Frogs Only Give You Frog Legs
By Trent Loos
Recently I attended the Waterkeeper Alliance’s “Fear
a Minute” conference. The Waterkeeper’s whole premise for
existence is to improve the waterways of the country. But the theme
of this annual rally seemed to be presenting any topic that might instill
fear in the minds of consumers. Animal rights issues had plenty
of time on the program, including three presenters from the UK. Now
there is a prototype we should adopt when it comes to animal laws! You
need to know that Patty Lovera, from the Public Citizen group, presented
information about a deadly concept - making meat safer.
It reminded me of the whole bumper sticker approach to
creating consumer anxiety. She identified the things that are happening
in the food business and then made little statements poking fun of science
in action. The one that sent my head spinning was her perception that
“the implementation of HAACP is an industry excuse to limit inspectors.”
So why is it that we have fewer and bigger packers? Concentration has
increased sharply in recent years. The four largest packers handled
82% of the cattle harvest in 1994 compared to 72% in 1990 and only 36%
in 1980. It seems that the cost of food safety compliance is forcing
many smaller packers out of business. Food-borne illnesses are predominately
a handling issue yet some seem to believe you can mandate consumers
to wash their cutting boards or even their hands!
According to Ms. Lovera, “manure from cattle has
e-coli.” She made it sound like some rare plague that you can
only catch if you eat beef instead of an organism that is present in
every human body. But there is the hidden anti-meat agenda slipping
a little subliminal message in there.
In her criticism of the USDA, Lovera stated that “they
have created so much of this irradiated beef that now we let them sell
to it the school lunch program”. Her statement implied that
since nobody else wants irradiated beef, we will dump it on the school
children. Never once was irradiation considered an important means of
ensuring food safety. If the procedure kills 99% of all bacteria, wouldn’t
it be a good idea to provide the safest food to our children that technology
will allow?
Lovera suggested that “the farm to fork” concept
is one of the most dangerous strategies this industry has come up with.
I find this statement fascinating because while she is busy poking holes
at the concept, she is probably shopping at a farmers market. I guess
it is fair to say that she may want to know the guy who raised her tomato
but when it comes to meat, ignorance is her choice.
Her closing jab was that “irradiating beef is similar
to painting a house when the foundation is crumbling.” I’m
not sure what part of the beef industry is on such shaky ground because
consumption is clearly on the rise. The U.S. is not only consuming more
beef annually but more total meat protein than ever before. While many
in the meat industry ignore people like this wishing them away, I recognize
all the people like her are a problem only if they are not held accountable.
Whether it is the truth or not, when we hear something enough times,
we begin to believe it. As consumers continue to be bombarded by messages
like these, they will lose trust in the safety of their food supply
and those who produce it.
Consequently, I challenge everyone in this industry to
confront the Patty Loveras of the world as you hear them manufacturing
and propagating these tales. If you don’t believe that their lies
uncontested will become “truth” just remember that, contrary
to what you heard when you were a kid, you don’t get warts from
a frog!
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