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US

Where’s the beef?

by Cat on June 8, 2008

Updated to correct statistics about “mad cows” in the U.S.

David and I were interviewed Wednesday night for this week’s Seoul Podcast and, as I told Joe and Jennifer, I usually avoid writing about political or controversial current events in Korea because, when you write like you know what you’re talking about—and you don’t—you end up looking like an idiot.

I should have kept that in mind when I wrote this earlier post about the FTA beef protests and inadvertently aligned myself with the lunatic fringe.

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Source: AP photo published in the Chosun Ilbo.

Over the past month, thousands of people–including many middle school, high school, and university students— have participated in huge protests against the beef-import agreements in the proposed KORUS free-trade agreement.

18-year old Kim Chae-won stated her opposition. “Even if you don’t eat beef you can get mad cow disease so why in the hell are they importing it?

All kinds of stories are growing and spreading. If you eat beef infected with mad cow disease you die instantly, mad cow disease can be spread by air and water, you can get it from a kiss — every sort of false rumor exists.

To clarify: I am no fan of the U.S. beef industry. I think that large-scale cattle farming, feedlots and industrial slaughterhouses engage in inhumane and unsanitary practices. Most beef cattle are fed an inappropriate diet and then pumped full of antibiotics to encourage rapid growth and treat illnesses caused by substandard living conditions and feeding practices.

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However, there has only been one case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (mad cow disease) ever found in the United States and that was in a cow that was originally born in Canada have only been three cases of BSE found in the United States. That cow also never made it to the slaughterhouse. None of these cattle were slaughtered and processed for beef. There are strict regulations to prevent diseased cattle from getting into the food supply.

Human cases of “mad cow disease” (the human form is known as variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease) take months, sometimes years, to develop and are believed to be caused by exposure to an infectious agent in the brains, spinal columns and nerve tissue from infected animals. You cannot get mad cow disease by breathing the same air as an infected person.

(The regulations that I belive most need to be strengthened and more stringently enforced govern the handling of meat during processing, but don’t get me started on that …)

Notably, Korea does not have a process in place to detect the presence of BSE in its own cattle, so Koreans could be more at risk from eating homegrown beef.

Really, though, I should just save my breath (and my typing fingers) because the protests really aren’t about food safety. They reflect dissatisfaction with the current president, Lee Myung Bak, adding in a good dose of anti-Americanism for good measure.

I wandered in to a discussion about this with Mrs. H. (She asked what I thought Barack Obama’s chances were against McCain and this led to a discussion of the influence of the media, which led to a discussion about the President Lee’s current approval ratings.)

According to Mrs. H, “most Koreans” know that U.S. beef is safe, but they are unhappy about the way that Lee Myung Bak has negotiated with the U.S., saying that they believe he has not “stood up for the Korean people” enough. She did go on to say that she personally believed that Korea had no choice but to negotiate trade agreements that would, inevitably, harm some Korean interests (small farmers, for example) because the country needed to participate in the global economy or get left behind. I didn’t get the feeling that this last part was a popular opinion.

Heeding the principle expressed in my first paragraph, though, I am going to refrain from speculating on the “Korean take” on the beef issue, except to say that, like Americans, Koreans are not of just one mind on anything. As compelling as thousands of students marching through the streets and fighting with riot police are, it does not mean that they represent the beliefs of the entire country. Even they don’t all agree about why they are protesting.

Given the large number of student protestors, and the ‘facts’ that many cite as influencing their opinion (that you can get “mad cow disease” through the air, that you can die within minutes or hours of consuming U.S. beef), it does make you question the role of the media, the Internet and education system here.

But that’s a post for another day.

Cheaper eats: Who’s paying?

by Cat on March 20, 2007

It’s interesting to me that I’ve been seeing a lot of stories in the press lately about the high price of food here. I can’t help but wonder about the timing, as South Korea and the United States continue a sometimes contentious effort at nailing down a free-trade agreement.

From Friday’s Chosun Ilbo:

Koreans pay more for their beef than residents of any other country. A private organization called Consumers in Korea released on Thursday a survey of the prices of 20 major commodities conducted earlier this month by consumer groups in 29 countries. The results showed that the price of domestic and imported beef in Korea is the highest.

Prices of other food and commodities in Korea are also comparatively high. The consumer group said Korea ranked among the top five most expensive countries in eleven categories out of twenty.

U.S. beef imports have been a major sticking point in the ongoing FTA negotiations. But, as the article points out, the food-price disparities don’t end there. According to this speech last year by U.S. Ambassador Alexander Vershbow to the Korean Importers Association, Koreans pay up to 10 times more for agricultural products than the average international consumer.

Added to high housing and fuel prices, the situation is particularly acute in the nation’s capital, as I’ve mentioned before, and as pointed out in this editorial in the Korea Times.

It is serious indeed that prices in Seoul for the three basic necessities of life _ food, clothing and housing _ are more than double those of New York, while the per capita income of Seoulites is less than half of New Yorkers. The rapidly strengthening Korean currency is one reason. But there are other structural problems, too.

[snip]

Food prices, particularly meat prices, are two to four times higher here than in the U.S.

This can be attributed directly to restrictions on the import of foreign agricultural products, high tariffs on what is imported, and government support for Korean farmers, many of whom work small plots, and use older, less-efficient farming methods. This makes food production more expensive, with higher prices passed on to consumers.

As an urban consumer in Seoul—one who was previously accustomed to the cheap, plentiful and diverse foods available in a U.S. supermarket—the contrast is stark.

[click to continue...]

Gyopos gone wild

by Cat on November 10, 2006

An article in the Dong-A Ilbo about Korean detective agencies going global contained some interesting anecdotes about Korean kids living abroad. (Well, not really “abroad” so much as living in the Great Western Satan United States, specifically.)

The parent asked, “It has only been a couple days since I sent our child money, but he is asking for more. I want to know if he is being bullied by other kids for money.”

The S Agency made a request to a partner detective agency in Los Angeles. The agency in Los Angeles soon pursued the whereabouts of the student, Lee (age 16), who is in the eleventh grade.

Lee had pretty much given up on school. He went to school, but he left right away with several friends. He would go to a restroom in a park, do cocaine, buy beer, and head to his friend’s house.

Wow. Here I was thinking it was likely he was blowing money on junk food, a new Xbox, and the latest Tommy Hilfiger. But if you think even that’s living a bit large for a high school junior, keep reading.

During weekends, he and four other friends would take an eight-hour drive to casinos in Las Vegas. Lee lost $3,000 in one night.

Well, I’ll say if there’s some kind of host family blacklist out there, I think this kid’s sponsors should definitely be on it. And, just to scare some more down off those goose fathers out there, we have this little tale:

In April, Mr. Han (age 46) asked a company to investigate his wife and son, who are living in Canada. He was worried because his wife seldom called and his son’s voice over the phone sounded somewhat strange.

Private detectives in Montreal reported that his wife often met with other men and his son, a high school student, went to bars practically every day. The Hans divorced and the son returned to Korea.

The rest of the article is boring, fairly well-supported stuff about how detective agencies are helping Korean multinationals thwart fraud and embezzlement, too. But that doesn’t pack nearly the editorial punch of those hard-partying exchange students.

I wonder which category supplies steadier business?

They put the service in Foreign Service

by Cat on August 8, 2006

I got my new passport delivered to my door, today, a full week earlier than I was expecting it. Since 2001, embassies outside the U.S. cannot issue permanent passports and must forward applications back to the States for processing.

When I applied at the U.S. embassy here (giving them the emergency passport issued at the AIT in Taipei), they told me it would take around two weeks. That was last Tuesday. This morning, I get a phone call from the delivery service confirming I was home and able to pay the delivery fee and sign for it.

Yay! I am no longer “undocumented.” Now, I just have to go through the process of getting my visa and ARC reissued, so I will be truly “legalized.”

I’ve never been so happy to see a little blue booklet. I am considering having it surgically attached to my body.