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November 1, 2007
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November 1, 2007
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Cheap Meat: An Accident Waiting to Happen
By Jo
Robinson
The
latest fiasco in the U.S. livestock industry is that thousands of
hogs and chickens have been raised on feed contaminated with
melamine, the same chemical that has sickened thousands of cats and
dogs. According to the U.S.D.A., some meat from those hogs and
chickens has already entered our food supply.
How did this happen? The story begins in China.
Melamine is an inexpensive by-product of the coal industry. In a
deceptive practice, some Chinese producers have been adding melamine
to rice, wheat, and soy meal to make the products appear to contain
more protein. (Melamine is not a protein and has no food value, but
it is rich in nitrogen and mimics protein on standardized laboratory
tests.) Melamine costs less than true sources of protein, so the
manufacturer makes more money.
The story continues in the United States. In
order to lower the cost of pet food production, U.S. companies have
been importing cheap protein meal from China. The pet food
manufacturers had no way of knowing that some of these products were
spiked with melamine. The exact number of dead and sickened pets is
unknown.
But how did melamine get fed to our pigs and
chickens? A common cost-cutting practice in the livestock industry
is to supplement animal feed with floor sweepings and other
leftovers from pet food manufacturing plants. In recent months,
however, some of the sweepings happened to be laced with melamine.
In this serpentine fashion, a cost-cutting adulterant that was added
to protein meal in China found its way into U.S. pet food, then U.S.
livestock feed, and then the food on our dinner tables.
The F.D.A. and the U.S.D.A. do not foresee any
health consequences from eating melamine-spiced pork and poultry.
This may prove to be true. The family pets that died ate the
melamine itself; we are eating chickens and pigs that ate the
melamine, diluting its concentration.
We may have dodged the bullet this time, but as
long as we continue to raise our livestock on a least-cost basis,
our health is at risk. For example, many cost-cutting practices
lower the nutritional value of our meat. Research shows that the
nearly universal practice of fattening cattle on straw and grain
instead of fresh pasture gives us beef that is higher in total fat
and lower in antioxidants and omega-3 fatty acids. The practice
causes no immediate harm, but our health may suffer over the long
term.
Some cost-cutting strategies are deadly. In the
1980s and 90s, feedlot managers tried to save money by feeding
cattle scraps back to cattle. The tragic result was mad cow disease.
Eating meat contaminated with trace amounts of melamine may cause
little or no harm. Eating just one serving of beef from a mad cow
can kill you.
Adding more governmental oversight is a stop-gap
solution. We need a sea change in the way we raise our livestock. We
need to raise the animals on their native diets or on quality
ingredients that match their original diets as closely as possible.
When we feed wholesome feed to our animals, we can serve wholesome
food to our families. We are what our animals eat.
Jo
Robinson is the originator and primary researcher of
www.eatwild.com, a science-based website that details the
benefits of raising animals on pasture. She is also the author of
Pasture Perfect, the Far-Reaching Benefits of Choosing Meat,
Eggs, and Dairy Products from Grass-fed Animals.
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