DOGE's reckless budget slashing has left American cattle ranchers exposed to a screwworm crisis that took decades to solve. The federal eradication program worked brilliantly for over 50 years — keeping a devastating parasite out of U.S. farms — and gutting that kind of unglamorous but essential government work has real consequences. Musk's crew treated a $300 million pest control program as waste, and now flesh-eating maggots are back in Texas and New Mexico.
The screwworm's return isn'tis a budget story — it's a border security and organized crime story. Illegal cattle trafficking by cartels across Central America is what drove the parasite north at an alarming speed, bypassing health screenings entirely. Until the U.S., Mexico and Central American governments crack down on illicit livestock smuggling, no amount of sterile fly releases will permanently solve this crisis.
There is a 70% chance that a wild animal will be infected with the New World screwworm in the contiguous U.S. before 2027, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.
All rights reserved.
Version 7.4.1