Latin America
In reply to the discussion: Supermarkets threaten Brazilian boycott over Amazon destruction [View all]Judi Lynn
(160,415 posts)then using the stolen (from indigenous people who lived there from ancient times) land to raise cattle for meat sell that meat to food industries all over the world. The grocery chains they do highly profitable business with (while using many slaves to toil endlessly for nearly nothing whatsoever) are huge multinationals themselves, located throughout Europe, and the Americas, too. Aldi is one of them.
No one is holding a gun to JBS forcing them to steal land, destroy the lives of the people who were living there, forcing them to try to live in a foreign system, among strangers, without even basic worldly skills, or become slaves to the food producers, to keep taking more and more land, buying and killing more and more animals, and NEVER giving back to the world they are stealing and using up.
These mega-multinational grocery chains are not obligated to keep growing, expanding until they encircle the earth, either. Their involvement with the giant food producers keep raising the stakes.
Here's an interesting article published just this year:
JANUARY 5, 20211:48 PMUPDATED 4 MONTHS AGO
JBS among meat firms linked to slavery-tainted ranches in Brazil
By Fabio Teixeira
3 MIN READ
RIO DE JANEIRO (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Brazilian meatpackers must clean up their supply chains, labor experts said on Tuesday, after an investigation showed six firms bought cattle from ranches that used slave labor.
Brazils JBS, one of the worlds largest meat processing firms, bought cattle from two ranches that later ended up on Brazils dirty list of companies that employed slave labor, the anti-slavery rights group Reporter Brasil said this week.
JBS said it banned the two firms once they were on the dirty list, but it was unfair to expect JBS to stop working with any ranches facing allegations of slave labor from inspectors as those companies also had the right to defend their actions.
Reporter Brasil is demanding JBS ... block producers based only on inspections (which) ... would be a disregard for that producers right of defense before public authorities, JBS told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a statement.
More:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-trafficking-cattle/jbs-among-meat-firms-linked-to-slavery-tainted-ranches-in-brazil-idUSKBN29A2EW
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Walmart selling beef from firm linked to Amazon deforestation
Exclusive: US chains Walmart, Costco and Kroger selling Brazilian beef produced by JBS linked to destruction of Brazilian rainforest
Andrew Wasley and Alexandra Heal
Sat 13 Feb 2021 02.00 EST
Three of the biggest US grocery chains sell Brazilian beef produced by a controversial meat company linked to the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, an investigation has revealed.
Food giants Walmart, Costco and Kroger which together totalled net sales worth more than half a trillion dollars last year are selling Brazilian beef products imported from JBS, the worlds largest meat company, which has been linked to deforestation.
Brazilian beef has been identified as a key driver of deforestation in the Amazon, where swathes of forest are cleared for pasture used for cattle farming. The Amazon is a crucial buffer in stabilising the regional and global climate. Experts say preserving the worlds rainforests is essential if further intensification of the climate emergency is to be averted.
Research by the Guardian, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism and the nonprofit data analysis agency C4ADS established that in recent years, the JBS subsidiary Sampco Inc has imported thousands of tonnes of Brazilian beef, destined for grocery chains and other food companies, into the US.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/feb/13/walmart-selling-beef-from-firm-linked-to-amazon-deforestation
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Earlier Trump gift to the dirty Brazilian meat producers:
Farm Bailout Paid to Brazilian Meat Processor Angers Lawmakers
Lawmakers want to know why a Brazilian-owned company got payments from a program aimed to help American farmers weather President Trumps trade war.
By Maggie Haberman and Alan Rappeport
Feb. 7, 2020
WASHINGTON The Trump administration, confident that the Chinese government will follow through on its agreement to buy more American agriculture, plans to shutter its bailout program for farmers hurt by tariffs.
But allegations of unfairness and other criticisms continue to dog the $28 billion initiative, which President Trump created to ease the economic hardship on rural America, which constitutes a large portion of his political base.
What was meant to be a financial lifeline for struggling farmers has been widely derided by critics as a corporate bailout for big agriculture companies and those who live in metropolitan areas but own farms in rural America. The program has also been attacked for providing financial support to American subsidiaries of foreign agriculture companies that operate in the United States.
For months, a bipartisan group of lawmakers has been pressing the Trump administration to explain payments to a Brazilian-owned company with a troubled past.
About $67 million in bailout funds have gone to JBS USA, the subsidiary of JBS S.A., a Brazilian company that is the worlds biggest meat-processing firm.
Lawmakers have argued that a company with foreign-held ownership should be getting more scrutiny, particularly one that encountered legal troubles three years ago. In 2017, two of JBS S.A.s former top executives, brothers Wesley and Joesley Batista, pleaded guilty to corruption charges in Brazil.
More:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/07/us/politics/farm-bailout-jbs.html