So I just caught on the news ticker on my
local 24-hour news channel that new legislation in the states requiring foreign
beef and pork to be labelled with where the animal was born, where it was raised, and where it was slaughtered, basically a chain of custody issue that really screws with the whole supermassive-scale slaughter and/or meat processing plant idea (an example of said would be XL Foods, at the centre of last year's international problems with tainted beef). I would like to know what this means to
cattle people, from the perspective of people who are closer to it than I am.
My question is,
should we be rejoicing? My reasoning for thinking we might is that it does seem to lead in to the kind of responsible chain-of-custody system that lends itself to knowing not just what plant and what batch, but what farm and what animal your meat is coming from. I could easily envision a system that makes use of QR codes printed on labels that would allow one, on one's smartphone in the store, to access live
video feed of the farm the cow was born and/or raised on, so that you could bypass the steak from the farm where they stand in their own shit and opt for the steak from the operation where there needs to be a roaming feed because they're pastured and the
shelter moves too.
And my idiot government's threatening retaliation (?) because cheap and dirty is just fine with the current administration. I'm not getting political, it's really the agrobusiness lobby, and it's the same whoever's at the helm. I realise that for business-as-usual, this is a shit move, and is essentially calling the state of Canadian meat processing inferior to American, which is ridiculous, as we use identical processes with no less supervision than south of the border, and I'd be surprised if adherence to set parameters was any better.
So comments? Criticism? Does anyone know what the name of the legislation is?
-CK
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein