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It's the Cow Feed, Stupid!December 31, 2003 Statement of John Stauber, co-author, Mad Cow USA We know now that in the US the so called "firewall," the FDA's 1997 feed
regulation misnamed a "feed ban," has been woefully ineffective, a farce.
Sheldon Rampton and I exposed this in our 1997 book, Mad Cow USA: Could the
Nightmare Happen Here? We waited to see what the FDA would do before we concluded our book in the
fall of 1997. The FDA wrote feed regulations that allowed the livestock and
animal feed industry to continue their dangerous practices that are
spreading mad cow disease in North America.
The USDA knew way back in 1991, more than a decade ago, that a feed ban was
necessary to protect human and animal health, but sided with the livestock
industry. In a 1991 report I obtained under the Freedom of Information Act
USDA said, "the advantage of this option is that it minimizes the risk of
BSE. The disadvantage is that the cost to the livestock and rendering
industries would be substantial." (Mad Cow USA, p. 149-150)
The 1997 FDA feed regulation is not a feed ban, but a labeling requirement
that meat and bone meal from cattle and other ruminants be labeled 'do not
feed to ruminants.' (MCUSA, p. 215-218) Government investigators have
found that this rule has been widely ignored and poorly enforced. Without
offering proof, USDA officials now say there is 99% compliance with this
rule.
However, even if that were true, it would mean little since farmers,
ranchers and cattle producers can buy properly labeled feed and still feed
it to cattle. There is no on-farm inspection of how even properly labeled
feed is actually used, and such inspection is impossible.
As long as billions of pounds of rendered slaughterhouse waste are being fed
to livestock, labeling regulations and the sort of partial requirements that
USDA announced December 30, 2003, will not stop mad cow disease from
spreading.
The 1997 feed labeling regulation is so bad that it even allows animals
known to be infected with mad cow and similar diseases to be rendered into
animal feed, despite the fact that the World Health Organization has urged
for a decade that no infected animals be fed to animals or people.
Researchers have long shown that blood can transmit mad cow type diseases,
yet under the 1997 labeling regulations massive amounts of cattle blood are
today being fed to calves in milk replacer, calf starter and feed
supplements. Government and industry sources are telling reporters that it
is safe to feed cattle blood to calves and cattle, yet Dr. Stanley Prusiner,
the Nobel-prize wining mad cow researcher, says that feeding cattle blood to
calves is "stupid."
Why was cattle blood exempted from the 1997 FDA regulation? The politically
powerful dairy industry wanted cheap blood protein in milk formula for
weaning calves. The 1997 FDA regulations were written for industry, not to
protect human or animal health.
Also, under the 1997 FDA regulations, all parts of cattle are rendered and
fed to pigs and poultry, which are rendered and all parts are fed back
to themselves and to cattle. This feeding loop can spread and amplify mad
cow disease, and even create and spread new, never before seen, strains of
the disease.
Unless and until the US follows the lead of the EU nations by implementing a
total ban on byproduct feeding, along with testing millions of animals, the
mad cow crisis will only worsen with time.
In January, 1997, FDA projected that with no feed ban in place, the
appearance of a single mad cow in the US would mean that over the next
11 years at least 299,000 additional mad cows cases would emerge, because of
the spread of the disease via infected feed and the long invisible latency
period in cattle. These 299,000 case would occur even if an airtight,
mandatory feed ban were put in place immediately after the appearance of the
first mad cow in the US. (MCUSA, page 211-212)
Cleary, there is no effective livestock feed ban currently in place in the
US, and USDA and FDA have absolutely no plans to put one in place. The
so-called "firewall feed ban" of 1997 is a farce, an ineffective labeling
requirement and nothing more.
The powerful livestock and animal feed industries continue to call the shots
at FDA and USDA. Apparently they believe that their current crisis
management PR campaign will fool the US news media and US consumers into
thinking that the right steps have all been taken. Apparently they also
believe that US trading partners can be bullied into buying US cattle and
beef. The longer that this industry and government deception continues, the
greater the US mad cow crisis will become. Eventually as in other
countries even the US government and the powerful US livestock industry will
be forced to adopt the only steps that work: a total ban on feeding
rendered byproducts to livestock, and the testing of animals before they are
eaten.
Today, however, the spin and obfuscation continues.
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