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U.S. beef prices reach record highs as cattle industry struggles to keep costs down
(www.cbsnews.com)
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With climate change, hay and such can be scarce.
But, factory farms mostly use corn and grain. I'm not sure where that's sourced, but I'm sure prices are going up since our slave labor workforce is being deported.
Even for cutting and baling hay, a lot of people are having a hard time finding someone who wants to do the work. My mom leases her fields to her neighbors for cattle grazing and hay harvesting, and it took them months to find someone to cut and bale.
Used to be there'd be some high school kid who wanted to earn some extra cash, but apparently this new generation doesn't want to do hard work (and they pay well)
The irony of calling out kids for not wanting to do the work you don't want to do either is pretty amusing.
Some people just aren't cut out for back breaking work (myself included). I did construction for a few summers in high school, and that was enough to tell me how important studying is, because I didn't want to wreck my body for someone else's dime.
I've done the work before. I can't do it now due to injuries.
But go ahead and keep making wild assumptions.
That sounds like incredibly shitty work, which means they're not paying well (compared to easier options).
A quick search showed it paid relatively in line with other retail and waiting jobs. Which are far less strenuous. Work shortages are a myth. It's always a payment deficit
"They pay well" .... Bullshit.
Pay $100/hour and you'll have a line out the door of applicants to work hard.
Play $15/hr and "Nobody wants to work anymore."