Thursday, April 30, 2020
Serving Suggestion: A Meatless May
The Current Occupant has, by a strange contortion of his powers under the Defense Production Act, ordered that meat and poultry production facilities remain open during the present pandemic.
This curious order comes at a time when Federal leadership continues to be inadequate in meeting truly critical needs such as Covid-19 test kits and test-reading capabilities - to say nothing of a continuing supply of personal protective equipment for medical staff, first responders, elder-care workers, etc.
But, given the proclivities of the Current Occupant and his staff - some of whom are far cleverer and more devious than he seems to be - this order has a certain, bizarre logic.
First, its declared purpose - to assure a continuous supply of meat and poultry to the nation's grocery stores - comports with the Current Occupant's preference for a diet rich in animal protein.
Second, its assertion of a Federal power to re-open facilities closed by state health authorities consists with the present Administration's insistence that the powers of the national government - and particularly, the Executive branch - are supreme and unquestionable.
Third, considering the outbreaks of viral infections among workers in these facilities - a large number of whom are immigrants (documented and undocumented) - keeping these facilities open has a definite genocidal potential.
It is difficult to write these words, but for the past three years, our government has shown a surprising willingness to tolerate - and even sponsor - policies which have a tendency to kill brown and black people. Whether it is by arresting Good Samaritans who leave water and food for undocumented aliens crossing Southwestern deserts; failing to provide sanitary and medical care for refugees along our southern border; pardoning a rogue soldier accused of murdering Afghan civilians; or failing to build on the previous administration's efforts to combat blue-on-black killings - the simple fact is that this Administration - our government - seems blithely unconcerned when its actions, or failures to act, result in the deaths of people who are not white.
The President's order that meat and poultry processors remain open - even at enormous risk to their workers - is of a piece with this tendency. It will kill people, and many of those people will be brown or black.
We should do something to combat this policy. But what can private citizens do to counter a Presidential order under the Defense Production Act?
Simple: We could unite to take a vacation from meat and poultry.
What if we began - starting today - to develop momentum for a nationwide Meatless May? By the end of next month, we could have undermined the essential logic of the Executive order.
The Current Occupant's order rests on the assertion that the national defense relies on supply chains which provide meat and poultry to our grocery stores. It's hard to justify that assertion under any set of circumstances, but if millions of us simply stopped buying and eating meat and poultry, it would make nonsense of the whole business.
For the truth is, most of us eat far too much animal protein. A reduction in the demand for these products would be good for our health - and good for our planet.
In recent weeks, a number of thoughtful writers have commented on the possibility that the present economic shutdown might have the effect of accelerating a shift to the use of renewable energy sources, while hastening the death of the fossil fuel industry.
Perhaps it is time we considered a parallel step with regard another industry which contributes to global heating - the industrial processors of meat and poultry. If we took this occasion to eat less meat - or no meat - it could help us realize that a diet low in animal protein is a viable lifestyle choice.
This is a small blog, and will not reach that many readers. But think about it - and if you like the idea, please share the idea with your friends.
What would you say to defying the Current Occupant's new order by joining forces for a Meatless May?
It could do some good.
Update, May 2: Since this piece was posted two days ago, the League of Latin American Citizens (LULAC) has called for national Meatless May Mondays in support of workers in meat and poultry production facilities. Other groups have urged a more modest MeatLess May - less meat, but not none. Still others have reminded Americans of the World War I era "Meatless May", a national movement to save meat supplies for the troops in Europe.
It is extremely unlikely that this modest blog had anything to do with these developments. Good ideas often occur to several people simultaneously.
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