Opinion

Mad Cow USA: The Nightmare Begins

Whether or not Canada is the source, both countries have failed to prevent a clearly predicted crisis.

By John Stauber, 30 Dec 2004, TheTyee.ca

When Sheldon Rampton and I wrote our 1997 book, "Mad Cow USA: Could the Nightmare Happen Here?", it received favorable reviews from some interesting publications such as the Journal of the American Medical Association, New Scientist, and Chemical & Engineering News. Yet although the book was released just before the infamous Texas trial of Oprah Winfrey and her guest Howard Lyman, for the alleged crime of "food disparagement," the book was ignored by the mainstream media, and even most left and alternative publications failed to review it.

Apparently many people who never read it at the time bought the official government and industry spin that mad cow disease was just some hysterical European food scare, not a deadly human and animal disease that could emerge in America. In March, 1996, when the British government reversed itself after ten years of denial and announced that young people were dying from the fatal dementia called variant CJD - mad cow disease in humans - the United States media dutifully echoed reassurances from government and livestock industry officials that all necessary precautions had been take long ago to guard against the disease.

What U.S. officials knew a decade ago

Those who did read "Mad Cow USA" when it was published in November, 1997, however, realized that the United States assurances of safety were based on public relations and public deception, not science or adequate regulatory safeguards. We revealed that the United States Department of Agriculture knew more than a decade ago that to prevent mad cow disease in America would require a strict ban on "animal cannibalism," the feeding of rendered slaughterhouse waste from cattle to cattle as protein and fat supplements, but refused to support the ban because it would cost the meat industry money.

It was the livestock feed industry that led the effort in the early 1990s to lobby into law the Texas food disparagement act, and when an uppity Oprah hosted an April 1996, program featuring rancher-turned vegan activist Howard Lyman, she and her guest became the first people sued for the crime of sullying the good name of beef. Oprah eventually won her lawsuit, but it cost her years of legal battling and millions of dollars. In reality, the public lost, because mainstream media stopped covering the issue of mad cow disease. As one TV network producer told me at the time, his orders were to keep his network from being sued the way Oprah had been.

In the six years since the publication of "Mad Cow USA," Sheldon Rampton and I have spoken out in media interviews, at conferences of United States families who had lost relatives to CJD, and we saw our book published in both South Korea and Japan. Our activism won us some interesting enemies, such as Richard Berman, a Republican lobbyist who runs an industry-funded front group that calls itself The Center for Consumer Freedom. Berman is a darling of the tobacco, booze, biotech and food industries, and with their funding he issued an online report depicting us as the ring leaders of a dangerous conspiracy of vegetarian food terrorists out to destroy the United States food system. Last week alone he issued two national news releases attempting to smear us.

Blood-fed calves cross NAFTA borders

Of course, he had an easier time attacking us before the emergence of mad cow disease in America. I was saddened but not surprised when mad cow disease was finally discovered in the United States. When the first North American cow with the disease was found last May in Canada, I told interviewers that if the disease was in Canada, it would also be found in the United States and Mexico, since all three NAFTA nations are one big free trade zone and all three countries feed their cattle slaughterhouse waste in the form of blood, fat and rendered meat and bone meal. In fact, in North America calves are literally weaned on milk formula containing "raw spray dried cattle blood plasma," even though scientists have known for many years that blood can transmit mad cow type diseases.

(This is why if you try to donate your blood to the Red Cross, you will be rejected if you spent significant time in Britain during the height of its mad cow epidemic. Britain is afraid that humans with mad cow disease may have contaminated the British blood supply, and they do not use its own blood plasma since as yet no test can adequately screen blood for mad cow disease.)

The United States has spent millions of dollars on PR convincing Americans that mad cow could never happen here, and now the USDA is engaged in a crisis management plan that has federal and state officials, livestock industry flacks, scientists and other trusted experts assuring the public that this is no big deal. Their litany of falsehoods include statements that a "firewall" feed ban has been in place in the United States since 1997, that muscle meat is not infective, that no slaughterhouse waste is fed to cows, that the United States tests adequate numbers of cattle for mad cow disease, that quarantines and meat recalls are just an added measure of safety, that the risks of this mysterious killer are miniscule, that no one in the United States has ever died of any such disease, and on and on.

Latest spin: Blame Canada

The latest spin is to blame the United States mad cow crisis on Canada. On Saturday, December 27, with no conclusive proof whatsoever, the United States Department of Agriculture announced that the mad cow in Washington state had actually entered the United States years ago from Canada. This set off an understandable howl from the Canadian government, and by Sunday the United States was forced to back off somewhat, but clearly the PR ploy is to get Americans thinking that this is Canada's problem, not ours.

Even if Canada does turn out to be the source of America's first case of mad cow disease, numerous questions remain: How many other infected cows have crossed our porous borders and been processed into human and animal food? Why are United States slaughterhouse regulations so lax that a visibly sick cow was sent into the human food chain weeks before tests came back with the mad cow findings? Where did the infected byproduct feed that this animal ate come from, and how many thousands of other animals have eaten similar feed?

Since the announcement of United States mad cow disease our phones have rung off the hook with interview requests. The New York Times noted that "The 1997 book 'Mad Cow USA', by Sheldon Rampton and John C. Stauber, made the case that the disease could enter the United States from Europe in contaminated feed." Articles in the New York Times also cited other warnings from Consumer Union's Michael Hansen, and Dr. Stanley Prusiner, the Nobel Prize-winning researcher who this week called the current United States practice of weaning calves on cattle blood protein "stupid." All of this would be very vindicating, except for one problem: the millions of dollars that the government and industry are spending on PR to pull the wool over the public's eyes might just succeed in forestalling the necessary steps that now, at this late date, must still be taken to adequately deal with this crisis.

Simple steps needed now

The good news is that those steps are rather simple and understandable. We should ship Ann Veneman and her smartest advisors to Britain where they can copy the successful feed and testing regulations that have solved the mad cow problem in Europe. Veneman and her advisors should institute a complete and total ban on feeding any slaughterhouse waste to livestock. You may think this is already the case because that's what industry and government said they did back in the summer of 1997. But beside the cattle blood being legally fed back to cattle, billions of pounds of rendered fat, blood meal, meat and bone meal from pigs and poultry are rendered and fed to cattle, and cattle are rendered and fed to other food species, a perfect environment for spreading and amplifying mad cow disease and even for creating new strains of the disease.

The feed rules that the United States must adopt can be summarized this way: you might not be a vegetarian, but the animals you eat must be. The United States must also institute an immediate testing regime that will test millions of cattle, not the 20,000 tested out of 35 million slaughtered in the past year in the United States. Japan now tests all cattle before consumption, and disease experts like Dr. Prusiner recommend this goal for the United States. And of course, no sick "downer" cows, barely able to move, should be fed to any humans. These are the type of animals most likely to be infected with mad cow and other ailments - although mad cows can also seem completely healthy at the time of slaughter, which is why testing all animals must be the goal.

Bush administration slow to act

Ann Veneman and the Bush administration, unfortunately, currently have no plans to do the right thing. The United States meat industry still believes that the millions of dollars in campaign contributions doled out over the years will continue to forestall the necessary regulations, and that soothing PR assurances will convince the consuming public that this is just some vegetarian fear-mongering conspiracy concocted by the media to sell organic food. Will the American public buy this bull? It has in the past. Much depends on journalists and what they are willing to swallow. It looks to me as if papers such as the Wall Street Journal and New York Times are finally putting some good investigative reporting teams onto this issue, and that may undercut and expose PR ruses such as the "blame Canada campaign."

What I can predict is that the international boycott of United States beef, rendered byproducts, animals and animal products will continue, and this will apply a major economic hurt to meat producers big and small across the country. Will their anger turn against the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, the Animal Feed Industry Association and other lobbies that have prevented the United States from doing the right thing in the past? Or will this become some sort of nationalistic food culture issue, with confused consumers and family farmers blaming everyone but the real culprits in industry and government?

We must continue to advocate for the United States to do the right thing: Follow the lead of the European Union nations, ban all "animal cannibalism," and test more or all animals. In the meantime, if you want safe American beef, search out products that are certified organic and guaranteed not to be fed slaughterhouse waste such as calf formula made from cattle blood. An excellent source of information on the web is the site of the Organic Consumers Association.

Our book, "Mad Cow USA," is temporarily unavailable until a paperback copy is released later in 2004. However, you can get the book in its entirety for free through the website of our Center for Media & Democracy. Simply go to http://www.prwatch.org/ and click on the cover of "Mad Cow USA." You'll be taken to www.prwatch.org/books/mcusa.pdf where you can download for free the entire book - and read the warnings that went unheeded then, and are still being ignored by government regulators and industry.  [Tyee]

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  • anne cameron (not verified)

    8 years ago

    For a number of years I operated a farm, proof, I'm sure, that there is a wide streak of masochism in most writers. The experience wrote good-bye to my back and gave me an admittedly sour view of most of the methods of food production. Please remember, this is the food we feed our children. This food is available in all supermarkets. This food should be the subject of nightmares. For at least ten years all potatoes sold in Canada have been zapped with radiation, and we were not told. Anything done to our food should be public knowledge. Even food marked "organic" and sold at highly increased cost actually isn't; anything coming from the US is held at the border and sprayed with a mist of pesticides, fungicides, and god in heaven alone knows what all else. How "organic" can anything be if it is grown beside a highway where car exhaust pours over the crop. Even jet planes passing overhead can dump enough exhaust fumes to make questionable any claim of "organic" for food grown beneath the flight paths. In the U.S. the agribusiness interests went to court and argued that anything which is grown is, in fact, organic and therefore they were entitled to use the word. They won. Unless you actually KNOW the grower the chances are the food for which you are paying premium prices is no different than all that other stuff in the store. There isn't a major aquafer in north america which hasn't been contaminated with chemical fertilzers, pesticides, etc. so if the crop you are buying has been irrigated you are buying the contaminants in the water. Hey, I haven't even got to meat, yet. Most grains are heavily fumigated , some are irradiated and increasing amounts are "franken food" grown from DNA modified seed. Strange things go into the making of franken food. I'm not too upset by the idea arctic char DNA has been incorporated into tomato seed to make the fruit resistant to chilly weather but by all the elder gods it does bring me to a nausteated halt when I learn some of our food has human DNA in it to encourage it to grow bigger, faster. I'm not yet ready to chow down on something containing human DNA. Want a slice of Uncle Elmer with your salad?? And meat. Well. Commercially raised calves are often given an ear tag which leaches growth hormones and steroids into the animal so it will grow bigger, rounder, cheaper, faster. Then there are the estrogen shots which give even steer calves a rounder, fuller shape. The grower feeds contain everything from road kill to steroids. Stuff from the floor of battery chicken farms is incorporated into beef feed, stuff from dead beef goes into chicken feed, beef wind up eating other beef and hens peck away happily at other hens. When raising chickens for egg production the newly hatched are examined individually and all the rooster chicks are tossed down a chute. They are then macerated and the resultant slurry is sold, it might wind up in animal feed, it might wind up in fertilizer, either way it will sooner or later wind up in your gut. "Downer" animals, those unable to walk to the slaughterhouse because of illness, are winch hoisted and added to the food chain. The old joke about weiners being "all eyeballs and arstles" isn't the least bit funny when you've had the chance to find out what most weiners really contain. Don't forget the lips, gums, ears, and scrotums, they're probably in there, too. People who still eat veal make me feel like puking. The newborn calf is put in a container three feet square. It is fed on "milk", most of which is actually milk replacer which is, in large part, just about anything else except milk itself. They cannot move so do not develop muscle tissue. When they're big enough to be profitable they are slaughtered and no wonder the meat is tender, the poor little jiggers never got to take any joyous leaps. But really nice people talk about going to restaurants and having the most delicious weiner schnitzel. Next time you chow down think of that calf, up to it's knees in its own shit, suffering from aching joints, its legs swollen by inactivity, its eyes dull and hopeless, and bon apetit to you, you asshole. Fish farms. Now there's a whole other can of crap. Everything that goes into other animal feed goes into fish pellets plus a mix of herring, anchovies, and assorted non-commercial "trash" fish...the industry boasts it takes a kilo of herring meal to make a kilo of salmon. Well, yeah, as long as you ignore the fact Rover is in there, too, as well as overaged kitty and some Bossy and a bit of ...oh, yeah, they had a problem with the pellets dropping so quickly the Atlantic salmon in the pens couldn't eat it fast enough and they were losing it through the bottom net. Solution? chicken feathers chopped up and added to the other stuff so the pellets would sink more slowly. In sheep "mad cow disease" is called scrapey because the sheep wind up scraping themselves along on their sides, unable to walk. Scrapey sheep apparantly still taste just fine. Those which don't pass inspection are sent to the rendering plant to be added to the crud which comprises "beefmaker" types of feed. The surprise isn't that humans have shown evidence of Kreuzveld-Jacov disease because of "mad cow", the surprise is that we aren't all coming down with a host of other horrile diseases. When road kill is taken to the rendering plant and put in animal feed to be fed to critters who will wind up on your table your KIDS wind up eating road kill. Please do not believe one single word I have written. Check it out for yourselves. Find out what you're putting in your kids bellies. Otherwise, why bother having kids?

  • Anonymous

    8 years ago

    Wow! and Ugh! Is there some way we can print Anne Cameron's comment as well as the article? Thanks

  • Krystle --joyk@telus.net (not verified)

    8 years ago

    I think all this mad cow disease stuff is a message from God,that It"s time to stop eating animals and treat them with respect and love them as our friends. I also believe we haven"t seen the end of this,there"s going to be alot more people dying of this disease,I believe people will be afraid to eat meat soon. who wants to eat meat that been fed the rotten insides of other animals. yuk, grosses me out. Krystle

  • Kelly B (not verified)

    8 years ago

    Yes, totally 100% disgusting! But, these practices will continue because it is the cheapest way to feed the population. Everything is governed by $$$. Only less expensive practices will over come these...any suggestions? Without options, this will continue.

  • Hans (not verified)

    8 years ago

    I don't see anything wrong with eating meat. It's nutritious and just as safe as ever. The BSE crisis is a media created nightmare. More than 100,000 cows have been diagnosed with BSE in Britain and only about 150 humans have been diagnosed with vKJD. Is vKJD caused by BSE meat? Maybe, many scientists do not think so. In any case the risk seems very small when you consider the numbers above! In contrast, many people die of influenza each year. Perhaps we should do more about that than worry about something that has very little risk of occuring.

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