• grue@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    How do you do that?

    By making beef more expensive so that fewer people want to buy it. We’ve been over this three times already.

    • over_clox@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Cows don’t disappear when there’s less demand. Cows disappear when people eat them, if they’d just regulate the breeding side of the cattle industry.

        • over_clox@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Let’s do some math here…

          100 / 365 ≈ €0.274 per day.

          You really think that’ll put much of a dent in a farmer’s wallet?

          Let’s do some more math. Let’s say they raise the price of a gallon of milk by €0.10. Nobody will bat an eye, they’ll just chalk it up to general inflation.

          A good healthy dairy cow produces ~ 9 gallons of milk per day.

          So, €0.10 * 9 = €0.90 per day extra, per dairy cow. That would actually yield the farmer an actual net gain of ~ €0.626 per day, per cow, subtracting the daily tax.

          That would actually end up with the farmer gaining ~ €228.50 per year per cow, after the tax.

          Ain’t nobody gonna bat an eye if they raise the cost of milk by €0.10 per gallon. Nothing will change, except the farmers will jack the prices around just enough that nobody cares and they actually profit from it.

          • grue@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Oh, so you’re saying the tax is a good start but should be a lot higher? Fair enough then, I agree!