<Buenos Aires is not in Kerala, and the endless squeals of self-hating
leftists get boring as hell.>
Carrol

Carrol, I have been encouraged not to engage in a flame war.       So
changing the subject, here is yet another commentary provoked by the
book ..Fast Food Nation..      I hope that it is of interest.

Comradely, Tony
_________________________________

FEATURE-Author finds new meat 'Jungle' in High Plains 12 Feb 2001 15:05
By Timothy Gardner

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Jurgis Rudkus has walked off the pages of Upton
Sinclair's classic 1906 novel "The Jungle" and reemerged as a Mexican
migrant laborer drifting from factory to factory in rural Nebraska and
Colorado.

Rudkus, a Lithuanian immigrant meatpacker toiling in Chicago stockyards,
was the hero of Sinclair's novel. The writer's portrayal of him sweeping
up guts from the kill room floor and shoveling pulverized bone for
fertilizer so disturbed President Theodore Roosevelt that he ordered an
independent investigation, which led to the passage of the Pure Food and
Drug Act of 1906.

In the 1930s, unionization swept through the meatpacking industry, and
for decades meat jobs were well paid, came with health insurance and led
to stable communities. But that has all changed, according to Eric
Schlosser, author of "Fast Food Nation," published by Houghton Mifflin.
The industry has consolidated and moved its factories from the city to
the U.S. High Plains. In the late 1970s, the top four beef companies
controlled about 20 percent of the market; now they control more than 80
percent, Schlosser said. A return to poor working conditions in this
period is not only bad for laborers but ultimately dangerous to
consumers, he added.

In 1995, Schlosser, an Atlantic Monthly correspondent, wrote a story
about Latin American migrant strawberry laborers in California. Rolling
Stone magazine editors read it and asked him to write about fast food in
the United States, leading to his new book, which spent six week under
review in Houghton Mifflin's legal department before publication. On
arriving in meatpacking towns, Schlosser would meet with migrant workers
from Mexico and Guatemala. Many of them were illiterate in English or
Spanish, which made it hard for them to work together or organize to
make conditions better, he said. "In Lexington, Nebraska, this Norman
Rockwell-esque town, I met Guatemalan Indians who barely spoke Spanish,"
he said. Many meatworkers are lured to the United States from Mexico by
Spanish radio advertisements paid for by U.S. meat companies, which bus
the workers to factories in the rural United States.

RECRUITING ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS?
"I'm not going to say they deliberately recruit illegal immigrant labor,
but they recruit immigrant labor," Schlosser said. In one instance
documented by local media, a beef company bused workers from the Mexican
border to a Minneapolis homeless shelter.

Meatpacking now employs just under 150,000 people, and the Immigration
and Naturalization Services estimates one quarter of the workers in
Nebraska and Iowa are illegal immigrants.

Since migrant workers, legal or not, rarely spend more than a year in
one factory, most slaughterhouse workers are without health insurance.
They also accept lower wages.

"We've gone backward," Schlosser said. "The wages in one Greeley,
Colorado, plant now are 30 to 40 percent lower than when the plant
opened in 1961. That's not supposed to happen." He read trade journals
and federal hearings to investigate insurance practices. In a 1994
article praising beef companies for minimizing insurance costs, one
executive confirmed his firm's slaughterhouses had a 100 percent annual
turnover.

Schlosser interviewed workers, former supervisors and nurses, and
physicians who treated worker's injuries. They told him workers were
pressured to hide injuries, which cut their companies' insurance
burdens.

"If the injury seems more serious, a Mexican worker is often given the
opportunity to return home for a while, to recuperate there, then come
back to his or her slaughterhouse job in the United States," he wrote.
Court documents show several of the largest companies kept two sets of
injury records, one for themselves and one for the U.S. Occupational
Safety and Health Administration.

DANGER FOR WORKERS CAN MAKE MEALS DANGEROUS Meatpacking is the most
dangerous job in America. In 1998, the latest available statistics, at
least 29.3 percent of meatworkers suffered injury or illness, compared
to 9.7 percent for the rest of manufacturing, the Labor Department
reported. Unlike the chicken processing industry, automation in beef
packing plants is limited because cattle come in all shapes and sizes
and the knife remains the most important tool.

Companies are under enormous pressure to speed up their lines, which can
lead to injuries and dangerous food, Schlosser wrote. "The three meat
packing giants -- ConAgra, IBP and Excel (the meat division of Cargill
Inc.) -- try to increase their earnings by maximizing the volume of
production at each plant."

A former meat factory nurse told Schlosser: "I could always tell the
line speed by the number of people with lacerations coming into my
office."

Speeding up lines can also mean workers have no time to clean or sharpen
their knives, which can lead to repetitive stress injuries and,
ultimately, dirty food. These conditions have already led to health
risks, particularly in eating hamburger, Schlosser writes, because
ground beef is more exposed to dirty working environments than meat
chops are.

Since fast food chains, a $110 billion business, buy most of the
country's beef, people who eat fast food are most at risk, said
Schlosser, who ate at fast food chains during his travels while writing
the book and still eats beef, but not hamburgers. "I'm not coming at
this as a radical vegetarian," he said. Cattle intestines often carry
dangerous pathogens such as E. coli and are supposed to be kept away
from meat, but faster lines can lead to more intestinal spillage onto
meat, he said.

Slaughterhouse workers told him they looked forward to packing beef
bound for the European Union, because companies slowed the lines then so
the meat would pass stricter EU inspections.

Schlosser sees stronger meatpacking unions as one possible solution.
"There's no question that in some industries unions have become
corrupted and a source of inefficiency and operate more like organized
crime than a workers' rights group," he said. "But if there was ever an
industry in this country that needed more unions, it's this one." Last
summer, McDonald's fast food chain announced a strict policy on how its
suppliers treat live chickens in a campaign called "Be Kind to Hens" --
a response to protests from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

"McDonald's has instituted some strict rules for its suppliers on how
livestock should be treated," Schlosser said, "but what they really need
to do is institute strict rules for their suppliers on how human beings
should be treated." ( )

COPYRIGHT: © 2000 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.










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