Swine & Smithfield & Granjas Carroll >:(
From The Guardian.
As I understand it, the pig farms in the US are a lot larger than the ones in Mexico.
Based on what I've been reading on factory pig farms, that fine was probably a tiny slap on the wrist.
The world's biggest pig meat producer, Virginia-based Smithfield, said it is co-operating with the Mexican authorities' attempts to locate the possible source of the outbreak and will submit samples from its herds at its Granjas Carroll subsidiary to the University of Mexico for tests.
As I understand it, the pig farms in the US are a lot larger than the ones in Mexico.
Smithfield, which is led by pork baron Joseph W Luter III, has previously been fined for environmental damage in the US. In October 2000 the supreme court upheld a $12.6m (£8.6m) fine levied by the US environmental protection agency which found that the company had violated its pollution permits in the Pagan River in Virginia which runs towards Chesapeake Bay. The company faced accusations that faecal and other bodily waste from slaughtered pigs had been dumped directly into the river since the 1970s.
Based on what I've been reading on factory pig farms, that fine was probably a tiny slap on the wrist.

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Indeed.
(Have you read Fast Food Nation?)
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*nod* I remember the whole milk powder scandal in China, and how so many Germans were all, OH, THOSE POOR CHINESE BABIES!
And I thought, yes, sure, but: If you think you are safe here, in Europe, you got another thing coming. And presto; news about contaminated powder in Nestle Koala cookies and other processed foods started popping up.
It's not that I hate to be right - I love it, generally - it's that, as you say, the interconnection factor is one not often considered.
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