Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
[view all posts]
[view all posts]
Mad Cows in Washington, D.C.
Pandemic Infects Congress, USDA, NCBABy L.M. SchwartzCattlemen and women are one of the few 'independents' left
in American Agriculture. That independence could soon come
to an end.Poultry production has been “vertically integrated” into a
tightly controlled structure of government-sanctioned,
corporate monopolism. Many “producers” may not realize it,
but the “industry” has been consolidated and restructured to
more closely resemble an industrial assembly-line than
Agriculture, and “producers” have been forced to assume
increased risks without commensurate rewards.Today, there are no free markets and few options for
“producers” once they have been enticed and locked into the
vertically integrated system. There is little in the way of
contractual certainty. When the company says “jump”, the
“producer” asks “how high?” Without warning, “contracts” may
be changed or cancelled, often leaving them stuck with
unmanageable debt on land, facilities and equipment not
economically convertible for other uses.For many years, the same corporate “integrators” have had
their jaundiced eyes on Cattlemen. They would like nothing
better than to run us into the “industry head catch” where we
can be “cut” and turned out as neutered cogs on the corporate
meat plantation, little different than assembly line workers
flipping burgers at McDonalds.My cow-calf operation isn't “industry” and it won't be as long
as I own it. If it were a John Deere dealership it might be “ag
industry.” In the 1950s, America still had Agriculture. Today,
it's called “the agricultural industry”, a not-so-subtle change.
Who promoted the change in terms, perceptions and reality?
Who benefits?Just about every Cattleman I've ever spoken with is fed up with
the increasing burden of federal, state and local government
regulations and taxation; fed up with markets being
manipulated by the big packers; fed up with seeing 70 cent
steers at the auction barn and $7 steaks at Krogers and Wal-
mart; fed up with congressmen, senators and bureaucrats
who either don't care, or long ago sold out for NAFTA, GATT,
WTO, Free Trade and the whole Globalist, New World Order
ball of wax which has made American Agriculture (and just
about every other sector of our economy) non-competitive.Cattlemen face many threats, but the biggest threat seems to
be we have not learned very much from years of betrayal by
the USDA/NCBA/Meat Industry Cartel. We've let them back us
into a corner, and maybe a coroner, because we swallow their
lies like hogs at a trough of stale Krispy Kreme donuts. We're
too dumbed-down to realize how sick their sugar-poison
makes us. We like the way it tastes.Over the past dozen years a few lone voices have attempted to
warn Cattlemen against USDA encouraged practices such as
feeding chicken litter to cattle. Some took the warnings as
“crackpot, organic farming” ideas which were completely
contrary to the conventional, industrial “scientific wisdom”
spouted by the USDA and Extension Offices across the
country. Hey, it must be OK if it comes from the USDA!One neighbor-soon after the mad cow was found in
Washington-said it might not be the “best thing in the world”
to feed cattle, but “I'll continue feeding my cattle [and the beef
consumers of America] chicken crap until it's outlawed
because it's cheap feed.”Yes, chicken litter is cheap, high-protein feed, it's tough for
Cattlemen to make ends meet and Virginia has a big poultry
industry with mega-tons of litter to dispose of. But the long-
term, negative consequences of feeding animal waste to
ruminants-waste contaminated with all sorts of chemical
additives-have taken a back seat to sound animal husbandry
and science-and just plain common sense that is independent
of any “organic farming” practices.There have been plenty of warnings. “Years ago, chicken litter
was used in Queensland as a feed supplement for cattle in
order to provide high protein levels,” according to the
Australian government. “Some batches of chicken litter have
caused cattle to die from botulism.” In one case, over 5000
head of feedlot cattle died from contaminated litter.Alpharma, Inc. manufacturers Roxarsone which is ground and
mixed with chicken feed by Tyson and others in the poultry
industry to enhance growth. Roxarsone passes straight
through chickens to their litter and becomes the toxic poison
known as Inorganic Arsenic III and Inorganic Arsenic V.Last December, several lawsuits were filed in Washington
County, Arkansas, against Tyson, Alpharma Inc., Cargill, and
others. The suits, on behalf of residents of Prairie Grove, claim
poultry companies use chicken feed tainted with high levels of
arsenic, copper and zinc as well as fungi and mold spores,
which caused children's deaths, blood disorders and rare
cancers.In 1978, the Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory,
Louisiana State University, reported cattle from two herds
developed copper toxicosis after the ingestion of chicken
litter. The affected animals were adult Holstein cows and
crossbred steers.Dr. Stephen Sundlof, FDA's director for the Center for
Veterinary Medicine, acknowledges, “adding chicken litter to
cattle feed is one of the primary methods of waste disposal
for the chicken growers” in the Southeast. “From an
environmental standpoint, what are people going to do with
the poultry litter? One of the benefits of doing this was that it
was an environmentally sound way of recycling the material.”
(emphasis added)In January, the FDA finally felt compelled to recommend “bans
on the widespread practice of adding blood, chicken
excrement and restaurant table scraps to feed”, but was
“deluged with troubling feedback.” The agency is still
“struggling” between the need for safeguards against mad
cow disease and a mountain of chicken dung.The Cartel and the “academic community” have attempted to
discredit or ignore the findings of British Stockman and
scientist, Mark Purdey. His research (http://
http://www.purdeyenvironment.com) indicates heavy-metal
contaminants, the application of organophosphate
insecticides, and other external factors are prime suspects for
causing BSE in cattle and similar conditions in other species,
including man.If Purdey's findings, which are clearly contrary to “accepted
wisdom”, prove to be valid, another layer of the Cartel's lies
would be exposed. And that would throw a monkey-wrench
into the scheme to “integrate” Cattlemen into their command-
and-control “industry” via a mandatory U.S. Animal I.D.
Program (USAID).Because of the incestuous ties between government and the
“industry” (remember the Clinton-Tyson connection and now
the Bush-Venneman-Harrison-Moore-NCBA connection?), and
the potential damage to the corporate meat empire's bottom
line, any attempt to get at the truth about the causes of the
complex BSE malady appears to be stonewalled at the highest
levels. Instead of truth, official “crisis” propaganda and media
fear mongering are used to cower Americans into begging for
another layer of mandatory government “protection.”The Mandatory Protection Racket, USAID, will not prevent or
control disease, nor will it “protect the safety and security of
our food supply” any more than a $40 billion intelligence
budget and thousands of federal agents protected 3000
people and the World Trade Towers. The end result will be
less food safety and more government control.What the USAID Protection Racket will do is financially break
the backs of the small farmer and rancher; put us out of
business and at the same time devastate the economy, culture
and traditions of rural America; further consolidate and
integrate cattle markets by cutting the throats of stockyard
owners across the country; allow the Cartel access to private
pricing, sales and herd number data; allow more government
control over private property; allow additional government
snooping into and surveillance of every link in the food chain;
limit choices for consumers; and create more layers of
regulatory bureaucracy at state and federal levels-all in
response to a fabricated “crisis.” Who pays?The big boys and the corporate farms and ranches might
prosper, at least in the short run. They'll likely get “assistance”
to comply with integrated USAID. The integrators may “help
out” by offering “contracts”, dictating the terms, the genetics
of the cattle, and the feed ingredients, in a similar manner to
the poultry “industry”-in the name of “meat safety, efficiency
and productivity”, of course.At some point, it's possible the Cartel won't need most of
them. It may be cheaper to “outsource” the “beef industry”,
maybe to China. Then American families could shop for
everything they need, including beef, at one cheap, safe,
secure, convenient, USDA approved, RFID scanned, “company
store”: Wal Mart.If we don't want our cattle and our private land marked with a
mandated number in order to buy and sell; if we don't want to
be castrated and “vertically integrated” by the politicians and
the Meat Industry Cartel, we had better not let them run us
down the chute. And we had better start bellowing, getting
wild-eyed and slinging snot.
http://www.vlrc.org/articles/36.html
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Mad Cows in Washington, D.C.
Pandemic Infects Congress, USDA, NCBABy L.M. SchwartzCattlemen and women are one of the few 'independents' left
in American Agriculture. That independence could soon come
to an end.Poultry production has been “vertically integrated” into a
tightly controlled structure of government-sanctioned,
corporate monopolism. Many “producers” may not realize it,
but the “industry” has been consolidated and restructured to
more closely resemble an industrial assembly-line than
Agriculture, and “producers” have been forced to assume
increased risks without commensurate rewards.Today, there are no free markets and few options for
“producers” once they have been enticed and locked into the
vertically integrated system. There is little in the way of
contractual certainty. When the company says “jump”, the
“producer” asks “how high?” Without warning, “contracts” may
be changed or cancelled, often leaving them stuck with
unmanageable debt on land, facilities and equipment not
economically convertible for other uses.For many years, the same corporate “integrators” have had
their jaundiced eyes on Cattlemen. They would like nothing
better than to run us into the “industry head catch” where we
can be “cut” and turned out as neutered cogs on the corporate
meat plantation, little different than assembly line workers
flipping burgers at McDonalds.My cow-calf operation isn't “industry” and it won't be as long
as I own it. If it were a John Deere dealership it might be “ag
industry.” In the 1950s, America still had Agriculture. Today,
it's called “the agricultural industry”, a not-so-subtle change.
Who promoted the change in terms, perceptions and reality?
Who benefits?Just about every Cattleman I've ever spoken with is fed up with
the increasing burden of federal, state and local government
regulations and taxation; fed up with markets being
manipulated by the big packers; fed up with seeing 70 cent
steers at the auction barn and $7 steaks at Krogers and Wal-
mart; fed up with congressmen, senators and bureaucrats
who either don't care, or long ago sold out for NAFTA, GATT,
WTO, Free Trade and the whole Globalist, New World Order
ball of wax which has made American Agriculture (and just
about every other sector of our economy) non-competitive.Cattlemen face many threats, but the biggest threat seems to
be we have not learned very much from years of betrayal by
the USDA/NCBA/Meat Industry Cartel. We've let them back us
into a corner, and maybe a coroner, because we swallow their
lies like hogs at a trough of stale Krispy Kreme donuts. We're
too dumbed-down to realize how sick their sugar-poison
makes us. We like the way it tastes.Over the past dozen years a few lone voices have attempted to
warn Cattlemen against USDA encouraged practices such as
feeding chicken litter to cattle. Some took the warnings as
“crackpot, organic farming” ideas which were completely
contrary to the conventional, industrial “scientific wisdom”
spouted by the USDA and Extension Offices across the
country. Hey, it must be OK if it comes from the USDA!One neighbor-soon after the mad cow was found in
Washington-said it might not be the “best thing in the world”
to feed cattle, but “I'll continue feeding my cattle [and the beef
consumers of America] chicken crap until it's outlawed
because it's cheap feed.”Yes, chicken litter is cheap, high-protein feed, it's tough for
Cattlemen to make ends meet and Virginia has a big poultry
industry with mega-tons of litter to dispose of. But the long-
term, negative consequences of feeding animal waste to
ruminants-waste contaminated with all sorts of chemical
additives-have taken a back seat to sound animal husbandry
and science-and just plain common sense that is independent
of any “organic farming” practices.There have been plenty of warnings. “Years ago, chicken litter
was used in Queensland as a feed supplement for cattle in
order to provide high protein levels,” according to the
Australian government. “Some batches of chicken litter have
caused cattle to die from botulism.” In one case, over 5000
head of feedlot cattle died from contaminated litter.Alpharma, Inc. manufacturers Roxarsone which is ground and
mixed with chicken feed by Tyson and others in the poultry
industry to enhance growth. Roxarsone passes straight
through chickens to their litter and becomes the toxic poison
known as Inorganic Arsenic III and Inorganic Arsenic V.Last December, several lawsuits were filed in Washington
County, Arkansas, against Tyson, Alpharma Inc., Cargill, and
others. The suits, on behalf of residents of Prairie Grove, claim
poultry companies use chicken feed tainted with high levels of
arsenic, copper and zinc as well as fungi and mold spores,
which caused children's deaths, blood disorders and rare
cancers.In 1978, the Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory,
Louisiana State University, reported cattle from two herds
developed copper toxicosis after the ingestion of chicken
litter. The affected animals were adult Holstein cows and
crossbred steers.Dr. Stephen Sundlof, FDA's director for the Center for
Veterinary Medicine, acknowledges, “adding chicken litter to
cattle feed is one of the primary methods of waste disposal
for the chicken growers” in the Southeast. “From an
environmental standpoint, what are people going to do with
the poultry litter? One of the benefits of doing this was that it
was an environmentally sound way of recycling the material.”
(emphasis added)In January, the FDA finally felt compelled to recommend “bans
on the widespread practice of adding blood, chicken
excrement and restaurant table scraps to feed”, but was
“deluged with troubling feedback.” The agency is still
“struggling” between the need for safeguards against mad
cow disease and a mountain of chicken dung.The Cartel and the “academic community” have attempted to
discredit or ignore the findings of British Stockman and
scientist, Mark Purdey. His research (http://
http://www.purdeyenvironment.com) indicates heavy-metal
contaminants, the application of organophosphate
insecticides, and other external factors are prime suspects for
causing BSE in cattle and similar conditions in other species,
including man.If Purdey's findings, which are clearly contrary to “accepted
wisdom”, prove to be valid, another layer of the Cartel's lies
would be exposed. And that would throw a monkey-wrench
into the scheme to “integrate” Cattlemen into their command-
and-control “industry” via a mandatory U.S. Animal I.D.
Program (USAID).Because of the incestuous ties between government and the
“industry” (remember the Clinton-Tyson connection and now
the Bush-Venneman-Harrison-Moore-NCBA connection?), and
the potential damage to the corporate meat empire's bottom
line, any attempt to get at the truth about the causes of the
complex BSE malady appears to be stonewalled at the highest
levels. Instead of truth, official “crisis” propaganda and media
fear mongering are used to cower Americans into begging for
another layer of mandatory government “protection.”The Mandatory Protection Racket, USAID, will not prevent or
control disease, nor will it “protect the safety and security of
our food supply” any more than a $40 billion intelligence
budget and thousands of federal agents protected 3000
people and the World Trade Towers. The end result will be
less food safety and more government control.What the USAID Protection Racket will do is financially break
the backs of the small farmer and rancher; put us out of
business and at the same time devastate the economy, culture
and traditions of rural America; further consolidate and
integrate cattle markets by cutting the throats of stockyard
owners across the country; allow the Cartel access to private
pricing, sales and herd number data; allow more government
control over private property; allow additional government
snooping into and surveillance of every link in the food chain;
limit choices for consumers; and create more layers of
regulatory bureaucracy at state and federal levels-all in
response to a fabricated “crisis.” Who pays?The big boys and the corporate farms and ranches might
prosper, at least in the short run. They'll likely get “assistance”
to comply with integrated USAID. The integrators may “help
out” by offering “contracts”, dictating the terms, the genetics
of the cattle, and the feed ingredients, in a similar manner to
the poultry “industry”-in the name of “meat safety, efficiency
and productivity”, of course.At some point, it's possible the Cartel won't need most of
them. It may be cheaper to “outsource” the “beef industry”,
maybe to China. Then American families could shop for
everything they need, including beef, at one cheap, safe,
secure, convenient, USDA approved, RFID scanned, “company
store”: Wal Mart.If we don't want our cattle and our private land marked with a
mandated number in order to buy and sell; if we don't want to
be castrated and “vertically integrated” by the politicians and
the Meat Industry Cartel, we had better not let them run us
down the chute. And we had better start bellowing, getting
wild-eyed and slinging snot.
http://www.vlrc.org/articles/36.html
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
