Friday night Pandemic Watch - Swine Flu coming to you?

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Postby Nordic » Tue Apr 28, 2009 5:29 pm

Truth4Youth wrote:
DEADLINE LIVE EXCLUSIVE: Mexican Swine Flu May
Have Originated at US-Owned Pig Breeding Farm


The recent swine flu outbreak taking place in Mexico may have originated at a US-owned pig-breeding farm by the name of Granjas Carroll (aka Carroll Farms), which is owned, in part by the Smithfield Food Company. Smithfield also promotes the consumption of genetically-altered foods, and even owns certain genetic lines of pork breeding. On April 12 of 2009, before the swine flu outbreak was covered by mainstream media outlets, the Mexican newspaper La Jornada broke a story on how Carroll Farms was polluting the drinking water near the towns of La Gloria and Perote, in Veracruz.

According to La Jornada, Carroll Farms maintains a strong political influence in municipal governments in the area. Recently, group of environmental protesters that blocked a highway near the Carroll Farms facilities was arrested. Among them were Guadalupe Serrano Gaspar, a 66-year-old man who said was arrested by undercover police officers. Local residents from 20 towns nearby in Veracruz and the bordering state of Puebla also oppose what they consider deplorable environmental practices by Carroll Farms. The complaints from local residents range from reports of large quantities of pig excrement in the waterways to the smell of chemicals and feces in several towns.

Veratect, which is company that tracks epidemic outbreaks, has posted a timeline of events that also indicates that the Mexican swine flu outbreak may have started in Veracruz, Mexico near the Carroll Farms facilities. According to the Veratect timeline, more than 400 local residents at La Gloria, Veracruz and other nearby towns reported having strong flu-like symptoms days before the outbreak was reported by the media. Local health authorities in La Gloria and Perote have determined that this "strange" flu-like disease or "new strain of the flu" was spread to the local towns by flies that feed on pig feces. In the town of La Gloria, 60 percent of the 3,000 inhabitants have been infected.

The newspaper La Jornada also reported that local health officials and residents found "clouds of flies" feeding on organic pig waste, carcasses and feces. Reportedly, Carroll Farms has been dumping organic pig waste out in the open, leaving it exposed for the flies to feed.



Yuck. Our food literally emerges from giant swamps of reeking, festering shit.

There's something seriously wrong with this picture.
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Postby stickdog99 » Tue Apr 28, 2009 5:33 pm

This whole thing will get really scary when pigs fly.
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 5:44 pm

Dang, check out wiki:

Smithfield Foods, Inc. is the world’s largest pork producer and processor. Its headquarters are in Smithfield, Virginia, with operations in 26 states and 9 countries. The company raises 14 million hogs a year and processes 27 million. The company produced 5.9 billion pounds of pork and 1.4×109 lb (640,000,000 kg) of fresh beef in 2006.

Smithfield started as Smithfield Packing Company, now its largest subsidiary, and grew by acquiring companies such as Farmland Foods, Eckrich, and Premium Standard Farms. Smithfield has many familiar brands including Butterball, John Morrell, Gwaltney, Patrick Cudahy, Krakus, Cook's Ham, and Stefano’s.

In February 2009, the company announced that it planned to close six plants and to reduce the number of its independent operating companies from seven to three.[1]

Farming

Smithfield has come under criticism for the millions of gallons of fecal matter that it produces and stores in holding ponds, untreated. In a four year period, in North Carolina alone, 4.7 million gallons of hog fecal matter were released into the state's rivers. Workers and residents near Smithfield plants have reported health problems, and have complained about constant, overpowering stenches of hog feces.[2] In 1997, Smithfield was fined $12.6 million for violation of the federal Clean Water Act.[3] "The fine was the third-largest civil penalty ever levied under the act by the EPA. It amounted to .035 percent of Smithfield's annual sales."

The hog industry in North Carolina came under scrutiny in 1999 when Hurricane Floyd flooded much of the eastern part of the state, including a number of fecal matter holding ponds (lagoons, in industry parlance). Many of the hog farms that contracted with Smithfield were accused of polluting the state's rivers.[4]

In the wake of Hurricane Floyd, Smithfield entered a settlement in 2000 with North Carolina Attorney General Mike Easley to fund development of environmentally sound waste management technologies for use on North Carolina swine farms. As part of this settlement, Smithfield committed $15 million to fund research at North Carolina State University.[5] In addition, the company agreed to make an annual contribution of $2 million to fund environmental enhancement grants in the state....



Disease

It is speculated that a collection of Smithfield's farms in Perote, Veracruz in Mexico may have had something to do with the 2009 swine flu outbreak. Residents in the area have complained of the swarms of flies around waste lagoons. Mexican health officials have said that the type of fly is associated with reproducing in pig waste, and that the swine influenza outbreak may have a link to these pig farms. [9]

[edit]
Labor issues

Smithfield Packing, Tar Heel, North Carolina

The Smithfield Packing plant in Tar Heel, North Carolina, had been the site of a long dispute between the company and the United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW), which had been trying to organize the plant for over a decade. Employees at the plant voted against the union in 1994 and 1997, but the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) later alleged that unfair election conduct had occurred and ordered a new election.

In 2006, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found in favor of the NLRB, and Smithfield agreed to comply with the NLRB's remedies to ensure a fair election.[10] Smithfield and the employees at Tar Heel had repeatedly called on the UFCW to hold a new election and the company had agreed to pay half the cost of an independent observer to ensure a fair election process, but the union had refused the offer, arguing that Smithfield would not allow a fair election and should have recognized card-check organizing.[11] After a year-long series of public demonstrations, several lockouts, a number of protests and a shareholder meeting which was disrupted by shareholders supporting the union, the UFCW called for a boycott of Smithfield products. In October 2007, Smithfield countered by filing a federal RICO Act lawsuit against UFCW.[12] In October 2008, the UFCW and Smithfield reached an agreement, under which the union agreed to suspend its boycott campaign in return for the company dropping its RICO lawsuit and allowing another election. On December 10 and 11, workers at the plant voted 2,041 to 1,879 in favor of joining the UFCW, bringing the 15-year fight to an end.[13]


Farmland Foods Monmouth, Illinois

The UFCW has been trying without success to organize employees of the Monmouth, Illinois subsidiary packing facility for some time. However, an employee points system has refueled the drive to organize. In this system, employees receive points on a rolling 12-month calendar, as follows:

• Late for work, 2 hours or less: 0.5 point
• Late for work, more than 2 hours: 1 point
• Sick, with doctor's excuse: 1 point per day
• Sick, without doctor's excuse: 2 points per day
• Doctor visit: 0.5 point
• Other appointments (banking, dental, school, child care or court related issues): 1 point

Accumulating points can lead to termination. Because employees are forced to work more than 10 hours a day, 6 days a week, they must take points to maintain a household outside of work. As a result, numerous employees "point out" and are terminated by Farmland Foods.....

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Postby whipstitch » Tue Apr 28, 2009 5:45 pm

Patient Zero Identified...

Image
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 5:49 pm

http://washingtonindependent.com/40832/ ... t-problems

If Smithfield Foods, which I wrote about in an earlier post, rang a bell, it may be because the company has recently gotten some bad press for its troubled labor relations. The problems are heating up with the company’s latest announcement that it’s closing six plants and cutting 1,800 jobs.

In March, a local chapter of the Laborers International Union of North America filed labor charges against Smithfield in Virginia, claiming the company has refused to bargain with the union as the company plans to close down one of its hometown plants and transfer some workers to other sites. LIUNA filed more charges in April.

This is hardly the first time Smithfield has had labor conflicts. In 2007, unions charged that Smithfield collaborated with immigration authorities who led an immigration raid at its huge North Carolina pork-packing plant. Union officials said Smithfield was trying to discourage its workers from organizing.......
Last edited by chiggerbit on Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:07 pm

!~ahem~

http://www.just-food.com/store/product. ... &lk=banner

Branded foods in MNexico: forecasts to 2013 download

"This report is the final part of a new series considering five countries known as the ‘BRICM’ economies – Brazil, Russia, India, China and Mexico – from the perspective of the branded/packaged food industry. The five countries are widely regarded as the ultimate emerging destinations for manufacturers and retailers prepared to invest now in order to reap the rewards once the countries ‘come of age’.

This series of just-food reports provides analysis and insight into the potential of the food sector in the five markets by considering the best-practice strategies employed by leading multinational and domestic manufacturers alongside trend analysis. Market value forecasts by category are provided to 2013, based on secondary research conducted by just-food in 2008. SWOT analyses are also included for at least one major domestic food company per country report.

just-food has ranked the five countries to provide an introductory overview into the potential for investment from a food company’s perspective. Perhaps unsurprisingly, considering the attention it has received within the global food industry over the past five years, China comes out on top, followed by India, Brazil, Russia and, finally, Mexico. Each report contains the ranking criteria and scoring system used.

This report analyses this expanding market, provides an insight into retail market trends, analyses the major branded foods categories and considers the best-practice strategies employed by leading multinational and domestic manufacturers. Consisting of over 11,000 words of analysis and commentary, and 13 data tables covering investment potential, market values and more, the key chapters of the report include:
An introduction to the Mexican branded food and drinks market
Detailed analysis of the mass grocery retail market in Mexico
A breakdown of categories including analysis of bakery and cereals, confectionery, dairy and savoury snacks ........"



And then on another pages, same site, it almost looks like they're gloating about the jobs situation

:http://www.just-food.com/article.aspx?id=105477


"US: Jobs to go in Smithfield pork shake-up

17 February 2009 | Source: just-food.com

view image


US meat group Smithfield Foods is to revamp its pork processing operations with a series of moves including the closure of six plants and the possible loss of almost 1,800 jobs.

The company today (18 February) unveiled plans to streamline its pork business in a bid to make it more competitive.

Smithfield said facilities in Virginia, Florida, North Carolina, Kansas, Ohio and Nebraska would close, leading to the loss of up to 1,795 jobs.

"Wherever possible, Smithfield Foods will offer transfers to other company facilities to an undetermined number of employees," the company said.

One initiative is to offer the majority of workers at the company's Smithfield Packing Company South facility in Virginia jobs at a second site in the state and at a facility in North Carolina.

Under the plans, Smithfield also plans to merge fresh pork sales teams at its John Morrell & Co. and Farmland Foods subsidiaries.

"Lay-offs and plant closings are difficult but necessary decisions," said Smithfield president and CEO Larry Pope.

For the second quarter to 26 October, Smithfield saw profits from its pork business rise from US$62.9m to $93.4m, thanks to a jump in export sales.

At the time of the announcement, Pope said Smithfield's pork business had "performed exceptionally well" despite a 15% rise in raw material costs.

Fresh pork margins, Pope said, were at "record high levels"......"


Oh, yes, Smithfield does beef, too.
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:19 pm

A union piece about Smithfield:

http://www.massaflcio.org/node/3236
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:26 pm

Sad. This epidemic couldn't happen to a more appropriate company, but those poor workers.


http://mikeely.wordpress.com/journalism ... hterhouse/

Strikers at Smithfield’s Tar Heel Slaughterhouse
No Longer Hidden, No Linger Hiding

By Mike Ely and Linda Flores

This article originally appeared on Counterpunch January 9, 2007

Shift change at the Smithfield plant,
Tar Heel, North Carolina
photo: Mike Ely



Winter seems to strip the countryside of secrets. Driving along the two-lane, you can see deep into the gray stretches of dry pine forest and far across bare, open cotton fields.But as night fell, as our contact took us farther and farther from the main road, it became obvious that many things about this corner of North Carolina have been carefully hidden.

“Roll down your window,” A. said. “Smell that.” The nose twitches. It almost burns. “The plant kills 32,000 hogs a day, many of them raised right around here.” A. gestures at the dark woods around us.

Modern industrial hog farming concentrates the swine and pours their untreated excrement into countless “lagoons” that fill acre after acre across North Carolina. The farms are tucked back away from any roads, but there is no hiding the pungent mist of manure that hangs across the land.

We turn left, then right. Dirt roads lead off on every side. People too are hidden here. Suddenly we are in a huge trailer park carved out of the pines. Rows of doublewides, with muscle trucks parked out front. “Michoacan” is spraypainted across a fender. “La Hacienda” is across a trunk lid.

Most of the plantation South has not seen immigration like this before. A white worker quipped to us, “That last wave of immigrants came on slaveships, and they were ordered to ’speak English’ too!”

But that has now changed. Over the last two decades, North Carolina’s immigrant population has grown to at least half a million, overwhelmingly from Mexico and Central America. About 65% of the new immigrants are estimated to be undocumented. Called “illegal” and “alien,” living like an outlaw population, these workers have kept out of sight–often in half-hidden trailer parks like this in remote clearings that dot the countryside.


Worked Mercilessly and Thrown Away

We have come to meet José and María, who both work at the Smithfield Tar Heel plant–the largest pig slaughtering and pork processing plant in the world. José, a slim man, is sitting on the sofa, restlessly, as his nephew lets us in. He is in pain. Two weeks before, at the Smithfield plant, he was wrestling with a tray, big as a table top, loaded with 70 pounds of fat and excess meat. Something gave out in his back.

José tells us in Spanish: “When I got hurt, the supervisor told me ‘pick up that tray.’ I told her I can’t. ‘Pick it up and throw it away.’ So I picked it up and I continued working. But I couldn’t hold the tray. She snapped her fingers, ‘Then you just go home.’ I was fired–for one day. If you get hurt you are fired. Then they told me, ‘Work is waiting for you.’ I am afraid that work will hurt me more. But now they can say I’ve quit.”

José and María’s five kids sit in a circle and listen intently as their parents describe their lives and troubles. One son is severely disabled–getting him care was one reason José first came here illegally, 12 years ago, from Guerrero.

Many hundreds of workers are injured like José each year at the Smithfield plant and are routinely fired. As we were in Robeson County, everyone was talking about a young Guatemalan woman who was accidentally stabbed in the eye with her own knife.

José tells us: “They don’t just butcher hogs at that plant. They butcher people.”

Smithfield had worked to keep all that secret too. The plant used to send screaming ambulances 2 or 3 times a day to the hospital in nearby Elizabethtown. But that became too obvious and too scandalous. So they built a clinic near the plant gates. Now the rate of injuries is hidden and the injury records are kept close.

And it’s not just Smithfield. Everyone remembers when 25 workers were burned to death in 1991 behind the locked doors of the Imperial Food chicken plant when it exploded near here.


What happens if María now gets fired for not having legal paperwork? In October, under pressure from the Department of Homeland Security, Smithfield announced it would fire hundreds of immigrant workers whose social security numbers don’t match their names.

José spits out his words: “The company has sucked the very air out our lungs and now they want to replace us.”

María talks about finding a new job, perhaps in a chicken plant, and then her eyes lock onto ours: “This is the way they treat us. We are not going to tolerate that forever.”

Yes–push has come to shove.

A thousand Latino workers walked out of the Smithfield plant on November 16. In a churning rally over two days, they climbed upon cars and spoke their bitterness over the firing of the undocumented, over the brutal treatment in the plant–in the face of the company guards and gathering sheriffs.

That’s how our Revolution team of reporters and translators knew to come here to Robeson County. The Smithfield strike had been like a brilliant flare launched over dark waters. A thousand workers risking not only their jobs–they knowingly risked arrest and deportation, they risked not seeing their kids that night. They spoke for themselves, and literally for millions more.

When we met immigrant workers like “María” and “José,” many of them did not want their real names or voices recorded. But they had a sense that, for them, there is no going back. The hiding is over, and they want their stories, their suffering, their dreams and their questions to reach the world. They want some justice.


“Things I’ve seen and that I’ve lived”

We took over a small storage room in a local office, so workers could hook up with Revolution to give interviews.

CC walked in–a lean, hard Black man, dignified, very tight-lipped at first. He told of growing up in a sharecropper family with six kids in South Carolina. He talked about picking cotton at seven years old. About how, after the army, he had worked construction until decent pay and benefits just disappeared. And now he was here at the Tar Heel plant.

“They work you hard out there, steady gettin it,” CC said, and described how he stands braced on that slimy floor, “chiseling jawbone” in one hard repetitive downward jerk, forcing the hog jowls from the bone on one carcass after another. “It’s not something I want for my four kids.”

One Black worker described to Revolution how insult is piled on top of the danger. He works running the 250-pound hogs up the concrete lane to the kill floor. “Here we are,” he said, “splashed with hog urine and feces because the drains don’t work. And they want to harass you if you go to the bathroom just to wipe it off your face.”

Another worker told Revolution , “I’ve seen hogs fall off the shackles, knock a worker down and the foreman is hollering ‘Grab that hog and fill that gap in the line!’ all while that worker is still lying there unconscious!”

Raphael came to Tar Heel early in this immigration wave. He had been arrested as a trade union militant in Mexico, and is active in trying to bring the United Food and Commercial Workers into the Tar Heel plant. He tells us of “things I’ve seen and that I’ve lived.”

“I’ve been working here for nine years,” Raphael started, “and they treat us very badly, worse than if we were slaves. There is so much pressure and aggression. They shout at us, ‘You, fucking wetback, get moving.’ They call us ‘motherfuckers’ and more. The supervisors speak to us through crew leaders who translate their orders and insults, and are, unfortunately, Latino like us. Supervisors always want us to work better than we are really doing. If you do it better they want more and more. The line doesn’t come like this: dum dum dum it comes like this ta-ta-ta-ta-ta. And there we stand on that line, shoulder to shoulder. So close that we touch, swinging that knife. And there they stand, the supervisors, each with a calculator, always taking the count–and trying to meet their quota for that day–they just get hysterical, just running around screaming, if they think it is falling behind… I knew I was coming here to work. But I didn’t expect the abnormality, and the abuse. I expected something far better than this. Because, many times you’ve seen stuff like this in your own country–but you don’t expect something like this in a country like the U.S.–an advanced country.”

The speed and intensity of the killing is startling. Truckloads bring hundreds of hogs an hour to the pens of the plant. They are raced to the killing floor–stunned, tattooed, and then stabbed once square in the throat. The lifeblood spurts warm, splattering the workers, over and over, one after another. Within seconds the pigs are hanging from hooks–gutted, draining, and moving toward the long lines of workers with razor-sharp knives. It is work that breaks down your joints at the shoulder, the wrist, and the knees. The heavy mixed smell of death and bleach is often overwhelming. Thousands of workers quit every year, or get injured or fired. And just as many arrive.

Smithfield directly employs between 5,000 and 6,000 workers. But their turnover is so huge that they also hire around 5,000 new workers each year.


Segragated by Language

When the plant first opened in 1992, it employed mainly Black workers (plus about 30% that were either white or Lumbee Indian). Smithfield brought convict labor onto the line. And alongside them came numbers of Black “ex-cons” who have trouble getting hired anywhere else.

Smithfield quickly went through a lot of the Black workers from the surrounding areas–and the company was obviously worried that the ongoing organizing might bring in a union. And so by the mid-1990s, Smithfield, like many other capitalists, was actively recruiting immigrant workers from Mexico and Central America. They dreamed of a workforce that was more desperate, grateful, intimidated and divided. No one knows for sure if Smithfield directly contracted with coyotes–but certainly they put out the word that anyone who made it here to their plant was guaranteed a job, no questions asked.

When I asked José how he ended up in Tar Heel 12 years ago, he said simply, “That’s where the van was heading.”

CC says, “It’s not just Black and white anymore.” What’s true for the plant is true for the South. Smithfield’s operation is about 65% Latino and 30% Black–at least for now.

Workers are tightly segregated from each other by work crew and language. CC talks about how the system based on petty favoritism inflames the hostilities: “They are working to keep Mexican and Black at each other. They do something to satisfy the Mexican, and Blacks get angry. Do something to please the Blacks to get Mexicans angry.” Workers talked of “stare-downs” in the hall between Black and Mexican workers armed with knives, who have no way to speak to each other.


“Queremos justicia!”

After years of hiring and exploiting immigrant workers, Smithfield turned over their hiring records to the federal government–saying that they were being pressured by the Department of Homeland Security. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said that 600 social security numbers from the Tar Heel plant did not to match the employee names. In October, Smithfield told workers they had two weeks to provide explanations. One Smithfield representative told workers at the Tar Heel plant that the ICE had threatened to raid the factory if Smithfield had not gone ahead with these firings. (They have already been carrying out raids against immigrants in other factories in North Carolina.)

People wondered what would happen to their jobs, their families and their very lives. And the answer came quickly: company guards and officials suddenly took over 50 workers off the line and fired them. A sharp sign of this continuing division is that when company officials came to fire the targeted workers, a few workers on the line openly supported the firing, shouting “You are illegal, get out of here!”

At the same time, many of the workers felt very differently.

After days of mounting tension, workers pulled key switches that shut down the production line early in the morning of November 16. Hundreds of pig carcasses were just hanging there, swinging, as workers poured out the doors into the parking lot. They chanted “Queremos justicia!” (We want justice!) and “Sí se puede!” (We can do it!).

The word of the wildcat strike swept through the plant: “The Latinos have walked out!” Six or seven hundred workers walked out, and at the next shift change, hundreds more from second shift stayed out. The mass picket swelled to a thousand at the front gate. Right there in the parking lot, the workers elected a multinational leadership committee to formulate demands. Cheers went up as a few Black and white workers walked out in support in small groups or by themselves.

The strikers won an important victory when Smithfield agreed to important concessions. The company agreed to rehire the fired workers and meet for the first time with an elected committee of the plant workers.

Then, after the strike ended and all the workers returned to work, Smithfield announced that it was giving workers at all its plants nationwide 60 days to clear up any problems with their social security numbers. The company clearly intends to press ahead to fire any workers who do not provide satisfactory proof of legal status. And now, in mid-January, those 60 days have ticked down.

The powerful action of the striking workers in November puts the spotlight on the horrific conditions faced by workers at plants like Tar Heel, and on the unjust attacks aimed at immigrant workers.

A thousand workers of Tar Heel dared to demand justice–in the face of intense anti-immigrant hysteria in North Carolina, in the face of federal threats of firing and deportation, and in the face of sharp divisions among the workers themselves. They deserve active support in their ongoing fight to make Smithfield back off completely from firing the immigrant workers they so ruthlessly exploited.

At the same time, this struggle has a potential importance far beyond one plant or one region. These workers are an inspiring example of resistance to an increasingly repressive political climate.

Their struggle places a challenge before everyone across the U.S.–to take a clear and uncompromising stand in defense of undocumented immigrants and against the criminal injustices carried out by this system.

Contact for Mike Ely: mikeely (at) yahoo (dot) com

Contact Linda Flores: comolaflores (at) yahoo (dot) com

Available online at mikeely.wordpress.com. Send comments to: m1keely (at) yahoo.com

Published: December 2007. Feel free to reprint, distribute or quote this with attribution. This website’s contents are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 U.S. License.
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Postby 8bitagent » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:37 pm

the other week PBS airs a piece on the Center for Infectious Diseases, and uses a kids cartoon to show what happens when sick minded scientists in government labs combine
H1N1(the swine flu killing people) with Avian bird flu:
(go to 7:30 mark)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iS3PO5mj-a8
Theyre telling you that people in labs are combining H1N1 with avian flu to "see what happens".
"Do you know who I am? I am the arm, and I sound like this..."-man from another place, twin peaks fire walk with me
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:41 pm

http://www.bloggingstocks.com/2009/04/2 ... ine-influ/

Smithfield Foods (NYSE: SFD) closed at $10.32. SFD says it found no evidence of swine influenza at its Mexican joint ventures. SFD May option implied volatility of 102 is below its 26-week average of 112, according to Track Data, suggesting decreasing price movement.
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Postby chiggerbit » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:47 pm

http://www.topinvestmentguide.com/2009/ ... t-journal/

Posted by Investment Property - Google News
April 27, 2009

US HOT STOCKS: GM, Smithfield Foods,
Continental Airlines - Wall Street Journal
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Postby ninakat » Tue Apr 28, 2009 6:55 pm

Hey 8bit, welcome back!
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Postby smiths » Tue Apr 28, 2009 8:48 pm

Yuck. Our food literally emerges from giant swamps of reeking, festering shit


is there anyone who honestly does not understand this yet ...

get vegies from a growers market and cook your own food,
and get meat from a small butcher and find out who produces it,

dont get anything wrapped in plastic, and for fucks sake avoid fast food at all costs

we all have to stop supporting these giant corporations with our mindless purchasing



and that photo of the kid licking the pig is gold
the question is why, who, why, what, why, when, why and why again?
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Postby pepsified thinker » Tue Apr 28, 2009 9:37 pm

smiths wrote:
and that photo of the kid licking the pig is gold


--and I love that the pig has a kinda surprised look on it's face, too.
"we must cultivate our garden"
--Voltaire
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Postby anothershamus » Tue Apr 28, 2009 9:42 pm

From cidrap via cryptogon:


CDC to mix avian, human flu viruses in pandemic study

Robert Roos * News Editor

Jan 14, 2004 (CIDRAP News) – One of the worst fears of infectious disease experts is that the H5N1 avian influenza virus now circulating in parts of Asia will combine with a human-adapted flu virus to create a deadly new flu virus that could spread around the world.

That could happen, scientists predict, if someone who is already infected with an ordinary flu virus contracts the avian virus at the same time. The avian virus has already caused at least 48 confirmed human illness cases in Asia, of which 35 have been fatal. The virus has shown little ability to spread from person to person, but the fear is that a hybrid could combine the killing power of the avian virus with the transmissibility of human flu viruses.

Now, rather than waiting to see if nature spawns such a hybrid, US scientists are planning to try to breed one themselves—in the name of preparedness.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will soon launch experiments designed to combine the H5N1 virus and human flu viruses and then see how the resulting hybrids affect animals. The goal is to assess the chances that such a "reassortant" virus will emerge and how dangerous it might be.

CDC officials confirmed the plans for the research as described recently in media reports, particularly in a Canadian Press (CP) story.


story continues here:


http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/panflu/news/jan1404hybrids.html
)'(
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