... 3) why do people on BYC assume that members who have many years of experience with chickens can't identify an unusual egg laying issue? 4) why do some people on BYC laugh at others concerns and assume them to be idiots? I keep reading about the suggestion that this is only people not used to 2 year old chickens in winter ... and they flat out pretend they never read the posts of seasoned chicken owners. It strikes me as very rude. 4) why can there NOT be the possibility that there's something wrong with some brand's feed AND the issue be something other than a global cartel trying to rid the US of back yard chickens? It sure strikes me as highly possible - especially in these economic conditions that a company would try to 1 cheat to save money or 2 make some ingredient switch to save money and inadvertently cause a negative issue with their product.
It's really sad how we treat each for what we perceive as protecting our team.
5) why do people ignore those who have many years of experience with chickens who identified this kind of unusual egg laying issue but didn't feed the suspect brands?
6) why do people ignore those who have many years of experience with chickens who identified this kind of unusual egg laying issue once after many years but it was several years ago?
I agree it could be something wrong with the feed without being a global cartel. That has happened before: Melamine in pet food (for an intentional example) and PBB in dairy feed (for an unintentional example).
I also think our food system is vulnerable to manipulation by powerful people. Why - gets pretty far into politics. I don't think it is in this case unless the powers are playing 4D chess. (what I mean by 4D chess: people - especially politicians - looking, or claiming, to do one thing while actually doing the opposite either through sophisticated multilayered strategies or incompetence. - in this case, manipulating people into feeding chickens dangerously high levels of copper and significantly low levels of protein (ie goat feed) by either messing with chicken feed or starting a rumor that chicken feed has issues.
Or just testing disruption via social media from real changes to feed or just rumor - politically or commercial competitors. Yes, I do find myself hard to live with sometimes.
Both sides have done a lot of appearing to ignore what the other is saying. This post quoted above, for example, picks out the suggestion "only people not used to 2 year old chickens in winter" - vs the several other possible explanation many of the people who said that also suggested.
I use "appearing to ignore" and not "ignoring" because if one is to write all the examples or all the conditionals - a very unwieldy topic becomes even more unwieldy.
I was active in this discussion for a while. I probably looked like I was discounting the feed as the problem. I was really just irritated that the people giving this the most push in the beginning didn't check it out first (test the feed - or find people who had).
And, even more, that they didn't check that their solutions to what they said was the problem would help that problem. Better to not give a solution that to do that.
Enough people don't have a problem with these brands that even if some of the feed had problems, the risk is low enough that I bought some Producer's Pride yesterday. I thought, if nothing else, I would have some to test. I'm planning to wait until late enough in the spring that they are all laying normally, then feed this and see if there is a difference. I can afford to not get eggs for weeks.
Edit to add, and the date is recent enough that it won't be old even then, especially with being it is winter so it will keep longer.