How Safe is Our Food? | The Alliance for Natural Health USA

How Safe is Our Food? | The Alliance for Natural Health USA.

- The Alliance for Natural Health USA – http://www.anh-usa.org -

How Safe is Our Food?

Posted By ANH-USA On May 8, 2012 @ 2:17 pm In

American beef [1]More and more countries are banning imports of American food products for safety reasons.

Last week, Indonesia became the first country to halt imports of US beef [2] following the discovery of an American dairy cow infected with mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy. The disease is fatal to cows and can cause a deadly brain disease in people who eat tainted beef.

“We will lift the ban as soon as the US can assure us its dairy cows are free of mad cow disease,” said Rusman Heriawan, Indonesia’s vice agriculture minister. “It could be one month or one year. It depends on how long it takes to resolve this case.”

One would think the US government would immediately test beef to make sure it’s safe. But the USDA, which regulates the test, administers it to less than 1% of slaughtered cows. Worse, until 2007 it was illegal for private beef producers to test their own cows for the disease [3]! Larger meat companies feared that if smaller producers tested their meat and advertised it as safe from mad cow disease, they too might be forced to test all their cows—so they persuaded USDA to block individual producers from doing the test. In 2007 a federal judge said this practice could no longer stand [4].

The highest risk occurs if animals or humans eat infected brain or nerve tissue [5]. Meat unconnected to bone, milk, and hooves are supposed to be safe, but who knows for sure? The ultimate source of mad cow, of course, is the filthy and disease-ridden (not to mention inhumane) conditions in CAFOs, or concentrated animal feedlot operations [6].

In February, Taiwan began refusing meat products from the US because they contain ractopamine [7], a leanness- and growth-promoting drug used widely in pork and beef production in the United States. Taiwan has a zero-tolerance policy for the drug.

Ractopamine is banned in 160 nations [8] including Europe because it is responsible for hyperactivity and muscle breakdown in pigs, and a 10% increase in their mortality rate. It was banned in China after more than 1700 people were “poisoned” from eating American pigs that had been given ractopamine. The drug bears the warning label [9], “Not for use in humans. Individuals with cardiovascular disease should exercise special caution to avoid exposure. Use protective clothing, impervious gloves, protective eye wear, and a NIOSH-approved dust mask’’—yet somehow it is considered safe in human food. How is this possible?

Most of the world’s developed countries [10] ban, or have at least placed limits on, genetically modified organisms. The European Union and its member states, as well as Switzerland, Norway, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Algeria, Brazil, and Paraguay all have restrictions or outright bans on the use or importation of genetically engineered seeds, plants, or foods. A detailed map with the specific products banned in Europe is available here [11].

This is one reason the California Right to Know 2012 Ballot Initiative is so important [12]. If California requires labeling products containing GMOs, it will be difficult for most manufacturers to create separate labels for their products sold in other states, so the labeling will become national. This is why we are trying to help the Right to Know Campaign raise one million dollars to drop a “money bomb” on Monsanto—to combat the anti-GMO propaganda and get this proposition passed in November. If you haven’t done so already, please make a donation to the Right to Know Campaign—and please give generously [13]!


Article printed from The Alliance for Natural Health USA: http://www.anh-usa.org

URL to article: http://www.anh-usa.org/how-safe-is-our-food/

URLs in this post:

[1] Image: http://www.anh-usa.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/2203_wpm_lowres.jpg

[2] Indonesia became the first country to halt imports of US beef: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/26/indonesia-beef-imports-mad-cow_n_1455309.html

[3] it was illegal for private beef producers to test their own cows for the disease: http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_440.cfm

[4] a federal judge said this practice could no longer stand: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/05/01/329744/-Mad-Cow-Disease-USDA-Says-Illegal-to-test-for-it

[5] if animals or humans eat infected brain or nerve tissue: http://www.anh-usa.org/you-are-what-your-food-ate/

[6] CAFOs, or concentrated animal feedlot operations: http://www.anh-usa.org/expose-cafo-conditions-stop-the-ag-gag-bills/

[7] because they contain ractopamine: http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2012/02/us-presses-taiwan-on-ractopamine-ban/

[8] Ractopamine is banned in 160 nations: http://www.thebetterhealthstore.com/Newsletter/030510_Ractopamine_07.html

[9] The drug bears the warning label: http://www.alternet.org/story/145503/why_has_the_fda_allowed_a_drug_marked_

[10] Most of the world’s developed countries: http://www.organicconsumers.org/gefood/countrieswithbans.cfm

[11] available here: http://www.gmo-free-regions.org/gmo-free-regions/bans.html

[12] This is one reason the California Right to Know 2012 Ballot Initiative is so important: http://www.anh-usa.org/gmo-labeling-initiative-will-be-on-the-ballot-in-california/

[13] please make a donation to the Right to Know Campaign—and please give generously: https://secure3.convio.net/aahf/site/Donation2?2480.donation=form1&df_id=2480&JServSessionIdr004=63aa89g9d3.app304b

Big Ag’s Big Secrets: 9 Things About the Food You Eat

Big Agricultures Big Secrets: 9 Things You Need to Know About the Food You Eat

May 10, 2012

This article originally appeared on the Huffington Post. 

Thanks to factory farming’s massive economies of scale, a lot of food today is disgusting or cruel or disgusting and cruel. Just when people stopped talking about cantaloupes with deadly listeria, “pink slime” hit the news. And just when people stopped talking about pink slime, ground beef treated with ammonia to kill germs, mad cow hit the news. Does anyone even remember the arsenic in the fruit juice?

Food scandals are so costly to Big Food, it has repeatedly tried to kill the messenger rather than clean up its act. In the 1990s it pushed through “food disparagement” laws under which Oprah Winfrey herself was sued by cattlemen in 1997 (Winfrey said she would never eat a hamburger again upon learning that cows were being fed to cows). Winfrey was acquitted and cow cannibalism was made illegal but the US still lost $3 billion in beef exports when a first mad cow was discovered in 2003. April’s new mad cow will not help foreign trade.

Last year, Big Food introduced Animal Facility Interference laws in several states which make it a crime to “produce, distribute or possess photos and video taken without permission at an agricultural facility.” The bills also criminalize lying on an application to work at an agriculture facility “with an intent to commit an act not authorized by the Owner”–in an effort to stop the flow of grisly undercover videos. The first facility interference offense would be an aggravated misdemeanor but subsequent offenses could be felonies.

Of course, the Ag-Gag bills, as they were quickly dubbed, are anti-free-speech and would chill both whistle-blowers and news media (who couldn’t legally even receive non-approved farm images). The bills were scorified by CNN, the New York Times, Time magazine and First Amendment and food safety activists and, luckily, were defeated in 2011. But they are creeping back.

Many farmers and agricultural professionals are miffed that the days of “it’s-none-of-your-business” farming are over. Once upon a time, consumers cared only about the price and wholesomeness of food and didn’t worry about–or videotape–its origins and “disassembly.” Now consumers increasingly want to know how an animal lived, died, and even what it ate in between. Some of the newly engaged consumers are motivated by health, wanting to avoid hormones in milk, antibiotics in beef, arsenic in chicken, and who knows what in seafood. But many are also motivated by humane concerns. (Read Full Article)

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 62 other followers