Thank you for the well researched and documented posts!
There are also many posts that make it obvious any additional government regulation is an emotional issue.
Our media has become less objective than it was, preying on our fears to get better ratings and not caring if they leave behind a more educated viewership. It can be difficult to research every bill that comes through that may affect us. The media is supposed to objectively help with that, not inflame our concerns until we are ready to riot without a better understanding of the topic.
Many of us live in more rural areas where it is easy for us to get to know our producers and processors. We need to remember there are millions of US citizens who will never meet a food producer. They have not the ability to examine every production facility that processes their food. They rely on the government to make certain that any thing labeled "food" or "medicine" is free from poison and disease. It would be unwise to assume anonymous/international mega-food and mega-drug producers and processors do not to cut corners to save money. We have seen they sometimes putting their consumers at risk to raise profits.
However, the government is already spending more than it takes in. I do not know that we will be able to afford the level of inspection this bill requires. Not one of us wants more taxes to cover the gap.
My greatest concern with these kinds of regulations is that it becomes cheaper for the regulating industry to pick on the small operator when it comes time to show that they are doing their job. Our inspectors are often overworked and, with government cuts, underpaid. This makes it very tempting to become corrupted. We have seen the results of this on the Gulf Coast, with an oil spill at a rig that was basically self-inspected by the drilling company because there just isn't enough money to inspect as regulated.
That is where we need to pay attention even when a good regulation is in place. The officials enforcing it need to be encouraged every way we can to do their jobs appropirately.
There are also many posts that make it obvious any additional government regulation is an emotional issue.
Our media has become less objective than it was, preying on our fears to get better ratings and not caring if they leave behind a more educated viewership. It can be difficult to research every bill that comes through that may affect us. The media is supposed to objectively help with that, not inflame our concerns until we are ready to riot without a better understanding of the topic.
Many of us live in more rural areas where it is easy for us to get to know our producers and processors. We need to remember there are millions of US citizens who will never meet a food producer. They have not the ability to examine every production facility that processes their food. They rely on the government to make certain that any thing labeled "food" or "medicine" is free from poison and disease. It would be unwise to assume anonymous/international mega-food and mega-drug producers and processors do not to cut corners to save money. We have seen they sometimes putting their consumers at risk to raise profits.
However, the government is already spending more than it takes in. I do not know that we will be able to afford the level of inspection this bill requires. Not one of us wants more taxes to cover the gap.
My greatest concern with these kinds of regulations is that it becomes cheaper for the regulating industry to pick on the small operator when it comes time to show that they are doing their job. Our inspectors are often overworked and, with government cuts, underpaid. This makes it very tempting to become corrupted. We have seen the results of this on the Gulf Coast, with an oil spill at a rig that was basically self-inspected by the drilling company because there just isn't enough money to inspect as regulated.
That is where we need to pay attention even when a good regulation is in place. The officials enforcing it need to be encouraged every way we can to do their jobs appropirately.