They want to ban meats because its too healthy and allows people to live without need for a doctor because they dont get “diseases” when their bodies are healthy
How do we buy beef from this outfit? I'd be fine with their beef, if I knew where I could buy it. My usual grocery outlets at Kroger, Publix, and occasionally COSTCO... and they all have their own sources for meats.
US Cattlemen's Association is a group of people who "represent" cattle producers in DC to push for policies to "better" the beef cattle business. I am admittedly not too familiar with them or what they push for. Most of these groups collect donations under the guise of helping, and just pocket it. Not unlike most of these types of groups. R-CALF is however a pretty good one.
Point to note: The Beef Checkoff collects (steals) $1.00 for every single head of cattle sold in the country. Mandatory. It gets used to push for things that do not help. It basically lobbies for the meat packer conglomerate, who control beef prices to their benefit. Akin to hedge funds in the stock market.
As far as fresh local beef, just talk to local farmers. TN has plenty of home grown beef. If you use that farce book crap, that is a pretty good way to get connected also.
I was channel surfing yesterday and came across a "60 minutes" segment about the last, major cattle drive in the country; I think call the "Green River Flow" (something like that) in Wyoming, where they herd cattle, on horses, to high pasture areas in the summer, and then the cattle naturally migrate back to the lower country in the fall. It was really interesting, and I was surprise 60-minutes would run a pretty "pro-American" story like it.
That isn't the "last" one. It happens all over the mountain west and front range, even into the plains. Nobody sees it though. A person would have to travel a very long way off of any paved road. Rest assured the American Cowboy and our legacy are alive and well. Just silent.
Thank you for keeping it going! This was about the 70-mile drive in Wyoming, which was stated as the longest one. Perhaps they referred to it as the last, long one?
I’ll take a 1/2 cow, please.
Funny... but around our house, a salad is usually just a precursor to BEEF in one form or another.
LOL so it wasn't just me who noticed that. That's OK, though, he's gotta stay healthy to produce the beef for the rest of us. :) I'll give him a pass.
Probably left-over garnish for a steak :)
They want to ban meats because its too healthy and allows people to live without need for a doctor because they dont get “diseases” when their bodies are healthy
Do it! My burger addiction isn't going to feed itself! 🍔
Ranchers Band Together to Take Back Control of Beef Industry: 'It Is Time We Fight Back'
https://www.westernjournal.com/ranchers-band-together-take-back-control-beef-industry-time-fight-back/?utm_source=RSSfeed&utm_medium=RSSfeed&utm_campaign=RSSfeed&utm_content=2021-10-17
Where do I buy? How do I invest?
What is all that junk in his plate?
How do we buy beef from this outfit? I'd be fine with their beef, if I knew where I could buy it. My usual grocery outlets at Kroger, Publix, and occasionally COSTCO... and they all have their own sources for meats.
US Cattlemen's Association is a group of people who "represent" cattle producers in DC to push for policies to "better" the beef cattle business. I am admittedly not too familiar with them or what they push for. Most of these groups collect donations under the guise of helping, and just pocket it. Not unlike most of these types of groups. R-CALF is however a pretty good one.
Point to note: The Beef Checkoff collects (steals) $1.00 for every single head of cattle sold in the country. Mandatory. It gets used to push for things that do not help. It basically lobbies for the meat packer conglomerate, who control beef prices to their benefit. Akin to hedge funds in the stock market.
As far as fresh local beef, just talk to local farmers. TN has plenty of home grown beef. If you use that farce book crap, that is a pretty good way to get connected also.
Thanks... I don't use the Fakebook crap but my wife does. I'll ask her to look around locally.
I was channel surfing yesterday and came across a "60 minutes" segment about the last, major cattle drive in the country; I think call the "Green River Flow" (something like that) in Wyoming, where they herd cattle, on horses, to high pasture areas in the summer, and then the cattle naturally migrate back to the lower country in the fall. It was really interesting, and I was surprise 60-minutes would run a pretty "pro-American" story like it.
That isn't the "last" one. It happens all over the mountain west and front range, even into the plains. Nobody sees it though. A person would have to travel a very long way off of any paved road. Rest assured the American Cowboy and our legacy are alive and well. Just silent.
Thank you for keeping it going! This was about the 70-mile drive in Wyoming, which was stated as the longest one. Perhaps they referred to it as the last, long one?
I saw the "preview" for it, or whatever it's called, but did not watch it. The last long one would probably be accurate. Have a good day fren.