Beating the Drum

<a href="http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=49321">Government's idea of 'tracking' animals</a><br />n<br />n<blockquote>Reaction to the National Animal Identification System is shining a light on a growing problem that independent producers believe is threatening the entire livestock industry. Vertical marketing practices in the meat processing industry, combined with the industry's access to and influence on the Department of Agriculture and Congress, has the small producer against the ropes. The <acronym title="National Animal Identification System">NAIS</acronym> may be the final blow that puts independent ranchers and small farmers down for the count.</blockquote><br />n<br />nThere is nothing particularly new here about National Animal Identification System (<acronym title="National Animal Identification System">NAIS</acronym>), just the same information hopefully reaching more and more people to help fight this plan. Just more information how <acronym title="National Animal Identification System">NAIS</acronym> is driven by the meat packers to further consolidate the market, and how they are using their money to influence the <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym> and Congress to do their bidding.<br />n<br />n<blockquote>There is strong belief among producers that the <acronym title="National Animal Identification System">NAIS</acronym> has little to do with food safety and much more to do with providing data for agribusiness. One farmer says "… agribusiness giants will then have access to all of the information on the [<acronym title="National Animal Identification System">NAIS</acronym>] database. They will have knowledge about all sources and supplies of commodity animals. They will use such information to improve their ongoing practice of captive supply and market price manipulation."<br />n<br />nHe is convinced that "The <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym> has become the conscript of agribusiness. All key positions at the <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym> are now held by former agribusiness people or their minions."</blockquote><br />n<br />nFunny, I've been saying the same thing all along. The Meat packers have bought and payed for the <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym> and expect it to do their bidding to the detriment of the farmers, ranchers, and consumers of the USA. Either somebody is listening to me, I'm listening to someone else, or thew facts are so obvious that everybody in the industry knows this to be true. I personally think it's the last on, it's painfully obvious what's going on, getting things changed is the next problem to solve.<br />n<br />nSince the problem of the big Agribusiness companies taking control of the <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym> first surfaced in 1993 with <a href="http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1997/08/27/espy/">Mike Espy</a> this isn't a problem that can only be laid at the feet of King George Bush. Bill Clinton was also involved in letting the big meat packers have their way in the <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym> and hurting all of us. The solution is going to take an awful big broom at the <acronym title="United States Department of Agriculture, Bought and Paid for by The Big Meat Packers">USDA</acronym>, along with the political will to use it, to clean out all the influence the Agribusiness companies have and to turn the agency around to helping America's agriculture, not just helping the meat packers to the detriment of us all.<br />n<br />n<b>Change means movement. Movement means friction. Only in the frictionless vacuum of a nonexistent abstract world can movement or change occur without that abrasive friction of conflict. Saul Alinsky</b><br />n<br />nFunny, the above quote comes from a book "The Purpose," Rules for Radicals. So I guess I'm a "radical agitator" now. Scary thought.<br />n<br />nCross posted to <a href="http://noanimalid.com">No Mandatory Animal ID</a>


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