Guest guest Posted December 24, 2004 Report Share Posted December 24, 2004 USDA Mad Cow Coverup Unravels By Robert Cohen Not Milk.com 12-8-4 I now realize that there may never again be a confirmed case of Mad Cow Disease during the George Bush Administration. Oh, the diseased animals are out there, but in the name of homeland security, we are being "protected" in this Orwell-like twenty first century by rulers who think we need sheltering. We may never know the true reason that Ann Veneman resigned her post as USDA's boss the day after the latest Mad Cow incident began. Shortly before her (forced?) resignation, she remarked that her intention was to serve through a second term. Did she leave because she was ordered to fudge the Mad Cow results? I've discovered new evidence that is quite suggestive of a continuing coverup. You be the judge, as I reveal disturbing new information in this column. The problem with lying, is that many lies have to be told to cover up the original lie, so that the liar often forgets to protect the original lie. Records show that after USDA concluded that the pre-Thanksgiving cow was not a Mad Cow, they then began to test an unprecedented number of other cows. Had the test come back negative, USDA would logically have gone back to previous test levels. Instead, significantly more animals were tested. During that ten week period prior to the discovery of America's latest case of Mad Cow Disease, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) examined the brains of 60,655 slaughtered creatures. That's an average of 6,066 per week. During that one week period of discovery (11/15-11/21), USDA tested 7,900 cows, an increase of 1,835 over the previous ten week average. Such a dramatic increase makes sense, of course, but what followed after USDA's "safe" conclusion contradicts USDA's lie. Once USDA fudged the results, I anxiously awaited the following week's data. Was USDA telling the truth? If so, it would have been logical to return to the previous test level of 6,066 tested animals per week. If USDA officials were more concerned than they let on, the test numbers would be close or would exceed the key week's 7,900 level. Here are the results. During the Thanksgiving week of November 22-November 28, how many cows were tested for Mad Cow Disease? Most of America enjoyed two weekdays days off of work, plus a weekend. A shortened four day work week had to have resulted in fewer animals being tested, particularly after USDA's big lie. So, from 11/22-11/28, just 5,878 animals were tested. If USDA had been telling the truth, the following week's testing would have reverted to the running 6,000 average or lower. If USDA had fudged the test data, the following week's data would have jumped through the roof. So I waited. And watched. Here's the surprise. Last week, from 11/29 through 12/3, USDA tested 9,110 animals. See their test history: http://www.aphis.usda.gov/lpa/issues/bse_testing/test_results.html Tiny URL: http://tinyurl.com/5f2qu The numbers do not lie. They expose USDA's lie. Over 9,000 cows were tested last week by concerned USDA regulators. An increase of fifty-five percent! Had there been no mad cow, the numbers would have been much lower, not 55% higher. More cows were tested because the cow was positive for Mad Cow. USDA lied to America to protect cattlemen. Only USDA's Department of Enlightenment (Propaganda) lies. Mad Cow is here, and in order to do damage control, insiders are in a panic, testing more animals to prevent the coming plague. Why test more animals? Because USDA confirmed that the original animal tested positive. Had it not, USDA most certainly would have returned to routine testing. They are now in an accelerated testing mode for good reason. It's here... Mad Cow Testing Timeline During that ten week period prior to November 18th, 2004, USDA tested 60,660 cows for Mad Cow Disease, or an average of 6,066 per week, or an average of 867 cows per day. More- http://rense.com/general60/USDAmadcowcoverup.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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