Posted on 08/22/2018 2:42:22 PM PDT by glorgau
After reports emerged that fish sellers were labeling rainbow trout as salmon, the Chinese government made a startling announcement.
According to the New York Times, Chinese regulators announced this week that, far from cracking down on mislabeled fish, rainbow trout can legally be labeled as salmon.
Incorrectly labeled fishwhether accidentally or intentionallyis a worldwide issue. Reports have indicated that much of the worlds fish is mislabeled; the advocacy group Oceana ran a test and found that one in five fish samples were mislabeled worldwide. Sometimes these are understandable: can you really tell the difference between red snapper and red sea bream? Other times, these are way off, and can be a major problem for consumers who want to eat ethicallyor simply know what theyre eating. Trout and salmon are part of a wide-ranging family of fish called salmonids, which also includes char, grayling, and some whitefish species. They all look sort of similartheyre primitive-looking fish with sharp teethbut vary dramatically in size, distribution, and sustainability. Some are freshwater, some saltwater. Some live in the Atlantic, some in the Pacific, some in various lakes and rivers.
The rainbow trout, like the char, has a pale orange to pink flesh. It is not as dark as the flesh of most salmon species, nor as fatty, but its similar enough. But it is not the same; rainbow trout are freshwater and salmon are saltwater fish, which means theyre raised (if farmed) entirely differently and have totally different environmental and health concerns. Freshwater fish is more prone to parasites; it is generally not recommended that freshwater fish is eaten raw.
Following the reports of rainbow trout being sold as salmon, Chinese regulators officially declared that the two species are similar enough that they can be sold under the name salmon. According to the Global Times, the governments argument is lexical: they say that, since both species belong to the salmonid family, they can be labeled as salmon. In other words, the word salmon is more like a shorthand for the entire salmonid family of fish, rather than the more widely understood meaning of the nine species of Atlantic and Pacific fish that are actually called salmon.
The New York Times says that the Chinese government is mandating a light label to this effect, so trout might carry the label salmon (rainbow trout). Presumably, salmon could have the label salmon (salmon).
Do Mrs. Paul’s fish sticks come from China?
Not even Ayn Rand foresaw this time, when everything promulgated is a complete lie.
Orwell saw it, though.
Maybe next week salmon can be sold as elephant.
Rainbow trout should be much more expensive than salmon in China. Why do they need to re-label it?
And in other news, the Chinese Accounting Standards Board has issued a rule allowing debits to be treated as credits if you’re running out of money....
Kilgore Trout.
As the Fortune Cookie said...”That wasn’t chicken.”
I’m labeling this “quarter” a “five dollar bill”. Thanks for the “salmon”.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.