Food Security
I read an Opinion piece this morning regarding Open Borders and the heavy migration of people from South and Central America up through Mexico that focused on the New World Screwworm (NWS). Southern Mexico has been the focus of containing the NWS since its eradication in regions north many years ago. The column indicated that the barrier was broken by the Cartels who moved both people and livestock northward through that barrier as authorities "looked the other way" due to potential violence and many bribes.
The cattle carrying the NWS were "legitimized" by being placed in Feedyards and on ranches in Mexico. It was a way of laundering money for the Cartels. The barrier holding back the NWS was destroyed through that illegal movement of livestock.
The result was that new reservoirs of the NWS were created across northern Mexico which is home to millions of cattle. Summer winds, wildlife movement and other factors pushed the NWS across the border into Texas.
We will be unable to stop the spread of NWS unless we can stop the Cartels from laundering money through illegal movement of cattle and other livestock into northern Mexico. Until that is eliminated, reservoirs of the fly will remain just across the border, providing the source of movement despite closing the border to the entry of live cattle into the U.S.
Food Security is National Security. The NWS threatens a highly pressured segment of our food supply in the impact it has on cattle production. The opinion expressed by the Columnist was that Border Security, elimination of the Cartels which engage in drug and human trafficking and elimination of their ability to launder money through illegal movement of livestock is a critical component of securing the U.S. against further spread of NWS.
Food Security has been an issue for humans since the beginning of time. It can be at the individual, family, community or country level. It was a serious issue for early pioneers as they founded homesteads and towns in their westward movement across the North American Continent. An interesting example of one solution was to turn the corn and grapes that they raised into alcoholic products that wouldn't spoil. Those could then be traded to others for food.
Whiskey was a primary way to store corn produced in the hills of Kentucky and Tennessee and Wine provided a way to capture the proteins and carbohydrates from grapes harvested wild in those same environments. Human ingenuity at its finest.
We have wild Muscadine Grapes (Vitis rotundifolia) growing in the woods on our place. I doubt that I will be making any wine from them, but I am happy to see them thriving. With the way things look in this old world, food security might again become a primary issue to individuals.
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