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Factory Farm Fallout: Ridglan, Rotten Litter, and Flies Bred By Your Tax Dollars | Rising Anxieties
Description
This week on Rising Anxieties, Mariann doesn’t let you look away — from the chaotic and heartbreaking Ridglan “rescue” that wasn’t, to a Yale study proving that just showing people a picture of a pig reduces meat orders by 22% (yes, really). Along the way, she covers a vegan vendor pushed out of Time Out Market for refusing to serve dairy, cancer rates running 4–8% higher near factory farms in Iowa, Texas, and California, a $750 million sterile fly breeding program meant to stop New World Screwworm, a new pig disease that looks alarmingly like foot-and-mouth, and a 20-year-old lawsuit about chicken feces in Oklahoma’s waterways that the cattle industry understands is a problem for them.
- Ridglan fallout is just beginning — The weekend’s activist action in Wisconsin ended in arrests and legal uncertainty, not a rescue; the real battle will play out in courtrooms now
- A pig photo reduced meat orders by 22% — A Yale cafeteria study found that simply displaying an image of the animal next to a meat dish significantly shifted diners toward vegetarian options
- Factory farms are a cancer risk — California, Texas, and Iowa all show 4–8% higher cancer rates in areas with heavy industrial animal agriculture, with Iowa holding the second-highest and fastest-rising rate in the U.S.
- Your tax dollars are breeding sterile flies — $750 million is going toward a Texas facility producing infertile flies to combat New World Screwworm, which is now within 200 miles of the U.S. border
- Animal ag’s waste problem just got a court ruling — A federal judge rejected Oklahoma’s too-cozy settlement with Tyson Foods over decades of chicken litter pollution in the Illinois River Watershed, sending a message that nutrient management plans actually have to mean something
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