Booman Tribune

Red Meat May Not be Safe to Eat

by Steven D
Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 11:33:59 AM EST

You went to the supermarket, looking for some fresh hamburger. You picked a package that had meat with a nice red color to it, thinking it must be fresher than the slightly brown hamburger you see sitting next to it. Unfortunately for you, there's a good chance the meat you chose may have been rotten, but thanks to a gaseous technology approved by Bush's Agriculture Department and the FDA in 2004 it merely looked fresher. That's because, despite indications that this method of keeping meat looking redder longer (through the use of carbon monoxide) wasn't necessarily safe, your BushCo Ag Department approved it anyway at the request of two of the largest meat producers in the country:

The Agriculture Department in 2004 gave the green light to using carbon monoxide gas to keep older cuts of meat looking red and fresh, even though scientists at the two companies promoting the technology had questioned the validity of their own safety tests, congressional investigators revealed yesterday.

The tests, conducted by Cargill and Hormel Foods, both of Minnesota, were part of a joint effort to persuade federal regulators to allow use of the gas without going through a public approval process. Inexplicably, however, the tests found that microbial counts on meat that had been left under-refrigerated went down over time instead of up, as expected, even as other indicators of spoilage increased, suggesting the possibility of some kind of error. [...]

Yet Agriculture Department scientists did not question the data when they reviewed them a few weeks later, and then relied upon them to reverse the agency's earlier decision to oppose the technology . . . In July 2004, acting on USDA's recommendation, the Food and Drug Administration gave the technology final approval.

In another surprise at yesterday's hearing, the chief executives of Cargill and Hormel said for the first time that their companies are willing to put labels on their carbon monoxide-treated meats that would say, "Color is not an accurate indicator of freshness."

That concession, made before a combative Stupak and other lawmakers, was the latest victory for those who oppose use of the gas on meat and say that consumers are being deceived into thinking meat is fresher than it is. Packages of ground beef more than two years old were on display at the hearing looking red and fresh.

Imagine that. Two year old packages of ground beef looking red and fresh! Makes me glad I stopped eating hamburgers. How much of this "gassed meat" was sold to an unsuspecting public over the last 3 years? How much tainted meat was ingested by Americans unaware they might be eating old, spoiled meat? How many packages of e coli contaminated meat passed muster because they looked fresh thanks to a dose of carbon monoxide? Who knows? Not our industry friendly BushCo FDA and USDA, that's for sure.

This is what you get when you cut back on so-called unnecessary regulations (unnecessary to Republicans that is) that protect the safety of the food we eat. This is what the food industry got for all its campaign contributions to President Bush and other Republicans. Lots of red meat that looked good lying there in the meat department of your local grocery store, but which should never have been sold to the public, at least not without a warning label. Meat I wouldn't have fed to my dog.

But then what's a little consumer fraud among friends (i.e., Agribusiness lobbyists and the Bush administration). I'm sure that this practice of keeping spoiled meat looking red in order to deceive the ordinary Jane and Joe consumer was quite profitable, and in Bush's America, isn't that all that matters?

There's an old Latin saying that applies here: Caveat emptor! Let the buyer beware. Never has that adage been more appropriate than in the Age of Bush, whether we are talking food safety, drug safety, toy safety, water safety -- hell, safety for Americans, in general. Government used to be in the business of protecting the consumer from fraud and unsafe products. Now, it's in the racket of protecting the sellers so that they can deceive buyers into purchasing their unsafe wares. Just one more legacy of Republican ideology run amok.



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It's worth pointing out that agriculture is one of the largest consumers of petroleum products in the country. And no, that's not mainly fuel for tractors, trains, and trucks. The vast quantities of fertilizers and pesticides used in the growing of crops are produced from petroleum feedstock.

The production of livestock, of course, is the ultimate consumer, since it takes an awful lot of feed to produce a cow suitable for conversion into steaks and burgers and leather purses.

If I was the unprincipled scion of a dynasty of oilmen, I would probably be working very hard to keep my main customers -- big agribusiness -- very happy. If people ever got the idea that eating meat was not all that healthy, it would directly impact my oleaginous profits.

---Cthulhu for President: Why vote for the lesser evil?

by eodell (eodell at naqada dot org) on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 11:48:31 AM EST
Good point.  Big Ag is also a petrohog of the first order.

Obama is a Patriot
by Steven D on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 11:50:53 AM EST
[ Parent ]
o/t but cool anyway

http://www.zapworld.com/node/200

Brown to go Green!


No Hillary, you were outspent by the people not the Obama campaign.

by mainsailset (rideback@gmail.com) on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 11:54:17 AM EST
[ Parent ]
My (unnamed food science) Professor was finally cajoled into admitting that CO has considerable anti-oxidant powers, but they don't even want this in the textbooks and for good reason; YOU DON'T WANT YOUR EMPLOYEES HANDLING THIS STUFF.
You don't want tanks of it around.
You don't want to store it.
You don't even want it in your neighborhood.
It is a colorless, odorless, tastless gas which is a very efficient killer, and at less than lethal doses it turns people into vegetables by killing parts of their brains.

Where is OSHA when you need them ?

greatferm

by greatferm on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 12:52:59 PM EST
Cargill.   Seen that name alot lately in these recent recalls.  I think their defense is:
If you cook it long enough, it kills all the 'organisms'.
So it's the buyers fault.

I think they should be including all those salmonella and E. coli bateria as part of the list of ingredients.

Unacceptable...

What are YOU buyng when you buy meat?  DO you know where and how the meat was grown/treated/processed?  I hope so, otherwise you're gonna get sick sooner or later.

"A little regulation, every now and then, is a good thing"

~~~~~ 'The highest function of Ecology is the understanding of its consequences'

by Drewsky on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 03:01:42 PM EST
Ah yes, but remember this is capitalism at its best watchdog self. So if the red meat dog slept through this, why not expand the use, say to Fish, pork, lamb. These are the same folks who think if one minute of waterboarding works to gain one secret well then we should waterboard all day long to save the Universe.
 

No Hillary, you were outspent by the people not the Obama campaign.
by mainsailset (rideback@gmail.com) on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 11:50:57 AM EST
People will keep eating this stuff, just like they keep smoking.  But let others destroy their lives and health:  YOU should not be doing it.

For a period of nearly one hundred years, the US government took on the task of inspecting meat and regulating meat-packers so that meat was relatively safe.  Those days are gone, and they are not coming back.  

Now the meat-packers regulate the government, not the other way around.  

Beef now routinely contains artificial growth hormones, Mad Cow, and rogue e coli.  Growth hormones disorganize the endocrine systems of children, and are also implicated in extreme-early puberty.  Of the other two, the one results in premature senility, after a latency of some half a decade, the other kills you outright very quickly.  

Worth the risk?  

There are other, safer, sources of protein--use them!  

PS.  Carbon monoxide is an old trick for re-coloring rotted meat, but it used to be the exception.  It looks like that too has changed.  

by Gaianne on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 04:19:42 PM EST
Not only will your body be glad you gave up red meat (as I did nearly 40 years ago), the earth will thank you as well, since beef production is one of the largest causes of climate change and all sorts of other ecological disasters.
by wataru (wtenga@gspamail.com) on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 05:43:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]
My advice is to go to a kitchen supply store and buy an electric (or hand-operated if you prefer) grinder and make your own hamburger. Ideally, use organic beef, but if you can't afford that, at least grind your own. It's not that hard to cut up a chuck roast and feed it into a grinder. Wash the grinder afterwards, of course.

Forty years ago, butchers did this daily and sold fresh hamburger. Today, hamburger is a factory product shipped long distances and blasted with poison gas to cover up rot.

by The Voice In The Wilderness on Wed Nov 14th, 2007 at 07:32:59 PM EST


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