Riding Herd Saying things that need to be said. November 15, 2021 • www.aaalivestock.com
Volume 63 • No. 11
Fact Or Fiction? LEE PITTS
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lease consider this little tidbit from the Organization for Competitive Markets: “Between 1980 and 2020, the retail sector’s share of the beef dollar has grown by about 65 percent, while the packer’s share increased by more than 70 percent. Over the same period, ranchers’ share of the beef dollar dropped by about 40 percent.” We’ve been sermonizing for 35 years that meatpackers were gaining too much pricing power through the use of contract production, just like they did with hogs and poultry. And we all know what happened to them; the pork industry lost 90 percent of its producers. While cattlemen were so engrossed in a game of checkers, the multinational monopolistic meatpackers and their packer-backers, the NCA/NCBA, were check-mating them in a more serious game of chess. In other words...cattlemen brought a pocket knife to a gun fight.
Too Little, Too Late
NEWSPAPER PRIORITY HANDLING
It was always theorized the meatpackers couldn’t use the same game plan with beef as they did with pork and poultry because cattle were different and had to spend the majority of their lives on the range. Whereas pork and poultry could be raised in virtual hothouses “from the cradle to the grave.” Now 35 years later cattlemen groups are wringing their hands over how to fix this mess, begging the packers to show us the contracts they’re using to control their captive supply and trying to force them into the open where they’d have to bid
Your fences need to be horse-high, pig-tight and bull-strong. for cattle in a transparent marketplace. During a period in American history when global supply chains are crippled and shortages are showing themselves on grocery store shelves, it seems obvious now that perhaps food was the one thing we should not have outsourced to foreign countries. Allowing the Chinese to buy our biggest pork packer and Brazilian firm JBS to buy their way into a commanding position in the American beef market were not exactly Phi Beta Kappa moves. And handing over millions of dollars in checkoff cash to a group that has become just another mouthpiece for the packers has to be dumber than the reporter who thought a “cattle guard” was a night watchman at a feedlot. So now everyone is trying to come up with some magic formula that will fix this hot mess. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but it could be too little,
too late.
Shame On Them I used to have so much respect for Texas A & M. I told people that if I had a son or daughter who wanted to study animal science I’d advise them they couldn’t do any better than Texas A & M. Now it looks like that august institution has joined the fraternity of teachers who haven’t been educating our kids but rather indoctrinating them. At far too many institutions of higher learning the universities have become nothing more than training programs for monopolistic packers and their contract feedlots. One of the reasons the BIG Four packers have so easily gained a strong advantage over ranchers is because the packers are using public money to pay for their research, promotion and training of future employees. Animal science departments across the country are turning out clones
Trifecta of “Ag Gag” Opinions BY TIFFANY LASHMET, TEXAS AGRICULTURE LAW BLOG
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ecently, there have been three appellate court opinions related to “ag gag” statutes in states around the country. Although they differ in detail, “ag gag” statutes essentially make it illegal to gain access to agricultural operations in order to photograph or record agricultural operations without consent. They target both unauthorized access such as trespass, but also frequently prohibit providing false information, such as on an employment application, to gain access to the facility. Here is a brief summary of those recent decisions. For a more detailed explanation of each, be sure to read the opinions linked below. Also, keep in mind, there may be petitions for certiorari filed with the United States Supreme Court in any of these cases.
Kansas Kansas has the oldest “ag gag” statute in the country. The “Farm Animal and Field Crop and Research Facilities Protection Act” states that entering an animal facility and taking photos or recording videos of the animal facility “without the effective consent of the owner and with the intent to damage the enterprise” is a criminal offense. Further, if the consent is obtained continued on page 2
to be plugged into the JBS, Cargill, Marfrig, and Tyson systems. The reason I’ve soured on Texas A & M is because after the House Ag Committee asked A & M to research our dysfunctional cattle market the professors there came up with a whitewash job that said the government should butt out and that proposals increasing government intervention will cost livestock producers billions of dollars. A & M issued a 180-page document titled “The U.S. Beef Supply Chain: Issues and Challenges,” that is now referred to as “The Book,” as if it is the holy bible on the beef business. According to the North American Meat Institute (a packer organization) these were some of the conclusions of the Texas A & M Study. Regarding Concentration: “While not necessarily a popular position, most economic research confirms that the benefits to cattle producers due to economies of size in packing largely offset the costs associated with any market power exerted by packers. Research indicates that there is market power, but its effect has been small.” On Fed Cattle Pricing: “Innovation via alternative marcontinued on page 2
People Who Eat Meat Report Lower Levels of Depression & Anxiety Than Vegans Do, A Recent Analysis Suggests INSIDER, BY AYLIN WOODWARD AND GABBY LANDSVERK
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meat-free diet is linked to higher levels of depression and anxiety than omnivorous eating, according to a recent analysis in the journal Food Science and Nutrition. That analysis examined 20 studies on meat consumption and mental health, and found an association between vegetarianism or veganism and poorer mental-health outcomes. “How many people have you met that are both happy and diet all the time?” Urska Dobersek, a psychologist at the University of Southern Indiana who co-authored the analysis, told Insider. “Probably very few — and there is a strong, scientific reason for that — restrictive diets make people unhealthy and unhappy in the long term.” continued on page 4
by LEE PITTS
Vote Early, Vote Often
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fter last year’s election I just don’t trust the process anymore. I first got suspicious when a network reporter said, “With 150 percent of the vote counted we can now project a winner.” I think we need a voting system that is more transparent and honest and instead of copying Venezuela’s election process I think we ought to adopt the arrangement employed in the wonderful northern California town of Burney. This community is famous for its fishing, the fact that one of their citizens once appeared on the Price Is Right, and part of the movie “Stand By Me” was filmed in its environs. I keep up on the local news because for decades the Northern California Traveler carried my column and when they ceased publishing, The Intermountain News picked up my column. I have also been to the area countless times and the skies were always blue, the air fresh, the water pure and the fish were biting. I always thought it would be a great place to live. Unfortunately for me when I looked in the classifieds the only jobs available seemed to be for “strip and chain pullers” and I have no idea what they are, let alone how to do it. Years ago, I saved a clipping from the paper that detailed how Burney elected their honorary mayor and I thought enough of it to save it for several years. In Burney’s honorary mayoral election you can vote as many times and as often as you want. The catch is that every vote costs a dollar. Simply put, the election is more like an auction with the prize going to whoever collects the most cash. If we’re being honest, it’s very much like the way we run our elections now only Burney gets rid of the middleman...the lobbyists. The election is sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce and the money raised goes to charity. The winner gets to designate 50 percent of what they collect to their favorite charity like Boy Scout Troop #38, the local 4-H club, Make A Wish, an effort to “Bring Back the Swings” to the park or to paint a mural on the wall of a local building. The person placing second gets to do-
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