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JFC, what have you idiots in the States done now? Why are you such panicky bitches?
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Originally Posted By BuckeyeNation: Are you really that stupid? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By BuckeyeNation: Originally Posted By bugy: Originally Posted By mrcatbert: Originally Posted By AKengineer: Doomers get to reap the result of giving up freedom for the illusion of safety. Let them eat surgical masks. Sorry, FB, but the meat packing facilities were all considered essential and not shut down. They closed because employees actually got sick. Generally it’s a bad idea to have sick people slaughtering/processing/packing your food supply. We have rules against that - even if they just have the flu. While I'm sure what you're saying is true, the next question is: who exactly are these employees? Are they Americans? Are they Mexican? Are they Chinese? It is strange that such a large percentage of ALL the cases in North Dakota are Smithfield Employees. Is it a coincidence? Why was the outbreak so concentrated in this one group of people. Spoiler: My theory is that these are Chinese people working in the plant, and they aren't washing their hands. That's why they all got sick. Are you really that stupid? Are you really that uninformed? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23790806 https://www.theepochtimes.com/only-23-percent-of-mainland-chinese-wash-hands-after-using-toilet-survey_3229841.html https://www.chineasy.com/10-things-can-get-away-china/ - View Item #7 This is a very well-documented fact about China. They don't wash their hands. It's a cultural thing. |
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Quoted: Smithfield is in SD. I think your theory is a bit of a stretch. They look like a pretty normal group of people working at a plant. https://www.nationalhogfarmer.com/business/smithfield-foods-invest-45-million-south-dakota-operations View Quote |
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Originally Posted By ACEB36TC: We have a STRICT 90 day rule on frozen beef. Double sealed, vacuum packed and it's trash in 90 days. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By ACEB36TC: Originally Posted By Greenspan: There is only a shortage in the sense that everyone has credit cards and freezers full of meat. There is only so much freezer space though. These idiots will be eating freezer burned steaks for years. We have a STRICT 90 day rule on frozen beef. Double sealed, vacuum packed and it's trash in 90 days. Wut? Really? |
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Originally Posted By N1Rampage: Publix distribution network disagrees along with my a few small grocery chains in central FL. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By N1Rampage: Originally Posted By fike: Originally Posted By AKengineer: Originally Posted By zwitterr: Meat packing plants aren't having issues because they were shut down. As far as I'm aware they were all categorized as essential so they kept operating like normal. Combination of increased supply and supply disruption due to stay at home orders. People are getting paid to not work more than their usual income so they are consuming more than usual. Restuarant supply is having to reorient to grocery supply. Add to that people not taking any common sense precautions and getting sick in huge bunches at packing plants. Not that many of those people were washing their hands after shitting on them to begin with. That hasn't happened. They might be be able to get some ad hoc order changes, but nationally, companies like Sysco aren't reorienting to grocery supply. |
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Quoted: As for places like Wendy's and McDonalds, fat fucks and unhealthy fucks will be better off. I find it hilarious and sad at the same time how so many (many here in GD) were so worried about restaurants closing down. Fast food starting to tank? I find that COMPLETELY hilarious! I'm sure the resident fatties will decry my post. View Quote It's all hilarious, isn't it? What an awesome human being. |
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Flu bros should be the only ones allowed to buy meat. Doomers should get a cock meat sandwich for causing all of this.
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Originally Posted By ACEB36TC: We have a STRICT 90 day rule on frozen beef. Double sealed, vacuum packed and it's trash in 90 days. View Quote Who is "We"? We are on month 11 or our last beef, still excellent. Key is not having a frost free freezer, they cause freezer burn. Next half comes in June, hope to get half a pig by then also, if not I'll wait for my nieces 4h pig in September. |
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Originally Posted By ahnglw: Alphonso has had many pounds of meat in him......https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/206146/85191ABA-6DBF-4422-8063-F793B187CD5C_jpe-1402695.JPG View Quote This is without a doubt the best post I’ve seen on the interwebz in ages. Had me laughing from the gut. Well done good sir. |
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My son manages meat departments for Kroger (Fred Meyer). OR and WA are working to reopen two big slaughter houses... should be in about a week.
Sorry, only have local data. But son brings home some nice meat... I love telling him that he is a good meat manager... |
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Originally Posted By fatcat4620: A local to us restaurant chain literally opened a grocery store. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By fatcat4620: Originally Posted By fike: That hasn't happened. A local to us restaurant chain literally opened a grocery store. A local restaurant isn't restaurant supply. |
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This is likely going to be an issue for a while.
There are two issues at play. The first is that a lot of meat processing plants were geared towards commercial sales. These get processed and packaged differently and are not allowed for commercial sale. The result is that these plants had to pull some machinery offline. The bigger issue is COVID. Once you have a confirmed member of a shift test positive for COVID, you have to pull everyone off, find a way to test them, sanitize the plant, and toss out the product that was in process. |
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Originally Posted By bugy: Are you really that uninformed? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23790806 https://www.theepochtimes.com/only-23-percent-of-mainland-chinese-wash-hands-after-using-toilet-survey_3229841.html https://www.chineasy.com/10-things-can-get-away-china/ - View Item #7 This is a very well-documented fact about China. They don't wash their hands. It's a cultural thing. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By bugy: Originally Posted By BuckeyeNation: Originally Posted By bugy: Originally Posted By mrcatbert: Originally Posted By AKengineer: Doomers get to reap the result of giving up freedom for the illusion of safety. Let them eat surgical masks. Sorry, FB, but the meat packing facilities were all considered essential and not shut down. They closed because employees actually got sick. Generally it’s a bad idea to have sick people slaughtering/processing/packing your food supply. We have rules against that - even if they just have the flu. While I'm sure what you're saying is true, the next question is: who exactly are these employees? Are they Americans? Are they Mexican? Are they Chinese? It is strange that such a large percentage of ALL the cases in North Dakota are Smithfield Employees. Is it a coincidence? Why was the outbreak so concentrated in this one group of people. Spoiler: My theory is that these are Chinese people working in the plant, and they aren't washing their hands. That's why they all got sick. Are you really that stupid? Are you really that uninformed? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23790806 https://www.theepochtimes.com/only-23-percent-of-mainland-chinese-wash-hands-after-using-toilet-survey_3229841.html https://www.chineasy.com/10-things-can-get-away-china/ - View Item #7 This is a very well-documented fact about China. They don't wash their hands. It's a cultural thing. Okay, but, like, this virus is extremely contagious, lives on surfaces for days, and doesnt present symptoms in 30%, of the infected. Trying to pretend like this is just because they dont wash their hands is idiotic. Even before the virus, they wore masks and gloves. The outbreak was concentrated because the people are concentrated there. |
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We all had salad, Steak, baked sweet potatoes covered in honey butter, cinnamon and brown sugar yesterday from Logans.
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Originally Posted By ahnglw: Alphonso has had many pounds of meat in him......https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/206146/85191ABA-6DBF-4422-8063-F793B187CD5C_jpe-1402695.JPG View Quote I'm sorry.... Got me... I laughed..... |
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I am in the industry.
Some plants are shut down. The others are practicing distancing as best they can so workers are spaced more. This slows the lines down and there is less meat processed. |
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Originally Posted By DeathMetalMedic: This is likely going to be an issue for a while. There are two issues at play. The first is that a lot of meat processing plants were geared towards commercial sales. These get processed and packaged differently and are not allowed for commercial sale. The result is that these plants had to pull some machinery offline. The bigger issue is COVID. Once you have a confirmed member of a shift test positive for COVID, you have to pull everyone off, find a way to test them, sanitize the plant, and toss out the product that was in process. View Quote Lolwut. A confirmed case of one person of a 3k person shift does not result in pulling off the entire shift. And what machinery are they pulling offline that is intended for retail sales? If anything that machinery not running is a labor issue, not a sales issue. |
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Of all the possible supply chain issues, and we are staring at gazillions of them, I still don't think food will be a problem. We make almost all of it here. Heck, if I wanted to invest the time and effort, I could feed myself using just my few acres. This is a temporary shortage. I predict we will be awash in beef, poultry and toilet paper before too long. I also predict that when those trump bux run out, and prices reflect the new inflationary pressures, we won't be talking about shortages but rather high prices and inability for most people to afford the basics. Enjoy the good times while they are still here, it's gonna be a real bitch come late summer into fall.
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I heard Chick-fil-a is out and they are never getting any ever again.....dang. |
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My local grocery store had ground beef on sale today. 35% off.
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I think most of the people eating fast food like the chain drive throughs are
When the cards max and the burger joints close is when things will get dicey. |
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Originally Posted By pedaler: You are wasting good meat or your freezer is crap. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By pedaler: Originally Posted By ACEB36TC: We have a STRICT 90 day rule on frozen beef. Double sealed, vacuum packed and it's trash in 90 days. You are wasting good meat or your freezer is crap. Probably has a self defrosting freezer. The old non self defrosting are a PITA once a year but they keep food MUCH longer as they are not constantly being surface thawed, then refrozen. |
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We still have meat around here for now. Central Florida. What I find interesting is that Walmart is running out while Publix is stocked consistently. Must be different supply chains.
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Originally Posted By NorthPolar: A friend of mine works in a packing plant connected to a major slaughterhouse in the midwest. They've got nothing to pack because the house is shut down. Then again, when a certain brand of meats employs entire shifts of Somali labor who live 15 in an apartment and practice Somali hygiene... I've heard some horror stories and no longer buy that brand of 'product.' Thankfully I can catch 10 trout a day up here, so I have an excuse to go fishing the moment I can get a hole in the ice. View Quote and you aren't gonna let us know which brand it is ???? |
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I just had a bacon jalapeno chicken sandwich yesterday from Wendy's. They were not out of anything.
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A small country meat processor my father uses for cows is booked up all through July.
Small, decentralized meat processors are gonna expand to meet demand I think. |
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I hope my grocery store does not read the meat panic attempts on arfcom cause they’ve got some great sales and packed shelves right now!
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Originally Posted By akgunwinner: Smithfield is owned by WH Group of China. Could have been a visit by a sick View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By akgunwinner: Originally Posted By Rapidfire_85: Smithfield is in SD. I think your theory is a bit of a stretch. They look like a pretty normal group of people working at a plant. https://www.nationalhogfarmer.com/business/smithfield-foods-invest-45-million-south-dakota-operations Smithfield is owned by WH Group of China. Could have been a visit by a sick |
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Quoted: Smithfield is owned by WH Group of China. Could have been a visit by a sick exec. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Smithfield is in SD. I think your theory is a bit of a stretch. They look like a pretty normal group of people working at a plant. https://www.nationalhogfarmer.com/business/smithfield-foods-invest-45-million-south-dakota-operations Smithfield is owned by WH Group of China. Could have been a visit by a sick exec. There have been over 100 USDA meat inspectors test positive. So you have sick inspectors going from plant to plant spreading the plague. Workers stand right next to each other in a cold moist environment which the virus loves. A lot of these workers also leave together in 8 to an apartment. It's a wonder that every plant has not had an outbreak. 8nBAIT |
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Quoted: Doomers get to reap the result of giving up freedom for the illusion of safety. Let them eat surgical masks. View Quote View Quote Oh, look, more people who allow doomers to life rent free in their heads. |
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Originally Posted By MaChu: A small country meat processor my father uses for cows is booked up all through July. Small, decentralized meat processors are gonna expand to meet demand I think. View Quote Small processor can meet small demand that's it. Last week in the us 170 million poultry 2 million hogs and half a million cows were processed. Local KFC is running out of chicken. Why? The daily sales have doubled and there internal supply chain doesn't have enough trucks. And for the use meat in 90 days guy. I had a ten year old frozen chicken out of my chest freezer the other day. It was just fine. |
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Originally Posted By bugy: While I'm sure what you're saying is true, the next question is: who exactly are these employees? Are they Americans? Are they Mexican? Are they Chinese? It is strange that such a large percentage of ALL the cases in North Dakota are Smithfield Employees. Is it a coincidence? Why was the outbreak so concentrated in this one group of people. Spoiler: My theory is that these are Chinese people working in the plant, and they aren't washing their hands. That's why they all got sick. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By bugy: Originally Posted By mrcatbert: Originally Posted By AKengineer: Doomers get to reap the result of giving up freedom for the illusion of safety. Let them eat surgical masks. Sorry, FB, but the meat packing facilities were all considered essential and not shut down. They closed because employees actually got sick. Generally it’s a bad idea to have sick people slaughtering/processing/packing your food supply. We have rules against that - even if they just have the flu. While I'm sure what you're saying is true, the next question is: who exactly are these employees? Are they Americans? Are they Mexican? Are they Chinese? It is strange that such a large percentage of ALL the cases in North Dakota are Smithfield Employees. Is it a coincidence? Why was the outbreak so concentrated in this one group of people. Spoiler: My theory is that these are Chinese people working in the plant, and they aren't washing their hands. That's why they all got sick. yes, it's a total coincidence that people that work in close proximity to each other all got sick |
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Two things:
I lived in the Springdale, AR area for a year and my FIL lived there his adult life. This is Tyson's home and main operation (although they have processing plants other places as well). The overwhelming majority of workers are Mexican and they tend to live in groups. As such, if one gets coronavirus, the chances are high that everyone in the household (often 10 or more in a single household) will get it. As such, the numbers of COVID-19 amongst the meat packing workers is going to be substantially higher. WalMart sells a LOT of consumer meat. Years ago, the butchers in each store threatened to unionize. WalMart sent them home, and went to central processing. When you put all your eggs in one basket with centralization, if there are problems, it will be widespread. |
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Quoted: We have a STRICT 90 day rule on frozen beef. Double sealed, vacuum packed and it's trash in 90 days. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: There is only a shortage in the sense that everyone has credit cards and freezers full of meat. There is only so much freezer space though. These idiots will be eating freezer burned steaks for years. We have a STRICT 90 day rule on frozen beef. Double sealed, vacuum packed and it's trash in 90 days. Odd. I just ate some 2017 venison that was perfect. Damn that was a good deer. Fatty thing that just makes for a great meal. |
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Originally Posted By nightstalker: Goodbye obesity and diabetes. Well, there’s a chance. View Quote Actually, I'd wager the opposite if there's any effect at all. People will just switch over to less healthy alternatives. Sure, the fast food will have a positive impact, but the grocery stores not having meat will mean people will look for other foods. The smart ones will supplement their diet with healthy protein rich foods. The welfare crowd, on average, will probably be buying up garbage foods... well more than they usually do. |
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Originally Posted By mrcatbert: Sorry, FB, but the meat packing facilities were all considered essential and not shut down. They closed because employees actually got sick. Generally it’s a bad idea to have sick people slaughtering/processing/packing your food supply. We have rules against that - even if they just have the flu. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By mrcatbert: Originally Posted By AKengineer: Doomers get to reap the result of giving up freedom for the illusion of safety. Let them eat surgical masks. Sorry, FB, but the meat packing facilities were all considered essential and not shut down. They closed because employees actually got sick. Generally it’s a bad idea to have sick people slaughtering/processing/packing your food supply. We have rules against that - even if they just have the flu. You're right. We shut them down every year when some employees get sick. No big deal and not the fault of the overhyped virus. |
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Originally Posted By tbonifie: Just bought a half cow yesterday. Another half reserved for Mid-July. You can't take the beef from me!!!! View Quote Same here. We buy a half a cow twice a year. Just picked it up from my beef/game processor yesterday. Good news is his business is booming through all this, which is great to see for him and his family. |
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