Stuff You Should Know - What Americans Ate When There Were No Food Laws
Episode Date: February 13, 2024There was a brief period in America’s history – after people left the farm to work in the city and before the government started regulating it – when there was a total, lawless free-for-all in t...he food industry. Things were bad. Really, really bad.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too
and we're just Stuff You Should Know in it,
doing some Stuff You Should Know kind of stuff
on the Stuff You Should Know podcast.
Yeah.
Uh, yeah. Hey, can I make a couple of quick announcements?
Oh boy, is it a correction about me?
No, that's in less than a mail.
Okay.
Uh, just a couple of quick things. Uh, firstly, I have had my front tooth implant redone.
Mm-done. So the next roughly 80 episodes might be a little
lispy here and there. Can you say sibilance? Sibilance. It's actually
more Fs. Can you say fibrilance? Fibrilance. Yeah, sometimes air just shoots
out of that little tooth hole. The TH at the end, that's problematic.
So, you know, here we are again, everyone, and bear with it. And I appreciate your support.
You can't even tell, Chuck. Like, had you not said something maybe one person would have
noticed, I think it's fine. I appreciate that. Oh, yeah, but you'll hear you know some words will stand out the other quick one is just for this episode
massive
Coa trigger warning
Any vegetarians or vegans or really anybody?
Who is just grossed out by gross food stuff?
This is chock full
Yeah, if you find the human body and the stuff it can do odious to,
you might want to just be prepared. Yeah, all right, so I'm ready. That's good. Good C.O.A. buddy.
Yeah, because we are talking about what things were like before America started regulating the meat that we bought in eight. And it turns out it was a total free-for-all until then,
but it was really just kind of nestled in a short period.
You know, where the like the second industrial revolution
happened and all of a sudden everybody moves to the cities
and you can't buy your bacon from the guy down the street
anymore or make your own milk or whatever,
you have to buy it. And so these companies sprung up to supply that stuff, and they started cutting
corners immediately. Yeah, it's the American way. Time and time again, we've seen from the very
beginning, corporate interests, corporate lobby, all in the name of profit profit and this isn't just us railing. This is the history of the United States
Yes, for sure. Most of them are advertisers on stuff you should know too
Probably so. So so people needed this stuff and they filled a void like it was a necessary thing that they were doing
But the problem is because there's zero regulation. I mean none. Yeah
like like there was an author named Deborah Blum,
and she wrote the poison squad colon,
one chemist single-minded crusade for safety
at the turn of the 20th century.
And she said that there was nothing
that could be done to food that was illegal
because there were no food safety laws.
It was, there was nothing you could do
aside from kill your customers. And even then, you might just get some bad press and everybody's
like, oh, well, it happens. Yeah, I wonder if it was because they just assumed that these
new corporations would just sort of deliver food the right way or I just wonder if it
was naivete. I mean, eventually it was obviously stuff started coming out as we'll see in this
episode. And Congress, you know, bows down to the donors as they still do today. But
I just wonder what they thought at first, just like, no, this is great. And then, you know,
they're supplying more food and I'm sure they're doing it right.
My take on it is because this is like set
largely in the Gilded Age,
that there was a general like hands-off approach,
like, hey, just businesses is zooming this economy
into the stratosphere.
And we don't want to interfere with it.
And I'm sure they're gonna do the right thing anyway.
Yeah, that's a good point.
So that's my take.
I think that it was a combination of not really realizing that we needed regulations because
we never needed them before and then not wanting to meddle with this red hot economic engine
that was flaming just with so many flames.
Yeah, flames on the side of your face.
Yeah.
So I guess we should start with milk, huh?
Yeah, why not?
Because there's pretty bad stuff.
Yeah, it was.
Pastorization had been around for a long time.
It was invented in the 1850s,
but they didn't get on the widespread
pastorization of milk till about the 80 or so years later.
So if you went and bought your milk,
you know, I think that the understanding
for a lot of people is like, oh, well, back then you would buy your milk from the local
dairy. Right. And it was that's way better just to get it fresh from the teat like that.
And that was not true because this milk was nasty. It was killing babies, 400,000 babies a year from drinking bad milk.
In America alone, that's not a global stat.
That's just in the United States.
Yeah, unbelievable.
Yeah, it is.
It is.
It's nuts that everybody's like, yeah, this just happens.
But I guess people just thought that's what happened when you drink milk sometimes,
or I don't know what the thinking was.
But a guy named John Newell-Hurdy, H-U-R-T-Y,
he became the Chief Health Officer of Indiana in 1896.
And we should say by this time,
just kind of to give it some context,
the pure food movement,
which was a progressive movement in the 19th century,
along with like temperance, suffrage, abolition, it had really kind of started
to gain steam.
So this guy wasn't laying the groundwork,
but his work was very noteworthy.
But he became the chief health officer of Indiana
and he immediately started investigating
the state's dairy farms and found what they were doing
as what was killing infants who were being fed cow's milk.
Yeah, it was because it was cow's milk that was watered down so they could stretch profits, but it was watered down.
It's not like they had some
beautiful filtration system from a Poland spring. Right. Actually, I don't even know what a Poland spring is.
It's a specific spring. It is. Ironically not in Poland. I had a feeling.
It's a specific spring. It is ironically not in Poland. I had a feeling
So they weren't using that of course they were using like the farms pond water, which was disgusting. It was stagnant
You at one point like he literally held up a bottle of milk from Indiana and saw actual worms inside of it
Yeah, isn't that awful live worms they were. Yeah, and that wasn't all he found.
He found insects, hairs, blood, pus, cow manure.
He estimated that just the residents of Indianapolis ingested about 2,000 pounds of cow manure
every year just from the milk they were drinking.
Yeah, that's collective.
Not each person, of course, but that's still a lot of cow poop.
I think you would OD on cow poop if you ate that much.
Or maybe you would make you into like a superhero.
There is another really gross one that Dave turned up.
I think it was originally in an Atlantic article about the early days of milk.
But one of the things that they would do, so like if you thinned milk with water,
it was very clearly thinned. It didn't look like milk, it was bluish gray.
So they put like chalk or flour or plaster of Parisin.
Not great, but still it gets much worse.
You also, when you got a bottle of milk expected the cream
to still be there on top, the cream rises to the top
as they say, right?
Well, if you've been watering down your milk,
there probably isn't much cream left in it,
but you need to put that cream back in.
There's something that looks like it.
So they said, aside from stagnant pond water,
what else do I have on the farm that's basically free
that I'm not using that I can use for this?
Oh yeah, these little calves that I'm slaughtering
and selling as veal, I could use their brains and puree
because it has kind of a creamy texture
and that will stand in for the cream that I'll put on top of the watered-down milk that I'm selling in the bottle
Yeah, so that is a horrifying thing to hear. Yeah with with human ears
We should point out that wasn't it wasn't like everybody was doing that. This is like an example
Of you know, who knows it could have been one farm, but what they did find out what was being used widespread
and just sort of with regularity in the industry
was using formaldehyde to preserve milk,
pre-pasturization, which is, you know,
we all know it's a embalming chemical used for dead bodies
to make them last longer.
And this was literally killing babies.
If you were a kid in Indianapolis in an orphanage,
or actually anywhere in the United States,
they didn't have a baby formula back then.
You can listen to our episode on,
did we do one just on baby formula?
Yeah, one on formula and one on the breast.
I think, oh, that's right.
I thought there was two on the breast, but it was two total.
That wasn't trying to be funny there.
Well, it was hilarious.
They would, you know, you would get cow's milk
as a little baby in an orphanage.
So it would, you know, it would kill a kid very quickly
if you're drinking formaldehyde.
Right, yeah.
It doesn't take much for a little infant, right?
And it's apparently one of those things I read
that it will just kill you almost immediately
if you ingest the right amount.
So it's not good.
And even if it doesn't kill you right away,
it's not a pleasant way to die.
And again, 400,000 babies a year
were dying in the United States just from bad milk.
So it was definitely more than just one dairy farm in Indiana.
It was a widespread problem, right?
Oh, absolutely.
So, you know, that's hero number one.
Hero number two also comes to us from Indiana.
Wait, wait, before we move on, you got to tell him that great, great quote from Dr.
Herdy.
Oh, I thought it was kind of smarmy.
Sure, I guess he had the right to be smarmy.
A reporter asked if formaldehyde in milk was dangerous
and he said, well, I guess it's all right
if you wanna embalm the baby.
That didn't strike me as smarmy.
That's pretty smarmy.
Is it smarmy?
For the 1920s or whatever.
I guess, but he's saying like
That's what the milk producers are doing. They're embalming babies. Yeah, I just I don't know
I thought a man of science would say it is extremely dangerous. I see you know, I see yeah, I get you
Thank you. So still a hero a little smart me maybe
But I was nice of you to spare him
The second who's your hero that's coming in is a gentleman named Dr. Harvey Washington Wiley.
In the 1880s, he got to be in his bonnet about the problem with food.
He was a boiler maker, a professor there at Purdue, and then the USDA, the fairly new
USDA said, all right, we're gonna start a Bureau of Chemistry
and you're the guy that's gonna run it.
Right. He was, he essentially dedicated
his entire adult life and career to fighting for,
like making the American food market wholesome, essentially.
Like that's what that guy did.
And he actually had a bit of the show minimum. He had a hugeolesome, essentially. Like that's what that guy did. And he actually had a bit of the showman in him.
He had a huge ego apparently.
Most of the people who were talking about today
had enormous egos and they rubbed up against one another.
And even though they didn't like one another, most of them,
they still managed to work together to affect real change,
which is kind of a cool little hats off to everybody.
So one of the first things that Dr. Wiley did when the USDA hired him to run the Bureau
of Chemistry, which apparently was a new department at the time.
This is in the, I think the 1880s or the late 19th century at the very least.
He started testing syrup and jam and all sorts of stuff.
I'm not quite sure if he was doing it to compare because he was actually researching corn syrup
at the time to find out if this was actually okay
to use as a food.
Because there was a, that whole pure food movement
was like, hey, I don't know what we're putting
into our food to preserve it.
Like we didn't used to do that 10 years ago
before everybody moved to the city.
I'm not sure how I feel about this.
So Dr. Wiley's job was to find out
if these things were actually harmful, or if you could use it as a food. I used to do that 10 years ago before everybody moved to the city. I'm not sure how I feel about this.
So Dr. Wiley's job was to find out
if these things were actually harmful
or if you could use them.
One of the first things he found out
was that most of the maple syrup and the honey,
like 90% of the honey was fake.
There wasn't a drop of honey in it.
Yeah, it was corn syrup.
They would flavor it a little bit with maple for the syrup.
They would flavor it like whatever fruit, I guess, for jam.
I'm not sure what they flavored it with for honey.
I don't know either.
Like, how would you take a bite and be like,
this is honey, I guess?
I don't know.
But that was just sort of a jumping off point
where he was like, well, wait a minute.
If they're doing this to honey and maple syrup,
we need to start looking into other things. And he started to learn about formaldehyde
and foods, borax, which is a, it's a cleaner, you know, like boric acid cleaner under the brand.
I think it was a brand, wasn't it? Borax? Yeah. I think it was like 20 mule team borax.
Oh, that kind of thing. Was the thing. That was the name of the brand.
But he started realizing this stuff was in our food.
He got obviously pretty upset about it and goes to Congress,
and Congress is not interested in passing anything.
Because as you will see, just like the things that go on today,
the food lobby was strong and rich and powerful
and Congress sat on their hands.
Yeah, that author Deborah Blum also said
that there was no political will,
not just because they were in the pockets
of the food producers,
a lot of them most certainly were,
and basically all of them were getting money from them
at the very least.
But that also, if you introduced one of these bills,
you were like a crackpot.
You were a crack.
You had no idea what it meant to be in the business world.
You were just a dummy.
That's how these things were reviewed.
And I think something like a hundred or something,
I think like more than a hundred bills were introduced in just within a decade or so
And only like eight or nine of them managed to get passed. Yeah, that's how that's how look down upon the idea of
food regulation was at the time. Yeah, so Wiley is
Pretty smart guy like you said he's kind of had a little bit of showman quality to him
So he got together an experiment,
also sort of a PR stunt.
In 1902, he took 12 government clerks
and put them in housing in the basement
of the agricultural department building there in DC.
And they were exposed to what they called
hygienic table trials where half of these
young men were secretly fed formaldehyde, borax, sodium benzenate, all kinds of nasty
chemicals like this stuff that was going in food.
And it was conveniently leaked to the press.
And Dr. Wiley, they were called the poison squad and Dr. Wiley was dubbed old borax Yeah, so he he actually became a national figure like people like
Just the average American knew about him if you read the newspaper you probably were familiar with dr. Wiley
Oh borax
Oh borax and we talked about him in the poison squad in I think that does the FDA Protect Americans episode. Yeah.
Just kind of briefly.
But I mean, that whole book that Deborah Blum wrote was about Dr.
Wiley in the Poison Squad and the work he did.
Amazing.
And Wiley definitely deserves a lot of credit.
He gets less credit than he probably should get because around that time, people started
to kind of look at Teddy Roosevelt as we'll see,
as the person who really got the legislation pushed through, but it
probably would not have happened when it did without Dr. Wiley. But in addition to
Dr. Wiley, there was also Teddy Roosevelt and another guy, a muck-wrinking
journalist, a socialist named Upton Sinclair. And those two are considered to be
some real driving forces behind food regulation in America.
Absolutely.
You know what that means.
It means that it's time for a message break.
Now it means I'm gonna go try and find a tiny
chicklet to shove into my tooth hole.
You should just switch the colors once in a while.
Aaron Cooper has my flipper.
Oh yeah, that's right, man, quite a gift.
I don't think it would fit now anyway.
Okay.
So don't feel bad, Coop.
Just keep praying to that thing every night
and it'll be okay.
It's so weird.
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All right, so we left off with quite a teaser that a gentleman named Teddy Roosevelt and a socialist
writer named Upton Sinclair would change the course of America and boy did they
A little background on Teddy Roosevelt just because it really applies here to how he got sort of swept up in all this to begin with
But he was a soldier
he led the Rough Riders and the invasion of Spanish held Cuba. And the reason
that is important to this story is because that invasion and that whole war was, a lot
of Americans died, but not from the battle itself. I think about 400 Americans died in
combat, but about 5,500 died from disease,
from malaria and dysentery and typhoid.
So President McKinley, after the war,
started just a big military commission to investigate
what it was like to be a soldier
in all these awful conditions,
and that very key to this story
included the food that they ate.
Yeah, because there was, at least among the people
who had fought in the Spanish-American War,
there was this awareness that the roast beef,
especially the canned roast beef
that had been delivered as rations.
Yeah, you're walking a fine line
just even attempting canned roast beef, right?
It better be good.
This was so not good.
It was like it would make you immediately start vomiting
according to Teddy Roosevelt.
They called it embalmed meat because it was clearly rotted,
but then they'd added formaldehyde.
This wasn't even like, okay, this is fresh meat.
We're gonna add formaldehyde.
They would put the formaldehyde in after it was rotted
to try to counteract the rot.
You know, to bring it back to life.
Exactly, to Frankenstein it up.
And they found that, yeah, when you ate this stuff,
it didn't matter what you did to cook it
or anything like that, it would just make you throw up
or just start pooping your pants almost immediately.
And Teddy Roosevelt and all of the other veterans
of the Spanish-American War were pretty miffed about this.
So when Roosevelt got the chance to go testify before Congress, he was the governor of New
York by this time, about that beef, that tin beef, he definitely took the chance or took the
opportunity. Yeah, he called that canned beef a disgrace to our country and also had a little
testimonial description. When the cans were opened,
the top was nothing more than a layer of slime.
It was disagreeable looking, that's pretty oddly,
and nasty, sometimes we stewed it with potato and onions,
but I could have eaten my hat stewed with potato
and onions rather than the beef.
Nearly all of them in sickened after eating it.
Yeah, isn't that gross?
Yeah, and like you said by this time,
he was already a war hero, but Governor of New York,
he has some clout all of a sudden.
For sure, yeah, he was fairly well known enough
that when McKinley stood for reelection in 1900,
he chose Teddy Roosevelt as his running mate.
Yeah.
He was still young, I think he was 42.
Less than a year into the second McKinley administration,
McKinley was assassinated and died.
And so suddenly Teddy Roosevelt,
the vice president is president
and he became the youngest president in history.
JFK was 43, Roosevelt was 42.
And it's really weird. It's one of
those moments in history where the right person happens to be
in the right place to really make things happen that seemed
intractable before. And I don't know enough about Teddy
Roosevelt to fully sing his praises. But from what I can
tell, just the brief stuff I've read about him researching this, he was a really
interesting level-headed dude at least as far as balancing the interests of the United States went.
Dare I say that?
Well, he was, he figured big in the foundation of our national parks.
So that was a big part.
But also like in this, in this specifically, he saw a very important need that needed to be filled,
which was the meat producers, but the food producers in general, the meat producers in particular needed regulating.
They were doing some nasty stuff he found out.
And he, he, he went to Congress and was like, make this happen.
If you don't make it happen,
I'm going to basically expose all of you
who are in the pockets of this beef trust,
as they call it, the big five beef producers,
which included Armour, Swift and Libby,
who are all three still around,
making meat in the United States.
Yeah, but his hands were, even as president,
tied by Congress and the lobby until that
is our final hero of the day comes along, a gentleman named Upton Sinclair, like you
said, a hardcore socialist and a writer who wrote the very, very famous book, The Jungle,
about, well, most people, if they've never read The Jungle,
would probably say, yeah, it's about exposing the meatpacking in Chicago, right?
But 14, I'm sorry, 15 pages really covered that meatpacking disgust that we are going
to have to talk about, so just get ready.
The book was really about an immigrant worker who comes to America and is sort of just,
you know, stomped on by capitalism because, again, he was a socialist and this was his
cause.
Right.
Yeah.
So in the end of the book, the worker who's I think only identified as Jurgus, J-U-R-G-I-S,
he just keeps getting like he loses his family.
He loses essentially anything good to his life by being ground through the gears of capitalism.
And on the other side, he comes out and finds
that socialism is the answer and starts dedicating himself
to building a socialist paradise or whatever, right?
So that was like you said, the point of the book.
But when America read this book,
they did not pay any attention
to that socialist message at all.
In fact, plenty of them ignored the fact that there was an overt socialist message
and still read the book and got something out of it.
And what they got was those 15 pages of disgusting descriptions of what was going on in Chicago's meatpacking district, packing district where essentially all of the beef and pork and I guess sheep
mutton was processed this one area and just just where they kept the live
livestock before slaughter just when they arrived by train and put them into a pen. Just that pen, Chuck, was a square mile big.
Yeah. Uh, it was known as, uh, packing town. And in order to get this information,
he went undercover. He spent seven weeks, uh, posing as a worker in this meat
packing district, uh, which was, uh, like I said, it was called packing town,
but it was in the heart of the union stockyards. And like I said, it was called Packingtown, but it was in the heart of the Union Stockyards.
And like you said, they would bring in by train.
It was the most efficient system on Earth
for processing animals.
10,000 cattle, 10,000 hogs, 5,000 sheep,
a day coming in and being processed.
They were doing, I think they were going through
18 million animals a year at this point because of a very innovative new system called assembly line work, which is,
we know what it is now, but back then it was kind of revolutionary in that they would make
one person do one job and one job only all day long for 12 hours a day and as fast as
they could.
Yeah. And if you screwed up, the foreman would be like,
you had one job.
Yeah, don't get your finger cut off and put into a sausage.
Yeah, so that would happen, right?
They would use everything they could from the animal.
Apparently, there was a widely known phrase that was used there
that they used everything about the hog except for the squeal
Which is haunting. Yeah. Well, I want to point out though like not in the way that like
an ethical master chef right wants to use or or a
Hunter that that you know provides meat for their family tries to use every, you know
Good edible part of the animal. That's a different deal.
We're talking about grinding up hooves for filler.
Exactly.
Yeah, I'm glad you pointed that out, right?
Yeah.
So when he wrote the jungle, he interviewed,
first of all, he witnessed what he wrote about firsthand.
But he said, I did not exaggerate this stuff.
This is not me embellishing like I witnessed this firsthand and the stuff that I didn't witness firsthand
I interviewed people who witnessed it firsthand
Yeah, and so he's like this stuff in the book is real people and we haven't even really kind of cracked into what was in those 15 pages
I say we do that now
Should we take a break into it? I think that's a fine idea, Chuck.
Alright, we'll be right back.
For as long as I can remember, I've been fascinated by the depths of human potential
and the incredible things that humans can do. So I became a cognitive scientist,
studying all the ways in which we think, create, make decisions, and work toward becoming who we
want to become. I'm Scott Barry Kaufman, host of the Psychology Podcast. I'm a cognitive scientist,
and I've written 10 books and hundreds of articles on topics such as intelligence,
creativity, well-being, narcissism, introversion, and education.
The Psychology Podcast is a place where we investigate the different ways in which we
can unlock human potential, and where I get to interview some of the most extraordinary
and fascinating people, and we have real conversations about what it means to achieve success, and
what it means to be human.
So join me, Scott Barryman on the psychology podcast where
we investigate the deaths of human potential.
Listen to the psychology podcast on the I heart radio at Apple
podcast or wherever you get your podcasts. the most famous restaurants in the world, there's a table in the corner. We're the most incredible conversations
on the planet are happening every week
with owner Ruthie Rogers, an amazing guest.
Like Martha Stewart.
But I did have an affair with one of his best friends.
Jimmy Fallon.
Do you want a zip line over your dad
while he gets attacked by alligators?
And Paul McCartney.
John and I hitchhiked to Paris.
We've saved you a seat.
Ruthie's Table Four. Listen. Ruthie's Table Four.
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OK, Chuck, so we're back.
It's time to get into the grisly details of the jungle.
There's some pretty famous stuff in there, just because it got out so far and wide.
It was a very widely read book and even more widely discussed book because of theust that it generated. But for example, when they created sausage,
like Upton Sinclair told everybody
how the sausage is made, everybody's like,
we didn't wanna know, but now we know,
and we can't unknow it.
They would grind up moldy sausage
that had been rejected from Europe.
So it was bad when it got to Europe,
and then they shipped it back to America,
and then they used it in the sausage they fed Americans.
That stuff would also be mixed in with scraps of meat
that had been shoveled off of the floor.
Probably a couple of times a day
they would shovel meat scraps and flesh and blood
off of the floor, put it into the sausage mixture.
That's bad enough that it was on the floor
but the workers
frequently had things like tuberculosis and they were spitting bloody tuberculotic spit
onto the floor. So that would get mixed in with the food scraps, the meat scraps that would be
put into the sausages. There was a rat problem there. So they would put out poison pieces of
bread for the rats. And then when the rats ate the bread and died,
they put the rats in the sausage.
And then for good measure,
they put the poison bread in the sausage too.
This was just the sausage that they were making.
Yeah, like I get the feeling that there was,
if there was a poster on the wall of this workplace,
it was, if it's on the floor, it's in the sausage.
Yeah, for sure.
Tobacco spit, that's probably the best thing
you could hope for.
Tobacco, yeah, you'd be praying for tobacco spit.
Yeah.
If anyone's still listening,
obviously potted meats, mystery meat
is kind of a funny thing to say these days.
But back then it was truly dangerous.
It was, you know, organ meats.
It was tripe.
This is a quote and it's hard for me to even say this word for because of my tooth and
because it's disgusting.
But the hard cartilaginous?
Cartilaginous? Cartilaginous. Cartilaginous?
Cartilaginous?
Cartilaginous, yeah, there we go.
Hard cartilaginous gullets of beef
after the tongues had been cut out
was in this potted meat as well.
Yeah, and the potted chicken in particular,
it always appears in quotes
because it was later determined
there was no chicken at all in the potted chicken.
It was just like you said,
every piece of the animal they could use,
not for ethical purposes,
but because they could sell it as potted chicken
and tell everybody, yeah, it's just ground up chicken.
Just eat it and shut up.
Yeah, so, you know, this is awful.
The workers themselves are working in deplorable conditions,
12 hours a day in these disgusting rooms,
doing this stuff, the same job over and over and over,
which was a new thing.
Like people weren't used to assembly line work,
much less like if your job all day is to,
I don't even know.
I can't even imagine what they were doing.
Skinning, slicing, removing, deboning.
Yeah, there you go.
They, I made the joke about losing a finger,
but they did, they would lose digits,
they would lose limbs.
This stuff would go into the food.
There were even people that fell into lard vats
and boiled alive and that went into the food.
Yeah, there's a quote.
Well, they went into the lard.
There was a quote that, well,
which eventually went into food, you know?
Exactly. There was a quote from, well, which eventually went into food, you know? Exactly.
There was a quote from Sinclair that said,
all but the bones of them went out into the world as Durham's pure beef lard.
I don't think Durham's is around anymore.
Durham's couldn't survive that one.
Yeah.
There's another quote from Upton Sinclair that he said,
I aimed at the public's heart and by accident I hit it in the stomach.
Which is him, yeah, him recognizing that
he wrote this book about socialism
and everybody just focused in on the really gross food stuff.
And that even still it affected change.
It just wasn't the change he was trying to affect.
But he wasn't one of those guys who's like,
oh great, I'm a celebrity either way.
I don't care how I got there.
He turned out to be like really bitter
at everybody missing this message.
Like his book was widely read and nobody got it.
At least they didn't get it the way
that he intended them to get it.
Yeah, this is another good quote.
He said that he was made into a celebrity
not because the public cared anything about the workers,
but simply because the public did anything about the workers, but simply
because the public did not want to eat tubercular beef.
Yeah, man, that word, you start messing with that word,
it gets grosser and grosser.
Yeah, I think tubercular beef should open
for diarrhea planet.
Oh boy, I think you've just come up with a tour.
So this is a very, sort of a bombshell book.
It was released in 1906 in January, sold 25,000 copies right out of the gate, which was just
a ton of books back then.
There's a lot of books now, as we've learned.
Within about five months, it was translated into 17 different languages and eventually
became a silent movie as well in 1914.
Yeah, it was, like you said, it was a bombshell. Basically, that logjam in Congress of, you know,
that had kept any food regulation bills essentially from passing, this book like broke it open. It dislodged all that stuff.
And the reason why was multifaceted
in addition to grossing out the public
and being like, we're eating this government
do something about this,
somebody do something about this.
You had that public outcry,
which was kind of in line with the progressive drumbeat,
right?
You also had a developing drumbeat coming out of the business side,
because that's where that's the whole, the debate was divided between the
progressives who were cranks and crazy and didn't understand business.
And the business side who were like to shut up and eat this stuff.
We're trying to make a profit here and get the engine of the United States revving.
There was a group in business that was like,
hey, we're already following like food safety practices.
Totally.
And it's really expensive compared to our competitors
who are cutting every corner possible
and selling unsanitary products for way lower
than we can sell our safe products.
So if these guys start getting regulated,
we're gonna even the playing field.
And as a matter of fact, they'll be behind us
because they're gonna have to play catch up expense wise
to get to the same level that we're operating at
and have been all this time.
And I said catch up, which is ironic
because one of those companies
that was already doing things safe was the Heinz company.
Yeah.
Hats off to the Heinz company, right?
Yeah.
Not just Heinz, but also old Taylor whiskey.
Yeah.
So, you know, there were, it wasn't everyone, and that's a really good point.
I'm glad you made it because Heinz probably, since that has been saying, by the way, you
know we weren't a part of all that.
Right.
You know, it should have been called the jungle colon, except for hind.
So Roosevelt all of a sudden is getting 100 calls. I'm sorry, not calls. He was getting 100 letters a day calls. He would have been like, what's happening here? Yeah.
About food safety. He calls up, up to Sinclair,
these guys should not be buddies and spoiler,
they did not end up being buddies.
Yeah.
It wasn't like some crazy like, you're like this
and I'm like this, but you know,
we have a lot in common as it turns out.
The only thing they had in common,
it seems like was that they wanted to clean up
the food situation in the United States.
They didn't trust each other, of course. They didn't really like each other.
Of course, Roosevelt did not like a muckraking journalist. And of course, Sinclair was like,
hey, the beef trust is giving you $200,000 for your presidential campaign, which in the future in 2024, that would be $7 million.
Wow.
So you're in the pocket of the beef trust,
which he denied of course,
because he had to eat that beef in Cuba.
Yeah, he said, Mr. Sinclair,
I bear no love for those gentlemen,
for I ate the meat they canned for the army in Cuba.
Yeah, comma, but their checks cashed all the same.
Well, he lived up to that quote. He took on the beef trust and he got this legislation essentially
passed through as we'll see. And then just as a side note, you mentioned Muckrakers. Apparently,
Teddy Roosevelt was the one who inadvertently coined that term. He was giving a speech about,
I'm not sure what the whole point of the speech was about,
but he was basically railing against journalists
to go look and dig up scandal.
And he allowed that there's a role that they play
in the public forum that's a good role,
which is if there's somebody doing something shady,
these guys are gonna go find out and tell everybody,
and that's a public good.
What he was saying is, even when given the chance
to just write legitimate journalism after that,
they still go look for scandal
and like try to cause problems
that might not necessarily need,
that aren't really problems.
And he compared them to a character from Pilgrim's Progress,
who was the muckraker, and muck is poop by the way,
who had the chance to trade in his muckrake for not a
muckrake and didn't even look up to, didn't even bother looking up, just kept looking
down at the muck he was raking.
For not a muckrake.
Exactly.
So, he doesn't like Sinclair, like we said.
He certainly doesn't trust him.
He thought that the account in the jungle was, he called it hysterical.
So, he was like, I'm going to look into this myself.
And by myself, I mean, I'm going to have other people do it for me. Charles Neal, who was
a commissioner of the Bureau of Labor at the time, and an attorney from New York named
James Reynolds, would do the same thing. Well, they, I don't think they posed as workers,
but they did the investigation in Packingtown in Chicago, it resulted in the Neil Reynolds report.
And basically, I mean, the long story short of the Neil's Reynolds report is, by the way,
everything he said was true.
Yeah.
And it's even worse than he put it in his book.
That was the thing.
You said they didn't pose as packing workers.
The packing companies knew they were coming.
And they, yes, and they were so,
like the stuff they were doing was just so bad
and entrenched that they still were doing all this stuff,
knowing that these guys were coming to investigate.
So now Teddy Roosevelt has documentation
from two people that he trusts saying,
yes, this is actually going on. This is a huge problem
and we need to do something about it.
Should we talk about the bathrooms? Yes, let's because we haven't been super gross for a minute.
So like we said, they exposed
even worse things in in the book and this is one of them. The bathrooms weren't really bathrooms. Sometimes
it would just be a little cordoned off area
of the same workroom floor where they're scooping up,
God knows what to put into the sausage.
There was obviously no sinks, there were no open toilets,
you would just pee in that corner, there was no soap,
no toilet paper, and that's when it was
just sort of cordoned off.
There were also places where it was just nothing.
They would just pee where they were
so they could keep working as fast as they could.
They said the fumes from the urine,
I'll just read the quote,
hints in some cases, the fumes from the urine swell,
the sum of nauseating odors arising from the dirty,
blood-soaked, rotting wood floors,
fruitful, yeah, fruitful fruitful start for me to say
Fruitful culture beds for the disease germs of men and animals. Yeah, and don't forget
Multiple times a day they scraped up the the stuff that had dropped on the floor and put it in the sausage
And I saw a description of those floors that really turned my stomach
They they called them Spongy.
Isn't that awful? Because they were rotting from spit and blood and urine.
And that's what the meat was coming into contact with. So it held even more.
Yeah. Spongy wood is bad enough as it is. Oh man, so the other thing they did was, said, and by the way, President Benjamin Harris,
former president, in 1890, you signed a very weak
meat inspection bill that basically put
USDA inspectors at these meat packing plants,
but all they were charged to do was say,
well, this cow was healthy before they slaughtered it,
and I'm going back to sleep now. They had no authority to oversee what happened after that point
Exactly. So
even the rejected animals that those USDA inspectors would be like, this one doesn't pass muster get rid of it
They would get rid of it and then when the inspector left they would go back and get it and process it anyway
So there was no actual like, um, oversight.
Yeah.
Even though oversight that was there was just completely undermined.
Yeah.
So, um, this, this was like, this was bad news for the, the beef trust and other, um,
Packers, this, this, something was now going to happen because Teddy Roosevelt
had this, um, report.
And in addition to the jungle being out in public,
he said, hey, I've got this report, Congress.
I want some reforms to be pushed through,
make it happen or I'm going to release this report
that I've commissioned that's really gonna blow
the lid off of this stuff.
And he got cooperation from the Senate.
They passed a great bill and then it started to get blocked from the Senate. They passed a bill, passed a great bill,
and then it started to get blocked in the house.
And I think it came down to like two senators,
or no, two congresspeople, congressmen,
who were so in the beef trust pocket
that they staged a last ditch effort
at stopping these meat inspection bills from going through.
And that finally did it for Roosevelt and he released the Neil Reynolds
Report and it just made anybody sticking up for the beef trust looks so bad that you just couldn't get in the way of it any longer
Yeah, and I think didn't
Someone leaked it beforehand to didn't upton Sinclair help leak it? Yeah, supposedly. And I guess Teddy Roosevelt angrily wired Doubleday, the publisher, the actual guy named Doubleday,
and said, like, can you please tell Upton Sinclair to leave the business of running the country
to me for once?
That was smarmy.
You see smarm everywhere in all the quotes.
I see smarmy people. So this resulted in two things,
the Meat Inspection Act of 1906,
and then eventually the Pure Food and Drug Act,
which outlawed the sale of any altered,
adulterated, mislabeled foods, drug, medicine, or liquor,
became known as Dr. Wiley's Law, the Wiley Act tribute to Dr. Wiley
Mm-hmm. That was not the creation of the FDA though that would come along a little bit later and
Like you said, we have a great episode on the FDA
What year was that though 1927?
1930 the Bureau of Chemistry was part of the USDA until 1927
All right, so then finally 1930 we All right. So then finally in 1930, we get our FDA.
And then finally in 1938, after FDR came into office,
the federal government was, the FDA was finally given
real teeth to actually regulate stuff.
It was kind of nominal for a while until the late 30s.
You gotta say real teeth right now.
Sorry.
I'm sorry.
I didn't mean that as a slam.
That's all right.
Well, if you want to know more about this
really interesting period in history,
go research Upton Sinclair,
Teddy Roosevelt,
Dr. Harvey Washington Wiley,
read the jungle,
do all that stuff, and just see how grossed out
you can get before you vomit.
And since Chuck laughed at vomit,
that means it's time for Listener Mail.
Yeah, I read this.
It's an email about our live show in Seattle.
And I read this as sort of a,
hey, here's what you get at a stuff you should know show.
Because we've got the cities lined up
We haven't announced on sale dates or anything, but I think we can probably say what cities we're going to right?
Yeah, yeah, I think it's pretty much in the bank. All right, so we're gonna hit Chicago
Indianapolis and
Minneapolis
Mm-hmm all the apple is and then where are we going in the Northeast this year in the Northeast we're doing DC
Mm-hmm. We're gonna do Boston. Yeah, we're gonna do New York City, which we haven't been to in a while
Yeah, it's been a minute since we've been to New York and then we're gonna finish out the year
in Durham, North Carolina and
Our final show the year in Atlanta like we like to do it
Yeah, that's the that's the schedule as it stands now
and it's pretty close to baked.
Close enough that we're willing to say this
in the hopes that we don't have to edit out a town.
That's right, so I read this
because this is a little taste of what you can get here
and this is from Mary Benedict,
a grandma to a grandson and they went to the show together.
Oh, this is a great email.
It was.
Hey guys, been listening for about 10 years.
I'm a huge fan and retired teacher.
I introduced my grandson to stuff you should know
and he too has become a devoted man.
So for Christmas, I gave him tickets
to the live event in Seattle.
He was thrilled.
We went to the show, absolutely loved the experience.
The topic was fun.
You two are as great as you sound in your episodes. As the questions move
forward so we do a little Q&A at the end. Surprise surprise if you haven't been to
a show. So as the questions move forward toward the end you declared one final
question which would have left my grandson at the mic. I was repeating to
myself please please see that he's a kid. Please see that he's a kid."
And Chuck did exactly that.
You asked him how old he was, as well as the girl behind him.
Both were 14.
You apologized to the other side and let the two young people talk with you.
Please know what a remarkable moment that was for my grandson, a euphoric life experience
and memory.
So thank you.
I also want to share my appreciation for how kind you were to all the people in Q&A. You always asked a question about
them or thoughtfully commented on personal things they shared with you. That
level of compassion and kindness is extraordinary in my regard for you both
rose even higher. And lastly Josh, thank you for your vulnerability sharing that
you need to avoid the news right now for your well-being.
You demonstrated strength and emotional intelligence to everyone present and thank you for modeling
great life strategies.
Are you familiar with highly sensitive people?
You may not be one, but I am and my grandson is as well.
It is a character trait, not a problem, and that would make a fantastic topic for a podcast. For sure.
Sorry this ran long, but in the world where people are quick to point out what's wrong,
Mary, we love you. I believe it's important to tell people what they are doing, when they
are doing great things, and you two are doing great things.
That's awesome.
That is wonderful. That is Mary with an eye, Benedict, and Mary's grandson.
So thank you both for coming.
Yeah, thanks a lot.
A lot.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, the life strategy example I'm setting is avoidance.
No, avoiding the news is not avoidance.
If you, it's true.
If you want to be like Mary and her grandson and come to one of our shows, we will eventually put the information and links
and all that for tickets up.
And in the meantime, you can get in touch with us by email
at stuffpodcastsatihartradio.com.
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