Guest guest Posted December 30, 2003 Report Share Posted December 30, 2003 If you read Howard Lyman's book " Mad Cowboy: Plain truth from the cattle racher who won't eat meat " he even cites an instance when a teenage lacto-ovo vegetarian died of the CJ (human mad cow) disease. Howard suggested that this might have come from milk of an infected cow, especially considering there's pus in milk. However, I am skeptical about drawing such a conclusion from one case. My guess is that either this vegetarian ate contaminated beef before going veggie (which is quite plausible considering that CJ can lie dormant in someone for up to 30 years!) or that this person was one of those " vegetarians " who doesn't mind eating soup with beef broth. Hell, maybe this poor kid unknowingly ate Mc Donald's beef laden fries. I don't know, but it makes me glad I am vegan and a bit worried I didn't go veggie sooner. When Howard Lyman investigated the " public " health records for any possible cases of CJ disease around a decade ago he found one case in which a person was suspected of dying of CJ disease (it's difficult for doctors to say for sure even after autopsy because the disease is somewhat similar to Alzheimer's). But in order to take the record out of the " public " file to make copies one must first submit all the records of interest to someone for approval. So Howard put the suspected CJ case file in a big stack of other medical files and turned it in for approval. When he got the stack of records the CJ one was missing. At this point I'd advise anyone who values their life to stay away from all beef. But of course no one will listen. And they'll throw away the carcasses of cows suspected of infection, cover up any cases of CJ, and tell people it's safe. , " Ian W Rudge " <ianr@i...> wrote: > > i keep reading that the meat from the cow with mad cow > > is ok to eat, that only the brain, spinal cord, and > > intestines carry the disease > > At the height of the UK's BSE scare, it was reckoned that any meat > " next to the bone " could potentially be infected, and so cuts > containing bone were banned. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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