• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Canadian Look at JBS

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    A Canadian Look at JBS

    Sheri doesn't mince any words- and tells it like it is....

    ------
    JBS is no gomer



    Sheri Monk

    Maple Creek News - Canada

    29-05-2008



    A gomer is a bull which wants to breed, physically can breed, but can’t make a calf. Gomers aren’t castrated and are used to mark a cow when she’s in heat.



    The bull climbs on, gets off, but leaves a mark on the cow with chalk or paint which is strapped on under his chin. Then, the real bull can be turned out, she’ll stand for him and hopefully, she’ll take.



    This concentrated meatpacking business has made a lot of cattlemen stand for a lot more than they should have ever had to take, and it’s only getting worse.



    Last year, JBS of Brazil bought Swift & Co., proudly declared themselves as American as apple pie and renamed the massive company JBS Swift.



    JBS is the largest packer in all of South America and is trying to buy three critical components to the US cattle business.



    If they succeed, they will have become the largest meatpacker in the U.S. and the world in just one year.



    It doesn’t matter if you’re growing apples, organizing rodeo or selling real estate. If there’s too few in control of too much, the wreck is on and your average citizen will take a beating for it.



    JBS is planning to buy National Beef, Smithfield Beef and Five Rivers Ranch Cattle Feeding. R-CALF has been raising hell over the deal and with good reason. Several U.S. governors and attorney generals have signed letters of protest, expressed concern and generally sounded the alarm bell.



    At the end of the day, I think the deal will go through because JBS is already behaving as though it has. If they thought it was going to go south, they’d behave as responsible corporate citizens. They’d be buying television commercials to show the world how pleased they are with how they turned out.



    Instead, JBS has mounted the American cattle business and won’t get off. A couple of weeks ago, JBS started sending contracts to U.S. feedlots that requires they waive any rights they have under the trust provisions of Section 206 of the Packers and Stockyards Act.



    Not that anyone’s enforced the trust act for decades, but at least there was a glimmer of hope.



    If that weren’t enough, the contract also demands the right to withhold payment for grade. Sounds to me like they know they’ve got the deal sewn up and shut solid and I guarantee you, this is no gomer screwing us.



    Yes, us. You can turn your Canadian eyes away from the wreck. You can read this and tiptoe out of awareness as if you’ve just walked in on your parents in the bedroom, but this deal is going to take and it’s going to make this business harder for everyone in it, including us.



    Ultimately, shoppers are not going to care who buys the beef they want to eat. This COOL (country of origin labeling) deal is nothing in comparison to this JBS swindle.



    Shoppers, for the most part, couldn’t care less where products come from which is why everything we buy is made in China.



    And if one company out of Brazil ends up owning every cow and every cattleman in America or the world, people won’t care about that either.



    Which is why folks who understand what’s going on in the business have to take a stand on this, even if it’s happening south of the border.



    We all know how stupidly dependent we are on the U.S. to support our cow business. Like it or not, that’s the way it is and unless our politicking cattlemens groups like CCA, ABP and SSGA are taken by coup, it’ll never change.



    Even if the JBS deal would never affect us (which it will) we should still scream over it because it’s wrong–plain and simple. People still ought to do what needs done for the simple reason that it needs doing.



    Look at our packers–Tyson, Cargill and XL Foods. Tyson and Cargill are always the bad Americans and XL is given a free pass because they were born in Canada.



    Well, I’ll tell you what. Soon as the border opened to UTM (under 30 month) Cdn. cattle, XL took that pile of BSE money they made and opened shop in America to get in on the same north-south screwing we all seem so happy to keep showing up for. That’s how Canadian they are.



    In this new era of globalism, patriotism exists only in song and sport. Sing the anthem all you want, but we’re dancing to the same beat and we’re all going to take the same breed of beating. No matter where you live, it’ll hurt.



    maplecreeknews.com

    #2
    Good on you Sherry, but I think it is a loosing battle. I have given up on herding chickens and am concentrating my efforts on our niche marketing. Got our second shop[ open in Calgary in March and going down to sell myself and help open a third this summer. When a growing number of consumers is willing to pay our company $29.99 a pound for bone out rib eye and new york strips, why the hell would I waste any more of my 30 years in the cattel biz on giant slaying or dealing with ego's at the political or industry level.

    Hope things are good with you Oldtimer.

    Randy

    Comment


      #3
      Sure, herding chickens can be dispiriting Randy and appear futile at times but I think our role as "activists" (or @#@% stirrers) is not to change the status quo by winning some David and Goliath battle as individuals. To my mind our role is to create greater awareness of the situation so that more producers, more consumers become aware of what is going on. I do believe in democracy ultimately and that things have a way of working out over time and restoring a kind of natural balance. I think in the beef situation that will come about with increasing quality, welfare and traceability demands driven by the consumer, demands which you are well aware of in your natural beef selling business. I do not agree with the preceding article's comment that "consumers couldn't care less where products come from which is why everything we buy is made in China." This is not, and increasingly will not be true of the food choices made by consumers.
      I respect the fact that you have to concentrate on your own business interests, we all have to ensure our own survival first and foremost, but I think this is in reality just moving the battle to a new stage. Dealing direct with consumers I'm sure you'll inspire them to seek change in much the same way you've inspired many beef producers over recent years. Thanks for all your efforts Randy.

      Comment


        #4
        THIS TELLS A DIFFERENT, PERHAPS MORE ACCURATE
        TALE...

        Smoke & Misdirection

        R-CALF Casts Their Bogeyman Net Further Afield


        Determined to cast aspersions on the proposed
        purchase of Smithfield and National Beef by JBS
        Swift, R-CALF's Bill Bullard has issued statements
        that appear to distort and misrepresent how the
        deal would affect feeder cattle markets and
        feedyards.

        A rabid opponent of cattlemen's beef alliances and
        branded programs, Bullard seems not to
        understand what U.S. Premium Beef (USPB) is or
        how it operates.

        "Post-merger, all competing order buyers who are
        now filling orders for Five Rivers and National Beef
        would be filling orders for the same company - JBS
        Brazil," Bullard claims. Bullard concluded this would
        reduce the number of buyers for feeder cattle,
        hurting demand.

        First, detail errors: a) there is no such company as
        "JBS-Brazil." JBS-S.A., based in Brazil, is the parent
        company of JBS Swift, their American company; b) it
        is not a proposed merger but a purchase of
        Smithfield Beef and National Beef. Smithfield held a
        half-interest in Five Rivers, a multi- yard feeding
        company, with ContiGroup Companies holding the
        other half.

        Further, National owns no feedyards at all, has no
        need for feeder cattle order buyers and, therefore,
        its inclusion in the acquisition would have no direct
        impact on the number of competing feeder cattle
        buyers. While Five Rivers has common headquarters
        management, it has managers with a degree of
        autonomy at each feedyard. They also feed some
        customer cattle, meaning some customers would
        be sending their own feeder cattle or feeder cattle
        purchased by themselves.

        But the biggest fallacy in Bullard's claim involves
        National Beef - a beef packing and processing
        company - and USPB, a cattlemen's alliance. USPB is
        an alliance of 29 qualified member feedyards
        located in six different states and numerous
        individual ranchers from around the country. USPB
        owns a majority interest in National Beef and in the
        purchase, would end up owning shares in JBS Swift.

        But USPB would not be owned by JBS, the feedyards
        are independent operators and procure feeder
        cattle as they wish and the member feedyards have
        sold only a part of their production to National. The
        idea that JBS would "control" USPB and set up the
        feeder cattle orders for all the USPB feedyards and
        their rancher members is preposterous.

        The facts are these:

        USPB has averaged selling 12,000 head of fed cattle
        per week to National (website figures).
        USPB member feedyards have the capacity to
        market over 40,000 head/week, meaning that
        member feedyards sell lots of cattle to other
        packers besides National. No more than 30 percent
        of their capacity has been sold to National.
        National, though still a relatively small packer,
        slaughters three million head annually, meaning a
        slaughter capacity of 14,000 hd./day -- it buys fed
        cattle from many more than just USPB member
        feedyards.
        So R-CALF's contention that suddenly JBS Swift
        would be consolidating ten percent of national
        feeder cattle purchases under one office and
        impairing demand and prices is totally incorrect as
        regards USPB or National. And Five Rivers has not
        been selling all its cattle to JBS Swift either, as
        differences in cattle, feedyard location and plant
        needs mean cattle go to different plants depending
        on packer needs and bids. Cattle customers feed
        may not be the type JBS Swift needs, either.

        Bullard's contention that "in some, and perhaps
        many, feeder cattle markets, this would
        significantly reduce competition for a significant
        number of feeder cattle," is farfetched, when
        someone other than Five Rivers will buy some 92
        percent of all feeder cattle. The USPB feeder cattle
        will be bought by 29 separate feedyards or brought
        in by some of the over 2,000 cattlemen who have
        sent cattle through USPB. They would be connected
        to JBS Swift only by a marketing agreement to be
        able to sell a certain portion of the feedyards'
        production to JBS Swift.

        The majority of feeder cattle bought by USPB
        member feedyards - at least 70 percent of their
        capacity -- will have nothing to do with USPB at all.
        The USPB qualified feedyards' one-time capacity is
        over 800,000 head (website data).

        Bullard's claim that the situation would harm feeder
        cattle markets nationally appears factually
        unsupportable.

        We suspect that the Department of Justice, having
        received Bullard's "evidence" and R-CALF having
        "met personally with the agency to help it better
        understand how the U.S. cattle market functions,"
        will have difficulty reconciling facts with R-CALF
        claims. Having seen Bullard's explanations of cattle
        market functions, we suspect Justice already has a
        much better understanding than R-CALF.

        Again, R-CALF is not presenting facts and their
        "evidence" doesn't exist.



        Invest in Your Future.
        We need your check today or your visit to our
        website, where you can use a credit card to make
        your contribution. If you prefer, send your check,
        made out to Agribusiness Freedom Foundation to:

        P.O. Box 88179,

        Colorado Springs, CO 80908 .

        We are engaged in national efforts that could shape
        the future of cattle and beef marketing, industry
        structure and world trade for decades. Animal
        welfare activists like the Humane Society of the U.S.
        engaged in an aggressive campaign to change the
        way production livestock are raised, housed,
        doctored and slaughtered. Please join with us and
        help make sure AFF's independent voice of reason
        is out there.
        The 2006 elections made the road ahead more
        challenging than ever. Please help us preserve your
        freedom to innovate and adapt to the 21st century
        consumer. Thank you.

        Please go to www.agribusinessfreedom.org and
        click on the "Make a Contribution" button to make a
        contribution. You may also review issues of the
        Sentinel. Contributor's identities are kept
        confidential. Contributions may be a business
        deduction - consult your tax professional.
        Contributions are not deductible as a charitable
        contribution.


        The Agribusiness Freedom Foundation promotes
        free market principles throughout the agricultural
        food chain. The AFF believes it is possible to value
        the traditions and heritage of the past while
        embracing the future and the changes it brings.
        The AFF is a communications and educational
        initiative striving to preserve the freedom of the
        agricultural food chain to operate and innovate in
        order to continue the success of American
        agriculture.

        The AFF - freedom watchdog for American
        agriculture.

        Agribusiness Freedom Foundation
        AFF: Promoting free market principles throughout
        the agricultural food chain.

        Website: http://www.agribusinessfreedom.org
        Readers are encouraged to use this information
        with credit to AFF. See links below to Forward to a
        friend or e-mail the author.

        Comment

        • Reply to this Thread
        • Return to Topic List
        Working...