don
Well-known member
if they put 'source unknown' on every package they're going to label product of usa/mexico/canada it probably would be less healthy for beef demand.
PPRM said:Sandhusker said:What I'm saying, and what the law is intended, is that beef be HONESTLY labeled as ACCURATELY as possible. If you've got beef from an animal that spent 100% of it's life in the US, an honest and accurate label would reflect that. Same for a Canadian animal, Mexican, Australian, etc..... I don't know why I'm explaining this to when we both know what the lawmakers were intending and we both know that the packers are playing Clinton lawyer games. Why are you defending horseshit maneuvers designed to circumvent law and continue a practice of playing Canadian and US producers against themselves to keep cattle prices down?
How can I be a protectionist when I'm calling for the same treatment, the same labeling requirements for US and imports alike?
I agree that the Loopholes don't align with the intent of the law. Actually, rather than "Product of US/Mexico or Canada", I would like to see "Source unkown"... That would be more accurate.
Perhaps COOL ultimately shows we really do not know where our meat comes from. Some products end themselves to source id much more easily than Beef...But that oes not mean we should Spin it into something it is not,
PPRM
However, you brought up the Certified Angus program. It is different in that there are quality standards that directly affect the eating experience that the program is tied to....
Bill said:However, you brought up the Certified Angus program. It is different in that there are quality standards that directly affect the eating experience that the program is tied to....
Some excellent points PPRM and you brought up the obvious which Sadhusker fails to mention. While CAB has quality parameters attached to it, COOL identified or "American by Default" beef does not.
Sadhusker's argument is solely based on buying American and not on the quality AND consistency that a branded program can offer.
Sandhusker said:What you fail to mention is that the requirements to make CAB are so loose that there really is no difference between CAB and "the rest". Any of my Maines qualify for CAB and will eat the same whether they've got the CAB label or not.
Sandhusker said:Bill said:However, you brought up the Certified Angus program. It is different in that there are quality standards that directly affect the eating experience that the program is tied to....
Some excellent points PPRM and you brought up the obvious which Sadhusker fails to mention. While CAB has quality parameters attached to it, COOL identified or "American by Default" beef does not.
Sadhusker's argument is solely based on buying American and not on the quality AND consistency that a branded program can offer.
What you fail to mention is that the requirements to make CAB are so loose that there really is no difference between CAB and "the rest". Any of my Maines qualify for CAB and will eat the same whether they've got the CAB label or not.
Sandhusker said:Take Hardees Angus burger; You get a burger with ketchup, pickles, onions, sauce, etc.... Are you going to tell me that Joe Blow from Chicago can pick up any burger and tell the difference between one who's beef came from a choice flank from a select chuck?
Also, we all know that the current standards for selecting quality are antiquated and not truly reflective of what seperates the "good" from the "bad".
Oldtimer said:Several of the local small plants that were trying to market a branded beef nationwide- that was USA born, raised, and slaughtered- went under mainly because they were not able to compete with generic/imported beef- when that generic/imported beef was being passed off to the customers as US with the USDA inspected stamp...
Under this law- and especially if Congress makes USDA enforce it the way it was supposed to be, which I believe will occur with the change of regime in D.C.- they stand a chance of making a go of it now....
PPRM said:Oldtimer said:Several of the local small plants that were trying to market a branded beef nationwide- that was USA born, raised, and slaughtered- went under mainly because they were not able to compete with generic/imported beef- when that generic/imported beef was being passed off to the customers as US with the USDA inspected stamp...
Under this law- and especially if Congress makes USDA enforce it the way it was supposed to be, which I believe will occur with the change of regime in D.C.- they stand a chance of making a go of it now....
I call Bullspit................
My Cost per head is $500 to process....My Net after that is about $2,000 per head. I am successful becase I raise Damned Good Meat that people Love. It is totally irrelevant what the imports cost....It is totally irrelevant what I do... I do not sit, p*** and moan about everyone else. I go out and make my stake. This is the USA, we have seemingly lost our individuality and become a group that has decided it is what others do that determines our fate...
My Packer (Small guy) is growing phenominally yearly.... The more average commodity stuff Tyson does, the better he does...
It is not rocket science...
These guys failed and have a convenient scapegoat... I can point to myself, Oregon Countrybeef and Painted hills. I can point to a dozen others in my state who have all done well. We are different that what you buy normally. It is the quality of our beef....
Too often I see the approach of "Buy it because I raise it"...I sell meat people will Love.It is what I do, not "What the Bad guys do"...
As Long a you blame others and wait for someone ele to change your position in life, you will reap the benefits of a socialistic society,
PPRM
Sandhusker said:The crux of my arguement is that marketing works. Advertising works. Customers respond to it. You're in sales, you know that.
Oldtimer said:PPRM said:Oldtimer said:Several of the local small plants that were trying to market a branded beef nationwide- that was USA born, raised, and slaughtered- went under mainly because they were not able to compete with generic/imported beef- when that generic/imported beef was being passed off to the customers as US with the USDA inspected stamp...
Under this law- and especially if Congress makes USDA enforce it the way it was supposed to be, which I believe will occur with the change of regime in D.C.- they stand a chance of making a go of it now....
I call Bullspit................
My Cost per head is $500 to process....My Net after that is about $2,000 per head. I am successful becase I raise Damned Good Meat that people Love. It is totally irrelevant what the imports cost....It is totally irrelevant what I do... I do not sit, p*** and moan about everyone else. I go out and make my stake. This is the USA, we have seemingly lost our individuality and become a group that has decided it is what others do that determines our fate...
My Packer (Small guy) is growing phenominally yearly.... The more average commodity stuff Tyson does, the better he does...
It is not rocket science...
These guys failed and have a convenient scapegoat... I can point to myself, Oregon Countrybeef and Painted hills. I can point to a dozen others in my state who have all done well. We are different that what you buy normally. It is the quality of our beef....
Too often I see the approach of "Buy it because I raise it"...I sell meat people will Love.It is what I do, not "What the Bad guys do"...
As Long a you blame others and wait for someone ele to change your position in life, you will reap the benefits of a socialistic society,
PPRM
How many do you market a year- 100- 200? And to where? These guys were marketing 1000's- around the country- by shipping it direct...That raised the cost they had into them...Which to many it may have been worth it had they known that the chunk of beef being passed off to them as US with the USDA stamp actually came from Mexico.... But they were unable to use that for marketing because of the government supported deception...![]()
But you go on PPRM - Keep supporting government backed lying and deception to the US consumer...Keep supporting not being open and transparent...
To me that is like the horse traders of old- that I avoided with a passion...If they don't want to be honest with folks they deal with on one thing- how can you ever trust them on anything :???:
Sandhusker said:If one bad experience sinks the boat, every product has got to be losing customers every day and thus in a death spiral. I'm sure that this very day, there were people that had an Angus product that they didn't think lived up to the billing. That means you can count them out. When are they going to run out of customers?
Sandhusker said:I hear what you're saying PP, and you do have good points. However, I can't agree with your assumptions that there is such a wide disparity between the quality of Angus and "the rest" or that the average schmo could tell the difference. I think that is the basis for 90% of our disagreement.
Sandhusker said:Why are you defending horseshit maneuvers designed to circumvent law and continue a practice of playing Canadian and US producers against themselves to keep cattle prices down?
How can I be a protectionist when I'm calling for the same treatment, the same labeling requirements for US and imports alike?