Guest guest Posted March 31, 2004 Report Share Posted March 31, 2004 Sahara Times February2004Mad cow: a civilizational crisisBy Sandhya JainRecent incidents of bird flu and mad cow disease in leadingmeat-exporting nations are symptomatic of a much largercivilizational crisis, and must not be brushed aside ortreated as mere health or gastronomic matters that should behandled by competent meat inspectors. Discerning citizensworldwide, especially in India, deserve to know howglobalization and the profit motive have been driving the meat industryto commit unthinkable obscenities upon living animals, withresults that may prove too horrendous to imagine.Ιou are what you eat,â ¯ur sages have long warned us, andthe food consumed by us, particularly the manner of itspreparation, has long been a matter of concern to civilizedpeople. That is why citizens in our part of the world, whoare being driven inexorably by attitudes and lifestyles ofwestern civilization, have a right to know that contemporaryepidemics caused by meat and meat products are mostly theresult of willful disregard for ordinary standards ofhygiene and decency by what is now a multi-billion dollar meatindustry. Nick Fiddes, in Meat, A Natural Symbol (Routledge, London,1991) has documented that less than 10% of Britishslaughterhouses meet European hygienic standards, and thatinspectors routinely complain of inadequate sterilization andruptured intestines that smear the meat with faeces. Theinfections caused by such meant include salmonella, compylobacter,tapeworm, listeria, toxoplasmosis, and chlamydiosis.In 1988, Fiddes records, a controversy arose in Britainover the levels of salmonella contamination in eggs andchickens. Media investigations then revealed that a principalcause of the epidemic was that the meat industry had beenfeeding carcasses of dead chickens to living chickens as aprotein supplement, with the result that the infection wasperpetuated. As for BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy),popularly known as the mad cow disease, which is believed tohave Ϊumpedâ ³pecies from sheep to cattle, and now ontohumans, the same pattern was repeated in 1989-90. It was foundthat British cattle were being fed the remains of sheep toincrease productivity (i.e. they were artificiallyfattened), and some of the sheep had probably suffered fromscrapie, a γpongiformâ ¤isease epidemic.Last December, US beef exporters were badly hit as Japan,South Korea, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia,Taiwan, Russia and South Africa banned imports following thediscovery of mad cow disease, even though Federal officialsinsisted the supply was safe (Pioneer 25 December 2003). Fewnations were impressed by the American argument that themeat from sick animals was not infectious, and that theinfection was restricted to the tissues of the nervous system,which were ãµ®likelyä ´o enter the food supply of people orof animals susceptible to the disease (Hindustan times 26December 2003).Their caution is understandable, as BSE is linked to arare, progressive and fatal degenerative brain disease. Itsoutbreak in Britain in the past decade has been linked to thepractice of grinding dead sheep and cows and feeding them to other cows. BSE is linked to a protein called prion,which turns the brain into a spongy mess, and moves with easefrom one animal species to another, as also to humans. Theseprions are not destroyed by cooking and other conventionalmethods.The western meat industry has been found to be guilty ofother abhorrent practices as well. A 1985 television show in Britain showed that sausages and other industriallyprocessed meat comprised of parts of animals normally consideredinedible (not eaten in the normal household). All theseissues, though known in the west, are not adequately known anddebated in India and other countries that are beingtargeted for the sale of such meat, with tantalizing press reportsabout chicken legs at a mere Rs. 18/- a piece. The issuesat stake here are not just that the meat is very likely tobe contaminated, as the US meat industry has so far resisteda ban on the slaughter of animals that are too sick for theslaughter-house. Far more important is the basic principle of duplicitouslyfeeding herbivorous animals with the remains of deadanimals of their own or other species, in the form of food cakesand other processed food. In the process, animal speciesintended by nature to be vegetarian are forcefully mutatedinto carnivorous cannibals.We cannot yet imagine the consequences of this action,which the governments of western nations have known about fornearly two decades, and have done little to stop, even ashuman rights activists from those lands rant and rave aboutchild labour in underdeveloped nations. The quality of themeat of these herbivores-turned-carnivores is surely theleast important, though it is what will grab the publicimagination.By far the worst-case scenario is the rise of a mutantspecies as the Τumbâ ¡nimals being reared for meat in meatfarms, protected from public scrutiny by benign governments,reproduce after being made unwittingly carnivorous. Thepossibility of such a horror upon the natural world cannot bebrushed aside lightly. Meanwhile, the pharmaceutical andprocessed food industry is at special risk from thesecarnivorous animals as their tissues are widely used for a range ofpurposes, from manufacturing vaccines and surgical andprosthetic products, to foods and food supplements.Prion-related disease has an enormous potential for damage,as it is known to lie dormant for many years. It istherefore imperative that the public be made aware of theseissues, and meat-exporting nations be held accountable for theirproducts and manufacturing processes at forums like WTOwhen issues of agriculture and agri-business are debated.End of matter Finance Tax Center - File online. File on time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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