegians, but I'm less sure about that) are noted in deer stalking circles for the respect that they show their victims : they place a "last meal" of moss in the animal's mouth, and sit around it and contemplate it for up to an hour (or so I was told by the gamekeeper on the Isle of Mull).
I do understand what you are saying Phil but even if I shared the sentiment, I just couldn't stomach it!
That's fine : friendly disagreement is always welcome

** Phil.