An opinion piece a few weeks ago in the Des Moines Register, by a Register staff writer, discussed in considerable detail the problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria resulting from indiscriminant feeding of antibiotics to livestock. The article was completely silent on the fact that factory farms are the worst over-users of antibiotics. The Lexington, Kentucky Herald-Leader, in the editorial below, does a much better job on this issue, and others, related to factory farming Tom > Lexington Herald-Leader > EDITORIAL: the real price of chicken > > December 28, 2001, Friday, BC cycle > > Lexington Herald-Leader > > No one who's watched the poultry industry in Kentucky can be shocked that > Tyson Foods Inc. stands accused of smuggling illegal immigrants > into this country. > > If anything is shocking, it's how easily such outrages are rationalized as > long as food is cheap. > > One advantage Americans enjoy over much of the world is supermarkets > brimming with low-cost food. When we stop to calculate the real cost, > though, our cheap food may not be such a bargain. > > Poultry is a good example. > > In Kentucky, taxpayers underwrite the industry through tax breaks and > government subsidies. The industry also shifts part of its financial risk > onto contract farmers. > > Environmental risks are borne by the public, though the Patton > administration is trying to make the industry protect water from manure > pollution. > > Health risks? The public gets stuck again. The routine feeding of > antibiotic drugs to factory-farm animals is breeding drug-resistant > microbes. This, in turn, weakens the effectiveness of lifesaving drugs in > humans. > > The poultry and livestock industries benefit from cheap grain that costs > taxpayers billions in farm subsidies that spur overproduction. > > The industry's safety shortcuts are borne by its low-paid, under-trained > work force. Remember the two Kentuckians who died in a vat of chicken > guts at a Tyson plant two years ago? > > Finally, the industry, which once employed well-paid union members, has > come to rely on poor Central Americans, who have few or no legal > rights in this country, to keep its production lines running. > > Earlier this month a federal grand jury in Tennessee issued an indictment > alleging Tyson officials obtained false documents for workers who were > not supposed to be in the United States and that the practice was tolerated > to meet production goals and cut costs. Cheap food, remember? > > The 36-count indictment, naming two corporate executives and four former > managers, was based on a 2 1/2-year undercover investigation. > Fifteen Tyson plants, including one in Henderson County, are implicated. > > Tyson, the nation's largest meat processor, disputes the charges. The > company says an internal investigation led to the firing of four managers > and administrative leave for two others and that the wrongdoers were acting > outside company policy. > > No matter how high the blame goes up Tyson's corporate ladder, it's > undisputed that meat processors rely on poor immigrants working for > poverty wages. > > Cagle's-Keystone, which got tax breaks and grants through Kentucky's rural > empowerment zone, employed illegal immigrants, including underage > Mexicans in its Clinton County plant. In other words, children who speak > little or no English were working under conditions dangerous even for > adults. > > So, the next time you're waiting in line to pay for a package of chicken > breasts, don't forget the price to the environment, public health, > taxpayers, agriculture policy, worker safety and U.S. border security. > > Bon appetit. > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: [log in to unmask]