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Kill the Qutoa System - We Want American Milk

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    Kill the Qutoa System - We Want American Milk

    Traditional small dairies, located primarily in the Northeast and Midwest, are going out of business. They are being replaced by intensive 'dry lot' dairies, which are typically located in the Southwest U.S.

    Regardless of where they live, however, all dairy cows must give birth in order to begin producing milk. Today, dairy cows are forced to have a calf every year. Like human beings, cows have a nine-month gestation period, and so giving birth every twelve months is physically demanding. The cows are also artificially re-impregnated while they are still lactating from their previous birthing, so their bodies are still producing milk during seven months of their nine-month pregnancy.
    With genetic manipulation and intensive production technologies, it is common for modern dairy cows to produce 100 pounds of milk a day — ten times more than they would produce naturally. As a result, the cows' bodies are under constant stress, and they are at risk for numerous health problems.

    Approximately half of the country's dairy cows suffer from mastitis, a bacterial infection of their udders. This is such a common and costly ailment that a dairy industry group, the National Mastitis Council, was formed specifically to combat the disease. Other diseases, such as Bovine Leukemia Virus, Bovine Immunodeficiency Virus, and Johne's disease (whose human counterpart is Crohn's disease) are also rampant on modern dairies, but they commonly go unnoticed because they are either difficult to detect or have a long incubation period.
    A cow eating a normal grass diet could not produce milk at the abnormal levels expected on modern dairies, and so today's dairy cows must be given high energy feeds. The unnaturally rich diet causes metabolic disorders including ketosis, which can be fatal, and laminitis, which causes lameness.

    Another dairy industry disease caused by intensive milk production is "Milk Fever." This ailment is caused by calcium deficiency, and it occurs when milk secretion depletes calcium faster than it can be replenished in the blood.

    In a healthy environment, cows would live in excess of twenty-five years, but on modern dairies, they are slaughtered and made into ground beef after just three or four years. The abuse wreaked upon the bodies of dairy cows is so intense that the dairy industry also is a huge source of "downed animals" — animals who are so sick or injured that they are unable to walk even stand. Investigators have documented downed animals routinely being beaten, dragged, or pushed with bulldozers in attempts to move them to slaughter.

    Although the dairy industry is familiar with the cows' health problems and suffering associated with intensive milk production, it continues to subject cows to even worse abuses in the name of increased profit. Bovine Growth Hormone (BGH), a synthetic hormone, is now being injected into cows to get them to produce even more milk. Besides adversely affecting the cows' health, BGH also increases birth defects in their calves.

    Calves born to dairy cows are separated from their mothers immediately after birth. The half that are born female are raised to replace older dairy cows in the milking herd. The other half of the calves are male, and because they will never produce milk, they are raised and slaughtered for meat. Most are killed for beef, but about one million are used for veal.

    The veal industry was created as a by-product of the dairy industry to take advantage of an abundant supply of unwanted male calves. Veal calves commonly live for eighteen to twenty weeks in wooden crates that are so small that they cannot turn around, stretch their legs, or even lie down comfortably. The calves are fed a liquid milk substitute, deficient in iron and fiber, which is designed to make the animals anemic, resulting in the light-colored flesh that is prized as veal. In addition to this high-priced veal, some calves are killed at just a few days old to be sold as low-grade 'bob' veal for products like frozen TV dinners.

    #2
    What's your point here, Lakenheath? Most of the practices you seem to despise in the U.S. dairy industry are carried out in Canada as well. Last time I checked, Canadian dairy cattle raised in our supposedly wonderful supply mismanagement system are used for veal too. If you think this article makes a case for supply mismanagement, you're mistaken.

    As for the issue of Bovine Growth Hormone, this has next to no relationship with supply mismanagement. If Canada abandoned disorderly marketing tomorrow, we could still enforce a ban on Bovine Growth Hormone.

    Without supply mismanagement, Canada would finally have a significant dairy and poultry processing industry, as our products would be able to compete on world markets. As it stands, Canada has totally conceded the export sector to countries like New Zealand and the U.S. The dairy industry would also spread out to other parts of Canada, instead of being concentrated in the politically well-connected province of Quebec. And consumers would get a much needed break from the ridiculous prices they pay for dairy and poultry products in Canada.

    Make no mistake about it: the dairy and poultry quota system is a moral and economic abomination that deserves to be ended ASAP.

    Comment


      #3
      Wow, that post looks like something cut/pasted straight from greenpeace or peta's website.
      You mean they have to use a bulldozer to move a downed animal weighing thousands of pounds!! I thought the barnworkers would just pick them up and put them on their shoulders.

      Comment


        #4
        lakenheath,

        You've made your point. I'm not exactly drooling for a cold glass of milk.

        But...and it's a word that yanks my chain periodically...

        is supply management in Canada going to prevent you from the opportunity to eventually bypass what you condemn?

        Parsley

        Comment


          #5
          I hear your point Parsley. And it is a good one. I just get off on a rant sometimes when it comes to trade and the U.S. What goes on down there frusterates me and to welcome them with open arms....well...is kind of hard to accept. They practice trade protectionism to an extreme degree. Too bad there couldn't be more give and take on both sides.

          Comment


            #6
            Pettiness aside, I can't imagine ANYONE I'd like more for a neighbor.

            Can you?

            Parsley

            Comment


              #7
              hugh hefner

              Comment


                #8
                or maybe you parley if you'll let me borrow your car from time to time I hear it costs over 200000 dollars

                Comment


                  #9
                  WRAPper,

                  You've obviously taken the CHOICE posts to heart! Lemme see Hugh....

                  BTW, Going to ride a horse to town to save on carbon emmissions, so no car. You can borrow the old horse, though.

                  Parsley

                  Comment


                    #10
                    there are lots of subsidies in the usa for milk. at least there have been.

                    just not supply management.

                    everything from school milk programs to programs buying up old dairy cows.
                    buying up excess milk and turning it into powder. then dumping it into off shore markets (which hurts the dairy farmers in those countries)

                    the cdn. industry has probably had it a little too good given what milk quota sells for.
                    there is something wrong when quota becomes one of the major costs.

                    it will be interesting to see if

                    Harper goes with principal or getting elected.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Sawfly,

                      I PM Harper goes by principal, the Conservatives WIll leave supply management alone. THis is the Conservative policy voted upon and approved in Montreal at the last policy convention. THE supply management system is an issue much like abortion,gay rights, or the CBC in Canada... don't expect it to change any time soon from a federal perspective.

                      Even in WTO, with sensitive products, Deviation, and top loading to protectDairy farmers... I bet a steak dinner with my mentor in economics... that this WTO round will not see Tarriffs on dairy below 200%...

                      Which means dairy will not significantly change... IMHO... any time soon... except by how the dairy farmers mess themselves up provincially.

                      American milk costs significantly more than CA milk at the retail level... and US milk producers receive almost half that of Canadian dairy producers.

                      THis proves tight supply chain management can produce significant efficiencies for both growers and consumers if an effective system disciplines a food chain!

                      Let the US keep their milk... I DON"T NEED or WANT it!

                      Comment


                        #12
                        WRAPper,

                        When we get to have the celebration divorce-from-the-CWB party, I'll arrange for the nephew to take you for a ride in his bright yellow Prowler.I have a hunch u2 will get along nicely.

                        In the meantime, buy insurance.

                        Parsley

                        Comment


                          #13
                          " American milk costs significantly more than CA milk at the retail level... and US milk producers receive almost half that of Canadian dairy producers."

                          Bingo, Tom4cwb - a perfect example of how the producer gets screwed when dealing direct with huge multi-national processors. Don't you notice the parallel with the CWB issue? If you get your wish you will be the producer getting screwed just like the US dairy producer at the moment compared to his Canadian counterpart with a high and secure income level. Be careful what you wish for.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            The only difference grassfarmer is we are being screwed twice now. Get rid of the CWB and our problem will only be half as bad.

                            The advantage and the difference with the dairy farms is their system actually benefits them.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              I look forward to the day when you ask the gov't to set up a "Canadian Cattle Board" so that they can market your calves for you grassfarmer.

                              Is that what you want? You ready to let someone else tell you what your calves are worth to the rest of the world? You have to trust them because they won't show you the records of the sales!

                              Maybe just for western canadian calves would be ok too?

                              Or do you want a quota system set up for you and your neighbors?

                              Please keep us informed how that is going for you.

                              Comment

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