- Jan 2016
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www.pbs.org www.pbs.org
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Then they cut wages, they cut benefits, broke unions. And now it has one of the highest turnover rates of any industrial job.
Just like every other job, they lowered their pay,gave them benefits and basically didnt care about their workers.
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This essentially injects a metal bolt. It's about the size and length of a thick pencil into its brain, right between the eyes, and that should render the animal brain dead. At that point, chains will be attached to his rear legs. He will be lifted up by the chains. The chains are attached to an overhead trolley, and then he will be bled. Another person in another station will stick a long knife in and cut his aorta and bleed the animal. And then he will be completely dead.
This is how it works. I don' think its right honestly but it is how we get our food so,i have to deal with it.
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This essentially injects a metal bolt. It's about the size and length of a thick pencil into its brain, right between the eyes, and that should render the animal brain dead. At that point, chains will be attached to his rear legs. He will be lifted up by the chains. The chains are attached to an overhead trolley, and then he will be bled. Another person in another station will stick a long knife in and cut his aorta and bleed the animal. And then he will be completely dead.
This is how it works. I don' think its right honestly but it is how we get our food so,i have to deal with it.
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www.foodpolitics.com www.foodpolitics.com
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If enough people complain about this problem, the USDA might get moving on it. The guidelines are a good first step.
People should have been complaining about the issue years ago.
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The USDA licenses so few slaughterhouses, and the rules for establishing them are so onerous, that humanely raised (if that is the correct term) animals have to be trucked hundreds of miles to considerably less humane commercial facilities to be killed (see added note below). Furthermore, appointments for slaughter must be made many months or years in advance — whether the animals are ready or not.
Why would the USDA not make it a point to licenses slaughterhouses? Why would anyone want to go through the process of booking a place for their animals to be slaughtered in a bad place?
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www.fao.org www.fao.org
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Moreover, there is also the high risk of contamination with food poisoning micro-organisms, such as Salmonella and enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), which should be taken very seriously. EHEC infections of humans can occur with relatively low bacterial numbers of the relevant type of E. coli.
So basically with the different slaughter houses if the dint do their job correctly this can happen.
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Figs. 2 and 3 show cattle slaughtering entirely carried out on the ground, in many cases followed by carcass splitting, cutting and deboning on the same contaminated floor area. Bovine slaughtering on the floor is a major source of meat contamination.
It says that putting a carcass on the floor while working on it is one of the major reasons why meat get contaminated. and what are they doing?
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it is still fact that the bulk of the meat sold within many APHCA-member countries most likely originates from unhygienic slaughtering and meat handling.
That's about twelve countries that are giving out bad meat from horrible shipping and slaughtering
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