What surprises me about China is how and why their people so passively have accepted their slave status. They are billions in number against only a few million maybe, of the cabal who are in control. I have not studied Chinese history but I am sure the answer is in there somewhere. If anyone has any information on that issue, please share it so we can follow up on it for our readers.
Our corporations used to have "some" sense of corporate citizenship, but its obvious from this below and other blatant examples, that the Corporate citizenship they used to exhibit has all gone by the way side. They are moving rapidly toward fascism globally. In checking the boards of directors and the sale of the stock of these companies, we find it to be dropping into fewer and fewer hands.
Its becoming clear that the problem lies in who are the ultimate owners today and who serve on the boards of Directors giving policy decisions to their managers. Rothschilds international bankers, illum bloodlines and their minions are becoming more and more the few hands these companies are falling into.
USDA on board with shipping U.S. chickens to China for processing, then re-entry to States for human consumption
http://www.dailypaul.com/330217/usda-on-board-with-shipping-us-chickens-to-china-for-processing-then-re-entry-to-states-for-human-consumption
by Ed Thinking, The Daily Paul, 12/03/2014
“Chinese chicken” will soon have a whole new meaning, as the U.S. Department of Agriculture recently gave the green-light to four chicken processing plants in China, allowing chicken raised and slaughtered in the U.S. to be exported to China for processing, and then shipped back to the U.S. and sold on grocery shelves here.
Furthermore, the imported processed poultry will not require a country-of-origin label nor will U.S. inspectors be on site at processing plants in China before it is shipped to the United States for human consumption.
Food safety experts worry about the quality of chicken processed in a country notorious for avian influenza and food-borne illnesses. And they predict that China will eventually seek to broaden the export rules to allow chickens born and raised in China.
“Economically, it doesn’t make much sense,” said Tom Super,
spokesman for the National Chicken Council, in a recent interview with
the Houston Chronicle.
“Think about it: A Chinese company would have to purchase frozen
chicken in the U.S., pay to ship it 7,000 miles, unload it, transport it
to a processing plant, unpack it, cut it up, process/cook it, freeze
it, repack it, transport it back to a port, then ship it another 7,000
miles. I don’t know how anyone could make a profit doing that.”
…fish processors in the Northwest, including Seattle-based Trident Seafoods, are sending part of their catch of Alaskan salmon or Dungeness crab to China to be filleted or de-shelled before returning to U.S. tables.
“There are 36 pin bones in a salmon and the best way to remove them is by hand,” says Charles Bundrant, founder of Trident, which ships about 30 million pounds of its 1.2 billion-pound annual harvest to China for processing. “Something that would cost us $1 per pound labor here, they get it done for 20 cents in China.”China has an infamous reputation as one of the world’s worst food safety offenders. (VN: What do they expect with those wages, anyone with half a brain knows that quality will suffer, you get what you pay for. But now the companies do not give a damn, they only care about profits and we have to eat and they are destroying our farmers and ranchers so they can have a monopoly on food production. Fair markets have gone away and market manipulations have taken over along with consolidation of competition ) Earlier this year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released a report on a Chinese chicken jerky manufacturer that created dog treats tied to more than 500 dogs’ deaths.
Food Safety News aims to spread awareness of the pending USDA agreement and stop Chinese-processed chicken from ever reaching supermarkets or school lunchrooms.
Food Inc.: A Participant Guide: How Industrial Food is Making Us Sicker, Fatter, and Poorer-And What You Can Do About It
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