By Friday, over eleven thousand coronavirus cases had been confirmed with ties to the US meatpacking industry. At least forty-nine meatpacking workers had died of COVID-19. The workers who died worked at twenty-seven different plants across eighteen states.
The virus is so widespread in the meat processing industry that forty plants have shuttered, either because they were ordered to by public health officials or because so many workers were out sick that ordinary production was impossible.
The closures have threatened to cause meat shortages, prompting Donald Trump to pass an executive order invoking the Defense Production Act commanding that they stay open. Due to the severity of the ongoing health crisis, the plant closures have continued in violation of Trump’s executive order, leading the Department of Agriculture to warn that “further action” would be taken against companies if they don’t reopen plants as soon as possible.
Meat shortages won’t lead to hunger, but they will cause meat suppliers to lose money, and inspire frustration in meat-loving consumers who are also, often enough, voters. To avoid these outcomes, the Trump administration is scrambling to preserve the integrity of the meat supply chain.
One strategy has been to displace blame for coronavirus cases in meatpacking onto workers themselves. On Thursday, Trump’s Health and Human Services secretary Alex Azar said that the sickness and death of meatpacking workers, their family members, and others in their communities were linked more to the “home and social” aspects of meatpackers’ lives than conditions in the plants. He even menacingly suggested sending law enforcement into the neighborhoods where meatpacking workers live to enforce social distancing.
But while Azar is playing dumb, meatpacking companies have themselves acknowledged that there are special problems inside their facilities that make them vulnerable to contagion. Smithfield Foods, one of the largest meat processing companies in the United States, published a statement saying, “There are inescapable realities about our industry . . . Meat processing facilities, which are characterized by labor-intensive assembly-line style production, are not designed for social distancing.” There’s no doubt that conditions inside factories are indeed responsible for the spread of the virus.
It’s not a coincidence that workers are getting sick in plant after plant, all across the country. One major reason that meat processing workers have become hotbeds of coronavirus lies in the labor-intensive nature of the work itself. Assembling the geometric and standardized parts of an automobile is a more machine-friendly task than disassembling organic material like meat. While advances in automation have changed the industry already and continue to do so, many stages of production still require human hands, and therefore a lot of humans.
“Folks, this what "reopening the economy” is all about. It’s not about getting things going again. It’s about forcing people to make the impossible choice of returning to work, or staying home for their protection and that of their family, at the cost of all income and safety net provisions (because they’re CHOOSING not to work).
In the middle of a pandemic.
This is soulless. Ironically being driven by a faction that fetishizes religiousity.“
Lesbian pulp covers from the 50s and 60s. See more here.
(source)21 Gay Street will also be the name of my lesbian remake of 21 Jump Street I’m going to make one day
And oh my gosh I love these covers :D
All of the video billboards in the loop are playing a randomized selection of “stay at home!” public service announcements. I stayed outside the post office for like 15 minutes trying to catch the best one I saw, which was a terrifying yellow-and-black ad that just read
6 FEET IS
6 FEET IS
6 FEET IS
6 FEET IS
6 FEET IS
6 FEETThe idea is that each of the lines was a foot high so together they gave you a sense of how far away to stay from people, but it felt like some kind of broken AI poetry or a random clue in a weird updated version of Myst.
Sadly it didn’t come up again in the cycle and it was fuckin’ cold out and I looked like a weirdo just standing there, so I went inside and mailed my packages.
[Description: two billboard ads in blue, put up by UNICEF, reading “20 seconds is all it takes, so wash your hands for goodness sakes” and “Keep your smile a safe space. Remember do not touch your face.” The third, in salmon, reads “Stay HOME” with the letters of HOME depicting people at home, baking, playing with children, and videoconferencing.]





