Factory Farms And The Next Pandemic

WE all have suffered through the bird flu…..eggs prices shot up and have remained up although they have come down a bit since the beginning of the crisis….there has been some concern with beef cattle, swine, etc….but what is causing this ‘scare’?

Throughout human history, zoonotic diseases, illnesses that jump from animals to humans, have shaped civilizations, triggered pandemics, and rewritten the course of economies. The Black Death, which ravaged Europe in the 14th century, originated from bacteria transmitted by fleas that lived on rats. Ebola, HIV, and SARS-CoV-2, which caused COVID-19, all had animal origins. As humanity’s relationship with animals has become increasingly industrialized through factory farming, the risk of zoonotic spillover has escalated.

Some diseases are transmitted through direct contact with animals, such as rabies from a bite or tuberculosis from infected cattle. Others spread through the consumption of poorly cooked meat, contaminated dairy products, or wet markets that sell live animals. Vector-borne diseases, where insects like mosquitoes and ticks act as intermediaries, transfer pathogens from animals to humans.

The intensification of industrial agriculture has amplified these risks. The crowded, high-density conditions of factory farms create a breeding ground for disease. Animals raised in confined spaces experience high levels of stress, which weakens their immune systems and increases their susceptibility to infections. When a pathogen emerges in this environment, it can mutate rapidly and spread with alarming efficiency.

This is particularly concerning with influenza viruses, which frequently originate in birds and pigs before adapting to humans. Bird flu has been detected in sheep, raising concerns about the virus’s ability to cross species boundaries. Such a discovery underscores the unpredictability of zoonotic diseases, particularly in terms of cross-species transmission and the potential for rapid evolution of health threats.

Philip Lymbery, author and global CEO of Compassion in World Farming, thinks the danger is serious: “Factory farms are a ticking time bomb for future pandemics,” he says. “Hundreds of coronaviruses are in circulation, most of them among animals including pigs, camels, bats, and cats. Sometimes those viruses jump to humans.”

Antibiotics, widely used in industrial farming to promote growth and prevent disease, exacerbate the issue. Overuse has led to the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which can jump to humans through direct exposure, contaminated food, or environmental runoff from farms. The World Health Organization has repeatedly warned that antibiotic resistance could become one of the greatest threats to human health, rendering common infections untreatable. COVID-19 was a wake-up call, but it was not the first time a zoonotic virus wreaked havoc on global health. The HIV/AIDS epidemic, which originated from nonhuman primates, has killed over 40 million people since it emerged in the 20th century.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2025/06/13/factory-farms-and-the-next-pandemic/

What are the chances of a new pandemic waiting for a time to strike?

I say they are pretty good because there is an administration that seems to care little for prevention or safety and that lack of concern could exacerbate the rise of another major impact on the food supply.

Any thoughts on this possibility?

On a side note–there is a farmer in Wisconsin suing the Trump administration….

A Wisconsin dairy farmer alleged in a federal lawsuit filed Monday that the Trump administration is illegally denying financial assistance to white farmers by continuing programs that favor minorities.

The conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty filed the lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Agriculture in federal court in Wisconsin on behalf of a white dairy farmer, Adam Faust.

Faust was among several farmers who successfully sued the Biden administration in 2021 for race discrimination in the USDA’s Farmer Loan Forgiveness Plan.

The new lawsuit alleges the government has continued to implement diversity, equity and inclusion programs that were instituted under former President Joe Biden. The Wisconsin Institute wrote to the USDA in April warning of legal action, and six Republican Wisconsin congressmen called on the USDA to investigate and end the programs.

https://apnews.com/article/trump-republican-usda-dei-lawsuit-5a524fedc611cb201a43c1967e3f12bf

Seriously an administration that hates brown people and women would choose them over some white dude?

I am hoping that anyone in Wisconsin can shed some light (Hopefully Grouchy Farmer will enlighten us)

Any thoughts on this possibility?

And life goes on in the wacky world of Trump and MAGA.

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

6 thoughts on “Factory Farms And The Next Pandemic

  1. The comments on factory farms is spot on. It is indeed a ticking time bomb, and not just with animals. It’s also a serious danger with plants as well. The major crops grown in the US and in large parts of the world, corn, soybeans, etc. are essentially genetically identical. This means that some type of plant disease they are susceptible to develops and spreads, there is the potential for wiping out the entire crop. That’s what caused the Irish potato famine that caused so much suffering back in the mid 1800s, something called “late blight” spread like wildfire. causing not just widespread famine but also political upheaval and forced migration of large numbers of people.

    As for the lawsuit, I shall refrain from commenting lest I descend into the use of language inappropriate for a family environment.

      1. The lawsuit is absolutely real. This the 2nd time this person and WILL has filed suits to try to stop programs intended to assist minority farmers. Interestingly, while WILL has “Wisconsin” in its name, most of its funding comes from sources outside of the state, laundered through various PACs and “foundations” etc. to make tracking where the money actually comes from difficult. It takes up various anti-union, anti civil rights and pro-extremist stances in various cases all across the state. While it is ostensibly backed by the right wing Brady foundation here in Wisconsin, most of the money for starting it up and filing anti-union lawsuits seems to have come largely from a handful of wealthy individuals, including the Koch brothers originally.

  2. In the same county I live in, they are building the largest chicken farm in the UK. Because the birds will not be caged, but kept in massive metal sheds, running around, the eggs will be considered to be ‘free range’ and priced accordingly. There is a big campaign against the company, and I have signed the petition against it, though I live over 40 miles away from where it is being built. Just because they are not caged doesn’t mean that they won’t spread infections. If anything, it could be worse.
    Best wishes, Pete.

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