Moderators: jcmanson, Sly Fox, BuryYourDuke
Knucklehead wrote:I blame it on greed.True. Big Dairy is all about the cash. They'd sell skim milk to an infant if they thought they could make a profit on it.
You can think of it this way if you like, although you are not purchasing the milk: after you purchase your share(s) in the cow, the price of milk is about $5.25 per gallon ($24 per month boarding divided by 4 weeks = $6.00). Compare this to the price of Horizon organic milk—about $3.50 per half-gallon or $7.00 per gallon—and Horizon milk is ultra-pasteurized!
El Scorcho wrote:Yeah, I know. No one complains about how farmers will dump milk down the drain to artificially drive up the cost of their product. But if gas was going for $4.50 a gallon, you wouldn't hear the end of the whining about how the economy sucks (and then you'll see the same people pay for a $7.00 latte at Starbucks).Knucklehead wrote:I blame it on greed.True. Big Dairy is all about the cash. They'd sell skim milk to an infant if they thought they could make a profit on it.
LUconn wrote:I've read a lot about how Brazil is able to be completely self-sufficient on ethanol that the produce through sugar.So they don't use gasoline in Brazil?

LUconn wrote:I don't think we have the right climate for sugar, but if Brazil has such an abundance of it, I would rather import their sugar instead of middle east oil.Can't do that. The corn industry in America won't allow it. There's a reason we use high-fructose corn syrup instead of sugar in soda these days. The corn industry lobbied for it and they don't want Brazilian sugar clouding up their market.
Wikipedia wrote:Because of a system of price supports and sugar quotas imposed since May 1982, importing sugar into the United States is prohibitively expensive. High-fructose corn syrup, derived from corn, is more economical since the American price of sugar is artificially far higher than the global price of sugar and the price of #2 corn is artificially low due to both government subsidies and dumping on the market as farmers produce more corn annually. The food industry turned to HFCS as a substitute, with both Coca-Cola and Pepsi switching to HFCS in 1984.Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_fructose_corn_syrup
LUconn wrote:well no. I think the ethonal fuel is made partially out of gasoline.i read it takes almost 2 gallons of gasoline to make 1 of ethanol....
SuperJon wrote: I love dc Talk.