Thanks Stephen,

Here is an article from the NYTimes today that makes the same point about
corporate "Productivity" when it comes to things that make us healthy or
wise.   Note that the person writing the article is a Not-for-profit
corporate executive since common sense is rarely productive or even
profitable unless its buildings, widgits or furniture.   All of the less
important things in life.   The things that disappear when you die and don't
prepare you for anything but a senile comfort.   This article shows why we
have learned little from the Irish potato famine.   Same mistake.

REH

November 24, 2003
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
About a Turkey
By PATRICK MARTINS

When you sit down to your Thanksgiving meal on Thursday, waiting for the
main attraction to be brought in on a platter, take a moment to think about
where it came from and how it found its way to your table. After all, your
turkey is not the same wily, energetic, tasty bird that struck our ancestors
as the perfect centerpiece for an American holiday.

Most Americans know that the turkey is a native game bird, and that Benjamin
Franklin thought it would have been a better national symbol than the bald
eagle. For good reason: in the wild, Meleagris gallopavo is a fast runner
and a notoriously difficult prize for hunters. Even after they were
domesticated, turkeys remained spirited, traditionally spending the bulk of
their lives outdoors, exploring, climbing trees, socializing and, of course,
breeding.

Now consider the bird that will soon be on your plate. It probably hatched
in an incubator on a huge farm, most likely in the Midwest or the South. Its
life went downhill from there. A few days after hatching - in the first of
many unnatural if not necessarily painful indignities - it had its upper
beak and toenails snipped off. A turkey is normally a very discriminating
eater (left to its own devices, it will search out the exact food it wants
to eat). In order to fatten it up quickly, farmers clip the beak,
transforming it into a kind of shovel. With its altered beak, it can no
longer pick and choose what it will eat. Instead, it will do nothing but
gorge on the highly fortified corn-based mash that it is offered, even
though that is far removed from the varied diet of insects, grass and seeds
turkeys prefer. And the toenails? They're removed so that they won't do harm
later on: in the crowded conditions of industrial production, mature turkeys
are prone to picking at the feathers of their neighbors - and even
cannibalizing them.

After their beaks are clipped, mass- produced turkeys spend the first three
weeks of their lives confined with hundreds of other birds in what is known
as a brooder, a heated room where they are kept warm, dry and safe from
disease and predators. The next rite of passage comes in the fourth week,
when turkeys reach puberty and grow feathers. For centuries, it was at this
point that a domesticated turkey would move outdoors for the rest of its
life.

But with the arrival of factory turkey farming in the 1960's, all that
changed. Factory-farm turkeys don't even see the outdoors. Instead, as many
as 10,000 turkeys that hatched at the same time are herded from brooders
into a giant barn. These barns generally are windowless, but are illuminated
by bright lights 24 hours a day, keeping the turkeys awake and eating.

These turkey are destined to spend their lives not on grass but on wood
shavings, laid down to absorb the overwhelming amount of waste that the
flock produces. Still, the ammonia fumes rising from the floor are enough to
burn the eyes, even at those operations where the top level of the shavings
is occasionally scraped away during the flock's time in the barn.

Not only do these turkeys have no room to move around in the barn, they
don't have any way to indulge their instinct to roost (clutching onto
something with their claws when they sleep). Instead, the turkeys are forced
to rest in an unnatural position - analogous to what sleeping sitting up is
for humans.

Not only are the turkeys in the barn all the same age, they - and the
roughly 270 million turkeys raised on factory farms each year - are all the
same variety, the appropriately named Broad Breasted White. Every bit of
natural instinct and intelligence has been bred out of these turkeys, so
much so that they are famously stupid (to the point where farmers joke
they'll drown themselves by looking up at the rain). Broad Breasted Whites
have been developed for a single trait at the expense of all others:
producing disproportionately large amounts of white meat in as little time
as possible.

Industrial turkeys pay a high price for the desire of producers and
consumers for lots of white breast meat. By their eighth week, these turkeys
are severely overweight. Their breasts are so large that they are unable to
walk or even have sex. (All industrial turkeys today are the product of
artificial insemination.)

Needless to say, no Broad Breasted White could hope to survive in nature.
These turkeys' immune systems are weak from the start, and to prevent even
the mildest pathogen from killing them, farmers add large amounts of
antibiotics to their feed. The antibiotics also help the turkeys grow faster
and prevent ailments like diabetes, respiratory problems, heart disease and
joint pains that result from an unvaried diet and lack of exercise. Because
the health of these turkeys is so delicate, the few humans who come in
contact with them generally wear masks for fear of infecting them.

On non-industrial farms, it takes turkeys 24 weeks to arrive at slaughter
weight, about 15 pounds for a hen and 24 pounds for a tom. Industrial
turkeys, however, need half that time. By 12 to 14 weeks, the whole flock is
ready for the slaughterhouse. Once slaughtered, the turkeys have to suffer
one more indignity before arriving in your grocer's meat case. Because of
their monotonous diet, their flesh is so bland that processors inject them
with saline solution and vegetable oils, improving "mouthfeel" while at the
same time increasing shelf life and adding weight.

Anyone who cooks knows that salt alone won't do the trick. Once, simply
sticking a turkey in the oven for a few hours was enough. Today, chefs have
to go to heroic lengths to try to counteract the turkey's cracker-like
dryness and lack of flavor. Cooks must brine, marinate, deep fry, and hide
the taste with maple syrup, herbs, spices, butter and olive oil. It's no
surprise that side dishes have moved to the center of the Thanksgiving menu.

Even so, 45 million turkeys will be sold this Thanksgiving, so turkey
producers aren't doing badly for themselves. But could they be sowing the
seeds of their own misfortune? By relying solely on a single strain of the
Broad Breasted White, and producing it in huge vertically integrated
companies that control every aspect of production, entire flocks and even
the species itself is one novel pathogen away from being wiped off the
American dinner table. The future of the turkey as we know it rests on only
one genetic strain. And the fewer genetic strains of an animal that exist,
the less chance that the genes necessary to resist a lethal pathogen are
present.

It's for this reason that maintaining genetic diversity within any species
is crucial to a secure and sustainable food supply. Sadly for the turkey and
for us, the rise of the Broad Breasted White means that dozens of other
turkey varieties, including the Bourbon Red, Narragansett and Jersey Buff,
have been pushed to the brink of extinction because there is no longer a
market for them.

What to do? One solution is to bypass Broad Breasted Whites altogether. A
few nonprofit groups - including my own, Slow Food U.S.A., and the American
Livestock Breeds Conservancy - are working with independent family farms to
ensure that a handful of older, pre-industrial turkey varieties, known as
heritage breeds, are still being grown. These varieties are slowly gaining
recognition for their dark, rich and succulent meat. (My group, which
encourages the preservation of artisanal foods, sells turkeys on behalf of
these farmers, but we don't profit from the transactions.)

While it might be too late to get your hands on a heritage bird this year,
there are some other options available to consumers who would like a turkey
raised in a more humane fashion, even if it is a Broad Breasted White.
Farmers' markets often have meat purveyors who raise their turkeys the way
they should be, free ranging and outdoors.

At the market, you can often meet the person who grew your turkey and ask
about how it was raised. Many independent butcher shops have developed
relationships with local farmers who deliver fresh turkeys, especially for
special occasions like Thanksgiving. A few environmentally conscious
supermarkets get their turkeys from small family farms.

But as you shop, you need to look for more than just labels like "organic,"
"free range" and "naturally raised." They have been co-opted by big business
and are no guarantee of a healthier and more humanely raised bird.

The key word to keep in mind is "traceability." If the person behind the
counter where you buy your turkey can name the farm or farmer who raised it,
you are taking a step in the right direction. You'll help give turkeys a
better life. You'll be kinder to the environment. And you might even wind up
with a turkey that tastes, well, like a turkey.


Patrick Martins is director of Slow Food U.S.A.



----- Original Message -----
From: "Stephen Straker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Ray Evans Harrell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Cole, Karen Watters" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Ed Weick"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Keith Hudson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Lawrence
DeBivort" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, November 24, 2003 3:02 AM
Subject: Re: [Futurework] David Ricardo, Caveman Trade vs. Modern Trade


> >>>>>> In my 48 year teaching career, I started in thermodynamics,
progressed through psycho-analysis,  then the character study of Gestalt
work, Somatic studies and laryngeal bio-mechanics and the therapy methods of
the latter 25 years of the 20th century.   But a funny thing happened on the
way to all of this knowledge.   Voice teaching just seemed to be bigger than
all of it. <<<<<<
> >>>> ... the underlying process is that there are many processes and that
all of them who answer all of the questions, work...<<<<
> >>> ... Everything is true, sometime and someplace.    For me the issue is
our being able to choose the world that we wish to florish in and to raise
our own children so that they can be free to do the same without losing all
of that "rear-end" knowledge. <<<<
>
> Well said, Ray. Well done!
>
> Reminds me of the ideas of that fabulous (& too much
> overlooked) British historian and philosopher RG Collingwood
> (1889-1943). Collingwood argued that human knowledge is
> nothing more *nor less* than the *history* of everything
> that ever has been (successfully) known, each in its time
> and place - rather like TS Kuhn's notion of "paradigms" but
> more deeply historical.
>
> (Could see RG Collingwood, *The Idea of Nature* and/or *The
> Idea of History*.)
>
> PS - I thought Hobbes best to make the case for the
> irreducible reality of social/civic entities since Hobbes
> begins, as you note, from a very hard-line reductionist
> materialism. Yet he comes out on the right side of things (I
> think).
>
> best wishes,
>
> Stephen Straker
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Vancouver, B.C.
>
>


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