i never realized how bad food shortage is in other states cus all 10 stores within 5-10 mins of my house never had that problem and the shelves are always full
A few reasons: preservatives that are bad for you and wage inequality. If there are hundreds of billionaires and tens of thousands of millionaires, why are there still homeless people? Same idea. Also, many supermarkets refuse to open inside certain urban cities. Food and water are future problems that entrepreneurs are trying to solve today and will become wealthier than Exxon-Mobile and even Tesla in the future.
I work for a major poultry processing plant an the way it is set up social distancing is simply impossible they try to implement safety measures but as always production first
Is it better to de-centralize the meat production. And go back to the neighborhood butcher? Where i grew up, iowa, every small grocery store had a butcher. Costs will go up.
It seems like the more a company grows the more greedy it becomes. Which means they can invest more in customer service so quality, passion, commitment and employee satisfaction/culture diminish.
"Where i grew up, iowa, every small grocery store had a butcher." Few of those butchers actually slaughtered the animals. They were being slaughtered in centralized meat packing facilities.
@ you mean the one that isnt spreading like wildfire because people decide to go out instead of staying inside and resting till they get better like a normal human being?
does anyone remember when gas prices skyrocketed so did food prices because transportation costed them twice as much ,and now gas prices are much lower and food prices are just getting higher and higher
@AllYouCan !!! The Spanish flu was a real pandemic since the number of deaths was more than 10 times more than this covid, which has similar deaths and infections to seasonal flu. The shutting down of the economy and infecting care homes, cancelling cancer treatments is killing more than the virus itself
Follow the rules and I’m sure you will. I work for a production line and COVID has had our sales increase, our factory is now expanding because our orders have done nothing but gone up since July. They’re not going anywhere.
Here in Peru meat production and distribution is still dominated by small operations from the farm to the mercado. We never had any shortages. Prices have not changed during the emergency. Partly because many cannot afford meats at the moment. But the system never broke down. The average butcher has two or three workers. This is called inefficient!!!!
It is inefficient. You literally just said it. "Partly because many cannot afford meats at the moment." As efficiency rises the price falls. As efficiency falls the price rises.
What about how the food is starting to drastically lose it's quality and flavor, while at the same time, they are making it seem as though we are paying for luxury quality items? This dosen't just goes for Tysons. but soo much for other companies. Nothing tastes the same anymore. Everything tastes cheap now.
4 года назад+45
Bigger issue is related to the monopolistic market we have.
@ "Four producers?" Four major producers with thousands of smaller competitors. I'll stick with a competitive market. I have over a half dozen local suppliers each of poultry, beef, pork, dairy and fish.
@@wisenber For consumers it wouldn't matter much, but for farmers the four oligopolies destroy them. Lobbies and lawyers these companies prevent farmers from disputing claims and lawsuits. We have recorded documents of how poorly farmers are treated. This kind of industry consolidation is bad for everyone. They want to keep the cost down in expense of farmers. We as consumers aren't getting the best produces. Even more, these companies are indicted for monopolistic practices like price fixing. If you want to see competitive market, you will rarely see it. Most industries want to act like they have competition to lax regulations but most of these industries are dominated by handful of companies.
My brother and I have traveled through four cities looking for shelves cleaned out without seeing even one store with bare shelves, not even little mom and pop grocery stores. I am starting to think that this is being made out far worse than it is and it would take more than a couple pictures of bare shelves to change my mind at this point.
i grew up on a dairy farm we knew exactly where my meat beef came from the male calves that we turned into steers and fattened up pork and bacon came from wild piglets that we trapped then raised lamb came from a couple of sheep tethered in the yard near the house moving them every day never had to mow our lawn
"When necessary, we've been willing to close those plants and deep clean them." You're telling me you've only JUST begun deep cleaning your meat packing plants?
In my area the Tyson Plant somehow locked up all the covid Test Kits. I mean the local health providers had to keep available kits for the Tyson workers. I'm a "at risk senior" and couldn't get the test. I was sent by my doctor to be tested and still couldn't get the attending health provider person to test me. Tyson was able to test 1500 workers. The "elderly at risk" got squat. So yeah, the Tyson Corporation has a lot of power and uses it and some of which just isn't in the headlines.
I'm from Greeley too. I noticed that. The JBS (Former Monfort) plant is defiantly not near any lakes. I live over by the Laprino cheese plant and we get a awful stink from it over here on E. 16th street. Thankfully they don't do pork in Greeley, only beef and lambs/sheep. I can imagine the smell on hot windy days that blows our direction.
@@bonniebrock5109 Sheesh i feel bad for you. I live near an old Quaker Oats factory (owned by Pepsi now i believe) in Canada and the smells of grains can be quite pleasant
I used to live near an Entemann's Bakery Plant back in the mid-80's and let me tell you it made waiting for the bus in the mornings extremely pleasant. I've also lived near a fish market and when the weather was hot and humid it made walking past the place Hell.
I had two Beyond burgers at home last week. If I didn't know better, I would have said I was eating quality ground beef. Just bring the price down to within 10% of beef, and I will buy it again.
Tyson Waterloo, Iowa, had 1,031 cases. The population of Waterloo, my hometown, only has a population of 67,798 as of 2018. No sick leave for their employees. Disgusting. Tyson should be made to retroactive sick leave pay and make it mandatory for them to cover employees. The greed of monopolies, or should I say, oligopolies, know no limits. They have all that money and they can't pay their employees sick leave? Let's boycott Tyson.
" No sick leave for their employees." The federal relief package did cover that. It does not cover workers not willing to go back if they are not ill. " Let's boycott Tyson." That would be a good way to displace your neighbors that work there. Do you think that would help them?
i just love CNBC documentaries, i'm so opsessed with them ! especially fields that interests me like grocery chains and ecommerce, thank you CNBC from an algerian arab guy.
I just bought almost 20 pounds of 80/20 ground beef. Not because of food insecurity. Or fear of rising meat prices or more meat shortages due to corona. But because I found t on sale for only $2 a pound & I've actually been craving hamburgers. I've also recently got a grill & it was cheap. Otherwise I normally don't eat much meat.
Always has been. People are acting like this is new. They must not remember all the guilds that used to exist. Capitalism always tends towards monopoly.
" capitalism tends towards monopoly " Capitalism never lead to a monopoly because a pure capitalism system there will always be competition . Because of the profit incentive . if you can make a product that the consumer wanted then you will make money . And because of that a lot of people make products and services to appeal to consumers . And that leads to competition wich restrict a monopoly ever happening . The only way of a monopoly happening is if the state make one business own exclusively the supply of or services and products . And that is not pure capitalism because the state interfere with the market and make one business rule the supply of or services and products
@@ninjanerdstudent6937 Vegan is proven to be the unhealthiest way of living there is. but then again you all as an american eat only garbage food to begin with. so it wont matter much for americans
That company is awful on animal cruelty, not preaching to go vegan but at least cut back on meat consumption from these big factories that torture them and are all filthy in dirt and feces which can lead to another illness.
You can find farms who raise and process their own cuts, sausages, etc. -- its all online; I use craigslist. Also, I can get a rotisserie chicken from Walmart for ~10% less than what it cost 20-25 years ago, and that's not counting inflation. Lets give *some* credit to big business; they've done a great job of hammering costs down, now its our job to vote w/our dollars.
I noticed there was a meat shortage in the rural area I used to live in the spring towards the beginning of the pandemic then I moved to a bigger city and haven't seen much of a shortage. I shop at Costco
It would be nice to see the government let companies fail. It seems like with all these bail outs, the risk reward scale is shifting to why not risk theres no penalty.
lobbyist.. why the hell you think they let company paid for campaign so they had to bail out when there are no money... just cycle of USA.... ;other county... they would just let it fail...
The company goes away not the jobs. If the goods/services are still needed than the jobs don't go away. The better mananged companies will expand and grow and will need new employees. The industry sees that those risks are not worth the reward and tax payers don't pickup the bill. Just like you said this is a capitalist country, letting them fail for bad decisions is exactly how the free market works.
@@rusitoexplorador not necessarily. Meat prices have been rising, yet farmers get paid less and less. If we cut out the middle men, farmers could get paid more, smaller farms would not be forced to shut down and could actually compete, and meat prices would likely be similar to what it is now.
"so the big factories one don’t act like death trap for humans." Any meat processing plant will have workers spaced closely together. Then again, the same is true for fruit and vegetable processing plants.
IBP hated American workers, during the Reagan years. They replaced American workers with Mexican citizens bussed in directly from Mexico. American's had to take a pay cut, about half. They didn't have to worry about taking care of their workers after that, thanks to political pressure to keep it that way. The meat processing industry did really cause their own problems, and the owners own greed is to blame.
So in 50 years meat consumption grew 10% while population grew more than 25%? Vegan/vegetarian options have become mainstream and the problem persists?
I have 4 slaughter houses within 5 miles of me. Their products are sourced local and butchered and packaged in a small facility with a few dozen employees. Their products are 2-3 times more expensive so I can't go buy chicken tiddies for $1.99/lb. Maybe that will become the new normal as shortages continue and increase.
Many years ago I used to eat meat and then I became informed how cruel is the way the meat industry treats animals during the animal's lives and during their slaughter so since I know how cruel the food industry is towards farm animals I do NOT eat meat and I do not buy leather for decades now. It is disappointing to say the least that in 2023 some countries still allow the food industry to be cruel as they are towards animals, those "businesses" deserve no respect and deserves to be out of businesses.
Of the major suppliers they're the most cruel. Tyson has not adopted the leading animal welfare policies. They have not banned gestation crates for pigs, have not abolished battery cages for egg-laying hens, and have not adopted a slower-growing broiler policy
I dunno, i like meat a lot, but the impossible burger is pretty effing tasty to me. If we could switch most fast food burgers to impossible burgers, we could probably dial back beef to not needing such insane factory farming of the worst environmental food crop we have. Like cutting soda except for occasionally, make beef a special occasion again.
The Defence Production Act wasn’t invoked to boost production- it was to prevent companies getting sued for not protecting their employees from coronavirus
Well Tyson is if you read the free advertizing on their trucks. You do read don't you. They make chicken pork and beef. Are one of the biggest meat proucers in the country. Their HQ is Springdale AR. wich is one town over fron Bentonville. Wich is,one town south of Lowell. So in a 10 mile radius in Northwest Arkansas. You have Tyson Walmart and JBHunt transportation. My question is WHY?
Does anyone know what a chair is?? How about workers who can sit and work?? The office workers sit, they have a chair- either take it away from them or give people on the line a chair!! See the difference in production!!
Being a farmer for the last 50 years I can tell you we have many problems in agriculture, not just Tyson. There are 4 big packers in America that control the meat industry. Three of these packers are owned by non-US companies, Two in Brazil and one in China. Your government should have used Antitrust laws to break large packers up 40 years ago. There is more pollution from crop farming in Iowa than pork production. USDA farm programs have done more to push farmers out of livestock production and into crop production. Don't blame the packing plants for forcing farmers out of business. Government policy or lack there of did that. The morel of the story is don't blame Tyson, blame your Congressman and Senators in Washington DC.
Support local small farmers if you can. Products will cost more but you're paying for better wages and hopefully happier workers and animals. If we all ate slightly less meat of "higher quality" you'd help with climate change and you'd encourage good jobs for the economy. It's important to know where your food comes from and if you can have a good relationship with a local farmer everyone benefits. idealistic yes but availablity of cheap food (and clothes and plastic junk and...) has become the norm and its at the cost of turning good local jobs into terrible working conditions that only exploitable foreigners are willing to take. The economy, the planet, and the health (diabetes etc) of average citizens is suffering so that we can easily access excess/unnecessary resources
i never realized how bad food shortage is in other states cus all 10 stores within 5-10 mins of my house never had that problem and the shelves are always full
bruh how does this only have 10 likes
bruh how does this only have 14 likes
bruh how does this only have 51 likes
Ikr?
A few reasons: preservatives that are bad for you and wage inequality. If there are hundreds of billionaires and tens of thousands of millionaires, why are there still homeless people? Same idea. Also, many supermarkets refuse to open inside certain urban cities. Food and water are future problems that entrepreneurs are trying to solve today and will become wealthier than Exxon-Mobile and even Tesla in the future.
I work for a major poultry processing plant an the way it is set up social distancing is simply impossible they try to implement safety measures but as always production first
Colgando en tus manos
I work at kraft heinz and it's the same way. People just refuse to not throw potlucks and are confined in small break rooms.
Actually it's Corporate Welfare before National wellbeing...🤔or just GREED
Well considering it's just a flu virus what's the problem more people died of the regular flu this year do you research and turn off the TV
@@washguy9577 I work in the end of life industry and you are dead wrong. Not to mention stupid to boot.
Is it better to de-centralize the meat production. And go back to the neighborhood butcher? Where i grew up, iowa, every small grocery store had a butcher. Costs will go up.
It seems like the more a company grows the more greedy it becomes. Which means they can invest more in customer service so quality, passion, commitment and employee satisfaction/culture diminish.
As far as quality is concerned, decentralization is better for consumers in almost all industries. Especially education.
"Where i grew up, iowa, every small grocery store had a butcher."
Few of those butchers actually slaughtered the animals. They were being slaughtered in centralized meat packing facilities.
Solo true. Oligarchs are centralizing every aspect of life in the name of cv19.
not necessarily you and friend buy a large animal of choice and split the cost. i use local processer. walk it in, box it out.
Lol I’m currently at a Tyson plant picking up a shipment... it’s funny that I saw this
They knew where you were
RUclips tracks your phone position for advertisements etc. =They noticed you were stopped, looking at RUclips so you get this video recommended.
Funny 🤣 how Google knows where you are and feeds you the video
@A B that's a lot of words for "I don't like Muslims/Arabs and don't know the difference between them"
@@krisklev mff6uj
They treat their workers like they treat their animals "cram as many as they can into as little space as possible"
bro chill-out it's just a flu
@@alainportant6412 yeah flu that Distroy your lungs.
@ you mean the one that isnt spreading like wildfire because people decide to go out instead of staying inside and resting till they get better like a normal human being?
This happens in manufacturing too.
That doesn't happen bro I've been in plenty of Tyson plants as a contractor and they have the best conditions factory wise
does anyone remember when gas prices skyrocketed so did food prices because transportation costed them twice as much ,and now gas prices are much lower and food prices are just getting higher and higher
Can't have a second wave if the first one didn't stop *taps forehead*
dr rex Really exciting news, indeed.
@dr rex Well maybe the second wave will be more EXCITING for you. What been wrong with the first one so far that it's boring?
i salute you sir, for reaching 69 comments& leave it that way!
@@dustigenes I can only assume it was supposed to be "existed" and they're in denial about the virus completely.
@AllYouCan !!! The Spanish flu was a real pandemic since the number of deaths was more than 10 times more than this covid, which has similar deaths and infections to seasonal flu. The shutting down of the economy and infecting care homes, cancelling cancer treatments is killing more than the virus itself
I work for a tyson storage/distribution center. Love my job, and I hope I get to stay at this company for a very long time.
Follow the rules and I’m sure you will. I work for a production line and COVID has had our sales increase, our factory is now expanding because our orders have done nothing but gone up since July. They’re not going anywhere.
Here in Peru meat production and distribution is still dominated by small operations from the farm to the mercado. We never had any shortages. Prices have not changed during the emergency. Partly because many cannot afford meats at the moment. But the system never broke down. The average butcher has two or three workers. This is called inefficient!!!!
It is inefficient. You literally just said it. "Partly because many cannot afford meats at the moment."
As efficiency rises the price falls. As efficiency falls the price rises.
What about how the food is starting to drastically lose it's quality and flavor, while at the same time, they are making it seem as though we are paying for luxury quality items? This dosen't just goes for Tysons. but soo much for other companies.
Nothing tastes the same anymore. Everything tastes cheap now.
Bigger issue is related to the monopolistic market we have.
The video just showed four producers controlling up to 60% of the market. That's not a monopoly.
@ "Four producers?"
Four major producers with thousands of smaller competitors. I'll stick with a competitive market.
I have over a half dozen local suppliers each of poultry, beef, pork, dairy and fish.
@@wisenber For consumers it wouldn't matter much, but for farmers the four oligopolies destroy them. Lobbies and lawyers these companies prevent farmers from disputing claims and lawsuits. We have recorded documents of how poorly farmers are treated. This kind of industry consolidation is bad for everyone. They want to keep the cost down in expense of farmers. We as consumers aren't getting the best produces. Even more, these companies are indicted for monopolistic practices like price fixing. If you want to see competitive market, you will rarely see it. Most industries want to act like they have competition to lax regulations but most of these industries are dominated by handful of companies.
My brother and I have traveled through four cities looking for shelves cleaned out without seeing even one store with bare shelves, not even little mom and pop grocery stores. I am starting to think that this is being made out far worse than it is and it would take more than a couple pictures of bare shelves to change my mind at this point.
Fast fwd to now. It was inner city high volume areas. Plus ppl with extra cash on hand. Hoarded what they could. TOILET PAPER SAME
This video is 2 years old. You think it was broken then, you haven't seen nothing yet.
You guys have no idea how big Tyson is until you haul their freight so many huge plants around the states
It's a monopoly. It should've been broken up ages ago, but guess why not? 🤷♂️
i grew up on a dairy farm we knew exactly where my meat beef came from the male calves that we turned into steers and fattened up pork and bacon came from wild piglets that we trapped then raised lamb came from a couple of sheep tethered in the yard near the house moving them every day never had to mow our lawn
"When necessary, we've been willing to close those plants and deep clean them." You're telling me you've only JUST begun deep cleaning your meat packing plants?
I thought I had an eyelash on my screen lol
@@flippineddy627 So did I
Didn't you hear them saying, cost matters, and do you even thick they give a f*k about cleaniness? Screw that bottomline matters more than hygiene
@@Han-rg4zt I'm just messing around lol of course they don't care about hygiene. Profit over health.
Profit is more important than health
Tyson supplies most of the fast food industry. Also jimmy dean , hillshire farms, ball park etc
Having a hand full of meat suppliers could in fact disrupt the food chain. Local suppliers as in the past could be the solution.
There already are local suppliers. That's the other 40% of the market. However customers demand more of the lower priced products.
I had to stop watching. I can no longer eat meat for a while....
Well till at least Dinner Time.
Dont ask about bologna then....
I will never ever buy any of any of these giant food processor products because it is toxic.
I will never buy any products that have that affiliation and that means Jimmy Dean sausage that I love so much
In my area the Tyson Plant somehow locked up all the covid Test Kits. I mean the local health providers had to keep available kits for the Tyson workers. I'm a "at risk senior" and couldn't get the test. I was sent by my doctor to be tested and still couldn't get the attending health provider person to test me. Tyson was able to test 1500 workers. The "elderly at risk" got squat. So yeah, the Tyson Corporation has a lot of power and uses it and some of which just isn't in the headlines.
no jobs & no meat & home quarantine & social distancing - a perfect recipe for depression!!
Interesting, I’m from Greeley and that aerial view of the factory was not the Greeley plant lol. We don’t have any bodies of water that nice 😫
lol it gets the point across
I'm from Greeley too. I noticed that. The JBS (Former Monfort) plant is defiantly not near any lakes. I live over by the Laprino cheese plant and we get a awful stink from it over here on E. 16th street. Thankfully they don't do pork in Greeley, only beef and lambs/sheep. I can imagine the smell on hot windy days that blows our direction.
@@bonniebrock5109 Sheesh i feel bad for you. I live near an old Quaker Oats factory (owned by Pepsi now i believe) in Canada and the smells of grains can be quite pleasant
I used to live near an Entemann's Bakery Plant back in the mid-80's and let me tell you it made waiting for the bus in the mornings extremely pleasant.
I've also lived near a fish market and when the weather was hot and humid it made walking past the place Hell.
Covid revealed that Tyson was swimming naked
mike tyson approved this message
Mike Tyson: “I approve this methage.”
Meh... replace once overly large corporation that is ruining farmers life, for others ones? Yeah no thanks.
I like how the history is included with the video
Fuchin amazing. I know. And in color too.
“Weaknesses in the meat system” 👁👄👁
The mistake was, Tyson let Stallone come in and use the hanging carcasses as punch-bags...
but he had Covid.
I worked at IBP right after Rocky came out. They let workers know they got fired if they got caught punching carcasses.
Punch-bags, bleeding punch-bags
got disrespected by Paul
I had two Beyond burgers at home last week. If I didn't know better, I would have said I was eating quality ground beef. Just bring the price down to within 10% of beef, and I will buy it again.
Tyson Waterloo, Iowa, had 1,031 cases. The population of Waterloo, my hometown, only has a population of 67,798 as of 2018. No sick leave for their employees. Disgusting. Tyson should be made to retroactive sick leave pay and make it mandatory for them to cover employees. The greed of monopolies, or should I say, oligopolies, know no limits. They have all that money and they can't pay their employees sick leave? Let's boycott Tyson.
" No sick leave for their employees."
The federal relief package did cover that. It does not cover workers not willing to go back if they are not ill.
" Let's boycott Tyson."
That would be a good way to displace your neighbors that work there. Do you think that would help them?
Cause he bit off the supply chain's ear
Spinal
oof.
i just love CNBC documentaries, i'm so opsessed with them ! especially fields that interests me like grocery chains and ecommerce, thank you CNBC from an algerian arab guy.
I just bought almost 20 pounds of 80/20 ground beef. Not because of food insecurity. Or fear of rising meat prices or more meat shortages due to corona. But because I found t on sale for only $2 a pound & I've actually been craving hamburgers. I've also recently got a grill & it was cheap. Otherwise I normally don't eat much meat.
Ammonia in the burger 🍔
JCT trailer at JBS! Not really important, but the best trucking company I ever worked for.
Nancy Wuhan has Botox induced DEMENTIA .. She has the Mind of a CHILD
1:19 im so sorry to tell you but all business also do the same.... Especially in asia which we uses security camera with thermo scanner integrated.
This Autumn or this fall. what is the difference?
9:19 that's every Industry now though.
Everything is an Oligarcy..
Always has been. People are acting like this is new. They must not remember all the guilds that used to exist. Capitalism always tends towards monopoly.
" capitalism tends towards monopoly "
Capitalism never lead to a monopoly because a pure capitalism system there will always be competition . Because of the profit incentive . if you can make a product that the consumer wanted then you will make money . And because of that a lot of people make products and services to appeal to consumers . And that leads to competition wich restrict a monopoly ever happening . The only way of a monopoly happening is if the state make one business own exclusively the supply of or services and products . And that is not pure capitalism because the state interfere with the market and make one business rule the supply of or services and products
@@highsky6175 I agree, this isn't Capitalism, its a Rigged System.
how did you do it can you share with me , thank you
I am getting sick thinking about the way we've treated animals 😞😢
Y. B. Normal go vegan, my friend.
@@ninjanerdstudent6937 But is that normal?
@@ninjanerdstudent6937 Vegan is proven to be the unhealthiest way of living there is. but then again you all as an american eat only garbage food to begin with. so it wont matter much for americans
Y. B. Normal , very normal, even Burger King and KFC are doing it. You can be vegan without changing the types of foods.
Metal Videos , you call fruits and vegetables garbage? Whatever.
Tyson also has the meat processing plants and chicken farms in several cities of China.
That company is awful on animal cruelty, not preaching to go vegan but at least cut back on meat consumption from these big factories that torture them and are all filthy in dirt and feces which can lead to another illness.
These short documentaries are so well produced I’m amazed it’s free. Thank you CNBC
You can find farms who raise and process their own cuts, sausages, etc. -- its all online; I use craigslist.
Also, I can get a rotisserie chicken from Walmart for ~10% less than what it cost 20-25 years ago, and that's not counting inflation. Lets give *some* credit to big business; they've done a great job of hammering costs down, now its our job to vote w/our dollars.
I'm sorry, what are those gears doing at 1:17?
Consolidation is the new monopoly.
I noticed there was a meat shortage in the rural area I used to live in the spring towards the beginning of the pandemic then I moved to a bigger city and haven't seen much of a shortage. I shop at Costco
At 10:22 , the stupid government can't even get the abbreviations right in the letter ...... Arkansas is "AR" , NOT "AK" !!!!! "AK" is Alaska !!!!!
What is the background song between 3:40 and 5:00? Please help !
Can we get an update on the lawsuits mentioned in the video and Covid updates?
clicked the link thinking Mike Tyson training again caused a meat shortage...
Same
Tyson has been doing great.
Boycott Tyson foods AS AFP
2:58 How my parents described me as a baby: fancy milk fed
The future of food and energy security resides in decentralized systems: more small-scale production closer to the consumer.
@Manfred Marshall sadly you Americans won’t accept the cost. Your meat is dirt cheap and terrible, but if you are accustomed you won’t notice
No it doesn't. Our system is incredibly efficient. It is stupid lunacy to think that we should replace efficiency with inefficiency.
It would be nice to see the government let companies fail. It seems like with all these bail outs, the risk reward scale is shifting to why not risk theres no penalty.
True capitalism
someone needs a refresher course in econ 101
lobbyist.. why the hell you think they let company paid for campaign so they had to bail out when there are no money... just cycle of USA.... ;other county... they would just let it fail...
If government let the companies fail, how many people will be jobless? This country is Corporate Capitalism.
The company goes away not the jobs. If the goods/services are still needed than the jobs don't go away. The better mananged companies will expand and grow and will need new employees. The industry sees that those risks are not worth the reward and tax payers don't pickup the bill. Just like you said this is a capitalist country, letting them fail for bad decisions is exactly how the free market works.
I thought Mike Tyson who broke this chain 😂
Sounds the supply chain should have been spread out more so the big factories one don’t act like death trap for humans.
and chickens 🐓
In the past from tyson's pov it was smarter for keeping the brand quality the same everywhere
Then meat would be more expensive
@@rusitoexplorador not necessarily. Meat prices have been rising, yet farmers get paid less and less. If we cut out the middle men, farmers could get paid more, smaller farms would not be forced to shut down and could actually compete, and meat prices would likely be similar to what it is now.
"so the big factories one don’t act like death trap for humans."
Any meat processing plant will have workers spaced closely together.
Then again, the same is true for fruit and vegetable processing plants.
IBP hated American workers, during the Reagan years. They replaced American workers with Mexican citizens bussed in directly from Mexico. American's had to take a pay cut, about half. They didn't have to worry about taking care of their workers after that, thanks to political pressure to keep it that way. The meat processing industry did really cause their own problems, and the owners own greed is to blame.
Help Tyson close more plants.. BOYCOTT
11:12 how different is it produce meat for retail as opposed to producing meat for the food service industry? Wouldn't it just be the packaging?
as far as way as kansas city? so 3 hours?
You are doing a great job, CNBC. Please make more videos about how the meat industry helps spread covid just like all the former predictions.
So in 50 years meat consumption grew 10% while population grew more than 25%? Vegan/vegetarian options have become mainstream and the problem persists?
"So in 50 years meat consumption grew 10% while population grew more than 25%?"
The US population increased by over 75% in the last 50 years.
I have 4 slaughter houses within 5 miles of me. Their products are sourced local and butchered and packaged in a small facility with a few dozen employees. Their products are 2-3 times more expensive so I can't go buy chicken tiddies for $1.99/lb. Maybe that will become the new normal as shortages continue and increase.
Well that's probably a fairer wage being paid to each person along the production line.
Tyson is expensive aF I always buy meat from lower brands bc they have good stuff and they are closer to where I live so you support local farmers
Doesn’t matter what they do if it’s not properly and consistently ventilated in those facilities
Dan Zickus because it's in the aerosols in our breath, not just the droplets
Many years ago I used to eat meat and then I became informed how cruel is the way the meat industry treats animals during the animal's lives and during their slaughter so since I know how cruel the food industry is towards farm animals I do NOT eat meat and I do not buy leather for decades now. It is disappointing to say the least that in 2023 some countries still allow the food industry to be cruel as they are towards animals, those "businesses" deserve no respect and deserves to be out of businesses.
I don’t know what I was expecting but I thought it was about Mike Tyson punching and destroying assembly lines
5:53 i really thought tyson bought mcdonalds
Follow you from Rwanda
No Tyson brand ever in my home
Of the major suppliers they're the most cruel. Tyson has not adopted the leading animal welfare policies. They have not banned gestation crates for pigs, have not abolished battery cages for egg-laying hens, and have not adopted a slower-growing broiler policy
Why would you buy plant based meat? Buy plants or buy meat do not try to trick yourselfs there is no point.
China Joe Biden Has RABIES and Communist RED China Xi Jinping approves China Joe, a WEAK USA and CNBC Fake media.
I dunno, i like meat a lot, but the impossible burger is pretty effing tasty to me.
If we could switch most fast food burgers to impossible burgers, we could probably dial back beef to not needing such insane factory farming of the worst environmental food crop we have. Like cutting soda except for occasionally, make beef a special occasion again.
Dude those impossible burgers are more processed than McDonalds chicken nuggets
The Defence Production Act wasn’t invoked to boost production- it was to prevent companies getting sued for not protecting their employees from coronavirus
The Act wasn't even needed as meat processors were still exporting meat to China en masse
The defense production act doesn't have anything to do with companies getting sued. Otherwise every company would request Trump use it on them
Simply put---> Acquire competitors and build more plants
Ralf Nader decades ago pointed out the problems inherent to big business. The stockholders don’t care even if it kills them as long as they die rich.
I actually thought Mike Tyson (The Boxer) broke the meat supply chain XD
He ate it all !!! 😅😅😅😅😅
WOW. Well, one could invest all their savings in Beyond Meat stock symbol BYND. What's a pandemic? Time heals allot of things.
Well Tyson is if you read the free advertizing on their trucks.
You do read don't you. They make chicken pork and beef. Are one of the biggest meat proucers in the country. Their HQ is Springdale AR. wich is one town over fron Bentonville. Wich is,one town south of Lowell. So in a 10 mile radius in Northwest Arkansas. You have Tyson Walmart and JBHunt transportation. My question is WHY?
Tyson is an awful company to its workers. They treat them like animals.
They treat the animals they process better than their workers, the Nestle of meat producers.
Break up the meat cartel!
Actually it's Corporate Welfare before National wellbeing...🤔or just GREED
Does anyone know what a chair is?? How about workers who can sit and work?? The office workers sit, they have a chair- either take it away from them or give people on the line a chair!! See the difference in production!!
this happens when oligopolies are pleased. in other countries that is impossible, tons of competition and chains
"this happens when oligopolies are pleased.'
The US doesn't have that. The big 4 control up to 60% with the remaining 40% being smaller providers.
Being a farmer for the last 50 years I can tell you we have many problems in agriculture, not just Tyson. There are 4 big packers in America that control the meat industry. Three of these packers are owned by non-US companies, Two in Brazil and one in China. Your government should have used Antitrust laws to break large packers up 40 years ago. There is more pollution from crop farming in Iowa than pork production. USDA farm programs have done more to push farmers out of livestock production and into crop production. Don't blame the packing plants for forcing farmers out of business. Government policy or lack there of did that. The morel of the story is don't blame Tyson, blame your Congressman and Senators in Washington DC.
Cruel then, cruel now. Meat is terror.
Lol
Support local small farmers if you can. Products will cost more but you're paying for better wages and hopefully happier workers and animals. If we all ate slightly less meat of "higher quality" you'd help with climate change and you'd encourage good jobs for the economy. It's important to know where your food comes from and if you can have a good relationship with a local farmer everyone benefits. idealistic yes but availablity of cheap food (and clothes and plastic junk and...) has become the norm and its at the cost of turning good local jobs into terrible working conditions that only exploitable foreigners are willing to take. The economy, the planet, and the health (diabetes etc) of average citizens is suffering so that we can easily access excess/unnecessary resources
Weird way to let everyone know who CNBCs favourite meat supplier is
Cutting any wiggle room to maximize profits for shareholders leave no wiggle room when disaster strikes
Boycott Tyson
Standing in close proximity, while wearing full protective gear
God bless America!
tysons has the market kinda cornered here...where else do you get the chicken.
We need to go back to old world production and shrink corporations
Mike Tyson: “It was thimple.”