at this time he s probably not buying any long-term and civil bonds. if you are his investment visor you were telling today trey. yet tony fauci is still working. in fact is on the longest serving employees in the entire federal government, almost certainly the highest paid. why is that? is tony fauci is that good. the term national treasure comes to mind. decent people understand that. drive through any neighborhood with high concentrations of college educated professionals with desperately unhappy personal lives and you will see the yard sign shines erected in his honor. thank you, dr. fauci, they read, tapped with a perky little axle mission point at the dash with a heart at the bottom, thank you for being you and you can often understand the gratitude. as the men who got us through the pandemic. as the coronavirus wafted from a chinese military biolab in wuhan and settled over the united states, tony fauci was the man americans looked to for guidance. he was are sherpa, a
so it s a major loss when thousands die. tucker. tucker: matt finn for us tonight, thanks so much. taking place in the wake of a massive poultry caliph that was not reported many places but was huge. there are applications to all of us so we want to talk with someone who works with cattle for living. assistant manager of winter livestock, and angus breeder, joins us tonight. thanks so much for coming on. first just really quick, does this explanation makes sense to you? tucker, yeah. this is not actually unlike blizzards or severe cold. you know, rain events that the american rancher fights every day to supply the americans with the wholesome beef supply we do. tucker: it s one of many events, whatever their origin, that have affected the basic components of the american food supply, commodities. i wonder what effect this will
about 5,000, 10,000 cattle that die of heat, you re talking a range of 10-$20 million. the margin that he american rancher has lost every week on cattle processed in united states is more like $200 million. so you know, we have a lot bigger fight out there, we fought the weather for centuries, blizzards, heat, but we need to get back to taking care of the american rancher. tucker: chinese control of our food supply is a bigger problem than the weather i would say. a big concern to the consumer, tucker buried tucker: i couldn t agree with you more but i appreciate bringing it up. steve, thank you very much. you bet, thanks for having me on. tucker: so gas is unaffordable, you just saw its effects on the food supply, diesel is high, that s one of the reasons food is high but that administration is not worried about that because we are getting renewable energy. how s it going to work exactly? well, we are seeing a specific example of how it works and we will tell you what it is
says as of tuesday it knew of at least 2,000 cattle reported dead after the high heat and humidity. attempts reached 108 degrees in northwest kansas on monday and the national weather service says the sweltering heat could extend into next week. one kansas farmer, greg peterson, says the animal health index is the worst it s been in 10-20 years. peterson says southwestern kansas saw a rare heat burst that caused the temperature to spike to 100 degrees at night. that farmer explains that i m very hot days, cattle must have those cool nights just to survive. they thought they were going off, the systems thought they were going to get a break, that temperature shot back to over 100 degrees. i think that s what s killed those cattle. i don t know for sure and we probably won t find out for a couple days. we go that farmer says there are theories out there like the cattle being poisoned, and he says every possibility should be investigated, but he notes a fully grown cattle is worth about
to the power and control we want. because that s really what this is all about. it s all about power and control. if it was about science emma they be a lot more transparent, a lot more honest and a hell of a lot more humble. tucker: that is also true. great to see you tonight, thank you so much. thank you, man. tucker: the things that are worth worrying about are the big things. all the small things may be annoying but the big things actually matter in the thing that matters most of course his food, because you die without it. america s food supply has just taken another major hit. thousands of cattle dropped dead. what exact what happened and what affect will it have on the country? that s next.