Poke and Sniff: A Lesson from 1906

Via Brownstone Institute

By Jeffrey A. Tucker

In 1906, Upton Sinclair came out with his book The Jungle, and it shocked the nation by documenting the horror of the meat-packing industry. People were being boiled in vats and sent to larders. Rat waste was mixed with meat. And so on.

As a result, the Federal Meat Inspection Act passed Congress, and consumers were saved from ghastly diseases. The lesson is that government is essential to stop enterprise from poisoning us with its food.

To some extent, this mythology accounts for the wide support for government’s involvement in stopping disease spread today, including Covid and the catastrophic response.

Not only that, but the story is also the basis for the US Department of Agriculture’s food inspection efforts, the Food and Drug Administration’s regulation of medical drugs, the central plan that governs food production, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the legions of bureaucrats who inspect and badger us every step of the way. It is the founding template for why government is involved in our food and health at all.

It’s all premised on the implausible idea that people who make and sell us food have no concern as to whether it makes us sick. It only takes a quick second, though, to realize that this idea just isn’t true. So long as there is a functioning, consumer-driven marketplace, customer focus, which presumably includes not killing you, is the best regulator. Producer reputation has been a huge feature of profitability, too. And hygiene was a huge feature of reputation — long before Yelp.

Sinclair’s book was not intended as a factual account. It was a fantasy rendered as an ideological screed. It did drum up support for regulation, but the real reason for the act’s passage was that the large Chicago meat packers realized that regulation would hurt their smaller competitors more than themselves. Meat inspections imposed costs that cartelized the industry.

That’s why the largest players were the law’s biggest promoters. Such laws almost have more to do with benefiting elites than protecting the public. It was not really about safety, the best scholarship shows, but exclusionary regulation to raise competitors’ costs of doing business.

Still, there is more to this little-known history that speaks to the entire basis for government management of health. The legislation required federal inspectors to be on site at all hours in every meat-packing plant. At the time, regulators came up with a shabby method for detecting bad meat, namely poking a rod into the meat and smelling the rod. If it came out smelling clean, they would poke the same rod into the next piece of meat and smell it again. They would do this throughout the entire plant.

But as Baylen J. Linnekin points out in “The Food-Safety Fallacy: More Regulation Doesn’t Necessarily Make Food Safer” (Northeastern University Law Journal, vol. 4, no. 1), this method was fundamentally flawed. You can’t necessarily detect pathogens in meat by smell. It takes a long time for bacteria to begin to stink. In the meantime, bacteria can spread disease through touch. The rod could pick up bacteria and transmit it from one piece of meat to another, and there was no way for inspectors to know about it. This method of testing meat most certainly spread any pathogens from bad meat to good meat, assuring that an entire plant became a house of pathogens rather than having them restricted to just one carcass.

As Linnekin explains:

USDA inspectors undoubtedly transmitted harmful bacteria from one contaminated piece of meat to other uncontaminated pieces in untold quantities and, consequently, were directly responsible for sickening untold numbers of Americans by their actions.

Poke-and-sniff — incredibly a centerpiece of the USDA’s meat inspection program until the late 1990s — was, in terms of its sheer efficiency at transmitting pathogens from infected meat to clean meat, nearly the ideal device.

Add to this the fact that the USDA’s own inspectors were critical of the inspection regime from the start, and that the USDA abdicated its inspection role at hundreds of meat processors for nearly three decades, and it becomes quite apparent that instead of making food safer, poke-and-sniff made food and consumers less safe.

Poke-and-sniff began in 1906 and was common until the 1990s. The USDA’s own website recounts the career of one meat inspector who praised the shift from the old practice, a practice that persisted longer than even Soviet communism.

When people teach about this history in a conventional classroom environment, they tell the story of meat-packing horror and the act’s passage. But there the story ends. There is a pervasive lack of curiosity about what happened next. Did the regulations achieve their aims? Did the situation improve, and, if so, was this improvement due to the regulations or to private innovations? Or did the problem get worse, and, if so, can the worsening be traced to the regulations themselves?

These are the sorts of questions we need to ask not only about the long-ago past but our own experiences with government-managed disease control.

As for why bad practices last and don’t get weeded out through experimentation, this is the way it is with such agencies. Once a rule is in place, no one can seem to stop it, no matter how little sense it makes. You know this if you have ever been in the TSA line at the airport.

The sheer irrationality strikes me every time — and it strikes the TSA employees, too. They are taking away bottles of shampoo but allowing lighters on planes. Sometimes they confiscate a corkscrew and other times not. They test your hands to make sure you haven’t been handling bombs, but the sheer implausibility is so apparent that the inspectors themselves can hardly keep a straight face.

It was this way with vaccine mandates, which stayed in place long after the public-health rationale for them had vanished. It became very clear that they neither stopped infection nor transmission, so there was no point in mandating them at all. Even after all benefit seem doubtful and reports of adverse effects exploded, people were still fired for refusing them. They still are.

So too with masks. And “social distancing.” And school closures. And domestic capacity restrictions. And travel restrictions. And curfews.

Whenever government imposes a rule, it begins to operate as if on autopilot. No matter how brainless, damaging, irrational, or outmoded it happens to be, the rule ends up trumping the reasoning of the human mind.

This becomes a very serious matter regarding health. Ruling this sector of life, you don’t want an overlord who is unresponsive to new information and new evidence and innovation — a regime that specializes in following a routine, no matter how bad, rather than improving itself with a testable goal in mind.

This is why in societies where such scoleric agencies rule, all things slip into a frozen state. This is why even today Cuba seems like a tableau of the 1950s. This is why when the curtain was pulled back on East Germany and the old Soviet Union, we found societies that seemed stuck in the past. This is why the postal service can’t seem to innovate and why public schools are still structured as if it were the 1970s. Once a government plan is established, it tends to stick, even when it is not achieving its aims.

The case of poke-and-sniff in meat-packing should serve as a warning for all measures that claim to improve our health, whether designed to protect us from disease, balance our diet, or bring us safety or any other reason. We live in a world of change and of growing knowledge. Our lives and well-being depend on economic systems that can respond to change, extract that growing knowledge, and enable it to be used in ways that serve human needs.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
17 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
July 14, 2022 9:01 pm

The real problem is corporatized food production and the failure to hold corporate executives criminally liable for problems. If every CEO who harmed people went to prison for an extended visit, food safety laws would be a lot less necessary. We could actually learn something from China.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Anonymous
July 14, 2022 9:30 pm

Same holds true for who they hire. Throw a couple of high profile CEO’s in jail for hiring illegals and voila no more jobs for illegals to come take from Americans. Ike threatened it in the 50’s (Operation Wetback) and it worked. Lots of jobs for returning servicemen.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Anonymous
July 14, 2022 11:13 pm

Regulations specifically protect CEOs from real accountability. You “comply” and all is forgiven.

bug
bug
  MrLiberty
July 16, 2022 4:31 pm

Not to mention that the typical action of a common sense male is “Sniff, then Poke.”

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 14, 2022 9:48 pm

corporations and banks… more specifically 14th amendment corporations and fractional-reserve banks/fiat-printing central banks.. without these ingredients we simply would not have the problems that come from cartels controlling food and every other damn thing. it would be impractical to get any organization into too big to fail/too big to jail type territory, if it had to be done the old fashioned way as partnerships between individual investors in a _company_ (the original meaning of company, that is, a group of people) who were all jointly liable for the company’s actions. Legitimate, non-pathological businesses can do just fine that way but criminally insane corporations are the perfect tool for enabling abusive activity while shrugging off the consts onto others… and funny-money banks only magnify the effect by a factor of, oh, a bazillion or so.

GNL
GNL
  Anonymous
July 14, 2022 10:57 pm

Excellent comment.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 14, 2022 9:56 pm

Poke and sniff still in use on potential female conquests, seems to still work.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
July 15, 2022 9:00 pm

A young couple were driving home one night.

As they came around a curve, they ran over a mother skunk. The woman saw a baby skunk crying on the side of the road and demanded her boyfriend stop. Taking the baby home, it started shivering.

The woman said, “It’s cold. What do I do?”

The man replied, “Put it down between your legs and warm it up.”

The lady then asked, “What about the smell?”

The man replied, “I guess just hold its little nose!”

Stucky
Stucky
July 14, 2022 10:09 pm

“poke-and-sniff ” —– the title of Dementia’s autobiography.

Marky
Marky
July 14, 2022 10:33 pm

Poke and Sniff

I miss those days. Had to pass the sniff test before going down there.

i forget
i forget
July 14, 2022 10:45 pm

Sam Camel pokes its directed nose into your tent, sniffs ~ which puts it mildly ~ & then Sam Camel *is* the tent.

Beware strangers, friends too, bearing gift casks of Amontillado.

Putin it where it counts
Putin it where it counts
July 14, 2022 10:54 pm

The Jungle was about socialism. “I aimed for the public’s heart, but by accident hit them in the stomach.”

jo
jo
July 14, 2022 11:43 pm

Regulator with a bad cold: To co-worker–“Hey! Smell my finger, willya?”

Middle Aged Mad Gnome
Middle Aged Mad Gnome
July 15, 2022 6:35 am

Not a fan of big government of any sort, however, this article omits the simple truth that a goodly number of business concerns, especially larger ones, will take consumer risks for the sake of higher profit until and unless a government entity by law imposes a significant risk to profitability with higher minimum standards. Unfortunately, that’s just a part of human nature.

bug
bug
  Middle Aged Mad Gnome
July 16, 2022 4:35 pm

Yes, but the situation now is that you must pay the inspector the total of his gov’t wage to sit around on his ass the whole time you are packaging product.

This is why massive amounts of food were (and are) being thrown out (during covid and other times). Since the inspector was not there, the food was not “safe.”

Aardvark-Gnosis
Aardvark-Gnosis
July 15, 2022 8:21 pm

Government Inspectors that get paid off??? Or is that too cynical? Wherever the money is… there are those that can be bought off. Here the lowest common denominators format the temptation to cover the corporatist establisment. Fire the inspector and nothing hapens to the Meat Pakers Porona Appetite for doing the same thing with every inspector. Just sayin!!!

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 15, 2022 8:57 pm

“That’s why the largest players were the law’s biggest promoters.”

Why, that sounds hauntingly familiar. “same. Only different.”

Led to the Whiskey Rebellion. Too.