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Ruffhowse Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 04:14 AM
Original message
U.S. Supports Lifting Ban on Canada Beef
TORONTO - U.S. agriculture officials reaffirmed their support for lifting the ban on Canadian beef despite the discovery of a second case of mad cow disease in Canada, expressing confidence that public health measures will protect American livestock and consumers.

Canada's Food Inspection Agency said Sunday that an older dairy cow from the province of Alberta has tested positive for bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease. The results confirmed preliminary tests released earlier this week.


Canada suspects the cow became infected through contaminated animal feed. The cow was born in 1996, before a 1997 ban on certain types of feed, the agency said. It did not enter the human food or animal feed supply and posed no risk to the public, the agency said.


BSE (news - web sites) attacks an animal's nervous system. Food contaminated with BSE can afflict people with usually fatal variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (news - web sites).

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=4&u=/ap/20050103/ap_on_re_ca/canada_mad_cow
____________________________________________________________

Looks like Bush bribed Canada to stop selling cheaper Canadian drugs to U.S. citizens in exchange for looking the other way on questions about mad cow disease in Canadian beef. Freakin' incredible. Chimpy cares much more about drug company profits than about the health of Americans. Now we won't be able to get affordable prescription drugs and our chances of contracting mad cow disease is drastically increased, just so BushCo can pay off more wealthy Repukes. Disgusting, but you won't hear a word about this in the MSM.
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Piperay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 04:27 AM
Response to Original message
1. I knew there
was going to be a pay off for the Canadian drugs, let the folks with prescriptions suffer so that mad-cows and can be imported here. :mad:
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Brundle_Fly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 04:27 AM
Response to Original message
2. the reason canada is finding mad cow...
is because we have implemented, as of 2003, bar none, the best screening process in the world. I would be much more worried from the massive cattle production plants in the US than I would Canadian beef.

and sorry about the cheap drugs, besides we get them from you, so why doesnt your government sell the to you at a fair rate? like they do us?
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Garbo 2004 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 05:01 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. US screening is a joke & yet the FDA tells everyone that US beef is safe.
They really have no way of knowing that since the screening is so limited. It's all about the $$$.
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proudbluestater Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 04:57 AM
Response to Original message
3. We want to lift the ban, so we can blame you for all mad cow here. Sorry


Happy Birthday Mad Cow, article not copywrited.

For a while, it looked as though one lone cow might succeed.

Government officials promised to implement food safety measures long championed by consumer, family farm, health, environmental, and public interest organizations. Industry groups - and their former lobbyists now working for regulatory agencies - were on the defensive.

It was December 23, 2003, and the first case of mad cow disease in the United States had just been confirmed.

Within one week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that so-called "downer" cows - animals too sick or injured to walk - would be banned from the human food supply. Representative Gary Ackerman (D-NY), who had unsuccessfully championed a downer ban for years, offered qualified praise. "We’re pleased that the Agriculture Department is finally banning downed animals after fighting with them for so long to do so," he said. "The department has seen the light but that’s only because they’ve been struck by lightning."

However, the lightning produced more noise than illumination. One year later, reforms proven necessary by the experiences of European and Asian countries have yet to be instituted by the agencies most responsible for food safety, the USDA and Food and Drug Administration.

Why does mad cow disease matter? Most immediately, because it’s a fatal, neurodegenerative disease that spreads from animal to animal - and from cows to humans - through the food supply. In Britain, the "ground zero" for mad cow disease, 147 people have died from variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD), the human form of the illness, and five others have been diagnosed with vCJD. In addition, 3.7 million cattle were destroyed and many family farmers and ranchers went bankrupt.

There’s another reason why mad cow disease is important - even for vegetarians. Like the Merck Vioxx and Enron scandals, the issue reveals how compromised our regulatory agencies have become.

The meat and feed industries, through lobbying, campaign contributions, and the industry-government revolving door, have shaped relevant policy from the beginning. "Consumer groups were shut out" of the process for developing the Mad Cow Risk Analysis Model that regulatory agencies rely on, reported the Sacramento Bee. But among those acknowledged for "scientific input and support" are people "with ties to ConAgra Beef, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, the National Renderers Association and the American Feed Industry Association."

Instead of implementing real reform, over the past year government officials and industry flacks have oversold limited policy changes, touted questionable polls and studies, and relied on slick public relations to maintain confidence in the U.S. food supply. However, similar techniques have not proven very successful in ending other countries' bans on U.S. beef.

One example involves the most important factor in the spread of mad cow disease – what is and is not allowed in animal feed. Currently, feed for cows and other ruminant animals can contain cattle blood and fat, chicken coop waste, and pig and poultry slaughterhouse waste. All of these materials present possible routes of animal-to-animal disease transmission.

In January 2004, the FDA (still blinking from the mad cow lightning storm) promised to close these gaping loopholes in what most government press releases refer to as the "firewall feed ban." Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson explained, "Although the current animal feed rule provides a strong barrier against the further spread of , we must never be satisfied with the status quo."

Six months later, Thompson announced that the FDA was indefinitely delaying action. Inscrutably, he said, "Although our current rules are strong, when it comes to public health and safety we cannot be content with the status quo." Consumers Union rightly called the stonewalling "a betrayal of a promise made to consumers to protect their health."

The FDA’s deja vu-laden inertia can be chalked up to vigorous lobbying. The American Meat Institute blasted stronger feed regulations as "unwarranted." The National Grain and Feed Association called them "Draconian." Eight cattle and feed industry groups warned the FDA that the proposed regulations would "cause economic dislocation throughout the livestock industry."

And Washington DC listened. In 2004, nearly 80 percent of campaign contributions from the livestock and meat processing and products industries went to Republicans, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. In August, the grande dame of meat politics, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, took "historic and unprecedented action in the organization’s 106-year history by directing its Political Action Committee to endorse Bush-Cheney for re-election," as an NCBA press release described. NCBA president Jan Lyons assured member groups, "The voice of NCBA cattle producers will be heard loud and clear on Capitol Hill."

But relax! There’s nothing to worry about - at least that’s what NCBA and their PR firm, Burson-Marsteller, would like you to believe. According to Tactics, the newsletter of the Public Relations Society of America, "key messages for spokespeople to reinforce in media interviews" include "U.S. beef is safe," "the surveillance system worked," and "regaining access to export markets is a priority."

In addition to pushing talking points, over the past year NCBA has "sought more conventional exposure through marketing, advertising and public relations. It created a Super Bowl radio promotion, purchased more radio ads, increased its retail store displays and distributed editorials to targeted publications … relied on third-party spokespeople through the Internet," reported Tactics.

It might take another mad cow - or ten or twenty - to cut through the hype and shock U.S. regulatory agencies into action. The main concern of Agriculture Secretary nominee Mike Johanns is international trade, as was the case with outgoing Secretary Ann Veneman. Moreover, Johanns is on record opposing USDA's refreshingly open policy of announcing the result of rapid tests used to screen cattle for mad cow disease.

Transparency and stronger safeguards benefit everyone, building real confidence among domestic and foreign markets, not to mention protecting human and animal health. Let's hope the Bush administration and their industry friends realize this sooner, rather than later.

http://www.prwatch.org/node/3136
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nadinbrzezinski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 05:00 AM
Response to Original message
4. Reality is... I DO NOT eat beef
forget it....

Actually we have found some sources of grain fed beef.... best way to avoid it

that said... no beef for us any longer....

Damn

And this has nothing to do with Canada... chimpster is an idiot!
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Ruffhowse Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 05:17 AM
Response to Reply #4
6. Good Ol' Burgerville, a local burger chain in Washington and Oregon,
only uses grain fed Northwest beef in it's burgers. That's the only fast food place I go anymore, definitely NOT McDonald's or Burger King or Taco Bell.
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sam sarrha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 07:21 AM
Response to Original message
7. check ;out these links, the beef industry bought up all the web sites with
"madcow" in them so you might have difficulty surfing out information, one Madcow.com/org is a neglected very weird tourist site for Boston..

www.maddeer.org check out their links, very informative,

also surf "Prion disease", you can cremate an infected animal at 2,200 degrees F and the ashes will infect live animals, and they can cross species lines in 2 or 3 generations.. this is real serious and they are worried about the wrong things... this cant be cleaned up if it gets lose.

one independent study showed that patients in care homes for Alzheimer's patients showed that up to 16% of the patients actually were misdiagnosed and had CJD... people are dying all over the country and it is being covered up.

LA county has quit opening craniums during autopsies, a pathologist and all the crew in the room came down with wasting disease and died after a patient with prion disease had an autopsy.
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donsu Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-05 11:25 AM
Response to Original message
8. it's not just madcow

beef is full of hormones and antibiotics

and americans are dying all the time from madcow but they are giving it another name or diagnoses.
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