Thursday, August 7, 2025

You're All a Bunch of Animals! (II)

 “Little Red Barns - Hiding the Truth, From Farm to Fable” by Will Potter, 2025 (Part 2)

Potter in his quest to ‘witness’ decides to follow the money.  Between 1998 and 2019 U.S. agribusiness spent $2.5B on political lobbying, more than the oil industry, mostly on climate change issues related to diet.  Tyson Foods alone spent $3.2M from 2000 to 2020, in a percentage of their profits far higher than Exxon.  National meat and cattlemen’s groups led the way to stop climate change regulations, spending $200M.  At COP28 in Dubai, big meat and dairy companies sent 120 delegates, 3 times more than in the past, as part of a U.S. ‘government’ delegation no less. They were able to blunt efforts to rein in factory animal farming there. U.N. reports advocating less meat, or a plant-based diet were stopped or changed.  Other climate and animal regulations in the Euro Zone have been weakened by the efforts of these Big Ag firms.  Their efforts add up to denial of the science, much like tobacco firms did and oil firms still do. 

Massaging science is the name of this game by creating doubt or manipulating methods and facts, both familiar tactics. The ag industry, like the pharmaceutical industry with animal hormones and anti-biotics, shovels money to university researchers. They have created two pro-meat institutes at universities in California and Colorado, churning out deceptions.  They have even massaged ‘regenerative’ agriculture as a green-washing tool, as has RFK Jr.  They established the Livestock Global Alliance to defend CAFO practices, including countries like Argentina and Brazil.  Its purpose is to procure ‘industry-friendly research.’ 

Given ag-gag laws are so blatantly anti-democratic and anti-journalism, some were repealed or rejected in the legislative phase.  Potter reminds the reader that Upton Sinclair, his hero, spent 7 weeks working undercover in slaughterhouses on Chicago’s South Side prior to writing “The Jungle.  Undercover journalism and even amateur journalism has a long history, and has won many awards.  So blatant censorship is not always a winning hand, as it brought together a coalition from the AFL-CIO to the Newspaper Guild to the Sierra Club to oppose it. Of course, now ‘public sentiment’ is irrelevant in certain states.  Government reports have been hidden if they cover factory farm pollution or treatment of animals and workers.  The USDA’s reports on this were deleted on-line by the first Trump administration. Some of the CAFO proponents now call for more ‘sunshine’ – just like police departments grudgingly installed body-cams.  Yet the cameras have changed little.

The Guv’mint on the Side of Big Ag

Controlling the government is the name of the next game, i.e. regulatory capture.  Potter here concentrates on environmental effects.  While the National Academy of Sciences says air pollution from factory farms kills 17,000 people a year, there is no bar to size or construction.  83% of agricultural land use is for animals and feed, but again, the Ag Department or EPA has nothing to say about this.  Beef’s carbon footprint is 20 times greater than cereals and root vegetables. Efficiency?  Regulation?  70% of all birds are now domestic fowl for slaughter, reminding us of the devastation to wild bird habitats.  Potter has many more stats.  And yet for all this land, energy and green-house gases, only 37% of protein is derived.  This kind of massive animal agriculture is basically inefficient but the government and society are captured by Big Meat’s profit motive.

No other agency is captured so thoroughly as the FBI, which targeted environmental and animal rights ‘terrorists’ in their stated defense of ‘the economy.  When January 6, 2021 happened, everyone but the FBI knew violence was afoot.  Their kid gloves approach to fascist and right-wing violence Potter compares to their long-term and hard-core surveillance, arrests and intimidation of non-violent animal and environmental protesters. (He covered this in a previous book ‘Green is the New Red,” reviewed below). 

Old McDonald's hog waste lagoon in NC

Potter goes into some soul-searching about how ‘light’ on a subject sometimes doesn’t change a thing.  The genocide in Gaza is one example.  He contends that the real power is one of ‘stories’ – and the U.S. story about red barns and ‘the cow goes mooo…’ from our youth still controls the narrative of what is going on in rural areas.  As he puts it “Old McDonald had a poop lagoon…” does not quite carry the same cachet.  He shows how the government has promoted land-grant colleges and 4-H, forming tech partnerships with big farmers that has created land consolidation.  Even State Fairs participate in this agrarian myth-making, as we see perfectly groomed farm animals competing in contests.  Potter claims that 85% of animal welfare claims by vendors are bogus, and this includes organic claims, ‘humane’ butchery and the like. 

The material need to eat is not considered by Potter, nor long decades of eating animal products in various forms by nearly everyone on the planet.  Habit, custom and the dead hand of the past are common.  Nor the financial investment of a large part of the capitalist system.  Blaming it on a ‘story’ is a form of leftie idealism, though still relevant as far as it goes.

Potter notes that the national ACLU and the Southern Poverty Law Center both consider animal rights and environmental activists as similar to right-wingers, with the latter calling them ‘eco-terrorists.’  Some ‘leftists’ distain them too, even to this day.  Their ideological point is that these movements are not about ‘humans,’ hence a distraction.  Yet CAFO agriculture impacts workers and human health, while also impacting the human environment. It should also be noted that humans are ‘animals’ of a sort, a point ignored because ‘it’s so obvious’ as one leftie told me.  Potter makes a plea for ‘intersectionality’ regarding these struggles, much as Marx understood political economy ‘holistically.’   It is not about empathy for ‘others,’ though it is that for some who don’t understand how animal ag impacts them too. 

Philosophy

Potter, by this circuitous route, ends up discussing the present link between the Right, fascism, rural politics and animal agriculture.  The latter is a profitable extractive industry based on killing. Most of its immediate proponents are wealthy corporations and petit-bourgeois farmers, ranchers and businessmen.  This occupation eventually needs a ‘philosophy.’  So the Right or fascists call anyone they don’t like ‘animals.’  This is a long-standing and standard rhetorical device.  Potter cites the use of forms of the ‘animal’ slur by the Klan, Nazis, Trumpists, Proud Boys, racists and Israeli government Zionists, and the history of colonialist ‘human’ zoos in Europe and the U.S.  

This is why ‘soy boy’ is a macho insult and why the cultural Right promotes raw milk and butter and the pathetic and toxic carnivore or paleo diets.  Standard bearers like RFK Jr., Trump Jr. and Kristi Noem take pride in oddly killing animals. A dog, goat, whale, bear and a rare African rhino!  Animal abuse is the first step for many murderers, people like Jeffrey Dahmer.  So think about the ‘animal’ insult.  Their intent in industrially killing animals – and this extends to big game hunting for the ‘sportsmen’ of the lot – is now trained on some humans.  Marx once said that you can judge a society by how it treats women.  You can also judge a society on how it treats animals and nature. 

Of note, Potter does not discuss health issues about the food produced by CAFO’s, which are filled with hormones, antibiotics and chemicals.  Nor of the level of fecal matter in products, like chicken for instance, nor industrial fishing or certain mass aqua-cultures.  He does not investigate the economics of Big Ag either, the gigantic pet industry in the U.S. or zoo-aquarium logic.  He concentrates on abuse and the environment, and the politics of it all.  His solution is an ‘Anti-Story’ that narrates a different view towards nature, animals and our inter-connections with both.  He’s not a socialist, so he does not make a plea for some kind of eco-socialism. But certainly any workers’ government interested in the environment, human health, hunger and efficiency would limit or end industrial animal agriculture. 

Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 19 year archive, using these terms:  ‘CAFO,’ ‘agriculture,’ ‘vegetarianism’ ‘veganism,’ ‘industrial agriculture,’ ‘Upton Sinclair,’ ‘Will Potter,’ ‘Red is the New Black.’’

And I found it at May Day Books, which has many left books on agriculture and the environment.    

Red Frog / August 7, 2025

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