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International Meat Crisis
The meat you eat
is contaminated and infected
to a degree never before known in human history

"Mad
cow is the creepiest in a family of disorders that can make ebola
look like chicken pox." —Newsweek, March 12, 2001
Richard
Lacey, a pioneer mad cow researcher, predicts that, by the year 2015,
two hundred thousand Britishers will die each year. —Richard
Rhodes, Deadly Feasts, p. 222
Ground glass
was in a shipment of burger shipped to four states. But federal law
permitted the packinghouse to not tell state inspectors which stores and
fast-food restaurants the burgers had been shipped to. —(see
p. 93)
INTRODUCTION
In 1906, Upton Sinclair wrote: "This is no fairy
story and no joke. The meat would be shoveled into carts, and the man
who did the shoveling would not trouble himself to lift out a rat even
when he saw one. —There
were things that went into the sausage in comparison with which a
poisoned rat was a tidbit" (Upton
Sinclair, The Jungle, p. 135).
Sinclair told the facts about the meat industry.
President Theodore Roosevelt read his book, The Jungle, and
immediately ordered an independent investigation of U.S.
slaughterhouses.
But the powerful magnets of the Beef Trust fought
back. "Meat and food products, generally speaking, are handled as
carefully and circumspectly in large packinghouses as they are in the
average home kitchen," wrote J. Ogden Armour in the Saturday
Evening Post (quoted
in Skaggs, Prime Cut, p. 123).
After an angry legislative battle, Congress narrowly
passed the Meat Inspection Act of 1906, a watered-down version of
Roosevelt’s proposals that made taxpayers pay for the new regulations.
Nearly a hundred years have passed since then; and
conditions in the packinghouses are now, if possible, even worse than
before.
But, in addition, a variety of horrible new diseases
have emerged. For back in Teddy’s day, cows ate grass out on the
range and drank water from the creek. They were not, as they are
today, born and raised in ponds of manure,—and fed ungutted dead
animals in pelletized form as their only feed.
Times have changed. They are worse now.
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HEART DISEASE
Heart disease and cancer are the two biggest killers
in the Western World. We now know a lot more about their causes than
earlier.
• A large 1970 study analyzed the relationship
between the dietary intake of saturated fat and cholesterol and the
number one killer, heart disease. The study included 12,000 men in seven
countries, including the United States. It found that the two
countries with the highest rate of death from heart disease were the two
with the highest consumption of saturated fat and cholesterol:
Finland and the United States (A.
Keys, ed., "Coronary Heart Disease in Seven Countries,"
American Heart Association Monograph, No. 29, 1970, p. 211).
• In the mid 1970s a very large study was conducted
by Loma Linda University in southern California. Because the eating
habits of Seventh-day Adventists are higher than the American norm in
whole grains, fruits, and vegetables, and lower in animal products, the
diets of 24,000 were studied and compared with the diets of meat eaters (John
Robbins, Diet for a New America, p. 215).
Seventh-day Adventists who used dairy products (lacto-ovo vegetarians
who do not eat meat but use milk and eggs) ranked one-third as high in
heart disease mortality as meat eaters. Adventists who ate no
meat or dairy products (vegans) had a rate only one-tenth as high (Peter
Cox, The New Why You Don’t Need to Eat Meat, 1992, pp. 3-6).
• A 1988 published study of nearly 5,000 British
vegetarians found the death rate from heart disease of male
vegetarians to be 44% of that of the British population. For female
vegetarians, it was 41% (Cox,
p. 8).
• Here in the United States, lacto-ovo
vegetarians have cholesterol levels that are 14% lower than meat eaters.
Vegans have levels (averaging 128) that are 35% lower (Erik
Marcus, Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating, 1997, pp. 10, 14).
CANCER
In addition to cardiovascular disease, the other main
killer in the Western world is cancer.
• A massive population study, known as the China
Health Project, concluded that those who eat the smallest amount of
animal products have the lowest rates of cancer, heart disease, and
several other degenerative diseases
(Peter Cox, The New Why You Don’t Need to Eat Meat, 1992, pp.
9-10).
• That Chinese research report interested the
German Government, so they tracked 1,900 vegetarians for 11 years and
found their death rate to be about half that of the rest of the
population. The official report concluded that, in order to have a
strong nation, everyone should become vegetarians! There were less than
one-half the expected deaths from cardiovascular disease, in both men
and women, and very low rates for cancers of the digestive tract. Most
of the vegetarians studied used milk and eggs (Food
Chemical News, September 21, 1992, p. 10).
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Alison Williams was 20 years old and lived in the
coastal village of Caernarvon, in north Wales, England. Bright and
outgoing, she was a business student who loved to sail and swim in
nearby mountain lakes. Athletic, attractive, and intelligent; she had a
happy life before her.
But, when she was 22, her personality changed
suddenly. Her father recalls that she lost interest in other people,
quit school, and came back to live at home with her parents. She would
sit alone for hours, staring out the window.
By 1992, physicians diagnosed her as having a nervous
breakdown. By 1995, she had grown paranoid and incontinent. "A
month before she died, she went blind and lost the use of her
tongue," her father recalls. "She spent the last five days in
a coma." Alison Williams had contracted the human form of mad cow
disease.
On July 11, 1997, Lee Harding ordered soft chicken
tacos at a restaurant in Pueblo, Colorado. It was Friday night, and
he and his wife were out to dinner. When the tacos arrived, Harding
thought there was something wrong with them. The meat seemed to have
gone bad. An hour or so after leaving the restaurant, Harding began to
experience severe cramps. It felt like something was eating away at his
stomach. He was fit and healthy, stood six-foot-one, weighed two hundred
pounds. But he had never felt pain this intense before. He lay in bed
through the night fighting the cramps, tightly curled into a ball. Then
came the bloody diarrhea.
At the hospital, he waited three hours before the
doctor told him, "It’s probably the summer flu." He was sent
home with a prescription for an antibiotic.
Harding kept sinking, but then it was accidently
discovered he had Escherichia coli 0157:H7, a virulent and potentially
lethal food-borne pathogen.
Eventually the health authorities discovered the
problem was not the tacos, but something in his freezer at home: frozen
hamburgers he had bought at the supermarket and partly eaten Friday
afternoon. In his freezer a Pueblo health official found a red, white,
and blue box, marked "Beef Patties"; it still had a couple in
it. Analyzed in the lab, that was where the E. coli came from. The
burgers had been produced in Columbus, Nebraska—not in one of the
oldest processing plants, but in one of the newest in the nation.
Jim Koepke spent his life as a ranch hand near
Fallon, Nevada, tending cattle and sheep. He loved meat and also
hunting. As a child he ate elk and deer killed by his father. His widow,
Brenda, says that the 6-foot-1 cowboy shrank to less than 120 pounds
before he died in 1999 at the age of 39. "I could carry him,"
she said. He died of mad cow disease.
Francis Will, of Evansville, Indiana, was 68 when he
passed away. Local forensic pathologist John Heidingsfelder suspects
it was mad cow because, in the previous year, he has seen three similar
cases, one of which was confirmed by autopsy as mad cow. Yet, at the
time Will died, the government still maintained that there are no human
deaths from mad cow in America. Will loved to eat meat sandwiches; in
fact he ate them every day. Doctors diagnosed his condition as various
things, including anxiety and depression. But a daughter, Kathy Bredahal,
a nurse working at a St. Louis hospital, suspected it was mad cow
disease; for her father’s symptoms were similar to those of a man
dying of mad cow she had helped care for at her hospital. Eventually
Bredahal arranged for her father to be seen by neurologists at Barnes
Diagnostic Center. After numerous tests, they decided it must be mad
cow.

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