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Questions & Help Mar 16, 2026 at 12:46 PM

3,800 workers are on strike at one of the largest meatpacking plants in the US

Posted by WilliamInBlack


https://apnews.com/article/meatpacking-plant-strike-jbs-greeley-colorado-02e9d57762af09a609b34d8e577f0c37

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Far_Radish7752 Mar 16, 2026 +795
From the article in AP News: >GREELEY, Colo. (AP) — About 3,800 workers at one of the nation’s largest meatpacking plants went on strike Monday in Colorado in what union representatives said is the first walkout at a U.S. beef slaughterhouse in four decades. >The strike at the Swift Beef Co. plant in Greeley began Monday morning, said Claire Poundstone, an attorney representing workers with United Food and Commercial Workers Local 7. Poundstone said she expected workers to participate in the strike line through the evening. >We’ll be here all day,” she said. >The strike follows accusations from union officials that owner JBS USA retaliated against workers and committed other unfair labor practices amid contract negotiations. A previous contract expired Sunday night. >A message was sent early Monday seeking an updated comment from a spokesperson at JBS USA. >The union said in a news release that its workers “perform some of the most difficult and dangerous jobs in the country.”
795
tonitalksaboutit Mar 16, 2026 +645
The JBS in my area has been fined several times for using children to do cleaning and sanitizing during the night shifts.
645
ApocalypseMaow Mar 16, 2026 +174
Yep and they've started closing offices in AR. Seen two in the last month.
174
SaltyLonghorn Mar 16, 2026 +121
Taking away jobs in Arkansas!? But Huckabee's daughter promised to put kids to work, this can not be...it was a match made in the Jungle.
121
Hillary4SupremeRuler Mar 16, 2026 +40
Maybe she will let them polish her luxury lectern?
40
hafree27 Mar 16, 2026 +15
What the hell ever happened with the lectern grift scandal? Big nothing burger because they won’t investigate?
15
Suckage Mar 16, 2026 +11
AR’s republican party repaid the amount she embezzled, and everyone decided to just forget about the whole thing.
11
instafist Mar 17, 2026 +2
Don't forget the ENTIRE STATE AUDIT that went off because of it. The UofA had to do a full inventory within the course of a month and a half to send to the state... Because of twenty thousand dollars worth of fraud ....
2
oroborus68 Mar 16, 2026 +6
I thought it was Spicer with the motorized lectern on SNL.
6
Mejinopolis Mar 16, 2026 +13
It's been 100 years but I've felt that we've been mirroring the 1920s pretty hard in a lot of different ways, the food packaging/processing industry has taken so many cut corners to get to where it has devolved to today. It's not as bad as back then, but its not too far off tbh.
13
DaneGleesac Mar 16, 2026 +15
Didn't Arkansas change their child labor laws so companies like this could exploit children more?
15
yomjoseki Mar 16, 2026 +10
HEY! They didn't change the laws just for you to keep calling it "exploitation." They are *leveraging* the children.
10
nathanzoet91 Mar 16, 2026 +70
Goddamn. Just slap on the wrist time after time. Maybe if we catch someone/corp doing things over and over again, we just don't let them do it again? I know, it's a novel concept in today's world.
70
Porn0323 Mar 16, 2026 +50
Corporations can be treated like people when we execute one
50
AileStriker Mar 16, 2026 +12
I mean, someone was in charge and made those decisions, they should be prosecuted. If it went up multiple levels, keep going until you can't prove someone was involved. Our justice system is so broken.
12
Sweetwill62 Mar 16, 2026 +6
And don't forget the others that profited off of those decisions. They are just as liable as the person making the decisions. If they aren't liable, then mobs are perfectly legal. "I didn't tell that person to do THAT I just said I didn't want to see them anymore." "I didn't tell the CEO to do THAT, I just wanted more money." Same thing, no different.
6
ThreeHolePunch Mar 17, 2026 +2
We don't have a justice system, we have a legal system and it's working exactly as intended-- for the benefit of the ultra rich.
2
Musiclover4200 Mar 16, 2026 +22
Really feels like we need to bring back tar and feathering at some point There was a time where if laws were repeatedly ignored or abused the local community would take care of the issue one way or another
22
tpeterr Mar 16, 2026 +17
This is the exact reason a lot of the big processing plants are the major employer in a rural area and not located closer to big transit hubs.
17
TucuReborn Mar 16, 2026 +8
I mean, also the smell absolutely reeks. I don't care much about property values, but any sort of mass meat agriculture tends to smell and tank values. We've got an egg place not that far from us, and driving past it makes your eyes burn. You can smell it for miles in all directions, too. It's not one reason, it's a bunch of reasons. Space for it is harder in urban areas, NIMBY/smell, being closer to producers(rural), urban roads not being built out for it, and more.
8
New-Geezer Mar 17, 2026 +2
…and to think people eat that shit!
2
AVGuy42 Mar 16, 2026 +16
Anything punishable by a fine is not against the law, there’s just a fee for doing it. But seriously this seems like it’s always the case. Fines are always a fraction of profits made from the illegal activities and executives are never held to account for repeated violations. Same is true with immigration. You hear about workplaces getting raided but never about the company owners or executives getting arrested. Now, just to add some tangential perspective, if we then look at H1B and other sponsored visa programs we see workers being fired/laid off and h1B workers who get paid significantly less and work under the threat of getting set home brought in to do the same job (talking about tech workers here, rural hospitals and other sectors are getting caught in the blowback). It’s almost as if all of this is about preserving corporate class control over the workforce.
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Upnorth4 Mar 16, 2026 +9
They're a terrible company, they also hire illegal immigrants for below minimum wage
9
JimboTCB Mar 16, 2026 +13
The children yearn for the ~~mines~~ slaughterhouse
13
bone_apple_Pete Mar 16, 2026 +8
Small cost of doing their business. They will gladly keep paying the fines and enslaving children.
8
orlinsky Mar 17, 2026 +2
And consumers will gladly keep paying for the cheapest meats.
2
Beard_o_Bees Mar 16, 2026 +7
> using children Where do these children come from? Are they being trafficked for c****/free labor? This company sounds skeezy enough to use child slaves.
7
tbird920 Mar 16, 2026 +4
JBS is owned by a Brazilian billionaire family that basically has a monopoly.
4
Lokarin Mar 16, 2026 +3
Are children union members? /satire
3
Topologicus Mar 16, 2026 +3
That’s straight out of The Jungle
3
Brownrdan27 Mar 16, 2026 +3
Keep it classy JBS of Green Bay!
3
ArbitraryMeritocracy Mar 16, 2026 +3
> The JBS in my area has been fined several times for using children to do cleaning and sanitizing during the night shifts. I hate this place.
3
tacticaldodo Mar 16, 2026 +2
they lobby to prevent it to happen in the future (the fines)
2
classic__schmosby Mar 16, 2026 +65
Not sure why you left a ton out. Here's the whole thing: >GREELEY, Colo. (AP) — About 3,800 workers at one of the nation’s largest meatpacking plants went on strike Monday in Colorado in what union representatives said was the first walkout at a U.S. beef slaughterhouse in four decades. >Hundreds of strikers picketed in front of the Swift Beef Co. plant in Greeley, owned by JBS USA, as the sun rose Monday. They walked back in forth in the morning cold, bundled in blankets as some yelled “huelga!” — Spanish for “strike.” Others carried signs saying “please don’t patronize JBS,” written in both English and Spanish. >The strike follows accusations from union officials that the company retaliated against workers and committed other unfair labor practices amid contract negotiations. A previous contract expired Sunday night. >“They don’t really value their workers and we’re the ones that help them get all their profit,” said Leticia Avalos, a 34-year-old union steward and Greeley native who has been working at the plant since 2020. >Avalos said she depends on the job to support her family including a 6-month-old baby, but she’s willing to make sacrifices to get the company to listen. >“It’s the number one place where all of Greeley works,” she said. “It’s a huge impact in the community for us to be striking. I know a lot of us are worried, and hope that nothing goes even more south.” >Smoke was rising from parts of the plant but it was unclear if it was still operating. >A spokesperson at JBS USA said late Sunday that the company stands by its contract offer, describing it as fair. >“Despite our continued efforts to reach a fair and responsible agreement, Local 7 chose to end negotiations and cancel the contract we had in place,” spokesperson Nikki Richardson wrote in an email. >The union said in a news release that its workers “perform some of the most difficult and dangerous jobs in the country.” It said JBS in many cases has charged workers $1,100 or more to offset the company’s expenses for personal protective equipment needed to ensure worker safety. >“They deserve wage increases that keep pace with inflation, ensure they receive healthcare commensurate with the toll this work takes on their bodies, and that allow them to live with dignity and respect.” >The strike comes at a 75-year low for the U.S. cattle population, with a Jan. 1 inventory of 86.2 million animals — down 1% from the prior year. >Beef prices have soared to record levels in part after drought and years of low prices led to the smallest U.S. herd size in decades. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Brazil, a major beef exporter, have also curbed imports. >The price for 100% ground chuck beef more than doubled over the past two decades from $2.55 to $6.07 per pound, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The increase has added to economic anxiety in the U.S., while the administration Trump has turned to a trade deal with Argentina in efforts to lower prices for food, including beef. >The strike also follows the January closure of a meatpacking plant in Lexington, Nebraska, which was expected to ripple through the local economy and community. Tyson Foods cited the smaller herd and millions of dollars in expected losses this year. >At the Greeley plant, the company tried to intimidate workers to quit the union in one-on-one meetings, union general counsel Matt Shechter said. A JBA USA statement issued before the strike said the company fully complies with federal and state labor and employment laws. >Kim Cordova, president of the United Food and Commercial Union Local 7, said 99% of workers voted to authorize the strike. No formal negotiations took place over the weekend after the company refused a union request to negotiate on Saturday, Shechter said. >Company spokesperson Richardson said any employee who didn’t want to strike would have work and be paid. The company said it would operate two shifts at the plant Monday and would temporarily move production as needed to other JBS facilities. >It’s the first strike at a U.S. slaughterhouse since workers walked out at a Hormel plant in Minnesota in 1985, Cordova said. That strike lasted more than a year and included violent confrontations between police and protesters, according to the Minnesota Historical Society. >Claire Poundstone, an attorney representing the union workers, said she expected workers to participate in the strike line through the evening. >“We’ll be here all day,” she said.
65
Far_Radish7752 Mar 16, 2026 +25
u/classic__schmosby  …maybe cuz they just updated it? And *substantially.* Thanks for your in-depth coverage!
25
Beard_o_Bees Mar 16, 2026 +19
Those are some brave workers to stand so publicly against a company that has a long track record of abuse towards employees.
19
MachinaThatGoesBing Mar 16, 2026 +8
If people want to read the whole article, they should just follow the link to the AP's site. The Associated Press is nonprofit, and their site isn't paywalled, so giving them the pittance of the ad revenue for your visit is literally the least you can do.
8
StrategicCarry Mar 16, 2026 +24
The majority of these workers are Somali and Haitian immigrants. Something like 50+ languages are spoken in the plant.
24
GreenStreetJonny Mar 16, 2026 +6
For anyone who wants to listen about this place https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/643-the-new-jungle/
6
Capital-Control308 Mar 16, 2026 +1737
Hope they get what they want
1737
Winter-Picture8807 Mar 16, 2026 +136
this is such a simple yet powerful statement
136
Fit_Perspective5054 Mar 16, 2026 +32
Even more so when, for lack of critical thinking and facts, 'news' pundits speculate that they just want to ruin it.   If the strike lasts long enough, believe it or not, antifa.
32
fleebleganger Mar 17, 2026 +7
If the strike lasts too short, antifa If the strike spreads, antifa if the strikers blow up, straight to antifa, no pass go if the strikers return to work for less pay...antifa believe it or not
7
UntamedAnomaly Mar 17, 2026 +3
I wish everyone could strike, now, all at once. No more money for billionares and CEOs until shit goes the way we want it to in this country.
3
tadaloveisreal Mar 16, 2026 +6
Read the comments on article!!! Theyre all negative like move to another state close down.... Against unions which are like 8% or 20 used to be 50%? Engineering colelge tauhjt me to hate unions with my major but also read the jungle 1909 horrors of beef plants injured worker gets nothing but replaced by 100 waiting outside for job
6
Dad_Bod_Supreme Mar 16, 2026 +1460
I stand with the workers of the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 7 and against the exploitation of labor in all of its forms!
1460
qft Mar 16, 2026 +335
This particular plant was negligent during COVID-19, didn't take it seriously, and 6+ of their employees died. Everything I've ever heard about this plant's owners paint them as total POS. https://coloradosun.com/2020/10/08/jbs-meatpacking-plant-coronavirus-negligence/
335
csfredmi Mar 16, 2026 +40
I don't live to far away from here and everything I have ever heard about that place, over many years from many different people, is that it is one of the worst employers in the country.
40
RamonaLittle Mar 16, 2026 +5
It's been "during COVID-19" for the past six years. Over 3,000 Americans died of covid just this year, people are still being sickened and disabled, and vulnerable and compassionate people are still being isolated and traumatized. *Most* workplaces are unsafe, and *most* workers decided they're willing to endanger themselves and others for a paycheck. I know the pandemic forced everyone into difficult situations and impossible choices, but if more people refused to work at dangerous jobs, employers would have to make things safer. Instead everyone's pretending everything's fine while the whole population becomes increasingly disabled.
5
CuntyBunchesOfOats Mar 16, 2026 +97
I’m UFCW local 555! Hell yeah brother ✊
97
UnderlightIll Mar 16, 2026 +64
This is my union and I am so proud of my brothers and sisters standing up for their rights. Everyone should look up what happened to that plant during Covid.
64
toolverine Mar 16, 2026 +22
These workers work extremely hard every single day and deserve fair compensation for feeding other humans.
22
CacctusJacc Mar 16, 2026 +19
On god
19
mystery_science Mar 16, 2026 +557
Employees are the backbone of any business, if you can't afford to compensate them properly you don't deserve to be in business Edited a word since I can't spell.
557
CheesyRamen66 Mar 16, 2026 +199
It’s not a question of deserve. Workers require a certain amount of pay to take care of their families and if a businesses can’t pay that then they don’t have a viable business model.
199
cyberpunk6066 Mar 16, 2026 +31
This applies to farmers too. No more hiring undocumented workers for pennies on the dollar.
31
Moneyshot_ITF Mar 16, 2026 +97
America functions on unequal compensation for work
97
mimaikin-san Mar 16, 2026 +87
one of the most unenforced crimes in the country is wage theft by employers
87
Hillary4SupremeRuler Mar 16, 2026 +22
That has always grinded my gears. The local mom and pop shops here in Miami can shave off multiple hours from your time clock for a pay period and if you're lucky and get a lawyer and really press the issue with the state you might be able to get your wages back and they might even pay a small fine after a lengthy months long or years long process. Yet if a worker goes into the cash register and steals the $80 missing out of their paycheck for the week, the police will be there with the quickness to protect the owning class and you will be thrown in jail on the spot until you prove your innocence while being held at ransom by the state.
22
mittenknittin Mar 16, 2026 +32
Wage theft is over half of ALL theft in this country.
32
MonochromaticPrism Mar 16, 2026 +3
It’s way more than half. Even if you break it down into its 3 largest general categories, all three of them, *individually*, are larger than all other kinds of theft combined.
3
Taokan Mar 16, 2026 +16
Compensation is obviously a cornerstone of any employment arrangement, however, it sounds like this also is protesting retaliation against their workers. And that's not something to ignore either. We've gone far too long without a lawsuit for union busting, and corporations have pushed that line well past what should be legal.
16
mystery_science Mar 16, 2026 +10
I agree with you. Unions are needed now more than ever. For too many years media has been pushing this anti Union sentiment and it has only hurt the working class.
10
SupplyChainGuy1 Mar 16, 2026 +2
This is why I refuse to tip. PAY YOUR PEOPLE 
2
NintenDawg92 Mar 16, 2026 +45
"As machines replace men, we must again question whether the depth of our social thinking matches the growth of technological creativity. We cannot create machines which revolutionize industry unless we simultaneously create ideas commensurate with social and economic reorganization, which harness the power of such machines for the benefit of man...the new age will not be an era of hope but of fear and emptiness unless we master this problem. Its solution will require forthright creative social planning from the shop level up to the highest levels of government." -Dr. King to the United Packinghouse Workers Union of America (May 21st, 1962)
45
frowawayduh Mar 16, 2026 +20
Greeley Colorado: "the exact opposite of Hawaii." You really don't want to be downwind when the plant is cooking the blood.
20
Pre-deleted_Account Mar 16, 2026 +10
When the wind is right, you can smell it in Fort Collins.
10
ricobirch Mar 16, 2026 +6
Or all the way down in Denver.
6
SippyMountain Mar 16, 2026 +3
I can sometimes smell it from 287 near Loveland through my car even if it's recirculating, and I change my cabin filter like once every other month. That shit makes your eyes water. It's like shoving your nose up a dead fish's ass that's been baking in the sun for a week and smothered in warm dog shit.
3
photo1kjb Mar 16, 2026 +6
Live in Denver. You always know when a cold front is coming through because of the smell.
6
IsopodIndependent553 Mar 16, 2026 +182
Good. Now let’s all strike.
182
Far_Radish7752 Mar 16, 2026 +110
From the article: >It’s the first strike at a U.S. slaughterhouse since workers walked out at a Hormel plant in Minnesota in 1985, Cordova said. That strike lasted more than a year and included violent confrontations between police and protesters, according to the Minnesota Historical Society.
110
747_full_of_cum Mar 16, 2026 +44
I wish Texans could get pissed off the way Minnesotans are right now, this is ridiculous. What state am I in.
44
The13thParadox Mar 16, 2026 +17
The cold makes us north folk testy
17
femanonette Mar 16, 2026 +7
just wait until you see what the heat does to the south
7
BigDump-a-Roo Mar 16, 2026 +17
Judging by how they vote I'd wager it melts their brains.
17
movzx Mar 16, 2026 +8
\> lives in state with a one star rating "Why does my state suck?"
8
bianary Mar 16, 2026 +5
> What state am I in. I think it's the One Star State.
5
ClintBruno Mar 16, 2026 +39
Seriously though. We Need a general Strike more than ever.
39
TrazynTheStank Mar 16, 2026 +14
> The strike also follows the January closure of a meatpacking plant in Lexington, Nebraska, which was expected to ripple through the local economy and community. Tyson Foods cited the smaller herd and millions of dollars in expected losses this year. Tyson Foods made $54 billion last year yet shuttered an entire plant because expected losses in the "millions of dollars".
14
Different_Victory_89 Mar 16, 2026 +157
Turned down an 8 cent raise. Saved you a click.
157
throwawaykayaker Mar 16, 2026 +236
> an 8 cent raise A f****** insult with the price of meat and consolidation in that industry.
236
hotsexychungus Mar 16, 2026 +168
Also, charging workers for safety equipment. What a joke.
168
Hillary4SupremeRuler Mar 16, 2026 +19
Charging them *up to ELEVEN HUNDRED DOLLARS.*
19
Upnorth4 Mar 16, 2026 +19
That's actually illegal in my state
19
bighootay Mar 16, 2026 +7
A f****** grand or more? Holy fucksticks
7
loveshercoffee Mar 16, 2026 +48
An 8 cent raise is pretty much an insult anywhere. I'm a freaking part-time lunchlady and my raise this year was $0.45.
48
mytransthrow Mar 16, 2026 +14
8 cents was a good raise in 1920s but this is 2020s. f*** them.
14
SoCalChrisW Mar 16, 2026 +6
I was working a minimum wage job 30 years ago, and got a 10 cent/hour raise. At the time, those of us who got that raise were widely mocking it and how ridiculous it was.
6
Aggressive_Sock1563 Mar 16, 2026 +7
Holy shit lmfao even my old tiny local warehouse job provided hefty raises. Pay wasn't great either way though
7
IamScottGable Mar 16, 2026 +52
I have literally never gotten a raise that small in my life, what a slap in the face offer.
52
[deleted] Mar 16, 2026 +14
[deleted]
14
IamScottGable Mar 16, 2026 +11
I think the smallest raise I ever got was 25 cents and that was almost twenty years ago. 8 cents now is garbage.
11
wyvernx02 Mar 16, 2026 +5
Yep. Same for me. 25 cent raises was pretty standard in the fast food industry 15-20 years ago. And when you were only making $7.25 an hour to begin with, that was a little over a 3% raise, which has always been a fairly typical raise amount.
5
hedoeswhathewants Mar 16, 2026 +47
About $160 a year for a typical 40 hour work week job. $3 per week
47
mewithadd Mar 16, 2026 +9
Right, so it should be easy for tge employer to foot that bill
9
AceMcVeer Mar 16, 2026 +5
That's not the article. Do you have a source on that?
5
Hillary4SupremeRuler Mar 16, 2026 +3
According to Google: >In March 2026, about 3,800 JBS meatpacking workers in Greeley, Colorado, went on strike after rejecting a contract proposal offering a wage increase of 60 cents per hour in the first year, followed by 30 cents per year for the next two years. Workers argued this offer was below inflation and insufficient to cover rising healthcare costs, with some calculating a net increase of only 8 cents per hour after accounting for premium hikes. >Key Details of the 2026 Strike: >Company Offer: A 60-cent/hour raise in year one, plus 30 cents/hour in years two and three. >Worker Demands: Higher wage increases to combat inflation and a higher cost of living in Colorado compared to other states. >Additional Issues: Workers are protesting the company charging for personal protective equipment, with reports of fees exceeding $1,100, say [UPI reports](https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2026/03/16/colorado-jbs-strike/7041773671903/) and [this YouTube video.](https://youtube.com/shorts/Uwdv-oX353w?si=wHrqOU237eZ2r8Zh) >Company Position: JBS termed the offer "strong" and "fair," stating it aligns with a 2025 national agreement.
3
Lettuce_bee_free_end Mar 16, 2026 +119
They deserve more than Shareholders. Bodies onsite should make the most.
119
PlateNo4868 Mar 16, 2026 +18
"You exist because of us, so you some how owe us for eternity." Shareholders in a nutshell.
18
velocitiraptor Mar 16, 2026 +10
I’ve already been cutting out beef due to the costs. More people should do the same. (Mind you I love a good steak, but not for these prices) Better for your health anyway. These beef monopolies are insane and they need to feel some pain.
10
NMS_Survival_Guru Mar 16, 2026 +4
If you have the chance buy local In most places you can get 200lbs of beef for $5/lb which is very c**** if you total all the cuts into retail prices plus quality is much better I always like bragging about my $5/lb porterhouse and filet mingon whenever I grill for friends
4
palmmoot Mar 16, 2026 +8
Horrible work. Solidarity.
8
RichardByhre Mar 16, 2026 +8
We need a general strike in the U.S.
8
HettySwollocks Mar 16, 2026 +15
Good work, that can't be a very fun job either. I've heard of people in this country who have worked in similar industries - they don't eat meat any more
15
YaThatAintRight Mar 16, 2026 +6
Good for them! Stay strong workers!
6
richestercanada Mar 16, 2026 +136
What about the Epstein Files w Trump
136
dr_strange-love Mar 16, 2026 +6
What's their names?
6
DisillusionedPatriot Mar 16, 2026 +4
Joesley and Wesley Batista, and there's nothing I can find that confirms this. Pretty sure they just made that up.
4
dr_strange-love Mar 16, 2026 +2
I can't find anything either. You got any proof /u/richestercanada?
2
DisillusionedPatriot Mar 16, 2026 +6
You just made that up ETA- nice edit
6
whitethunder9 Mar 16, 2026 +2
Quick Google sleuthing indicates no connection - this is misinformation.
2
modechsn Mar 16, 2026 +8
From the article: JBS in many cases has charged workers $1,100 or more to offset the company's expenses for personal protective equipment needed to ensure worker safety. Plus low wages and extremely low increases.
8
Ok-Young-2731 Mar 16, 2026 +19
Bet execs and share holders are getting raises above the average the workers get though. Greedy fucks.
19
theskippyraccoon Mar 16, 2026 +4
What's the likelihood that we'll see a resurgence of Pinkerton-esque bullshittery since we're simply repeating the worst parts of US history?
4
Ok-Young-2731 Mar 16, 2026 +2
Dude I wish it would have been my door that wizards sent them to. My response would have been " Aw shucks pa, I guess we're in trouble now!" And then close the door on them.
2
ccjohns2 Mar 16, 2026 +18
Crazy how every industry facing the same problem. Seems like the real problem in the world is wealthy disconnected people who don’t care about others.
18
Soft_Equipment_2787 Mar 16, 2026 +5
Current adminstration is also making it easier to bring in H2 workers on Visas. They will fire these people and replace them with foreign laborers.
5
PsyduckSexTape Mar 16, 2026 +5
Support the striking workers. Do not buy from brands listed here: https://jbsfoodsgroup.com/our-brands
5
2Autistic4DaJoke Mar 16, 2026 +30
There’s only like 4 meat plants left in the US.
30
Far_Radish7752 Mar 16, 2026 +27
From one of the comments in the OP article: >… [JBS] are such a large percentage of the meat market. Their 5 biggest plants process 20% of the beef supply in the US. Stuff that happens at JBS definitely impacts beef prices.
27
laikalou Mar 16, 2026 +31
They're also the American arm of the Brazilian meatpacking company that has massively contributed to the deforestation of the Amazon. Just google "JBS deforestation" and you'll find article upon article about them promising to do better in exchange for another chance, just for them to continue buying cattle from farms that illegally cleared forest to raise cattle.
31
Double-O-stoopid Mar 16, 2026 +9
The sheer amount of devastation cheeseburger addicted Americans have caused over the last 50 years is f******... staggering. The subsidizes JBS gets will blow your f****** mind.
9
Reputation-Final Mar 16, 2026 +5
Dems in congress were/are trying to pass laws to break up meat packing plant conglomerates. They artificially drive up prices. They closed that plant in Kentucky to keep beef prices sky high.
5
Least_Gain5147 Mar 16, 2026 +5
I have always refused to buy from JBS sourced products. They treat the ranchers and packers poorly.
5
DGVET Mar 16, 2026 +5
When beef imports increase, it doesn’t just affect ranchers union workers in U.S. meatpacking plants feel it too. If fewer cattle are processed domestically, that can mean reduced hours, slower hiring, and weaker leverage in contract negotiations. Trade policy decisions ripple directly into American labor markets, which is why solidarity among unions in this industry matters so much for protecting job stability. But also bear in mind this is what most of you voted for.
5
Coteup Mar 16, 2026 +5
They should be shut down.
5
What---------------- Mar 16, 2026 +6
A *lot* of the people employed there are Somalian immigrants. Greeley is in Colorado's very-red 4th congressional district (the one Boebert now represents). ICE sightings have been growing in northern Colorado. - I'm praying this goes well, I hope the strikers are successful. And I really hope Polis doesn't f*** this up.
6
CDR57 Mar 16, 2026 +3
As an aside, Greeley itself is fairly purple. The rest of the district is red but Greeley is the spot in weld that a seemingly keeps it from teetering to full red
3
toxic_badgers Mar 16, 2026 +3
I worked at that plant briefly after college... It's about f****** time. There were walk outs and mass no shows on an almost weekly basis but never an organized effort. That plant was tough.... The avg turnover there was 90 days... Which coincidentally is how long I was able to stand it. 95% of the workers there are refugees or immigrants, they never had the ability to feel safe in organizing there. I
3
tmhoc Mar 16, 2026 +3
So does making everyone working in the food industry miserable have anything to do with obesity or is it just a coincidence? The servers don't get paid a full wage. They have to earn tips and pay for runners McDonald's "isn't a real job" Migrant caravans (are coming to harvest crops) oh f*** The CEO is doing adds so Kill HIM (loved that ngl) Even f****** tap water... Tap water! That's coolant now you peasant fools. Take shorter showers
3
JacoRamone Mar 16, 2026 +3
We should all be on strike in this entire country.
3
IntelligentGuide4080 Mar 17, 2026 +3
Factory farming is inhumane and despicable.  
3
xChoke1x Mar 16, 2026 +6
We need A LOT more of this. Mass Labor strikes are how you take back your f****** country. There's more of us, than there is them.
6
av1998 Mar 16, 2026 +11
Not enough. A full on general strike would be the only path to defeat the oligarchs.
11
thepurpleskittles Mar 16, 2026 +8
God willing, it will spread like wildfire.
8
numbmumpleb1ister Mar 16, 2026 +2
Every meatpacking plant should strike with them!
2
nottodaysatan317 Mar 16, 2026 +2
That’s ok. No money for food, just gas.
2
BrandenWi Mar 16, 2026 +3
Best of luck to the striking workers. That said, as if the rest of us don't already have enough problems with rising grocery costs....
3
Robdon326 Mar 16, 2026 +3
Oh boy here we go again "Supply chain issues BS" coming right up And if Trump didnt deport all the illegals. The people left@ the slaughter house wouldn't have to work OT& get burned out. They sure didnt give them a raise after the deportations.
3
Neat-Bridge3754 Mar 16, 2026 +6
Workers' rights and fair compensation notwithstanding, America could stand to eat less meat in general, so bring on the high prices. Just like higher gas prices, it's a long-term good thing.
6
[deleted] Mar 16, 2026 +2
[deleted]
2
Neat-Bridge3754 Mar 16, 2026 +3
I agree. Modern America is too stupid, too lazy, or too much of both to be proactive. The higher prices won't subsidize green energy and more sustainable agriculture unless the people demand it, because corporatism doesn't care as long as the bottom line goes up. That can happen with fewer sales at higher prices. Americans won't demand change until it actually becomes painful. We've been convinced of our own superiority, told we deserve what we have. We are not superior and we don't deserve shit. Or, rather, we deserve exactly what we're getting because we have allowed it to happen. So right now, from a mile-high view of the United States, I think skyrocketing fuel costs (which are still way below what they should cost given how heavily oil is subsidized) and insane meat prices are good for America. I am all ears on how else to incentivize the populace to demand change without increased prices. Common sense sure as shit isn't working.
3
waiting4signora Mar 16, 2026 +2
Another reason for ppl to look into plant-based alternatives 👀
2
Certain_Luck_8266 Mar 16, 2026 +3
Oh this will be great for the cost of beef. Not blaming them, the consolidation of meat packer companies has tipped the balance to far in favor of companies...but this is going to turn beef from 'expensive' to 'not attainable' for most people. Maybe this is a good thing health wise
3
hawksdiesel Mar 16, 2026 +1
wealthy people who don't care about anyone else.....
1
Electrical_Rip9520 Mar 16, 2026 +1
Why is our food supply owned by foreign corporations? JBS USA is a misnomer. It is a owned by a Brazilian company.
1
fevered_visions Mar 16, 2026 +1
>The strike at the Swift Beef Co. plant not going to be so swift for awhile now, har har
1
CDR57 Mar 16, 2026 +1
That’s where I live! Jbs f****** sucks lmao
1
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