In a development that has sent shivers down the spine of every steak-loving patriot, Canada has slammed the border shut on Texan cattle after an outbreak of the flesh-eating screwworm. Yes, you read that correctly: a parasitic maggot that devours living tissue from the inside out, like something out of a Cronenberg film but with more mooing.
While the Canadians are busy patting themselves on the back for their swift biosecurity measures, let us turn our gaze to these sceptered isles, where our own standards are held up as a beacon of bovine purity. The Animal and Plant Health Agency assures us that we are safe, that our borders are impregnable. But then, so did the French about their Maginot Line.
Let us not forget that we are the nation that brought you BSE, foot-and-mouth pyres that lit up the countryside like a hellish Glastonbury, and a government that once lost a shipment of cows on a ferry to the Isle of Wight. Our biosecurity is about as robust as a chocolate teapot. Yet here we stand, smug as a vicar at a garden party, tutting at the colonial cousins and their maggoty cattle.
The real story, of course, is not about worms. It is about money. The global beef trade is a blood-soaked arena where countries flex their muscles with import bans. Canada's decision is not just about protecting their herds. It is a political smackdown, a reminder that trade can be weaponised faster than you can say 'non-tariff barrier'. And where does that leave us? Clinging to our 'gold standard' biosecurity like a drunk man clutching a lamppost, pretending we are not part of the same grubby global meat market.
Beneath the headlines, the real victims are the Texan farmers, whose livelihoods are being devoured as surely as the flesh from their livestock. But do not expect any tears from the chattering classes. They are too busy ordering their organic, grass-fed, locally-sourced steaks from Waitrose, all while ignoring the fact that our own farming practices are a horror show of antibiotics, hormones, and industrial cruelty.
So let Canada have its moral victory. Let them bask in the glow of their decisive action. But remember this: the screwworm does not respect borders. It is a patient, hungry beast, and it will find a way. In the meantime, I shall be enjoying my Sunday roast with a side of existential dread and a generous splash of gin. Cheers.








