America's Meat Shortage Is Self-Inflicted and Fixable
How can it be that with so much cattle in America, we sometimes can't buy meat?

How can it be that with so much cattle in America, we sometimes can't buy meat?
At the beginning of the pandemic, Costco, Wegmans, and Kroger limited purchases of beef. Hundreds of Wendy's outlets ran out of hamburgers.
"How the hell can this be?" says Rep. Thomas Massie (R–Ky.) in my new video. "They (Wendy's) were out of hamburger, yet you could see cattle from the drive-thru!"
It happens because of stupid government rules.
Massie owns a small farm in Kentucky. "I'd rather deal with cattle than congressmen," he jokes. "At least (cattle) exhibit learned behavior."
But politicians often don't.
"You're born with the right to eat what you want," says Massie. "Why is the government getting in the middle and saying, 'No, you can't buy that'?"
"To keep you safe," I push back.
"They're not keeping you safe," Massie responds. "They're keeping you away from good, healthy food."
American meat regulation began after activist Upton Sinclair worked undercover at a meatpacking plant and then wrote the book The Jungle. It became a huge bestseller. Sinclair's goal was to advance socialism. But his book became famous for exposing unsanitary conditions, like rat infestations and rotting meat carcasses, at packing plants.
The outcry over that led Congress in 1906 to declare that any meat sold must get a stamp of approval from the United States Department of Agriculture.
What did the inspection entail? An absurd technique called "poke and sniff." To find tainted meat, federal bureaucrats stuck little spikes into carcasses and then smelled the spikes.
If they smelled something spoiled, they ordered that meat discarded.
The process was ridiculous. The inspectors used the same spikes over and over, plunging them into multiple animals. Poking and sniffing sometimes made things worse by spreading disease from one carcass to the next.
Of course, governments often do ridiculous things, and regulators, once they start doing them, keep doing them. The feds didn't stop "poke and sniff" until the late 1990s.
Today, USDA inspectors do a better job. They test for bacteria. But the inspection process is so cumbersome and expensive, many small companies can't afford it.
The result, complained President Joe Biden recently, is too much market concentration: "Four big corporations control more than half the markets in beef, pork, and poultry!"
His remedy, sadly, is to give your tax money to some smaller meatpackers.
Of course, such subsidies and regulations increase market concentration.
"The bigger the government, the bigger the corporations," Massie points out. "People who don't like big corporations haven't figured that out."
During the beginning of the pandemic, it was that market concentration that caused meat shortages when a few big meat processing plants shut down due to COVID infections.
"We made our food supply brittle," says Massie. "One small disruption throws the whole thing off."
When the processors shut down, some ranchers who couldn't get to a federally approved slaughterhouse ended up killing their own animals. If only they'd been able to go to a local processor.
Massie takes his cattle to one. There, he can see the conditions himself. His local slaughterhouse meets state inspection standards.
But since it is not USDA-certified, Massie and other ranchers who have their cattle processed there may not sell you a steak. He can, however, give it to you or eat it himself. But he may not sell it.
To fix that, Massie proposes a new law: the PRIME Act, which would let farmers sell meat processed by state-approved slaughterhouses, with no federal meddling.
"You're self-dealing," I tell him. "Just trying to help yourself."
"I've got 50 cattle," he replies. "This is the most inefficient self-dealing any politician has ever engaged in."
Massie says he's doing it because Americans ought to have a right to eat whatever we want to buy.
"It boggles my mind why Washington, D.C., needs to be involved in a transaction between me … and a customer who's my neighbor."
COPYRIGHT 2022 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.
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I remember when I first heard of "poke and sniff". It was early days, but still, doctors and nurses had learned to wash up before poking around after they killed President Garfield in 1881. Why would anyone think it didn't apply to meat inspectors too? And to keep on doing that until the 1990s. Well, typical government security theater.
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A big problem I see here is how difficult it is to set up a slaughter house. It basically precludes many smaller ranches from selling in an open way.
Feature, not a bug.
It's basically regulatory capture. Either you're a ginormous conglomerate so you can amortize the cost of the inspectors over a huge number of animals processed, or you just can't compete as it will impact your price.
So you can't set up a smaller meatpacker and keep up.
There's a small ranch near me that sells direct. I don't think they can sell to stores for resale.
(Bringhurst Meat, if you're in south NJ. Not cheap, but good quality).
It's not that hard to set up a slaughterhouse. You can get a deer carcass processed in any of thousands of small operations all over the US. In fact, many of the small family ranches do exactly that for their own food. Okay, you'd have to add the step of killing the animal but that's not actually all that hard.
The article is right - the obstacles are all government regulation, not the economics of meat processing.
Also, since this question is inspired by me trying to buy a whole cow and pig, anyone have chest freezer recommendations? Just a garage one to hold a variety of dead animals and frozen pizzas I purchase.
The best kind of freezer will hold more than one dead body.
Serially, or in parallel? Asking for an EE friend.
Parallel killers need parallel freezers for their parallel victims, serial killers need serial freezers their serial victims, and cereal killers need cereal freezers their cereal victims!
(I was once the victim of a cereal girl, but not for long. I wised up at last!)
Related digression then...
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/love-language-youre-more-likely-170236564.html “If This Is Your Love Language, You're More Likely to Divorce”… Couples treasure the following items, or express their love in the following ways, says this article: ‘1) gifts (presents), ‘2) quality time together, ‘3) acts of service (AKA work… Do the dishes already!), ‘4) words; I love you, etc., ‘5) physical touch (affection).
Beware of #1!!! Materialism, gifts, status symbols, conspicuous consumption!..Designer this and designer that! “I spent more money on you than you spent on me!” A quick way to fights, broken relationships, and divorces! Achtung, Baby!
If your maybe-Baby is this way, then, until you can find one who is NOT this way (to be bribed, materialistically, into a relationship with you as Sugar Daddy or Sugar Mommy), then keep in mind some Ancient Wisdom:
Sugar is sweet,
And so is honey,
Beat your meat,
And save your money!
(And save the Purity of Your Essence, and your Precious Bodily Fluids, for some future Babe who is less-so, all about materialism).
Blended
"EE?". Is that the sound that follows when he catches you in the shower? 🙂
That's the cup size of his moobs.
I didn't know Norman Bates was that big. 🙂
You are aware that you don't even have to buy the freezer or even *a* freezer, right? They aren't available everywhere, but you could rent space in a meat locker. Lots of meat packing places rent storage.
Unless I were going to open a restaurant, yeah, I would buy the cheapest freezer I could. Am I mistaken in thinking you're in AZ? Maybe a different story there in that you wouldn't want to go bargain basement, but personally, in N. IL, my freezer isn't even on 3-6 mos. out of the year.
He should make friends with local goodwill and other resale stores.
They get freezers not infrequently that can be had for 40 or 50 bucks.
You could build a mini-smoke house and jerk your meat. No electricity required, but as Lazarus Long prescribed with writing, do it in private and wash your hands afterwards. 😉
Doing this to good cuts of meat is just awful...like when the Obama admin was having people murder good muscle cars back in the '10s.
To each their own taste, but I like Jerky and so did both the Indians and the Cowboys and Pioneers who got it from the Indians. And Jerky pieces do reconstitute in water for soup or stew.
Oh, smoked, salt-cured or honey-cured country ham is simply wonderful with eggs and made into Redeye Gravy for grits! 🙂
There is no needed recommendation for a chest freezer. Get a cheap one, and fill it with meat. Keep it sheltered from the elements, and do everything you can to ensure that it isn't accidentally slightly propped open. If there is one feature that is great, it is a high temp or even no power alarm. Since these often go in a basement or garage, the louder the better.
If you are going to own a Chest Freezer, the key is spring cleaning. You are going to fill that fucker up, and if you don't regularly rotate things, you will be finding 5 year old hotdogs in the bottom corner.
Suggestion: get something that will warn you if it loses power. This one is good if your WiFi is on a battery backup; sends texts and email: https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B089QQNKJL/reasonmagazinea-20/
I have a simpler cheaper one on the house circuit which merely beeps and flashes a light when power is out, but I had it in the house so I could see and hear it, and the basement freezer circuit breaker tripped and I didn't find out until 3 days later. $4-500 of frozen meat, pies, etc all turned to putrid soup.
"Also, since this question is inspired by me trying to buy a whole cow and pig, anyone have chest freezer recommendations?"
Previously frozen meat ain't on the table; beef turns grainy, like eating muddy sand. Pork, not far off. Fish? It is to laugh.
For some reason, turkey does just fine.
Hey Mr. Massie, why not go the way of "sweet cider" (apple juice, unfermented)? you can sell if raw, so long as it's labelled as such (or "not pasteurized"). Do the same with meat, tell the USDA to allow meat to be sold as "uninspected", and let the buyers decide (very quickly, I'm sure), what is good and what is not.
Let the USDA's role be advisory, not regulatory.
Yeah, I didn't exactly want to criticize Massie or Stoss, but a link to the text of the bill would be nice. Federation is a decent step but there's lots of other ideas that could stand to be thrown against the wall.
How can you have an economy when you can't eat your meat?
You! Yes, you, behind the butcher shop, stand still, laddy!
You could build a mini-smoke house and jerk your meat. No electricity required, but as Lazarus Long prescribed with writing, do it in private and wash your hands afterwards. https://basketball-stars.co/
I believe he also pointed out that it's lonely.
True. But as 60's comedian Brother Dave Gardner pointed out, some of the best times you ever had in your life there wasn't nary a word spake. 😉
Hey! That's my line!...But not my link.
Thomas Massie is VERY respectable...
The USFDA is UN-Constitutional ( IS Socialism as stated )
"The bigger the government, the bigger the corp monopolizing."
so well understood by Massie.. Free-markets cannot monopolize unfairly due to competition; the only entity that eliminates that is Gov-Gun threats (i.e. FORCE).