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  by Martha Rosenberg
 May 9, 2012
 from 
			HuffingtonPost Website
 
 
 
			  
				
					
						| 
						Martha Rosenberg 
						frequently writes about the impact of the 
						pharmaceutical, food and gun industries on public 
						health. Her work has appeared in the Boston Globe, San 
						Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Tribune and other outlets. |  
			
 
 
			  
			Big Agriculture's Big Secrets:  
			9 Things You Need to Know About the Food 
			You EatFood scandals are so costly to Big Food that it has repeatedly
 
			tried to kill the messenger rather than 
			clean up its act. 
			  
			  
			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 scarified 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.
 Here are some shocking facts that Big Food would like to mute with 
			Ag-Gag and food defamation laws:
 
 
				
					
					
					rBGH in Milk - We're Drinking 
					What?Recombinant bovine growth 
					hormone (rBGH), injected into dairy cows to increase milk 
					production, was created by crossing cow DNA and E. coli 
					bacteria. Yes, that
					
					E. coli.
   
					From the start, farmers and 
					veterinarians worried about the udder infections it causes, 
					the resulting need for more antibiotic usage and more.
					 
					
						
						"I surely wouldn't want to 
						eat from the hypodermic pockmarked section of the cow," 
						said one farming critic as early as 1994.  
					Banned in many countries and 
					unlabeled here, rBGH-produced milk also contains pus and a 
					protein associated with increased prostate and breast cancer 
					risk called IGF-1.    
					Still, Eli Lilly, who bought 
					rBGH in 2008 from Monsanto insists, it, 
						
						"safely increases 
						productivity of dairy cows" and helps "family farm 
						owners." 
						  
					
					 
 
 
					
					
					Eggs With a Side of SalmonellaTwo years ago, a 
					salmonella outbreak caused the recall of half a billion eggs 
					and 1,600 illnesses.
   
					Thanks to factory farming, with 
					thousands of hens stacked over their own manure, egg 
					operations are festooned with germs. In fact, the government 
					found both Tyson Foods and a hatchery injecting eggs of 
					future laying hens preventively with antibiotics to avert 
					infections. Yum.    
					Austin "Jack"
					DeCoster, to whose 
					farms the salmonella was linked, had a 30-year history of 
					health and safety violations. In fact, when authorities 
					raided his Turner, Maine operation in 2009, charging him 
					with animal cruelty, four officers required treatment for 
					ammonia-burned lungs just from entering his barns. 
					   
					Yet DeCoster received no 
					penalties for the salmonella outbreak and enjoyed a gracious 
					retirement.
					  
					
					 
					
 
					
					The Drug Store in Your MeatYou may not have heard of 
					Fort Dodge, Elanco, or Intervet, animal divisions 
					
					of Big Pharma, but you may well be "taking" their drugs.
   
					Government safety inspectors 
					miss residues of penicillin and other antibiotics, parasite 
					and anti-inflammatory drugs and heavy metals in beef, says a 
					2010 Office of Inspector General report, allowing 
					contaminated beef into food supply.    
					For other toxins like dioxin, 
					lindane and fire retardants, inspectors do not even have 
					"established action levels" to test for. Four plants, with 
					an astounding 211 drug residue violations, were given a pass 
					says the OIG report.    
					Worse, unlike germs like 
					salmonella or E. coli, drug and metal residues aren't 
					neutralized by cooking and can even turn into more dangerous 
					compounds when heated.
					  
					
					 
					
 
					
					"Free Antibiotics" in Food and 
					WaterOne of the late Sen. Ted 
					Kennedy's last legislative fights was about the overuse of 
					livestock antibiotics.
 
					
						
						"It seems scarcely 
						believable that these precious medications could be fed 
						by the ton to chickens and pigs," he wrote in the 
						Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act.
						 
					Over 70 percent of antibiotics 
					go to livestock, not to people, says the bill and 48 percent 
					of national streams are tainted with antibiotics. 
					   
					Other reports say that almost 
					half of Midwest hog farms harbor the antibiotic resistant 
					germ, MRSA, and 64 percent of workers carry it. Are people 
					who don't eat meat or drink tap water safe? Guess again.
					   
					Crops themselves can harbor 
					antibiotics, say food researcher, siphoning them right up 
					from the soil. 
					  
					  
					 
					
					
 
					
					
					Meat Inspection by the "Have a 
					Cup of Coffee and Pray" MethodOnce upon a time, federal 
					meat inspectors visually examined carcasses for 
					wholesomeness.
   
					But under the Hazard Analysis 
					and Critical Control Points (HACCP), implemented in 2000, 
					inspectors now simply ratify that companies are following 
					their own self-created systems - as in "Trust us." Soon 
					after HACCP, 80 percent of inspectors surveyed said that 
					HACCP limited their ability to enforce the law and the 
					public's right to know about food safety.    
					Almost 20 percent said they'd 
					been told to not document violations. And 62 percent of 
					inspectors said they allowed contamination like feces, 
					vomit, and metal shards in food on a daily or weekly basis 
					since HACCP.    
					No wonder HACCP has been been 
					dubbed "Have a Cup of Coffee and Pray." 
					  
					  
					 
					
 
					
					A Delicacy from HellFoie gras is a "delicacy" 
					that requires the indelicate force-feeding of geese and 
					ducks to bloat their livers.
   
					
					
					Video shows birds with bloody 
					throats, barely able to walk and struggling to breathe. Yet 
					Big Food, restaurateurs and even the American Veterinary 
					Medical Association defend the gratuitous cruelty lest veal 
					crates and other extreme "production agriculture" be 
					questioned next.    
					Foie gras is banned in Europe 
					and other countries but a 2007 foie gras ban in Chicago drew 
					ridicule from the Chicago Tribune's food critic ("Has City 
					Council finally quacked?" Will "quack-easies" surface?) and a 
					Foie Gras Fest backlash from area chefs who served 
					five-course foie gras meals.    
					P.S. The ban was repealed. 
					  
					  
					 
					
 
					
					Extreme Growth PromotersMany of the growth 
					promoters used in US meat production are banned in other 
					countries.
   
					Europe boycotts US beef because 
					of hormones like 
					
					oestradiol-17 and
					
					trenbolone acetate which 
					it says are linked to prostate and breast cancer. The EU 
					also disallows farmers to use antibiotics and arsenic as 
					growth promoters, which the US does. (Yes, arsenic.) Still, 
					it is some consolation that most US growth promoters are 
					withdrawn in the weeks before slaughter.    
					Not so with ractopamine, an 
					asthma-like drug given to 60 to 80 percent of US pigs, 30 
					percent of ration-fed cattle and an undisclosed number of 
					turkeys.    
					Ractopamine, which few are aware 
					of, is given during the last weeks of life and not withdrawn 
					before slaughter. 
					  
					  
					 
					
 
					
					Mad Cow Disease - It's BaaaaaackDoes anyone remember the 
					government's misinformation and ineptitude with the first 
					three mad cows, now that the disease is baaaaacck?
   
					With the 
					first cow, a government report said all 
					"potentially-infectious product" had been "disposed of " in 
					a landfill but the San Francisco Chronicle and Los Angeles 
					Times said it went to California restaurants where it was 
					eaten.    
					That's very different. With the second cow, 
					authorities did not even realize it had mad cow disease for 
					seven months!    
					The government's final report says the farmer 
					who sold the cow was "relatively sure" he had not kept any 
					offspring but "there were essentially no records 
					maintained."    
					Want more reassurances? The ranch was cleared 
					to resume selling meat within one month. 
					    
					 
					
 
					
					Brave New ClonesThe FDA says clones and 
					their offspring are no different from other food animals and 
					won't be labeled. (See: rBGH.)
   
					But in its own 2008 report it 
					cites cloned calves with elevated glucose, elevated growth 
					indicators, early mammary development, umbilical abscesses 
					and high white blood cell counts. Even the meat and milk is 
					different in one study, the FDA admits.    
					Are Americans eating 
					unlabeled clones right now?  
					
						
						"I can't say today that I can 
					answer your question in an affirmative or negative way," 
					replied Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to the question in 
					2010. (Why should the ag secretary know?)    
						"I don't know. 
					What I do know is that we know all the research, all of the 
					review of this is suggested that this is safe." 
						  
					 
			
 
 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			
 
			
 
 Foie Gras
 
			
			
			Delicacy of DespairMay 2012
 from 
			PETA Website
 
			  
			  
			  
			 
			  
			  
			  
			To produce "foie gras" (which literally 
			means "fatty liver"), workers ram pipes down male ducks' or geese's 
			throats two or three times daily and pump as much as 4 pounds of 
			grain and fat into the animals' stomachs, causing their livers to 
			bloat to up to 10 times their normal size.  
			  
			Many birds have difficulty standing 
			because of their engorged livers, and they may tear out their own 
			feathers and cannibalize each other out of stress.
 The birds are kept in tiny wire cages or packed into sheds. On some 
			farms, a single worker may be expected to force-feed 500 birds three 
			times each day. Because of this rush, animals are often treated 
			roughly and left injured and suffering.
 
 A PETA investigation at Hudson Valley Foie Gras in New York (then 
			called "Commonwealth Enterprises") found that so many ducks died 
			when their organs ruptured from overfeeding that workers who killed 
			fewer than 50 birds per month were given a bonus. Many ducks develop 
			foot infections, kidney necrosis, spleen damage, bruised and broken 
			bills, and tumor-like lumps in their throats.
 
			  
			One duck had a maggot-infested neck 
			wound so severe that water spilled out of it when he drank.
 Other investigations at Hudson Valley Foie Gras and America's other 
			leading foie gras producer, Sonoma Foie Gras in California, revealed 
			that ducks were crammed into filthy, feces-ridden sheds and that 
			others were isolated in wire cages that were so small that they 
			could barely move.
 
			  
			Investigators also observed barrels full 
			of dead ducks who had choked to death or whose organs had ruptured 
			during the traumatic force-feeding process.  
			  
			The investigators 
			rescued 15 ducks, including two who were being eaten alive by rats 
			because they could not move. 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			Kate Winslet narrates this shocking 
			undercover footage  
			of the torture that ducks and geese 
			endure in foie gras production. 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			Foie gras is so inhumane that in 2004 
			California passed a law banning the sale and production of foie gras 
			effective in 2012.  
			  
			Force-feeding has also been outlawed in, 
				
					
					
					the U.K.
					
					Austria
					
					Germany
					
					the Czech Republic
					
					Finland
					
					Italy
					
					Luxembourg
					
					the Netherlands
					
					Norway
					
					Poland
					
					South Africa
					
					Sweden
					
					Switzerland
					
					Denmark
					
					Israel 
			Join Sir Roger Moore and countless 
			others around the world in refusing to eat foie gras.  
			  
			You can even take one more step by 
			giving up all animal products for one month.  
			  
			  
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