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Supreme Court ponders the fate of pigs, high cost of bacon

California's law regulates conditions in which pigs may be raised. ©AFP

Washington (AFP) - A California law aimed at reducing animal suffering on pig farms led to some unusual exchanges Tuesday in the US Supreme Court.

Following a grassroots referendum, California passed an animal welfare measure in 2018 that bans the sale of pork from pigs that were raised in overly confined spaces.

The pork industry had gone to court accusing California -- which produces little of the pork it consumes -- of restricting interstate commerce and trying to impose its values on other US states.

The sector fears that California will effectively set national standards for conditions in which farm animals, including cows and chickens, are kept, thus raising ham and bacon prices for consumers.

Pork producers, after being rejected by state courts, turned to the Supreme Court, which seemed baffled by the case.

For nearly two hours, the nine justices pondered the criteria that would allow comparable cases to be resolved in the future.

The result was a series of highly political hypothetical scenarios.

Progressive Justice Elena Kagan wondered what would happen if Democratic states banned the sale of goods made by non-unionized workers.

Her conservative colleague Amy Coney Barrett imagined that they would ban goods from companies that did not fund medical care for their transgender employees.

Judge Brett Kavanaugh, meanwhile, speculated that Republican states might ban products created by undocumented immigrants.

Perplexity peaked when Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted that the pork market was already regulated. 

"We have marketed already pork marked as organic, crate-free, antibiotic-free and beta-agonist free," she said."I have no idea what that means, but I know it's there.I've seen it in supermarkets."

The high court will return a decision before June 30. 

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