EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- As Death Toll Rises Beyond 500, Garment Factory Disaster 'Worst in World History'
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- Pregnant Anti-War Soldier Sent to Prison
- Move Over, Koch Brothers: A Bigger, Darker Rightwing Funder Is Out to Destroy Public Education
- Move Over, Koch Brothers: A Bigger, Darker Rightwing Funder Is Out to Destroy Public Education
- Time for Big Green to Go Fossil Free
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- The Downwinders: Fracking Ourselves to Death in America
Popular content
Today's Top News
The Campaign to Privatize the World
One of the biggest con games going on at the moment is the sustained attack on the U.S. public school system. It’s being perpetrated by predatory entrepreneurs (disguised as “concerned citizens” and “education reformers”) hoping to persuade the parents of school-age children that the only way their kids are going to get a decent education is by paying for something that they can already get for free. You might say it’s the same marketing campaign that launched bottled water.
The profit impulse fueling this drive is understandable. All it takes is a cursory look at the economic landscape to see why these speculators are drooling at the prospect of privatizing education. Millions of students pulling up stakes, bailing out of the public school system, and enrolling in private or charter schools? Are you kidding? Just think of the money that would generate.
Mind you, these “education reformers” are the same people who want to privatize the world—the same people who want more toll roads, who want hikers to pay trail fees, who want city parks and public beaches to charge admission. Indeed, they’re the same tribe who convinced a thirsty nation to voluntarily pay for drinking water that it could otherwise get for free.
Before comparing private and public schools, let’s revisit that bottled water craze, the stunning marketing phenomenon that made beverage companies wealthy and added a billion plastic bottles to our landfills and oceans. For the record, since passage of the Safe Drinking Water Act (1974), municipal water, unlike bottled, has been stringently regulated by the EPA, which is why bottled water contains more impurities and bacteria. In truth, city water is safer, cheaper and better for the environment.
Of course, there are people who refuse to believe one word the government (municipal or otherwise) tells them. They don’t believe the census, they don’t believe the figures in the federal budget, and they regard EPA statistics as state-sponsored propaganda. Fine. You’ll never get these people to change their minds, so save your breath. Let them, Grover Norquist, and Orly Taitz do whatever it is they do.
And then you have your beverage connoisseurs who (even though blind taste-tests tend to dispute this) insist that they can not only instantly tell the difference between bottled and tap water, but can tell the difference between varying brands of bottled water. I’m not saying that some of these epicureans (taste-test evidence aside) can’t do this. All I’m saying is that they’re fanatical about it.
Offer a glass of tap water to a beverage connoisseur who—before the bottled water craze swept the nation—had happily guzzled city water his entire life, and he’ll recoil in horror, as if you’d invited him to drink from your toilet. I’ve joked with these people that if I ever introduced a brand of bottled water, I would name it “Placebo.”
Back to education. The thing about private schools is that they’re very much like bottled water. They are far less regulated than public schools. In fact, they’re largely unregulated. Take California, for example. In order to teach in a California public school (elementary, intermediate or high school), you must have both a college degree and a teaching credential. The private schools require neither.
Not only can you teach in a private without a credential or degree, but private teachers earn significantly less than their public counterparts. Less education, less certification, less salary. The obvious question: Which institution—private or public—is going to attract the better instructor? Would we ever choose a medical doctor with those startling deficiencies? Yet, free enterprise hounds continue to extol the virtues of privatization, pretending it’s the cure for what ails us.
Another component to this anti-public education campaign is the Republican Party’s on-going attempt to subvert organized labor by attributing the flaws in our public school system to the teachers’ union. In 2008, labor is reported to have donated $400 million to the Democratic Party, which has been a rallying cry for Republicans ever since. Their stated goal is to neutralize the Democrats by crippling organized labor.
Of course, the irony here is that labor is furious at the Democrats for having more or less abandoned them. Labor places $400 million in the Democrats’ war chest, and what do they get in return? A pat on the head and a condescending lecture on the virtues of patience from Rahm Emanuel. Talk about your placebo.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


114 Comments so far
Show AllPrivatization not only leads to increased profits for the very few, but it also ends up costing us ten times more than leaving things in the public realm. Look at prisons, for example. In Colorado 30 years ago, we spent $70 million on average for the entire police, prison, probation departments of the state. Now, after Reagan's "let's save by privatizing" lie, we spend 11 TIMES that. We spend the same amount we used to on EVERYTHING just for cannabis law, and we have medical cannabis here.
Privatizing has NEVER brought prices down, increased services, or helped anyone that the public services wouldn't have. Privatization is welfare for those who already have more than they will EVER need or be able to spend. Do we REALLY need to make those people even richer? I don't think so.
We should undo the privatization that we've already done. Start with the prisons.
The key problem with this article is that Mr. Macaray wants us to believe that labor is
"furious at the democrats",
but fails to tell us that labor is also still clinging to their abusers.
Whereas the republicans love to throw away those used plastic bottles,
democrats are re-filling those plastic bottles with piss and re-selling them under pretty labels.
You make a really good point about labor "clinging to their abusers." Labor sees its choices as (1) the Democrats, (2) the Republicans, or (3) a yet-to-be-named Third Party (which will have zero chance of winning). But labor knows it's been painted into a corner.
Labor has been in plenty of corners before, and has found the way out. The bosses have been winning pretty consistently for a few decades. That doesn't mean they always will.
In my view, privatization is a consequence of rugged individualism and the 'me' generation. It's a consequence of the failure or refusal to work together, move beyond personal convenience, personal preferences, greed.
For a long time, we seem to have been marketed and sold a selfish idea of 'more' which is the operative word of all addiction. While greed is a human quality, it's something to be outgrown. "You can't ever get enough of what you don't need."
Society is teamwork. It's about the full orchestra playing and making beautiful music together. It's not about the soloist. Society is about us, not 'me'.
A system of privatization benefits a handful of big bankers and gazillionaires who probably invented the system in the first place. If it's not working for most of us, it's to us to respect and believe in ourselves more than 'them', work together for solutions and a better world.
Well, I kind of disagree, it's not really a consequence of (the ideology of) "rugged individualism". Both are results or parts of a historical process of accumulation and concentration of power (its current capitalist form). "Rugged individualism" is just a supporting ideology of a form of accumulation (historically, it may be the aggressive invasion and colonisation of the "New World" (to Europeans at least) of America); the "me" attitude is - among other things - the result of the huge and easily acquired material wealth which is a local and temporary side-effect of the larger trend of power concentration: some wealth did in fact "trickle down" in one way or another to average people who were luckier than the rest to have been born into relatively rich places and families. But don't think this'll last long :-/
"It's a consequence of the failure or refusal to work together, move beyond personal convenience, personal preferences, greed."
I think it's the opposite way around. Greed, lack of cooperation etc are results of a complex set of social circumstance, ranging from relative material wealth to a huge propaganda industry, and cannot be considered root causes.
Well-said, Atomsk.
Those complex set of social circumstances were created by the particular animal that we are. In attempting to construct social structures which create more egalitarian societies, it is imperative that we be realistic about what we are dealing with. Realistic about our psychological makeup, our genetic wiring, our social tendencies. Realistic about our socially evolved drive for status and how easily that can be manipulated. Realistic about the fact that more competitive and exploitative individuals tend to end up in leadership positions where they work to enhance the advantage of competitive, exploitative people. Realistic about the fact that we are still, in many ways, a primitive species.
"Realistic about our psychological makeup, our genetic wiring, our social tendencies."
I don't think that being realistic possible, because we know so very little about this issue in terms of science - general pessimism and thinking the worst of yourself is not exactly "realism". I understand where you're coming from, but I don't think this kind of (mostly biological) determinism is actually realistic in any way.
Also, it is pretty easy to make up even worse - and more universal - theories about inevitable decline and doom. For example, we seem to have created a self-reinforcing and uncontrolled system of power concentration, that uses power in order to amass more power - grows in order to grow. This sounds exactly like cancer - and maybe the "higher" reality behind both phenomena is the same. Maybe it's unavoidable for any single living organism to develop cancer over time but most die for other reasons before that happens. But really, I can make up "realistic" doom and gloom speculations endlessly :-)
I didn't use the terms "determinism" and "pessimism". Equating realism with those things is precisely what will insure that progressive change never happens. Then you're left with fantasy and pipe dreams. Being realistic is always possible and it involves evaluating a situation with the best evidence available at the moment. You can't fix something unless your willing to actually take a look at what your fixing. Taking a look at dysfunctional social systems involves taking a look at the human nature that created them. Taking a look at human nature involves, among other things, looking at where we came from.
No, you didn't use those terms, I did. I wasn't equating realism with pessimism and determinism - I was just saying that what you think is realism from your part is nothing more than pure pessimistic biological determinism. You cannot support what you're saying with anything but your personal feelings and hunches about the nature of "human beings". That is not realism - just having a negative outlook is not enough for that.
delete
Atomsk
Well stated. You are on a roll.
"For a long time, we seem to have been marketed and sold a selfish idea of 'more' which is the operative word of all addiction. While greed is a human quality, it's something to be outgrown"
So true - it is, I think, the clearest indication that the human species is still terribly immature. Sadder still perhaps that the species will destroy itself before it reaches puberty (let alone maturity)
Why is it sad? Millions of species have come and gone in the 4.5 billion year history of this planet. It's the normal course of things. What's so special about us? Perhaps the sadder fact (considering our toll on all the species that had the misfortune to exist while we were here), is that we ever evolved in the first place.
"What's so special about us?"
For one thing, our ability to alter reality through the use of drugs. For another, reality TV. Do I need to go on?
True. I forgot about Jersey Shore. I guess we are special.
Ah, the fallacy of the cheese brick. All the same. Some people are immature, thus the whole species is immature.
There are actually cultures that have worked quite well for a very long time. There are even groups of mature people within this one. Read more. Learn more. Do more.
I think you're on to something with that rugged individualism, "prarie mentality" observation. America never embraced the collectivism that Europe did. It's not in our DNA.
More likely not so much "in our DNA" as it is not in the interest of those who actually control the country and decide what can be "discussed" and what cannot be discussed. Plus, the design of our political was designed by the Founding Fathers (all men of wealth) to insure that the "upper class" always have control over the American people. There is a book by Howard Zinn, Ph.D in history, that covers this. The title is "A People's History Of The United States". Try your public library for a copy. Then you'll understand "why" the USA is the way that it is.
The US has a great tradition of collective action, from the building of powerful unions to the winning of great wars.
The civil rights movement wasn't individualistic, it was a collective effort.
The movement to stop the Viet Nam War wasn't individualistic, it was collective.
The response of the labor movement to the attacks of Gov. Scott Walker was collective action at its best.
The reaction to the death of Trayvon Martin was collective, and involved millions of Americans of all backgrounds.
You can probably think of examples yourself.
Are you aware that the American labor movement of the late 19th and early 20th century was led by many European immigrants? The pamphlets announcing the Haymarket rally (1886) were printed in German and English. If not for European radicalism, the U.S. labor movement would have sunk under its own weight.
The system was designed to be exactly the way that it is. Howard Zinn's "A People's History Of The United States" will explain "why" things are the way that they are. I also suggest reading "The Federalist Papers" (Google for them) to gain an understanding what the wealthy "Founding Fathers" thought about things. One thing they were sure of, and that was that the ordinary people should never have control over the political system. This is also "why" they were horrified about the French Revolution which was actually a true "class war" where the French "haves" often ended up with their heads lopped off! You will also see "why" the Russian Revolution of 1917 scared the American 1% of that time. And what they did to prevent such ideas from taking root here in the USA.
Ayn Rand wrote a number of books that pretty much glorified the "elite" and gave intellectual justification for their actions. Most people have heard of "Atlas Shrugged" and have heard of "John Galt", another Randian hero. Add this to the Social Darwinist thinking of the Republican Party and you can see "where" they and the Tea Party are coming from. Ayn Rand also wrote a book called "The Virtue of Selfishness" which reflects to a great degree modern Republican thought. This is why modern Republicans make a virtue of selfishness. Ayn Rand vindicated them.
Even that bastion of reactionary thought The Chicago Tribune, in a story today, questions Rahm Emanuel's privatization efforts dealing with major infrastructure imporvements, pointing to several attempts around the country that ended in financial disaster. These phony Democrats, going back to the beginning of the Richard M. Daley administration, have been pushing this Republican idea. It's a joke, and we are the suckers.
As glen ford at the black agenda report wrote -
The democrats are No Longer the lesser evil - but are in fact the more effective evil......
Anyone who votes for either of the 2 political parties needs to have their heads examined at this point....
The evidence is overwhelming and undeniable at this point -
I would have liked the author to have suggested some remedies (instead of simply stating the problem), but refusing to vote for Democrats isn't one of them. It's tantamount to handing the election to the Republicans. And with Repubs like the senator from Oklahoma, who declared global warming/climate change to be a "hoax," it's a scary prospect.
There are only 13 "battleground" states. The remaining 37 are solidly for one party or the other. So if you live in one of the 37, voting or not voting is meaningless.
If you live in a "battleground" state, voting is marginally more meaningful. However the question then arises: why is one party superior to the other? Yes, there are differences between them. But they are slight. In general, both parties have had the same foreign and 'security" policies since WWII; both have been pretty close on domestic policy since the 70s.
Culturally, Romney is different from Obama: the former represents parts of the business elite and shares their characteristics; Obama represents the professional elite and shares theirs. I tend to prefer Obama as a person, because I'm turned off by rich speculators and I like intellectuals. It's also a good thing that Obama is the first African American president.
Choice on abortion is very important, but it's a Supreme Court matter, and the Court already has a right wing majority. They are held back from dumping Roe v. Wade mostly by circumstance (someone has to get a case through the court system so they can take it on), and possibly by a desire to avoid inflaming a difficult issue. Anyway, Obama's appointments have been mediocre at best.
So why worry about voting? in most states, there's no real reason to. In 13 states, your vote might make a difference, but that's largely nullified by the similarity of the parties.
P.S. Senator Imhofe of Oklahoma is not in any danger of losing his seat. His seat is not "in play". Not many are, in either House. Some aren't even contested.
Two things:
1. Have you seen on Yahoo the ad that comes up at the e-mail portal about investing in water as a commodity? This is the next step in the privatization wars. Vandana Shiva has spoken eloquently about this, and written about it in "Water Wars."
2. If you haven't yet read Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine," I recommend it for the big picture. She has accurately analyzed all that is currently going on in the US by looking at the patterns of how Globalization affects the rest of the developing world. Everything she talked about is now coming home to cannibalize the people of the U.S.---That is, after we have cannibalized the people of other countries first.
The comparison postulated in the piece between public schools and bottled water is quite apt in the case of Southern California. The water that flows into the home taps is so putrid that bottled water is considered a necessity in the region. Likewise, a formerly robust public education sector has been slowly squeezed to death by the usual suspects. The quality of public education in So. Cal. is truly hit or miss and quite dependent upon the robustness of local property tax revenues.
Why is it so hard to find a balance between capitalism and communism?
Direct democracy
hello there, eze. I want to follow up on a question you posed to me: What scholars of US Constitution, International Law, and US Civil Liberties consider Obama to be worse than Bush?
The following are the most salient, in my view:
Jonathan Turley: "President Obama not only retained the controversial Bush policies, he expanded on them."
Francis Boyle (University of Illinois, professor of law, one of the leading scholars of International Law and US Constitution): "Obama is taking us down"
Glen Greenwald: "the media’s role in giving this awful president the pass despite his solid track record in being the ‘worst’ and the group of foundation-puppies who have been secretly rewarding him for his ‘worst-ness’ "
Anthony Romero (ACLU) "disgusted with Obama" for adopting all of Bush's worst policies and then taking them further.
Comparing Presidents assumes that oligarchy puppets can be progressive. The best we can hope for is that one is not as regressive as another.
Direct Democracy would replace elections with a lottery system where every American citizen with the minimum of a high school education could qualify to stand for a lottery to select representatives of the American people in a parliamentary system. The members of this parliament would select the individual they found to be the best choice for Prime Minister. Obviously there would be a true cross section of the American people, as each group racial, sexual, and economic class would be represented according to the percentage of the population they represented. There would be no political parties as there would be no elections. Anyone with a minimum of a high school education who had reached the age of 21 wishing to run for the position of "representative" could stand for office. Selection would be the same way as we use now for lotteries. The wealthy would have perhaps no more than five members in parliament, there would be probably one lawyer, one doctor, perhaps four or five would be small businessmen. The rest would be ordinary working people. Obviously this sort of political change would permanently destroy the ability of the 1% to control things. We'd have national health insurance, a far more progressive tax system, and the corporations would have very little "say" in anything. It would no doubt require a true revolution to achieve this, since our "ruling class" is very much aware that their position can only be held as long as they control the political system.
Thank you.
It may have already been brought up (having not yet read all the comments), but we need to ask why Labor "placed $400 million in the Democrats' war chest in 2008." Isn't this a form of Stockholm Syndrome? Except of course, labor leaders have been indistinguishable from leaders in the Dem Party for about 40 years, and neither does doodly squat to advance the real interests of labor. They advance their own interests, which so happen to parallel those of owners, not the workers.
So members of the working class who are unionized (roughly 7% these days)are forced to pony up $400 million to pack the war chest of the Democratic Party, who then proceed to ignore all the real issues most besetting the working class. And this goes on election cycle after election cycle, because no third parties are permitted to enter the arena. Labor has nowhere else to turn but to their betrayers, and no one understands this better than that slimeball Rahm Emanuel. This is one aspect of the jail the sacred Duopoly has built.
It certainly does resemble the Stockholm Syndrome, Ephraim, but I think it's simpler than that.
Labor in the US is led by either masochists, the corrupt, the stupid, or all three. If they had the brains that God gave geese, they would have dumped the Dims long ago and built a party that would serve their interests, justice and the 99%. They could have allied with the Greens, worked to build the party.and today be a force in politics. They have money, which they use to back candidates that, when elected, stab them in the back. Union membership has steadily declined since the end of WWII despite unflagging union loyalty to the Dims. It would seem then that any honest, sensible person would question continued loyalty to the Dims, but Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, recently came out in support of Obama. Brilliant.
I can't say you're entirely wrong in your observations, but you do seem way too critical of labor, and, frankly, a bit glib. For one thing, you act as if all the options available to labor were as easy as pie, that all they'd have to do to succeed is get their message out, form a couple of new alliances, and everything would fall into place. If only.
Then you think continued union support of the Democrats is a good way to advance the cause of labor?
That's a very fair question you ask, and I'm not sure there's a simple answer. Obviously, the Dems have been a disappointment. But just as obviously, if the Repubs took over, labor would be in far worse shape under a Republican regime. As to forming a third party, that's a tall order. How many third parties have succeeded in the last 110 years? Answer: none.
"How many third parties have succeeded in the last 110 years? Answer: none."
This is not proof that it cannot be done, it is only proof that a concerted effort has not been made.
If the Repubs took over for a lengthy period there would be two possibilities: they would hammer passive labor's influence into the ground and disappear it completely -or- labor would get up on its hind legs and fight.
As Leezasky 8:07pm so aptly points out "Hard stuff is what [good] unions do." and that is precisely what US unions have not been doing, because the 1% always pushes labor to the red line but is very careful not to exceed it. After labor adjusts to its latest oppression, the red line is moved again and the workers are further squeezed. We can expect this process to continue under both Rs and Ds until union membership, now at around 7%, drops to zero. If labor fights and loses, the result will be the same. But if labor fights and wins, as it did in the early 20th century, society will be changed for the better.
The coffers of organized labor are the only substantial money that might be available to the 99%, and if it were spent wisely it would go a long way to bettering their lives, but it is instead wasted on the support of Dems who are in the business of supporting the 1%. How much better it would be for labor to exert its independence from the Dems and work with the Greens. Labor's example in doing so would likely convince others to follow.
Yes, it is terribly hard. How can you expect Labor do hard stuff?
I expect them to do hard stuff because courageous workers were ready to do hard stuff like sit in factories, fight back against goons, organize people of all backgrounds and many different languages, and strike even in wartime, even against FDR and Truman.
Hard stuff is what unions do. Starting a new political party with strong ties to Labor, a strong environmental agenda, a commitment to equality and decent wages for all (etc. etc.). Would take some hard strategic thinking, some money, some organizers, and a determination to build as broad a coalition as possible.
It's better than forking over money to the Democrats and hoping that they'll throw the unions a few crumbs once in a while. Labor has done this kind of thing in many countries. Why not America? Too "exceptional"?
"Hard stuff is what unions do." Gr8 observation. If it was only true. Thx 4 recognizing the rank-and-file role in class struggle. Too bad the bosses are able to supress it -- capitalist bosses and labor bosses.
You tell the truth, Leezasky. So much of the labor movement has become corrupt, expelled leftists from leadership, or gone under receivership by the FBI. For decades the older workers and the labor leadership have been throwing the newer workers under the bus, depriving them of wages and benefits while protecting the older. Now these young workers have grown up, and have little faith in the aims and effectiveness of unions, little vision of what they could do..
The labor movement has done nothing to stop industry from leaving, no laws, no support or solidarity for protecting workers in other countries so that industry will not leave. No challenges to tax breaks for companies that promise jobs and then do not deliver. No insistence that work be safe and communities and the environment be protected. They have supported every stupid war that drains the economy. Instead they should be insisting on a peace economy that creates more jobs than military weapons production, and on a major program for replacing fossil fuels with clean energy. They should withhold support from politicians that betray their interests, but instead continue like robots to send them money. Doing what is right woud be HARD and labor leadership is not into HARD.
It's almost as though labor has to start all over, in a new world of multinational corporations and complete abandonment by both parties. It has to organize from scratch as though it were Joe Hill and Mother Jones. Well almost, since there are laws on the books that theoretically protect the right to organize. Where are the brave ones who will do this? Right now I see people like some young girls in Bangladesh, and some activists here organizing in new job territory. Ironically, sloth is the deadly sin of the labor leadership.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0Sx5Yhx0Xs&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Jim Page singing Over My Dead Body
They say they will incorporate the world
Over my dead body
They got the money, we've got the will
And I'd rather be a match than a paper dollar bill
yes I would
They got the guns, all we are is flesh and blood
But we will multiple our number and drown them in our flood
Yes we will yes we will
They got the power that's what they say
But we will turn those tables take their power away
Yes we will
They say they will incorporate the world
Over my dead body
OCCUPY! The long hot summer......
There was a recent story about a man being deported via a private immigration company. He complained about stomach aches, but, the private company having no regs to worry about, did not have him checked by medical people. He died. One wonders how a private school system would treat a complaint by a child who says he or she is being bullied. Without regs, that complaint could easily be ignored--especially in a monopoly market. Could that child die? Maybe. Could he be traumatized over and over again? Likely.
The question I ask my fellow parents is: Do you want your child subjected to the "tender mercies" of a corporation focused only on the bottom line? As my brother said, children have "tender feelings." They are not even the age of a young Wall Street exec, say 27, and they could face ostracization and over-wrought penalties when they've barely learned to talk and walk, let alone socialize or focus on homework every night.
It is such a white man thing.
Please allow me to place this info in, too. Karen Davis wrote:
Privatization of Poultry Slaughter Inspection and Animal Advocacy Reflections on the Government’s Proposal to Privatize Poultry Slaughter Inspection and Whether Animal Advocates Should Support Efforts to Make Poultry Products Safer for Human Consumption
On March 7, 2012, Food & Water Watch posted an announcement that “privatized meat inspection experiment jeopardizes food safety.” Food & Water Watch explains in a new report that in the interest of budget-cutting, “more defective and unsanitary poultry contaminated with feathers, bile and feces could make its way to consumers if the USDA’s controversial pilot project for privatized inspection in poultry slaughter plants is expanded” from two dozen slaughter facilities since 1998 to all poultry slaughter facilities, as proposed by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack under the Obama Administration.
The proposed Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP)-based Inspection Models Project (HIMP), in addition to removing USDA inspectors from assembly lines and putting “inspection” in the hands of slaughter plant employees, could involve increasing assembly line speeds from around 91 birds a minute to 175 or even 200 birds a minute. Inspectors responsible for inspecting 35 birds per minute for bruises, sores, abscesses, feathers, and fecal contamination would have even less time for the job, down to couple of seconds per bird under the proposal.
Back when I started United Poultry Concerns, in 1990, the first letter-to-the editor I published in my fledgling capacity as president of UPC appeared in The Atlantic in February 1991. I wrote it in response to the magazine’s November 1990 report called “Dirty Chicken,” which began:
“If consumers knew of the filth in many poultry-processing plants and the likelihood that the chicken they buy is contaminated or diseased, many USDA inspectors say, they would think twice before buying it. Has a move toward industry self-inspection meant that a USDA stamp of approval is no longer reassuring?”
This 1990 “Dirty Chicken” report is as relevant today as it was 22 years ago. For example, we learn that:
After the Reagan Administration took office, in 1980, the speed at which poultry moved down the assembly line was allowed to more than double. In the 1970s, inspectors say, the line speed was about thirty-five birds a minute. If something caught an inspector’s eye, he could stop the line to take a closer look at a potentially diseased or contaminated bird. The maximum rate allowed is ninety-one birds a minute, and now many inspectors say that they can’t see much of anything. Even if an inspector is able to find a defect on a bird, the new “streamlined inspection system” (SIS), implemented in 1986, may not allow him to do much about it. If the violation involves what under SIS is considered an aesthetic rather than a public-health problem, the inspector must wait for plant employees to clean up the problem. Some inspectors say that many of the violations said to be aesthetic – such as oil, rust, feathers, and lesions on skin – are in fact dangerous (p. 42).
Back then, inspectors said that under the “streamlined inspection system (SIS) implemented in 1986, they easily passed birds through inspection that were “full of feathers, fecal contamination, blood clots, skin blisters, and abscesses.” Air sacculitis, a respiratory infection that produces pus around the lungs of virtually every bird people eat, was allowed to pass inspection, and blisters, abscesses and cancerous tumors were simply trimmed off birds sold for human consumption – just as they are now, in 2012.
And so on. You can go to: For the Food & Water Watch analysis of Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack’s proposal to privatize poultry inspection, go to http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/food/foodsafety/privatized-poultry-inspection-usdas-pilot-project-results/ AND: www.UPC-online.org
thank you...
John Robbins, as in Baskin-Robbins, found his involvement with the nation's food systems so troubling he wrote Diet for a New America, a riveting expose of the meat and dariy industries...
My Reagan counter quote:
Privatization isn't the solution to the problem; privatization is the problem.