Sign up for email alerts, from breaking news to weekly commentary:
Sign up for email alerts, from breaking news to weekly commentary:
The spark that ignited tea party wrath in 2008 was not such right-wing bugaboos as "Obamacare," the federal deficit, or states' rights, which were added on later by Koch-created front groups. Rather, the uprising sprang directly from the public's raw outrage over Washington's flagrant coddling of Wall Street banksters.
| www.flickr.com |
All Flickr photos of Jim Hightower
To add your photos, upload them Flickr and tag them with jimhightower!

America is at an historic divide between rulers and rulees and the rulees are restless. Hightower...
[More info]

It's time to make politics fun again! With uncommon insight, political fearlessness and laugh-out...
[More info]

The New York Times bestselling author and America's funniest activist gives the lowdown on...
[More info]
Have a gander at the whole store here...
Home | Contact | MDC | RSS | Privacy Policy | Copyright Saddle-Burr Productions, Jim Hightower, All Rights Reserved 1996-2009
Outlawing exposés of factory farm horrors
Big Ag has a big problem – but it's come up with a neat solution.
The problem is that the meat, eggs, and dairy that are marketed to us as "wholesome" foodstuffs by such giants as Tyson, Smithfield, and Borden are actually produced in mammoth, mega-messy, monstrous factory farms. Known by the baleful industrial acronym, CAFO, these Confined Animal Feeding Operations amount to animal concentration camps.
They cram thousands of cows, pigs, chickens, and other pastoral creatures into torturously-tiny cages enclosed in metal, prison-like buildings. The animals never see the light of day, they're routinely dosed with antibiotics and growth hormones, and they are frequently ravaged by epidemic diseases. In turn, we human animals suffer from wide-spread salmonella, E. coli, and other food contaminants that are an inevitable by-product of CAFO production, as well as suffering from the gross air and water pollution caused by the unbelievable mass of manure coming out of these animal factories.
It's ugly in there, but such a reckless system produces big corporate profits, so they want to keep the uglies a secret from consumers. Problem is, in this age of watchdogs and whistleblowers with cellphone cameras and direct access to the public through YouTube, there's been a spate of barf-inducing exposés. But, problem solved: Big Ag's lawyers and lobbyists have simply coughed up a nasty legalistic hairball called the "Animal and Ecological Terrorism Act." Yes, it's an "Ag-Gag" bill that criminalizes use of cameras to expose the horrors inside CAFOs and prosecutes participants as terrorists.
You'd think such a repressive act would gag a legislature, but Iowa, Missouri, and Utah have already passed it, and at least 10 other states are considering it. To keep up and fight back, go to www.organicconsumers.org.
"Shocking: Reporting Factory Farm Abuses to be Considered "Act of Terrorism" If New Laws Pass," www.alternet.org, January 24, 2013.