Beefman said:
Econ101 said:
Beefman, there is no USDA Grade A in beef. If you need to learn a little more about this discussion you may read the following publication:
http://www.ams.usda.gov/lsg/stand/standards/beef-car.pdf
There are grade a chickens, eggs, and other items, but THERE IS NO GRADE A BEEF. IT IS A MISREPRESENTATION. IT IS JUST MADE UP. QUALITY GRADES AND YIELD GRADES ARE ONE THING BUT SAYING THE MATURITY, CLASS, OR TYPE OF BEEF IS A GRADE IS JUST PLAIN LYING TO CUSTOMERS.
MAKING INVESTIGATORS IDENTIFY THEMSELVES BEFORE ASKING THESE KIND OF QUESTIONS PUTS INTO SERIOUS QUESTION THE INTEGRITY OF THE "INVESTIGATION" THAT IS PREFORMED (pun intended).
There is nothing heroic about pointing out that your government regulatory agencies are not doing their jobs and beef products are being misrepresented to customers, I assure you.
I find it very interesting that packers can put the maturity of the animals on the box but not the quality grade. Heck, they can't even tell what country it comes from and give that information to customers.
My response was correct. Check out page #9 of your document. Maturity grades / classification are a determining factor in the final quality grade. Quality grades would be on the box and primal label. I don't know for sure, but I doubt you'd find maturity references on labels or boxes for prime, choice, select or CAB product.
Leave the poor meat man at Walmart alone. Isn't there something / someone / some issue in bicycles or trash cans where you can proclaim "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it anymore!"
No, Beefman, your response was not correct. there is no maturity grade. There is a classification for maturity, but THERE IS NO GRADE for maturity. THERE IS NO "USDA GRADE A BEEF".
Just to clue you in, there are quality grades and yield grades. There are no maturity grades. Your putting grade/classification together is the problem. Maturity classifications may fall into one of the quality grades but they are not the same.
I guess you want me to leave everyone that misrepresents for you alone. It is not good for customers nor is it good for the industry.
Tyson wants to pawn off lower costing animals for better grading beef. They are not giving the customer the information so they can make a good decision. When asked by customers, the people in charge lie about the product. The meat industry is not educating consumers---they are trying to make a quick buck off of a lower quality product with lies.
As I said before, some of that meat should be going in the grind, not in the artificial gas packages that have beef saturated with unnatural salt water and passed off as a quality product with word games.
When Walmart claims that the meat it sells is USDA GRADE A meat by their meat department personell, they are misrepresenting the truth to sell product. They are assiging a made up grade that can easily be considered a fraud. THERE ARE NO USDA GRADE A CATTLE or BEEF. Tyson and Walmart are just getting their chickens and beef mixed up.
Now why would they want to do that? Can't they tell the difference? Must the Beef Checkoff go in and retrain Tyson and Walmart personell?