The Poultry Industry’s Chickens (Really!) Come
Home To Roost
By Walter Pringle
[See also:
Canada: The Disease Dimension,
By Michael Monastyrskyj]
Here in California, there
has been much media attention to the outbreak of
Exotic Newcastle Disease (END). Initially detected
in private “backyard flocks” in Los Angeles County, the
virus has spread quickly throughout the Southern
California poultry industry. Over 1.3 million of the
state’s 12 million chickens have already been destroyed.
The outbreak
threatens the entire $3 billion California poultry
business.
But the media has not
reported the cause of outbreak. I searched a hundred or
so “news” links. The unenlightening “backyard flock” was
the only “explanation” offered. Apparently, no-one had
any interest in discovering why this important event
occurred.
After much digging in
farm trade publications, I discovered the cause: the
illegal smuggling of
illegal game cocks from Mexico. Cock fighting is
illegal in California and all but
three other states and
poultry smuggling is illegal due to federal health
and disease control regulations. In fact, according to
the USDA, the principal means of prevention of END is by
strict border control and inspection of imported
birds.
The same
loose border control that allows hundreds of
thousands of illegal aliens to sneak into our country
also enables the very same aliens to bring in their
“backyard flocks” of fighting birds.
The virus has been
assayed and judged to be of the type that caused an
END outbreak in Mexico in 2000 during which 13
million birds died or were killed. Obviously, it was not
completely eradicated in Mexico three years ago.
But, you may well ask,
what does a handful of gamecocks have to do with the
California poultry industry? How could a couple of
roosters infect those flocks to the tune of 1.3 million
dead birds?
Well, the USDA thinks
they do. It has destroyed 43,000 birds in “backyard
flocks” in an attempt to stop the spread of the disease.
The reason: many of the
owners of these critters work in the nearby poultry
farms. Although the poultry farms have strict biosafety
rules to protect their flocks, a principal one - “you
can’t be around other chicken flocks” - was ignored by
the workers. It turns out that END, although harmless to
humans, can be carried on clothes and shoes. It is
easily spread by a human who has had contact with
infected birds.
And, to bang yet another
chip out of the “Irony is Dead” conceit, what about
this: the
poultry industry hires
illegal Mexicans and pushes for open borders. It
gets its
cheap workers - who then turn around and destroy the
business, because of an expression of their “culture”,
that while illegal, is winked as part of the vast
multicultural benefits immigration brings us!
END is dangerous. In
1971, the whole California poultry crop had to be
destroyed due to infection with END.
Yet here we are, 32 years
later, with huge foreign national populations throughout
the nation enjoying their protected (illegal) cultural
expression of watching
roosters slice each other to ribbons with razor
blades and knives attached to their feet.
What is going to keep END
from spreading? Aliens with infected chickens can cross
the entire Southern border, bringing the disease to the
huge poultry farms in Arkansas and elsewhere in the
South.
And there is a
large trade in these birds in the LA area at swap
meets and shows. Gamecocks are expensive. Their fighting
prowess can return a good living for the owners, who may
have hundreds of them. To protect their investments, why
wouldn’t the owners want to sell them as fast as
possible - before they die or are confiscated?
Altogether now: diversity
is our strength!
Walter Pringle
(email him) lives in California. He does not keep
chickens.
[VDARE.COM NOTE:
In another ironic news item, it turns out that as a
result of the END outbreak in Alta California, Mexico
has banned all imports of
American
(not just
Californian) poultry. Canada’s
border control has always been better than ours.]
January 27, 2003