Wednesday, February 22nd is Washington’s real birthday. In honor of General George Washington who became the first President of our brand new liberated nation, I urge you to contact your local radio stations as well as national radio station personalities to let them know the danger that the USDA’s National Animal Identification System (NAIS) poses to our liberties. Let them know that you want them to address the issue of why is the government stealing away our rights with programs like NAIS, PAWS, REAL ID and the Patriot Act. If you miss doing it on the 22nd, it is not to late! Give your local media a shout any day.

Are you familiar with NAIS? Let me give you a little background. The USDA wants to register the GPS coordinates, name, address, phone and other data on every farm, home and other location that has even has a single animal with a government Premise ID. For this privilege of mandatory registration you will pay a fee of $10 or more per year. Next they intend to tag every single one of your animals with a RFID or other tag. This will be mandatory. In addition to paying an annual fee and paying for tags for all of your animals, you would also be required to log, track and report all ‘events’ such as the birth of an animal, death of an animal, animals leaving or entering your property. All reports must be made within 24 hours or you could face stiff fines. Do not expect them to keep your private information secure. In a little “Oops” the USDA just released the social security numbers of 350,000 farmers.
Big producers like factory farms get to use a single batch ID for tens of thousands of animals to keep their costs down. For them NAIS is a minor bookkeeping entry that gives them big profits in the export markets to Japan and other countries. Small farmers and homesteaders with their mixed aged flocks and herds would be required to tag and track every single individual animal. NAIS is great for big corporate producers and hellish for small farmers and homesteaders. The cost of NAIS in fees, tags, equipment costs and time will bankrupt small farmers and overwhelm people who raise their own food animals. In the end, the consumer will pay - NAIS could add almost a thousand dollars a year to the annual food budget for the typical family of four. By destroying small producers NAIS will kill the Slow Food and the Buy Local movements as local farmers are driven out of business.
NAIS is already mandatory in some states starting this year including Texas and Wisconsin. In other states, like Vermont, the agricultural commissioner and state vet have said they will tag and track every animal right down to the back yard level. This means everyone, even granny with her one laying hen is going to have to get a $10 per year premise ID, a RFID tag for her chicken and make government reports on its movements. Texas has implemented a $1,000 per incident per day fine for non-compliance. What small farmer or homesteader can stand up to that kind of fire power?!?
NAIS also requires tagging and tracking of pets and guardian animals including alpaca and horses. It may later likely be extended to cats and dogs although that has not yet been announced it is allowed for in the draft proposal through extensions of the program. In New York state they already have a bill in the legislature requiring that all dogs be internally tagged with RFID chips for tracking purposes.
USDA agents can come to your home and kill all of your livestock without a warrant or any legal appeal under NAIS. Once you are registered into the mandatory NAIS system you effectively lose your rights to your own livestock. You become a serf for the state worse than in Communist Russia. If you do not believe me then please go to the USDA web site and read the draft proposal for NAIS which is already being implemented in stages without public feedback or scrutiny. Check out the timeline - we all must start fighting it now before it is too late. Together we can stop this fascist move to take away our property and livelihoods. We can still protect our traditional rights to farm if we act now.
Is NAIS legal? No, not under our Constitution but that does not stop the government from implementing bad laws and regulations and then enforcing them. NAIS specifically violates the 1st, 4th, 5th and 14th Amendments and Bill of Rights. The USDA has been very hush-hush about NAIS because they know that if people really understood how far reaching it is, what an outrageous violation of our constitutional rights NAIS is, then people would stop NAIS dead. The USDA has being asking for feedback but only from the large “stakeholders” as they call them. Small farmers don’t count. Homesteaders don’t matter. Pet owners were completely ignored because none of these groups profit from NAIS.
How could this happen? NAIS was enabled under the Patriot Act. Killing the Patriot Act now will not be enough. Individual states have already enacted NAzIS laws. The Republicans and Democrats are both in on creating the Patriot Act and NAIS in the wake of the terrorism scare of 9/11. Using this theater of fear large corporations jumped at the chance to implement NAIS.
Why would anyone want NAIS? In a word, profits. Remember, always follow the money trail. Large meat exporters are required to provide trace-back documentation for their cattle for export to foreign markets like Japan. Agreements with the European Union are asking for similar tagging and tracking. The big meat packers announced they did not want to deal with two streams of animals, those who were tagged and those that were not so they expanded NAIS to cover all cattle. The RFID tag and equipment industry got excited about this tremendous market. In their greed they wanted NAIS extended to all livestock that might enter the food chain. Then it was extended to non-traditional food animals including horses and guardian animals.
To justify this they now claim that the purpose of NAIS is to prevent disease. It is not. They use Mad Cow (BSE) and Avian Flu (H5N1) scares to justify a program that is about profits. NAIS will not prevent or stop disease. BSE is caused by cows eating cows and it sometimes occurs randomly when a protein misfolds so traceback won’t help with BSE. Testing at slaughter and stopping the practice of feeding cows back to cows are the things that will help prevent Mad Cow Disease. Avian Flu comes from wild ducks and other wild water fowl. NAIS will do nothing for either. Confinement rearing also will not help with Avian Flu - several factory chicken farms have been hit by it.
Now there is even a push to extend chipping to pets and even humans both as an implant for “medical records” and as part of the national REAL ID program so the government can better track all people within the United States.
NAIS is about profits for large meat exporters. NAIS is not about disease and has nothing to do with food safety for the American consumer. NAIS will hurt small farmers, homesteaders and pet owners with excessive fees, invasions of privacy, threats of enormous fines and onerous paperwork. It is a clear violation of our Constitutional rights. NAIS will also hurt consumers, even vegetarians because animal manures are used to grow vegetables organically. NAIS will result in the consolidation of our food supply into the hands of fewer large corporations thus making our national food chain more susceptible to attacks by terrorist organizations. The best way to prevent terrorist attacks is diversity and to spread out the food supply. Buy Local! NAIS could even cause the national housing bubble to collapse as small farmers go bankrupt and their prime developable lands get chopped up into subdivisions by developers. The damaging effects of NAIS could ripple through our fragile economy driving us into another great depression as people who supply farmers are put out of work and they stop buying.
What is the solution? NAIS should be made strictly voluntary and the rights of consumers, small farmers, livestock owners, homesteaders and pet owners should be protected from future abuses. If NAIS is such a good idea then the sellers who would benefit from the export markets and other venues requiring traceability will get higher prices so they will voluntarily join the system. There is no need to force it down everyone’s throat if it is such a good idea. The very fact that the USDA is planning to make NAIS mandatory proves what a bad idea it really is. Better the carrot than the stick.
For more information about NAIS check out the FAQs at the top of the left hand sidebar and the various additional resources in the right hand sidebar on the NoNAIS.org web site.
Speak now while you still have the right. Let your voice be heard across the land. Start to day by contacting your local talk show radio hosts and stations.
“As nightfall does not come all at once, neither does oppression. In both instances,there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we all must be aware of change in the air however slight, least we become unwitting victims of the darkness.”
Justice William O. Douglas,
US Supreme Court
(1939-75)

Action Alert…
Go check out NoNAIS.org for great talking points on NAIS. Call your local radio shows, senator, congressmen, anybody who cares or doesn’t care and get this heard.
An ear tag never stop a disease, but working together we can stop the ear tag….
Trackback No Mandatory Animal ID — February 22, 2006 @ 6:51 am
GREAT NEWS!!!!
I just heard on AGDAY this morning (Agricultural News Program) that someone has put a bill into the Texas Legislature to stop the mandatory registration of properties which contain agricultural animals. I know a week ago, persons were trying to stop the original bill making it mandatory from passing, and thus the first undermining of the entire NAIS program.
WAY TO GO, TEXAS!!!
As a side note, I read a libertarian comment that this program of animal registration originated in the U.N.
Comment b_heart — February 22, 2006 @ 8:34 am
I emailed the editor of our Fannin Co, Ga. paper. He’d never heard of it, but was disturbed and assigned a reporter to do a series of articles on it. The first came out after interviewing me over the phone plus vets, farmers and industry officials. The article whitewashed the issue so I’ve written a letter to the editor correcting the misstatements by the industry officials and referring them to this website. Hopefully, at least by calling this to their attention, this county won’t be blindsided.
Comment Cynthia B. — February 23, 2006 @ 6:45 am
It might help if we could get some celebrities involved.(Obviously Not OPRAH!) An example, but one most would not think of would be someone like Christie Brinkley. She was involved in a scientific study a few years ago on the effectiveness of guinea fowl on eradicating ticks on her ranch property. She used to freerange guineas to protect her young daughter from lyme disease. It may sound silly, but maybe someone can think of other celebrities who would be affected or would be sympathetic to our constitutional rights like the Charlton Heston types.They sometimes have clout or at least a louder voice. Just an off-the-wall thought.
Comment Cynthia B. — February 24, 2006 @ 7:24 am
Some people are working on Willie Nelson. Robert Redford is another I would think of. Interesting about Christine Brinkley - we use guineas at our place to keep down the ticks and other bugs. Very effective. NAIS would stop this sort of thing. Guineas roam and you would be for ever making event reports to the government about them.
So, who knows some celebrities and how to contact them?
Comment walterj — February 24, 2006 @ 8:14 am
Cynthia B. check out this site. You will have to skip through a few ads to get to the story.
Comment Sharon — February 24, 2006 @ 8:16 am
Thanks, Sharon. There does appear to be a number of celebs who own livestock and would be affected. Finding their contact numbers/addresses is the key. Hopefully, someone here will have some luck with that.I’ve been trying myself.
Comment Cynthia B. — February 24, 2006 @ 10:35 am
My local paper did the editorial at the bottom of the page on the following link.
http://www.thenewsobserver.com/opinions.html
It was the third one they’ve done since I informed our editor of the NAIS. I would have given you a link for the first two, but our paper didn’t put them online. The reporter who interviewed me is still saying it is for commercial producers only and they did not print my letter to the editor in today’s edition correcting that assumption, because the reporter listened to the cattle industry guy instead of what I told him in our interview. At least he’s doing the articles.I have referred him to this website so I hope he will read further. So many people just don’t have their facts straight so Walter, I thank you for having such a comprehensive website!
Comment Cynthia B. — February 24, 2006 @ 11:32 am
Our state is resisting the NAIS.
Feels like some dumb movie.
Resiste the borg!
Comment Marcus MD — March 8, 2006 @ 9:46 am
Good news! Radio Free Vermont, a music station, is broadcasting the “Hour of the Time”, beginning Nov. 6th, at 9-11 p.m. EST, on the internet. While Bill Cooper was alive, his shortwave radio program was hugely popular around the world. In a White House memo, Bill Clinton called Bill Cooper the “most dangerous” radio host in America. I actually found this memo in the Federal Register years ago, at the library, and copied it. It is really there. Bill was shot and killed by Eager, Arizona authorities, on Nov. 6, 2001. He is the one who said, “Read everything, believe nothing, unless you can prove it through your own research.” His research and radio program are being carried on by Doyel (correct spelling) Shamley and Robert Houghton. Bill wrote “Behold a Pale Horse” many years ago. Some of you may have heard of it. The program can be heard at:
link
Walter, just one more thing to thank the great state of Vermont for!
Comment Texas Goat Gal — November 7, 2006 @ 9:18 pm