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demmiblue

(36,841 posts)
Thu May 21, 2020, 02:25 PM May 2020

The End of Meat is Here

Is any panic more primitive than the one prompted by the thought of empty grocery store shelves? Is any relief more primitive than the one provided by comfort food?

Most everyone has been doing more cooking these days, more documenting of the cooking, and more thinking about food in general. The combination of meat shortages and President Trump’s decision to order slaughterhouses open despite the protestations of endangered workers has inspired many Americans to consider just how essential meat is.

Is it more essential than the lives of the working poor who labor to produce it? It seems so. An astonishing six out of 10 counties that the White House itself identified as coronavirus hot spots are home to the very slaughterhouses the president ordered open.

In Sioux Falls, S.D., the Smithfield pork plant, which produces some 5 percent of the country’s pork, is one of the largest hot spots in the nation. A Tyson plant in Perry, Iowa, had 730 cases of the coronavirus — nearly 60 percent of its employees. At another Tyson plant, in Waterloo, Iowa, there were 1,031 reported cases among about 2,800 workers.

Sick workers mean plant shutdowns, which has led to a backlog of animals. Some farmers are injecting pregnant sows to cause abortions. Others are forced to euthanize their animals, often by gassing or shooting them. It’s gotten bad enough that Senator Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican, has asked the Trump administration to provide mental health resources to hog farmers.

Despite this grisly reality — and the widely reported effects of the factory-farm industry on America’s lands, communities, animals and human health long before this pandemic hit — only around half of Americans say they are trying to reduce their meat consumption. Meat is embedded in our culture and personal histories in ways that matter too much, from the Thanksgiving turkey to the ballpark hot dog. Meat comes with uniquely wonderful smells and tastes, with satisfactions that can almost feel like home itself. And what, if not the feeling of home, is essential?

And yet, an increasing number of people sense the inevitability of impending change.

Animal agriculture is now recognized as a leading cause of global warming. According to The Economist, a quarter of Americans between the ages of 25 and 34 say they are vegetarians or vegans, which is perhaps one reason sales of plant-based “meats” have skyrocketed, with Impossible and Beyond Burgers available everywhere from Whole Foods to White Castle.

Our hand has been reaching for the doorknob for the last few years. Covid-19 has kicked open the door.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/21/opinion/coronavirus-meat-vegetarianism.html
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jimfields33

(15,769 posts)
2. We thankfully do not have any shortages of any meats here
Thu May 21, 2020, 02:42 PM
May 2020

I did buy extra after the news media said expect shortages. I fell for the media again. I’ll never learn I suppose.

MuseRider

(34,105 posts)
3. I say yea!
Thu May 21, 2020, 02:43 PM
May 2020

As a vegetarian for a long while now I am happy. However I am a vegetarian who has Gastroparesis and I can eat very few fruits and veggies and no grains and hardly ever any nuts. I have been surviving on chicken and occasionally tofu but that is rough too. Still I say yea! Go for it. I will manage and if it is gone I will be made to figure something out along with everyone else.

randr

(12,409 posts)
6. What we should see is an increase of local small farm producers
Thu May 21, 2020, 03:04 PM
May 2020

selling directly to local butcher shops. From seed for feed to final product.
Our system has Monsantocized into one that employs the least amount of people to produce the most amount of product. From the farms that grow the seed to the feed on down the line, our food is genetically altered, injected with chemicals, handled in inhumanly, and finally wrapped in plastic.
The only people to gain are the 1 % that suck the fat off the top.
Local production using organic methods hire more people and deliver a healthier product without all the petro chemical costs attached.

Normanart

(279 posts)
8. Lucky we live Hawaii
Thu May 21, 2020, 03:26 PM
May 2020

Specifically the Big Island, where we have a robust agricultural history, and plenty of small scale farmers and ranchers. We buy only local produce, eggs, and meat, great quality, and support our local economy at the same time. Hawaii no ka oi!

randr

(12,409 posts)
12. Same here where I live.
Thu May 21, 2020, 04:54 PM
May 2020

All the organic fruit and vegies I need along with local ranchers and wild game. I raise my own chickens and grow a lot of our annual needs.

JudyM

(29,233 posts)
11. Local would be better, certainly, and less would certainly be far better for the planet
Thu May 21, 2020, 03:59 PM
May 2020

and humanity, generally.

dixiegrrrrl

(60,010 posts)
15. We have an organic farmer not too far away.
Thu May 21, 2020, 09:58 PM
May 2020


Can't afford him. He charges 4 times what a store does. He makes his profit by hitting the Sat. Farmer's market in a big town about 60 miles away, has a steady customer base who also drive to his place.

I am pleased he is doing well and I know the pork and chicken are delicious.

Not sure how the virus is affecting him...

mitch96

(13,892 posts)
7. Peak meat??? Never mind ;)... Plenty down here in So Fla... I don't eat much so I don't know if
Thu May 21, 2020, 03:04 PM
May 2020

the price went up or not...
m

CaptYossarian

(6,448 posts)
14. I eat tuna every other day.
Thu May 21, 2020, 09:28 PM
May 2020

Growing up during those "mercury-scare" days in the 60s and 70s, I can't bring myself to use it 7 days a week.

During these times, I might choke on some plastic though.

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