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LMD June 2024

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Riding Herd Saying things that need to be said. June 15, 2024 • www.aaalivestock.com

Volume 66 • No. 6

by LEE PITTS

Consider The Possibilities The LEE PITTS

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or nearly 20 years we’ve been speaking out against USDA’s efforts to force you to put electronic ear tags in all your cattle and most of the time it felt like we were just tilting at windmills. Like other battles we’ve fought it looks like we’ve lost another one because on April 26 the USDA came out with their final rule mandating that beginning six months from now you’ll have to put electronic ear tags in your cattle if you intend to ship them to another state. The USDA insists it’s not mandatory but once again, they are being deceitful when they say you don’t have to use the tags as long as you don’t move your cattle across state lines. Who can tell when you brand your calves or work your cows where their eventual destination will be? Take my home state, California, for example. Because we don’t have a thriving feedlot sector and now virtually only one major cow killer you’d have to be an idiot not to put EID tags in all your cattle and limit the number of buyers on your cattle to only those in your state. Most of our California calves end up in trucks headed for midwest feedlots. And if you don’t put tags in your cows, it means you’ll

exclude out-of-state buyers and have only one bidder for them when they go to slaughter. The USDA says it is taking such action for animal disease trace back and to maintain foreign markets for beef but once again they aren’t being truthful. Over and over, they have insisted we simply must have the EID to be able to trace back a disease outbreak to the responsible culprit but this is hogwash. According to R-CALF, “The

or high-cost EIDs) in the U.S. cattle herd.” Consider this if you will: We know that 40 percent to 45 percent of all beef consumed in America is ground beef which is mixed in huge batches that theoretically could have beef in it from two dozen countries. Tell me, how in the world are they going to trace back a disease in this instance to a single cow? The USDA won’t even demand that there be mandatory country of origin labeling (mCOOL) for heaven’s “I ain’t afraid to love a sake so at man. I ain’t afraid to least they’d have some shoot him either.” idea where to look to – Annie Oakley trace back a disease. So on one hand, final rule will not subject any how can the USDA be so conmore cattle to EID than are cerned that they make you use currently subject to the ‘flexible electronic ear tags in all your solution,’ which enables trace- cattle to trace back a disease backs in less than one hour. This while at the same time they immeans the final rule does noth- port beef from two dozen couning at all to expand the coverage tries without mCOOL or have of official identification devices any idea if it is diseased or not? (either low-cost nonelectronic

Who’s Your Daddy? Of all the national livestock organizations, R-CALF is the only one that has taken a leading role in fighting against electronic ID. Their CEO, Bill Bullard, said in response to the USDA’s announcement that EID will begin in six months. “The USDA has slapped independent cattle producers, who continued on page 2

Tell the World, Young Adults the Dutch Tractor Losing the Climate Protests and Faith in the US Their War on Net ood news: despite 2023 being the Zero Won hottest year since Homo Erectus, BY JOANNE NOVA

BY JOANNE NOVA

S NEWSPAPER PRIORITY HANDLING

And remember, this is on 40-45 percent of the beef we eat. Keep in mind that only 11 percent of the beef produced in the U.S. is exported and according to R-CALF, “In 2023, the U.S. did not produce enough beef to meet domestic beef consumption, though it exported 3 billion pounds of beef representing only 11 percent of the 27 billion pounds of beef produced in the United States. Thus, the final rule imposes an EID mandate on 100 percent of our nation’s 622,000 remaining beef cattle producers for the benefit of the small minority of beef cattle producers whose cattle produce beef that is actually exported.”

ix months after Geert Wilders won the Dutch election, he has finally negotiated an agreement with a few minor parties to form government, and the unthinkable has happened. The centre-of-the-road conservatives (referred to as “far-right extremists”) got elected to unwind the worst excesses of the totalitarian left. Henceforth, the forced farm reclamations will stop, mandated heat pumps are out, electric car subsidies are going, and, in a brave scientific move, no one will be culling livestock to change the weather. The Netherlands won’t have to pursue stronger environmental policies than the rest of the EU, so their leaders can show off at cocktail parties and get jobs with the UN. The Netherlands will still be tied to crazy EU rules, but those elections are coming next month. And official government ministers are so much harder to ignore in EU negotiations. The landscape has changed. The Telegraph in the UK gets the message: The Tories should go to war on Net Zero. This applies everywhere else, too. Tony Abbott didn’t win a 90-seat landslide victory in Australia by trying to do half a carbon tax. He won because he said he would Axe the Tax. (And Stop the Boats.) The political candidate who goes to war on continued on page 3

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there was a 17 percent fall in the number of 18 to 34-year-olds who call “Climate change” a very serious problem. Even though there were hottest-ever-headlines month after month, the punters lost the faith. No one is cracking champagne because 50 percent of young adults still tell pollsters they think it is a “very serious problem.” But when all is said and done, at least half the generation that was drip-fed the dogma since kindergarten can not only see through the catastrophism, but they are brave enough to tell a pollster that, too. For the most part, after a few hot El Nino years, “climate fear” is back where it was in 2016 or so. Most people still want the government to solve the weather with someone else’s money. But where younger people were once much more enthusiastic about a Big Government fix than older people were, now that gap is almost closed. What was a 21 percent difference between those age groups is now only 2 percent. That’s a whopping fall in faith in the government to do something useful, or probably, a recognition that whatever the government does will cost too much. Looks like young adults are learning to be cynical adults faster? The Monmouth University group polled 804 people in late April: The percentage of Americans between the ages of 18 and 34 who see climate change as a continued on page 4

Middle Man

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was born at the wrong time, but then my timing has always been off. At the tender age of 21 I was hired as a field editor for a livestock weekly and there were eight of us all together. Every other man was at least 20 years older than me and most were 30 years older. The editor, publisher and owner were also at least 30 years older so everything that went wrong was obviously my fault. When I started work in 1973 the price of feeder calves was 70 to 80 cents a pound and within my first year prices for the same weight and age of cattle dropped to 30 cents per pound! Naturally, this was all my fault too. Due to my youth my fellow field editors thought they had the right to boss me around. One of them, who I thought was my friend, came to me and said that one of his contacts had asked him to find 40 Polled Hereford heifers to be shipped to Japan but there was one condition: they had to come from Arizona, which just happened to be part of my territory. They had to come from a desert environment because cattle from California tested positive for blue tongue even though they didn’t have the disease. My friend said that this would be a big feather in my cap and the grateful breeders would probably buy a big thank you ad on which I’d get a commission. Plus, I’d get to write a fascinating story. So I paid all my expenses, motel, gas, and food and crawled all over Arizona to find six people in the whole state who had Polled Herefords for sale. After weeks of work I finally found 45 head of Polled heifers and arranged for them all to be blood tested, gathered up at one central location to be loaded on a truck and hauled to the port of Oakland, California. There they were inspected by Japanese health officials who found a wart on one heifer the size of a pencil eraser and they grounded her. I was not privy to the selling price. All that was handled by my fellow field editor who I sensed was making money off my hard work. This was all part of the massive sale of Polled Here-

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