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flashl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-18-08 07:38 AM
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Farmers fear governments' mark of the beast

Farmers fear a barnyard Big Brother


A federal database of animals to fight disease outbreaks is a threat to privacy and family operations, critics say.

WASHINGTON -- After days of parading around her beefy black steer in the dung-scented August heat at the Colorado State Fair, Brandi Calderwood made the final competition. For months, the 16-year-old worked from dawn well past dusk, fitting in the work around school, to feed, train and clean her steer. But just before the last round, when the animals are sold, fair officials disqualified her.

They alleged that Brandi had not properly followed a new and controversial rule that required children to register their farms with a federal animal tracking system.

...

A Bush administration initiative, the National Animal Identification System is meant to provide a modern tool for tracking disease outbreaks within 48 hours, whether natural or the work of a bioterrorist. Most farm animals, even exotic ones such as llamas, will eventually be registered. Information will be kept on every farm, ranch or stable. And databases will record every animal movement from birth to slaughterhouse, including trips to the vet and county fairs.

But the system is spawning a grass-roots revolt.

Family farmers see it as an assault on their way of life by a federal bureaucracy with close ties to industrial agriculture. They point out that they will have to track every animal while vast commercial operations will be allowed to track whole herds.

Privacy advocates say the database would create an invasive, detailed electronic record of farmers' activities. Religious farming communities, such as the Amish and Mennonites, fear the system is a manifestation of the Mark of the Beast foretold in the Book of Revelation.

LA Times


Note. USDA's recent request for moratorium on cloned food animals was based on argibusiness claim of its inability to track clone off-springs. Are small farmers targeted as a backdoor to enforce big-ag tagging?
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countryjake Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-19-08 03:05 AM
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1. kick for cows
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SpiralHawk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-19-08 08:30 AM
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2. "All your meat are belong to us." - republicon-minded agri-corps
"Shut up and eat your clone burgers." - Republicon Big Ag

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