As Downing Street refuses to rule out lowering food
standards in the wake of a Brexit trade deal with the United States,
chlorinated chicken is now a headline across numerous mainstream media
platforms.
Don’t be misled by the headline of this piece. Chlorinated
chicken is vile – and I, for one, wouldn’t want that floating about in my gut.
Nor would I want young children growing up in post-Brexit Britain to be
consuming toxins that our bathrooms are cleaned with, and it being classed as
‘the norm’.
I’m not a huge fan of the EU, or a so-called ‘remoaner’,
but I am a fan of protecting people’s health and wellbeing. The EU, regardless
of what you think of it, was helpful for us in terms of food regulation and
standards. The Daily Mail did a good job of putting people off food regulations
with that banana story. Because nothing says sovereignty like a ‘nana does.
They actually convinced people that those in Brussels stop us from eating
curved bananas and cucumbers...even though we do eat them already. And even though the EU never banned them in the first place.
Useless nonsense like that paved the way for the
government to think they have a mandate to do what they want with Brexit in
terms of trade, as if they have a blank check to do screw us over in whatever
way they think is best.
Chlorinated chicken is an issue (and I can’t believe I’m
actually writing an article about it, to be honest), but the outrage of this
story is not the product itself, but the premise behind it.
The idea that Britain is going to sell its soul – or
body, more like – for a trade deal with the US after Brexit is the problem. The
idea that we’re not going to hold our head high and have a firm hand in
upholding standards we should be proud of is the problem. We’re just going to
roll over and accept whatever we get regardless.
International trade secretary Liam Fox, who has some
dodgy connections with Trump and the US (which explains a lot), as pointed out
in George Monbiot’s Guardian article earlier this year, clearly shows a
complete lack of integrity as we seek positive relations with the rest of the
world. Our standards are slipping and that’s where the problem lies.
We were told that Brexit was a new horizon and, as
Theresa May said repeatedly (nope, it’s not “strong and stable” – it’s the
other one), we need to “make a success of Brexit”. If a Brexit success is
lowering our standards for some dirty products from America, who we have that
oh-so-special relationship with, then, quite frankly, we’ve been screwed over
yet again. Make no mistake: chlorinated chicken is just the beginning. We’ll go
a lot lower than that. And for what?
It would be seemingly hypocritical on paper of me to say
that the government can’t know if people wanted looser regulations on trading
standards post-Brexit, then say people don’t want them. But if you think about
it, do we genuinely believe people wanted post-Brexit Britain to be one where
we’re contaminating our kids and polluting our country with crap we’ve had to
accept from abroad in the name of a trade deal? I don’t believe it for one
second. It’s false.
People who voted Brexit are more often than not proud of
their country. They are proud of the values it supposedly embodies. Perhaps our
usual (or portrayed usual) quality of standing our ground is what they like and
what they wanted to see more after Brexit.
Britain should stand firm on its regulations and be
resolute in its standards in the coming years. Just as we can’t afford to leave
with no trade deal at all, we can’t afford to let ourselves be walked all over.
I doubt major British politicians will bother to acknowledge this point on
their own, but people power is strong. So it’s time to raise our voice and tell
them that Britain won’t be made a trollop of by Liam Fox and his cronies in the
Brexit negotiations. Even if they don’t listen, we can’t regret something we
tried our best to change.
The Chlorinated Chicken isn’t the Problem – It’s the Premise Behind it | Lauren White
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