Tuesday, June 10, 2008

American Protests

For the past couple of days the nights have been a lit with candle light. The sounds of chants and shouts from the street have risen. Even on my tiny island of Jeju, these protests are getting larger and louder. Last night, while I was eating my BBQ after a horrific game of bowling. There came a parade of police followed by a 4 city block long group of protesters carrying candles and chanting slogans against American beef and the new Korean President Lee Myung-bak. The one here was small compared to the one in Seoul last night. The Seoul protest was over 1 million people strong. That is twice the population of my entire island. People are protesting all over the country.

This all started about a month ago. The new President Lee Myung-bak signed an agreement with the U.S., about beef imports to Korea. There were no limitations to the meat. In quality or quantity. He was just trying to lower beef prices for his people at home. It was also part of a larger free trade agreement between the two countries. An argreement that would have increased Korea's trade by an estimated $20 billion dollars. Korea used to be the US's third largest importer of beef. That was until the Mad Cow Scare of the 2003. Since that time the wealthier Asian countries have all baned US beef.

Now through the fear mongering of a few people, his entire cabinet have offered to stepped down. The fear mongers are saying that we will ship the lowest quality meat to Korea. I think grade E meat. Basically it is meat that we feed to dogs. While not entirely true, yes, some of the lower quality would be shipped here. But, some higher quality meat would also be shipped.

The fear mongers are warning people of the prevalence of Mad Cow Disease in American beef. They are especially worried about cows over 30 months of age. Apparently older cows are more susceptible to Mad Cow. The recent videos of American slaughter houses killing downer cows has not helped the situation.

Creekstone Farms Premium Beef, wanted to test all of it's cows for Mad Cow, and were blocked by the US FDA. Each animal costs about $20 to test. They were willing to do this, because Japan said it would buy the beef if it was tested. Other farmers are applauding the US FDA's block on Creekstone's testing, citing that it would cause consumers to ask too many questions and that consumers would start asking for more regulations. Creekstone Farms, has since had to lay off 50 people and still can not ship their beef to Japan. They are appealing the FDA's decision.

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