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🗓️ 18 October 2024
⏱️ 32 minutes
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Take a stand to protect farmers' rights and stop animal EID! Join us at the Rogue Food Conference to help stop mandatory animal ID laws that threaten our rights. Learn more and register here: https://roguefoodconference.com/rfc-tx/
Rogue Food TX Discount: Berg10
https://roguefoodconference.com/come-and-tag-it-help-stop-animal-id/
DATA:
https://grist.org/article/in-court-ca...
Today, I’m going to interview homesteader John Moody about the bill that involves the electronic identification of livestock.
John explains that livestock tracking goes far back in history. It started with branding animals to sort and keep track of cattle, and branding was eventually replaced with ear tags. With the rise of the beef industry, government agencies wanted an electronic way to keep track of all livestock at all times.
Like many government programs, this idea was sold under the guise of safety coincidentally as there’s a huge push to get Americans and Western countries to eat less meat. Their efforts have been unsuccessful thus far, which is why they are resorting to EID and RFID electronic identification of animals in an attempt to get farmers to radically reduce their number of livestock.
In the early 2000s, the USDA proposed the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), which would require every farmer and homesteader in America to radio-frequency ID tag every single livestock animal they have, including cattle, pork, chickens, lamb, and goats. Confinement animal feeding operations (CAFOs) were exempt.
John explains that the USDA does not need a vote to instate the NAIS. They can create rules without needing a law or bill to be passed. Congresswoman Harriet Hageman has created a bill to stop NAIS and has stopped RFID twice in the past.
Around 100 years ago, 50% of American households were farming households. That number is now down to only 2 to 3 million farmers in America! You can personally stand up for your farmers! People who were not farmers stopped this program in 2009. Buying your food directly from your farmers is one of the best ways to support them.
Call your congressperson and senator, and ask them to support Hageman’s amendment that would prevent the USDA from being able to require RFID tagging on animals of any kind.
The Rogue Food Conference organized by Joel Salatin works to organize pushback against regulations that make it difficult for the public to access real food from farmers. The next seminar is happening on November 8th and 9th in Dallas!
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | and has a grocery store, looks like it's straight out of the Walking Dead. |
0:03.8 | There's nothing left on the shelves except for the vegan section. |
0:09.3 | And even in a natural disaster, people would rather die than eat fake meat foods, fake meat substitutes. |
0:18.1 | What I'm going to share with you today is absolutely crazy, and I was shocked to hear about this. |
0:24.6 | But way do you hear about the story? |
0:25.9 | They're trying to pass this bill that basically tags livestock for a reason that they say is just for the environment, it's to protect |
0:36.3 | the animals from disease, but there's actually another motivation to this. |
0:40.4 | You've got to hear the story. |
0:41.6 | And today we have John Moody, who's a homesteader. |
0:44.5 | He knows a lot about it. |
0:45.8 | He's personally experienced this area for years. |
0:49.6 | So brought him on to kind of explain to us what is going on because it involves you and I |
0:55.2 | and because it involves our food. |
0:57.8 | So welcome John, thanks for being on here. |
0:59.8 | Hey, good morning. |
1:00.9 | Good morning. |
1:03.0 | Can you just give us a little brief overview of what's going on now with this bill they're trying to pass related to electronic identification of livestock? |
1:14.0 | Animal livestock tracking ID goes way, way back in history. |
1:20.0 | Started with branding animals out on open ranges. |
1:22.6 | How do you know whose cow is whose? |
1:24.8 | That's where branding originally came from, |
1:26.4 | being able to sort, keep track of cattle, |
... |
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