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ORGANIC BYTES #60 6/28/2005

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Tue, 28 Jun 2005 17:36:12 -0700

" Organic Consumers Association " <listadmin

This Weeks Biggest Environment and Organic News Tidbits

 

 

 

Organic Consumers Association

 

Food, Consumer and Environment News Tidbits with an Edge!

 

ORGANIC BYTES #60

6/28/2005

 

USDA ATTEMPT TO BURY MAD COW FAILS

Another case of Mad Cow disease (BSE) in the United States has been

confirmed. The cow, apparently from Texas, was originally slaughtered

and pronounced free of BSE by the USDA in November 2004, under rather

suspicious circumstances. Facing mounting criticism by public interest

groups, including the OCA, Consumers Union, and the Center for Media

and Democracy, the USDA finally allowed a UK lab to retest the brain,

revealing that the animal did, indeed, have the fatal brain wasting

disease. Despite warnings by scientists and bans on U.S. beef exports,

the USDA still refuses to test more than a tiny fraction of U.S.

cattle, and continues to allow the routine feeding of blood, manure,

and slaughterhouse waste to farm animals. Consumers, responding to the

fact that these risky practices are prohibited on organic farms, are

turning in droves to organic and grass-fed beef. In 2004 organic beef

sales increased by over 120% in the U.S.

http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/coverup062705.cfm

 

 

 

TOBACCO INDUSTRY LET OFF HOOK

The tobacco industry was given a major break last week by the U.S.

Justice Department. During the closing statements of a six-year-old

lawsuit that was on the verge of fining the tobacco industry $130

billion, Justice Department lawyer Stephen D. Brody unexpectedly

announced the U.S. Government wanted to reduce the fines by 90%.

Sources close to the case, including government officials, say trial

lawyers reduced their demands due to pressure from the Bush

Administration's Attorney General's office, which has recently held

several closed door meetings with the tobacco industry.

http://www.organicconsumers.org/Politics/tobacco060905.cfm

 

 

 

HELP WANTED: HUMAN LAB ANIMALS

The EPA is now allowing chemical companies to conduct toxic chemical

studies on low-income Americans. An analysis of 24 such studies found

that 22 involved ethically questionable practices. A new related

congressional report states that " nearly one-third of the studies

reviewed were specifically designed to cause harm to the human test

subjects or to put them at risk of harm. " The report said scientists

conducting the experiments " failed to obtain informed consent (and)

dismissed adverse outcomes, " adding that the tests " lacked scientific

validity. " One study involved paying college students $15 an hour to

sit in enclosed chambers while having insecticide vapors sprayed at

them. The Bush Administration recently announced the EPA's new policy,

which allows these types of human studies for the first time in

decades. Chemical companies have welcomed this announcement with the

goal of generating studies that would allow their products to be

considered " safer " than originally thought. Congress is currently

discussing whether or not this process should be alowed to continue.

Take Action: http://www.organicconsumers.org/epa5.htm

 

 

 

ORGANIC FARMING IS THE SOLUTION TO AFRICA'S FAMINE

Despite intense pressure from the biotech industry, African nations

are increasingly turning to organic farming practices rather than

genetically engineered crops. Tewolde Berhan, head of the

Environmental Protection Authority of Ethiopia, believes that organic

farming is the solution to Africa's famine. " Organic farming disturbs

nature as little as possible and reduces risks. Intensive farming has

led to the exacerbation of pests and diseases, " says Berhan. While the

biotech industry pushes expensive synthetic fertilizers on

impoverished Third World farmers with claims of high yields, those

farmers implementing simple organic soil amending techniques are

witnessing higher yields without the chemicals or the cost. According

to Berhan, " When well managed, and as fertility builds over years,

organic agriculture isn't inferior in yield. Now, farmers don't want

chemical fertilisers. They say, 'Why should we pay for something we

can get for free?' "

http://www.organicconsumers.org/ge/famine062705.cfm

 

 

 

WHILE MILLIONS STARVE, U.S. WASTES BILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN FOOD

New statistics show that $100 billion of food in the U.S. is wasted

annually. As a result, the USDA is being asked to consider a proposal

from the University of Arizona to create a " Food Loss Center " that

would analyze methods of reducing food waste in the shipping, retail

and home sectors. At present, the USDA is claiming it does not have

the budget to create such a program. According to Dr. Timothy Jones,

an anthropologist at the University of Arizona's Bureau for Applied

Research in Anthropology, " Huge amounts of food are being wasted

throughout the industry. A proportion of this waste is inevitable, but

a large part of it can be eliminated and lead to increased profit, not

only through cutting losses but also through increasing efficiency. "

http://www.organicconsumers.org/OFGU/waste062105.cfm

 

 

 

QUICK NEWS TIDBITS

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) investigators have

obtained video footage of inhumane treatment of chickens in a Tyson

Foods plant in Alabama, which supplies KFC. The footage shows

chickens' heads being routinely ripped off by hand, and large numbers

of birds being scalded alive. Tyson has responded by accusing the

undercover PETA investigator of violating the company's privacy

policies.http://www.organicconsumers.org/OFGU/tyson060605.cfm

 

New studies in Richland, Washington have revealed that the local

Hanford Nuclear site has contaminated the area far more than

previously thought. For the first time, plutonium has been found in

clams and fish in the Columbia River. In addition, radiation levels of

area mulberries are so high, eating less than a teaspoon full of the

berries would cause a person to exceed EPA maximum allowable risk

levels for an entire year.

http://www.organicconsumers.org/Politics/nuclear061605.cfm

 

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has announced that farmed salmon

contains roughly 6-7 times as many PCBs as wild salmon. A total of 29

tests were conducted on salmon in the British Columbia area, and the

results support previous studies revealing higher levels of toxins in

farmed salmon, due to the compact manner in which they are raised.

http://www.organicconsumers.org/foodsafety/pcbs060805.cfm

 

 

 

__

 

SNEAK ATTACK: CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE MAY PASS " MONSANTO LAW "

Just as we are going to press, OCA has been informed that California

state legislators may try to pass a law shortly that would take away

counties' rights to ban genetically engineered crops. So far three of

California's 59 counties have passed GE crop bans, with Sonoma County

slated to vote on a ban in November. Across the U.S. 11 states have

already passed these " Monsanto Laws. " Stay tuned to OCA's website and

the next issue of Organic Bytes, for further information. The apparent

ringleader of this nefarious scheme to suppress Biodemocracy and

spread Frankencrops across California is State Assemblyman Simon

Salinas of District 29 (representing Santa Clara, Monterey, San Benito

and Santa Cruz Counties). You may want to call or fax Salinas' office

and tell him to back off. Simon Salinas' office can be reached at

Phone: (916) 319-2028 or Fax: (916) 319-2128.

 

__

 

 

 

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*****************************

 

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NOTE TO CO-OP AND NATURAL FOOD STORE SUBSCRIBERS:

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You are also welcome to use this material for your newsletters. Within

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download at http://www.organicconsumers.org/organicbytes.htm

_________________________________

 

ORGANIC BYTES is a publication of:

ORGANIC CONSUMERS ASSOCIATION

6771 South Silver Hill Drive

Finland, MN 55603

Phone: (218)-353-7454 Fax: (218) 353-7652

 

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