I want them protected, but due to the politicians in place in this country they won't be. I'm not sure what my calls would do. Believe me that's not who I vote for, completely opposite.I haven’t seen anyone trying to advance the agenda of shaming and decreasing meat eating. I see a lot of China blaming, but no calls for the American meat industry to protect workers and the public.
The thing is American meat processing and production is not even necessarily for Americans, Americans eat meat of course,l but I believe that a lot of these meat processing plants that were opened much of the meat was shipped elsewhere. That's why I can and might boycott but it might make no difference if any of us did (you'd need a boycott movement of course, but also if the meat is just going to be shipped to other countries an American boycott might not be enough).
Trees don't grow on money
I think if people can do without toilet paper they can do without meat. There are substitutes.
My community has a fair number of quite militant vegetarians and vegans, and our local newspapers and discussion groups are full of opinion pieces on the matter, saying "meat eating causes pandemics, meat bad, you are bad, save humanity, eat plants".
Mind you, agriculture here on the island relies on clever diversified use of the land to be remotely profitable or sustainable, and part of that involves small-scale livestock production - some of the land is best suited for that most of the time, and/or the livestock fulfills other important roles on the farm.
Then again, by my observation, most of the militant vegans here don't farm, they buy expensive food imported from the mainland.
Eliminate? In what way? I'm a 3/4 vegetarian myself. But my goodness, on other groups that I am in, the people are wailing and moaning about the shortage and prices of meat like it's the end of the world, but I don't see anyone really looking at it as perhaps the nexxus of a life changing paradigm shift.
and early in the pandemic you couldn't get beans or rice to save your life, and it would have served one well to eat meats and produce then, and now maybe less meats (that early situation seemed in many ways an absurd situation, when poverty foods were what couldn't be had, beans, rice, pasta etc., it was like: "ok this is ridiculous you can get chicken and steak, but beans or eggs don't even hope ..."). So the practical if maybe not the moral win goes to flexibility.
Trees don't grow on money
Lots of good input on a subject I’ve been thinking about a lot. I don’t think much will change right now. With so many people worried and/or out of work, major changes in our food chain are unlikely. I guess we all just have to do out best, if we care and can afford to, to support local farmers and humanely raised food.
I would willingly forego meat products until packing plants have time to test their employees, re-design their lines, allow the infected plenty of time to recover...I'd be fine with them shutting down entirely for as long as it takes. But corporate America thrives on the backs of its workers, er "human capital stock" as Kevin Hassett would put it, and they're clearly expendable.
I don’t grocery shop but my husband was out of town and we were getting low on food. My son and I went to do the monthly shopping and I couldn’t believe how expensive things were especially meat.
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