Well, wow. National legislators stand up to oppose the use of tax revenues to subsidize large-scale confinement pig farms out of concern for food safety and antibiotic resistance, declaring that they are "going to war in defense of pigs."
In Europe, though.
At the European Parliament today, three national representatives — Janusz Wojciechowski of Poland, José Bové of France and Dan Jørgensen of Denmark — declared their opposition to industrial-scale swine agriculture, positioning themselves for a fight over the European Union's Common Agriculture Policy, which is up for revision this summer.
Jørgensen represents the country that has done the most to place controls on agricultural antibiotic use; Bové is a farmer and political organizer who famously destroyed a McDonald's by driving a tractor through it; and Wojciechowski is the son of pig farmers who wrote on his blog today:
As I've written before (long archive here and here),the MRSA strain ST398 arose on Dutch pig farms in 2004, among pigs that had been given prophylactic doses of antibiotics, especially tetracycline. It has since spread through the EU, Canada and the United States, affecting not only farm workers and veterinarians, but also hospital patients with no connection to agriculture.
(Self-promotion alert: This may be a good time to tell you that my book SUPERBUG: The Fatal Menace of MRSA, which tells the full story of the emergence and spread of ST398, has just been released in paperback.)
In advance, this morning the trade paper Farming UK wrote this about the planned European Parliament announcements:
The event was co-organized by Tracy Worcester, who is both a British aristocrat and director of a documentary, Pig Business, that has not yet been shown in the US. Here's its trailer:
In both medicine and agriculture, Europe has been ahead of the US in addressing concerns about antibiotic resistance. This morning's announcements are yet more evidence of just how far ahead they are.


