A few decades ago, I dated a guy (VERY briefly) who did state inspections at chicken farms. In a way, it made dating difficult because he refused to eat chicken and would tell me stories of why.
I've also gotten stuck driving distances behind chicken trucks and I can tell you, it's fairly disgusting.
So the most recent episode of the John Oliver (HBO) show featured a story about some of the politics of chicken farming and it was also very disturbing.
There are some real issues with the chicken farming companies in the US.
Did anyone else see it?
Originally Posted by ElisabethWhispers
The episode made my blood boil.
There was a previous show (maybe on Oliver) about the cruel practices of chicken farming - not enough room to stand, no sunlight, steroids, enormous breasts that makes them unable to walk.
This episode, though, was about the abusive practices of the four major poultry sellers and how they treat the farmers who raise their chickens.
I don't know how the system came about, but the sellers (Tyson, etc.) provides the baby chicks by the 100s of thousands to the farmers and basically forces them to run the farms a certain way (i.e., no sunshine, no room to walk, etc.) and forces them to buy whatever new equipment the seller deems necessary. Of course, the farmer has to borrow to buy the equipment, but doesn't get any more money from the chicken sellers.
Then, the big sellers rate the farmers against each other. Ones who produce the biggest chickens the quickest get bigger bonuses, the ones who produce smaller chickens actually get negative bonuses. How the fuck does that happen?
The farmers are on the edge of bankruptcy and some have committed suicide because that got bad grades from the big poultry companies.
The callousness of the representatives of the poultry companies was appalling.
We are buying chickens raised by the least ethical methods possible.
This is an industry that is ripe for regulation. Congress should break up the big poultry companies and/or outlaw most of these practices.
Eliminate the sheds and mandate a certain number of square feet per bird. Put the farmers in charge of raising the birds themselves right from eggs. The big poultry companies should only buy the output of the farmers, not mandate the inputs. And prices should be FIXED in advance, not subject to some grading system worked out after the fact by the agribusinesses.
If we pay more for chicken and eat less of it, so be it.
We don't need McNuggets that badly.
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