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Paying the Price for Cheap Meat
Modern factory farms have created a 'perfect storm' environment for powerful viruses
At first glance, this seems wrong. All through history, viruses have mutated, and sometimes they have taken nasty forms that scythe through the human population. This is an inescapable reality we just have to live with, like earthquakes and tsunamis. But the scientific evidence increasingly suggests that we have unwittingly invented an artificial way to accelerate the evolution of these deadly viruses - and pump them out across the world. They are called factory farms. They manufacture low-cost flesh, with a side-dish of viruses to go.
To understand how this might happen, you have to compare two farms. My grandparents had a pig farm in the Swiss mountains, with around 20 swine at any one time. What happened there if, in the bowels of one of their pigs, a virus mutated and took on a deadlier form? At every stage, the virus would meet stiff resistance from the pigs' immune systems. They were living in fresh air, on the diet they evolved with, and without stress - so they had a robust ability to fight back. If the virus did take hold, it would travel only as far as the sick hog could walk. So if the virus would then have around 20 other pigs to spread and mutate in - before it would hit the end of its own evolutionary path, and die off. If it was a really lucky, plucky virus, it might make it to market - where it would come up against more healthy pigs living in small herds. It had little opportunity to fan out across a large population of pigs or evolve a strain that could be transmitted to humans.
Now compare this to what happens when a virus evolves in a modern factory farm. In most swine farms today, 6,000 pigs are crammed snout-to-snout in tiny cages where they can barely move, and are fed for life on an artificial pulp, while living on top of cess-pools of their own stale faeces.
Instead of having just 20 pigs to experiment and evolve in, the virus now has a pool of thousands, constantly infecting and reinfecting each other. The virus can combine and recombine again and again. The ammonium from the waste they live above burns the pigs' respiratory tracts, making it easier yet for viruses to enter them. Better still, the pigs' immune systems are in free-fall. They are stressed, depressed, and permanently in panic, making them far easier to infect. There is no fresh air or sunlight to bolster their natural powers of resistance. They live in air thick with viral loads, and they are exposed every time they breathe in.
As Dr Michael Greger, director of Public Health and Animal Agriculture at the Humane Society of the United States, explains: "Put all this together, and you have a perfect storm environment for these super-strains. If you wanted to create global pandemics, you'd build as many of these factory farms as possible. That's why the development of swine flu isn't a surprise to those in the public health community. In 2003, the American Public Health Association - the oldest and largest in world - called for a moratorium of factory farming because they saw something like this would happen. It may take something as serious as a pandemic to make us realise the real cost of factory farming."
Many of the detailed studies of factory farms that have been emerging in the past few years reinforce this argument. Dr Ellen Silbergeld is Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at Johns Hopkins University. She tells me that her detailed, on-the-ground studies led her to conclude that there is "very much" a link from factory farms to the new, more powerful forms of flu we are experiencing. "Instead of a virus only having one spin of the roulette wheel, it has thousands and thousands of spins, for no extra cost. It drives the evolution of new diseases."
Until yesterday, we could only speculate about the origins of the current H1N1 virus killing human beings - but now we know more. The Centre for Computational Biology at Columbia University has studied the virus and now believes that it is not a new emergence of a triple human-swine-bird flu virus. It is a slight variant on a virus we have seen before. We can see its family tree - and its daddy was a virus that evolved in the artificial breeding ground of a vast factory farm in North Carolina.
Did this strain evolve, too, in the same circumstances? Already, the evidence is suggestive, although far from conclusive. We know that the city where this swine flu first emerged - Perote, Mexico - contains a massive industrial pig farm, and houses 950,000 pigs. Dr Silbergeld adds: "Factory farms are not biosecure at all. People are going in and out all the time. If you stand a few miles down-wind from a factory farm, you can pick up the pathogens easily. And manure from these farms isn't always disposed of."
It's no coincidence that we have seen a sudden surge of new viruses in the past decade at precisely the moment when factory farming has intensified so dramatically. For example, between 1994 and 2001, the number of American pigs that live and die in vast industrial farms in the US spiked from 10 per cent to 72 per cent. Swine flu had been stable since 1918 - and then suddenly, in this period, went super-charged.
How much harm will we do to ourselves in the name of cheap meat? We know that bird flu developed in the world's vast poultry farms. And we know that pumping animal feed full of antibiotics in factory farms has given us a new strain of MRSA. It's a simple, horrible process. The only way to keep animals alive in such conditions is to pump their feed full of antibiotics. But this has triggered an arms race with bacteria, which start evolving to beat the antibiotics - and emerge as in the end as pumped-up, super-charged viruses invulnerable to our medical weapons. This system gave birth to a new kind of MRSA that now makes up 20 per cent of all human infections with the virus. Sir Liam Donaldson, the British government's Chief Medical Officer, warns: "Every inappropriate use in animals or agriculture [of antibiotics] is potentially a death warrant for a future patient."
Of course, agribusinesses is desperate to deny all this is happening: their bottom line depends on keeping this model on its shaky trotters. But once you factor in the cost of all these diseases and pandemics, cheap meat suddenly looks like an illusion.
We always knew that factory farms were a scar on humanity's conscience - but now we fear they are a scar on our health. If we carry on like this, bird flu and swine flu will be just the beginning of a century of viral outbreaks. As we witness a global pandemic washing across the world, we need to shut down these virus factories - before they shut down even more human lives.
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133 Comments so far
Show AllTo throw a little humor on all this . . .
http://politicalirony.com/2009/04/28/the-kiss-of-death/
LOL that is funny :-)
Step one: Stop eating meat and dairy.
Step Two: Repeat Step One.
Good advice!
It is not our "demand for cheap meat" that is the cause, it is agro-business' demand for huge profits while dismantling regulations and ignoring practices that would keep our food supply safe. If we were all to become vegetarians overnight, the problem would still remain as methods for growing fruit and vegetables are not much safer (pesticides, genetically modified foods, etc.) - we need to rise up and challenge corporate control over everything we do. Dismantle corporate power!
I agree. This greed is now pervasive in all areas of our society. From food manufacture to banking to insurance to schools to prisons. When will this stop? Probably not until the US is no longer a world power? I say the US because I believe that we are the worst offender in this, including food manufacture. Time to start growing your own vegetables...
Good refinement, though ceasing to demand cheap meat might change the actions that companies perform to chase dollars.
Part of what makes this difficult is the lack of transparency in the production of foodstuffs. If a picture of the pigsty were in the store above the pork, the organic cuts might seem cheaper, and the corn and beans might seem more appetizing.
our "demand for cheap meat" ...
"our" is not the minority reading commondreams.org...
ever brave a walmart on a weekend? i did once... just to get "the experience"...
one pulls into a parking lot seemingly larger than a football stadium... and dodging oversized pickups and suv's... and many a smaller car... with cell phones going constantly... and EVERYONE is going to park right at the entrance...
then one enters a building seemingly larger than a large stadium... a quonset hut the size of meadowlands, n.j.... bare bones cinderblock... exposed corragated metal ceilings... and monstrous stadium lighting... poured concrete floors... and shelves... barest of the barest to stack the merchandise bearing brand names of companies that have no presence in the united states or any country offering any standard of living wage one considers 'livable'... other than for incorporation purposes to enjoy property rights court systems... interstate highways... and a plethora of well developed taxpayer funded and maintained infrastructures... to bring in "products"... bearing one label... "lowest prices... ALWAYS"... even though they aren't... and those products' useful life is significantly lower by an exponential factor... and their usefuleness during it's lifetime even less... when they don't poison or kill the purchaser...
many of my friends and peers will pavlovlilian spurt out... "oh... i'll just swing by walmart"... when faced with most purchase decisions or some other "really damn big box discounter" each marginally distinguishing themselves from each other in nothing more than advertising campaigns designed to promote the ultimate (and ultimately elusive) 'shopping experience'...
did i mention that you're standing inside a football stadium cum retail outlet... surrounded by minions of chatterers on cell phones fishing thought purses and wallets for the mega-awards plastic-of-the-day enhancing their "always low prices" (which aren't) with "cash back" and "rewards points" for future consumption of the same crap they're signing little receipts for that will acrrue at 15-20-30% compound interest and fees for years longer than anything they just paid for will last...
now... don't forget... you too can get up at 2AM... the day after THANKSGIVING... the day after "we" as a culture... put down all our semmingly important possessions accumulated over the past 364 days... to stuff more food into our intestines in one day than most families living in indian "reservations" see in a week... to give thanks for all the bountiful aplenty from sea to shining sea... WHILE being entertained from activity... in an actual football stadium...
you too can get up at 2AM... in 30 degree weather... to "beat" the crowd... to get... BARGAINS... on those "lowest prices ALWAYS" (even though they aren't)... and trample your neighbors to death for the privlege...
is it a great country or what?
btw: elsewhere one questions the use of an indian proverb... american indians hunted and used every ounce of those animals in some fashion from food to fuel to tools... long before the europeans pointed their rifles out the windows of trains barreling through the plains... for the pleasure of hanging these beasts in their living room...
Eat local! And organic.
Save the planet - stop eating meat.
Seriously.
Never criticize a man until you've walked a mile in his moccasins - Native American proverb.
That's a strange reply for someone ostensibly representing the Native American community. The U.s conquered many of the Indigenous Americans precisely by destroying their main food supply, the buffalo.
I would not be so bold to suggest I "represent" anyone other than myself. I think the quote is a really neat affirmation, kinda like the Golden Rule.
Having said that, my understanding of the Americas before the European invasion is that the North American Indian lived sustainably within their means. Unlike the Europeans with their Abrahamic view of the universe (ie, God gave us the universe to exploit), the North American Indians believed they were a part of the Earth, and found ways to coexist. On the other hand, Native Americans were quite cruel to animals, but they never over-exploited the land.
Never criticize a man until you've walked a mile in his moccasins - Native American proverb.
Give anyone species enough rope and they well hang themselves...
Close down all the feedlots and hog confinement systems!! Return to the way we lived in the last century. Also, close down all of the public and private schools,as they only serve to spread disease around by packing kids together. Time for home schooling to combat all of these diseases!! Tear down the malls where people are too closely involved with each other as they are making us sick as well as broke. Great article for real progress on disease prevention.
The cheap meat - George Wanker Bush, Cheesedick Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, et al, left D.C. a few months ago.
Nancy Pelosi is still there - lots of cheap meat still in DC. Can you say BOTOX?
BO-TOX.
HBO recently aired a documentary "Death On A Factory Farm". It's very difficult to watch. The Humane Farming Association sent an undercover worker to document the cruelty on a certain factory hog farm. It also follows the court case that resulted from the release of the undercover videos.
Yeah, I had to stop watching it after the first couple minutes at the beginning of the newborn piglets being thrown into carts from 15 feet away.
The FDA is alerting the public to be wary of Internet sites and other promotions for products that claim to diagnose, prevent, treat or cure the 2009 H1N1 flu virus. The agency also is advising offending websites to take prompt action to correct and/or remove promotions of these fraudulent products or face enforcement action.
It is my understanding that the ubiquitous food-label term "Free Range" (which, admittedly, refers more to cattle and chicken than pigs) does not necessarily mean what we assume it does. In other words, there is no actual legal definition of what that term means; the term is so open-ended to allow some of the same conditions as found in the cramped quarters described above. There are many "free range" cattle and chicken that really ARE free range, but there are many more that are not.
If I have my information wrong, someone please feel free to correct me.
You'd be doing us all a big favor if you could list the brands that actually do practice free range raising.
Well, I guess that is my whole point, Zmann, and I realize now I most certainly didn't make that clear with how I worded the sentence. I don't really know which, if ANY, brands do practice real, free-range raising. I have been told by conscientious meat-eating friends that there are indeed such companies, but being completely vegan myself, I didn't really take note of any company names, if they ever said any, because it wouldn't affect my own food choices. I was simply taking their word for it. Likewise, I have read in various books and websites that the term "free range" really has no legal teeth to it as far as what that should mean.
So I guess I was asking if anyone knew for sure one way or the other and could back it up with evidence.
Organic Valley is the largest organic dairy in the U.S. Their products (including meat) are more than just free-range, they are certified organic. And, they are widely available. Check out their website at organicvalley.coop.
There is a least one person on here who says he has been royally screwed over by Organic Valley.
So what? That guy said he's a struggling farmer that couldn't make it work with Organic Valley, but he has not provided any details.
The question was about which natural food brands can be trusted to provide what the label says.
Organic Valley is certified organic food. Moreover, they treat their animals and the environment well, they are a growing and successful coop, and they pay farmers premium prices. Check out their website and decide for yourself. I think they are a model for what agriculture should be.
For those who do no want to participate in the ongoing factory-farm environmental and health disaster, for those who think their family's health and the planet's health are more important than paying the lowest possible price at the supermarket, Organic Valley and other trusted brands are the way to go.
You're right. The terms "free range" and "cage free" are meaningless terms that make people feel better about eating animals and animal products. Legally, it means that the animals are actually out of cages/free range for only a small part of their lives in order for the producers to make those claims. I know there are small producers who are not as brutal in their treatment of animals as the monstrous factory farms, but when the bottom line is profit, there is always the potential for abuse. Moreover, there is no such thing as "humane" slaughter and all these animals are destined for that fate, including the ones raised at Organic Valley.
That's a twisted point of view. Are you against eating milk, cheese, butter, eggs, yogurt and kefir? These foods have been part of the human diet for thousands of years.
"Free range" is not meaningless. Many transitional farmers produce free range animals while they are transitioning to certified organic. Others are too small or under-capitalized to make the investments required to achieve organic certification.
It's wrong to smear small farmers who practice sustainable agriculture and humane treatment of animals as label fraudsters simply because they make a "profit." Most of these farmers are conscientious. It's a handful of big ag corporations (like Dean Foods) who abuse labels.
And, Organic Valley is a co-op.
"For as long as men massacre animals, they will kill each other. Indeed, he who sows the seed of murder and pain cannot reap joy and love." --Pythagoras
"As long as there are slaughterhouses, there will be battlefields." --Leo Tolstoy
"Nothing will benefit human health and increase chances for survival of life on Earth as much as the evolution to a vegetarian diet." --Albert Einstein
Be not deceived; God is not mocked. For whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap..
This body, Arjuna, is called the field. A man sows seeds of action and watches to see what will grow.
Nobody can dwell on her hatred of evil and then expect to be a loving person.
At least reduce your meat intake
Pigs seem to be the most affected by Swine Flu. This is not just a current event, it's happened a long time ago as well.
http://www.RichardsPalace.com
karma.
My parents used to tell me all about pasture raised meat when I was young but I used to end up preferring the meat offered in schools and in restaurants over pasture raised type due to addictive tastes. I wonder how many out there were fools like myself to settle for the overprocessed type over the true quality and sicken themselves. I wished I had listened when I was younger and not ruined myself like this. While I have eaten meat less and less frequently ever since I moved from the countryside to St Louis, I cannot help but wonder what would have happened if I had eaten pasture raised meat in place of all that overprocessed meat big agri seduces and poisons us all with. Maybe I wouldn't have been so hungry so often, depressed, or even having unstable mood swings? I don't know what to say but that I sincerely and deeply apologize for my childhood addiction to factory farm meat and without realizing it contributing to the death of small family farms. :.(
"wonder how many out there were fools like myself to settle for the overprocessed type"
Can't blame yourself for doing this as a kid. Much of the flavor of this processed shit is chemicals cooked up in New Jersey and added to the 'food'...on the surface, it really does taste better.
"on the surface, it really does taste better."
Really? I'm surprised. You prefer, say, "cheese food" to actual real cheese made from raw milk? Or Bud / Coors / Miller to say, Sierra Nevada?
If you've never had the real thing, the chemicals can trick you into thinking it tastes wonderful. I've since learned better myself.
I've tasted a sample of pasture raised cheese at Whole Foods Market once. Rather salty I must say. The not too salty cheese, unfortunately the conventionally processed type, is what I'm still addicted to. I have been able to break out of some of the addictive processed foods such as the sweets. I usually keep a bottle of stevia with me. If I am about to fall into the temptation of eating another cake slice at work or even a candy bar, a few drops of stevia liquid is all it takes to keep me off. :)
I'm not much of a cheese person myself, I'll only use it as a condiment for a burger, sandwich, or topping on a burrito or salad or something. Except when it comes to fried cheese sticks, mmmmmm.
While we better things for the swine, let's point out that viruses breed when human conditions have squalor, too. When people drink feces-ridden water and then have to work and do business even when they are deathly ill, these things spread quickly within the human population.
Not all the populations involved are ruled by obvious poverty, though those are likely the worst. At schools across the States on Monday, students will arrive with coughs and fever. Most will not have swine flu. Others, of course, will.
Buy now, pay later.
Monocultures are unnatural.
CAFOs, along with industrial-scale, monocultural commodity cropping, present a host of other problems just as serious as their roles as breeding grounds for viral and bacterial infection:
1. Pollution of groundwater and streams from waste and chemical run-off.
2. Depletion of groundwater.
3. Depletion of soil nutrients.
4. Depletion of soil itself by way of wind and water erosion.
5. Necessary reliance on chemical pesticides, with all their attendant risks.
6. Concentration of animal waste and the capitalist temptation to cut corners in its disposal processing, that is to say, the externalization of production costs.
7. Lack of sustainability due to reliance, throughout, on dwindling fossil fuel supplies.
Finally - and I would argue most important of all - this form of food production produces a system for which calories are cheap but nutrition is expensive, and in which small, traditional, careful, indigenous farmers are driven out of business, off the land, and into the wage slave system of the world's megacities. Small farmers are in position to be independent and self-sufficient, and are therefore anathema to the culture of corporate globalism. And this is true not only in the developing world, but in the US as well. We've been relieved of the burden of laboring for our food, but the human and environmental costs have been enormous.
President Obama is too centrist by far, but I give him credit for having, however tentatively, expressed reservations about our current farm subsidy programs. Now if he'll stop babbling nonsense about everyone going to college, and push to redirect those subsidies to a revitalized, hands-on agricultural system based on care of the land, plant and animal husbandry, community (you see where I'm going), we might end up with change we can survive with. And an environment we can survive in.
"Now if he'll stop babbling nonsense about everyone going to college...."
Yes, why educate the riff-raff above their station? It will only make them unhappy.
There is no evidence that fossil fuel supplies are dwindling. We are not expected to reach "peak" oil for at least one-hundred years. Gas supplies remain largely untapped. Heavy oil resources in the U.S. exceed remaining "conventional" sources in Saudi Arabia and we have learned how the exploit them. Furthermore engineers have discovered that low Co2 emissions mining and refining is more efficient and cheaper than past practice and will greatly extend the life of their businesses. For example, pumping Co2 into wells actually extracts more oil than the other methods and thus 'carbon sequestration' easily pays for itself. Co2 can be easily moved around the country with pipelines. In ground gasification of coal is also possible, greatly reducng Co2 footprints for that industry and more efficiently extracts energy than removing from the ground.
Furthermore, fuel for the nuclear generation of elecricity is virtually inexhaustible, it can even be efficiently extracted from granite. This along with solar and wind represent 'conservatory' measures that will greatly extend the "window of opportunity" for the oil industry.
Sorry if this throws too much cold water on popular "doomsday scenarios".
sierra7
"nuclear generation of electricity is virtually inexhaustible,"
And, pray tell, what will we do with the nuclear waste?
Treat it like "swine flu"????
We are likely to have cyclical periods of generally ever higher meat prices, especially beef and pork. This is not a bad thing. A good cook can make lots of tasty and nutritious meals with little or no meat.
"NOTHING WILL BENEFIT HUMAN HEALTH AND INCREASE THE CHANCES FOR SURVIAL OF LIFE ON EARTH AS MUCH AS THE EVOLUTION TO A VEGETARIAN DIET."-- ALBERT EINSTEIN
"A HUMAN CAN BE HEALTHY WITHOUT KILLING ANIMALS FOR FOOD. THEREFORE IF HE EATS MEAT HE PARTICIPATES IN TAKING ANIMAL LIFE MERELY FOR THE SAKE OF HIS APPETITE."
LEO TOLSTOY