Fast Food Nation: Cogs in the Great Machine After reading, the meatpacking industry astonishes me in several ways. Iowa Beef Packers (IBP) is one of the biggest meatpacking industries in the United States and in my opinion, cruel to their animals. Meatpacking industries are competitive and personally believe that the industries are mostly concerned with the money. The old Chicago slaughterhouses were usually brick buildings, four or five stories high. Cattle were herded up wooden ramps to the top floor, where they were struck on the head with a sledgehammer, slaughtered, and then disassembled by skilled workers.
Although Sinclair’s investigation tells a story of the toll the meatpacking industry took on families nearly a hundred years ago, he still offers insight into the deceiving side of America’s food corruptions. Both writers brilliantly offer realization and awareness in their books that will benefit anyone who reads them to make better decisions daily. The description of the factory farming slaughterhouses in both books is enough to send chills down almost anyone’s spine; The Jungle opens with the cruel tactics, yet Fast Food Nation did not mention the slaughterhouses until midway. As Jurgis and his family tour the packinghouse where he will be working as a shoveler,(shoveling blood and guts) they first see what seems to be millions of cows. There are rail yards that carry the cattle to the slaughterhouse where the mechanics of the process are awe-inspiring.
When the Act was passed, the meat packaging industry had to succumb to continuous inspections and investigations by the Agricultural Department which would be paid for by the meat packaging industry. Furthermore, the Act would require stamps on meat products that were sent to market for public consumption. There have been many amendments created to correspond with enhancements in the meat industry. The Federal Meat Inspection Act was established to warrant the health of American consumers. It abolished any diseased or contaminated meat before the consumer gets it.
Diet For New America : Yahel Michaeli, Section# 3155 1. What are the main health problem and the main environment problem that the movie talks about? - The main health problem in the movie are : Heart diseases , diabetes , cholesterol, and breath cancer . The environment problems are water problems: to grow cows and authors animals for meat we need to use thousands of gallons of water, in that case lots of water are wasted the earth is getting dried and we will stay without water , also if people will stop to eat meat, there won't be so much pressure to grow more and more cows . The cows will live by their self , and we'll have more water for us and the whole environment.
Adding in additional substances to the cows corn diet, such as remnant cow parts, has led to e-coli out breaks in humans and continued to spread mad cow disease. One such victim of e-coli poisoning was Kevin Kowalcyk at the age of two. He ingested e-coli O 157 H7 in a contaminated hamburger he ate in 2001; which developed into hemolytic-uremic syndrome and resulted in his death twelve days later. Unfortunately the beef was not recalled until 16 days after his death. This was probably due to the fact that cattle at CAFO’s spend all their time held up in concentrated pens standing in their own feces.
Shadow of Hate Assignment Explain which story or section in the documentary was the most powerful/ shocking and why. Japanese American arrived in the early 1900’s. They did a lot for the country by transforming American agriculture in the west. They worked hard to become successful farmers and businessmen. Envy against these innocent women and men was degrading they were given a week to sell properties and businesses. They were sent to internment camps over 100,000 were ordered by government custody and were announced as disloyal.
Making millions of dollars a year, top meat processing companies sell their meat to fast food chains, such as McDonalds. From outside of the factories, not much seems out of the ordinary or illegal, but inside is a totally different story. The working conditions are completely unsanitary. Puddles of blood are all over the floor. Workers are forced to butcher animals and process their meat at fast rates, too often causing injury.
The rise in grain prices has encouraged the feeding of less expensive materials to cattle, especially substances with a high protein content that accelerate growth” D. Transportation Billions of farm animals endure the rigors of transport each year in the United States, with millions of pigs, cows, and “spent” egg-laying hens traveling across the country. Overcrowded onto trucks that do not provide any protection from temperature extremes, animals travel long distances without food, water, or rest. The conditions are so stressful that in-transit death is considered common. (Weber, 63) IV. Destruction if the Environment A. Ecosystem 1.
But they do not stop there, they continue by cutting the legs off. Throughout this process the horses finally die. I strongly believe they need to reopen the American Slaughter houses because the government regulated a timely, painless death for the horses. Sending unwanted horses to Mexico or Canada needs to stop. It is inhumane and wrong on so many levels.
Mad Cowboy This book was enlightening to say the least for me being a devout meat eater for the past Forty-eight years I was completely caught off guard as to how server the problem really is today. The way we treat other creatures is unbelievable and we call ourselves civilized, it’s almost as bad as how we treated the African people. We took them from their homeland and forced them to our hard labor for us all the while treating like they were our property rather than human beings. There are a lot of similarities in how we treat our cattle and the way we treated the black race. Once I started to read this book it gave me a new perspective on what I eat but not just that it also game me a new outlook on animals in general and how we treat