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Five Dangerous Substances Big Ag Pumps Into Your Meat

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Christopher O'Brien

Back in the Saddle Aginn
Staff member
[I hate to harp on this, but it's for your own good and the health of your loved ones. Why try and eat local, free-range meat? Here's just five reasons out of many... —chris]

By Martha Rosenburg/ecowatch.com

Article HERE:
It is no secret that in the war against meat pathogens in commercial U.S. meat production, the pathogens are winning. The logical result of the tons of antibiotics Big Meat gives livestock (not because they are sick, but to fatten them up) is clear: antibiotics that no longer work against antibiotic-resistant diseases like staph (MRSA), enterococci (VRE) and C.difficile. Antibiotic-resistant infections, once limited to hospitals and nursing homes, can now be acquired in the community, Florida public beaches and on the highway behind a poultry truck.

The EU has not accepted U.S. poultry since 1997. Big Meat has found some novel ways to retard the growth of salmonella, E.coli and listeria on commercially grown meat, but it does not necessarily want people to know about them and these substances are conspicuously absent from labels.

1. Chlorine Baths
If you want to know the most problematic ingredients in our food supply, just look at the items the European Union boycotts, starting with genetically modified organisms (GMOs), hormone beef and chicken dipped in chlorine baths. U.S. Big Food lobbyists are pushing hard to circumvent the European bans, says MintPress News, especially “bleached chicken.” They claim the “many unwarranted non-tariff trade barriers … severely limit or prohibit the export of certain U.S. agricultural products to the EU.”
That’s the idea. In fact, the EU has not accepted U.S. poultry since 1997.
Why do U.S. poultry processors use chlorine? It “kills bacteria, controls slime and algae, increases product shelf life [and] eliminates costly hand-cleaning labor and materials” in addition to disinfecting “wash down” and “chilling” water. “Pinners” in the slaughter facility who remove the birds’ feathers by hand wash their hands with chlorinated water to “reduce odors and bacterial count” after which the birds are sprayed to “wash all foreign material from the carcass.” Meat is similarly disinfected with chlorine, says one industrial paper, especially because conveyer belts are “ideal breeding grounds for bacteria.”

In a 2014 directive, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) admits the many uses of chlorine in poultry and meat production, none of which are required to be on the label under the “accepted conditions of use” (which limit the parts per million of chlorine allowed). And it gets worse. The FSIS directive also reveals that chlorine gas is used on beef “primals,” giblets and “salvage parts” and for “reprocessing contaminated poultry carcasses.” Bon appétit.

2. Ammonia
It has only been two years since the nation’s stomach churned when it saw photos of “pink slime” oozing out of processing tubes and bound for U.S. dinner tables and the National School Lunch Program. Looking like human intestines, “lean, finely textured beef” (LFTB) was made from unwanted beef “trim” and treated with puffs of ammonia gas to retard the growth of E. coli. While the company making most of the nation’s LFTB, Beef Products Inc. (BPI) shuttered three plants and laid off hundreds of employees two years ago, it is since fighting back and has brought a lawsuit against ABC news.

The suit alleges “that ABC launched a disinformation campaign that had an adverse effect on BPI’s reputation, and used the term ‘pink slime’ to describe the company’s LFTB even after it had been provided factual information about the product,” reports Beef magazine. And, indeed, a quick look at FSIS’s 2014 directive, whose purpose is to provide an “up-to-date list of substances that may be used in the production of meat, poultry and egg products,” shows that “lean, finely textured beef” is alive and well. “Lean finely textured beef,” says the FSIS, is treated with anhydrous ammonia, “chilled to 28 degrees Fahrenheit and mechanically ‘stressed.’” Ground beef is also treated with anhydrous ammonia “followed with carbon dioxide treatment.” Neither treatment appears on the meat label.
In November, Ag giant Cargill announced it is bringing back pink slime, with two changes—instead of ammonia, E.coli will be killed with citric acid and the meat will be identified as “Finely Textured Beef” on its label.

3. Carbon Monoxide
Eight years ago there was an uproar about Big Meat using gases like carbon monoxide to color meat an unnatural red even as it was aging on the shelf. The brown color meat assumes after a few hours is as harmless as a sliced apple turning brown, says the American Meat Institute. But like mercury in tuna or ractopamine in beef, pork and turkey, Big Food didn’t blink or make any changes because it knew the contretemps would blow over—and it did. Thank you for your short memory, John Q. Public. “Modified atmosphere packaging” of meat, using assorted gases, is still a mainstay of meat production and “safe and suitable” in meat production, according to the FSIS report.

According to the FSIS directive, carbon monoxide is used as a “part of Cargill’s modified atmosphere packaging system introduced directly into the bulk or master container used for bulk transportation of fresh meat products. Meat products are subsequently repackaged in packages not containing a carbon monoxide modified atmosphere prior to retail sale.” Carbon monoxide is also used to “maintain wholesomeness” in packaging Cargill’s “fresh cuts of case-ready muscle meat and ground meat,” says the FSIS directive.

Why is Cargill’s name actually written into government directives? Maybe because it’s one of the world’s biggest Ag players according to Rain Forest Action. With annual revenues bigger than the GDP of 70 percent of the world’s countries, Cargill is the world’s largest privately held corporation, says Rain Forest Action. It operates in more than 66 countries and is one of a “very small handful of agribusiness giants that collectively are shaping the increasingly globalized food system to their advantage.”

4. Other “Safe and Suitable” Ingredients You Don’t Know You’re Eating
Unless you’re a chemist, you may not recognize some of the other ingredients in the 2014 FSIS directive, but that doesn’t mean you want to ingest them. Take “cetylpyridinium with propylene glycol for bacterial control.” While cetylpyridinium is a germ-killing compound found in mouthwashes, toothpastes and nasal sprays, in meat production it is combined with propylene glycol to “treat the surface of raw poultry carcasses or parts (skin-on or skinless).” Yum.

How about, “aqueous solution of sodium octanoate, potassium octanoate or octanoic acid and either glycerin and/or propylene glycol and/or a Polysorbate surface active agent,” also to kill germs?
And, does anyone want to eat “hen, cock, mature turkey, mature duck, mature goose and mature guinea” into whose raw meat and tissue has been injected protease produced from the mold Aspergillus for tenderness?
Another unrecognizable chemical is sodium tripolyphosphate, used as an “anti-coagulant for use in recovered livestock blood which is subsequently used in food products,” says FSIS. According to Food & Water Watch, seafood like scallops, shrimp, hake, sole or imitation crab meat may be soaked in sodium tripolyphosphate to make it appear firmer, smoother and glossier. Sodium tripolyphosphate, “a suspected neurotoxin, as well as a registered pesticide and known air contaminant in the state of California,” says Food & Water Watch, also can make seafood weigh more. To avoid sodium tripolyphosphate, buy fish labeled as “dry,” says Food & Water Watch, and avoid seafood marked as “wet.” We have not found advice on how to avoid the chemical in meat.

5. Bacteriophages
An under-reported way in which Big Food is seeking to kill meat pathogens, especially antibiotic-resistant pathogens, is with bacteriophages. Phages are viruses that infect and kill bacteria, essentially turning the bacteria cell into a phage production factory until the bacteria cell bursts, releasing hundreds of copies of new phages, which go on to infect and kill more bacteria. Phages, discovered in 1919, were used to treat bacterial infections but fell out of favor when antibiotics became widely available in the 1940s. Antibiotics had the advantage of attacking more than one bacterium at the same time and were not usually recognized by a patient’s immune system, so they could be used over and over in the same person to fight bacterial infection without producing any immune response.

In 2008, OmniLytics, Inc. announced FSIS approval (issuance of a no-objection letter) for a bacteriophage treatment for poultry it developed in conjunction with Elanco, the animal division of Eli Lilly, to reduce salmonella. Other, similar products soon surfaced for meat production. At least nine bacteriophage uses are listed in the FSIS 2014 directive, mostly sprayed on the hides or feathers of live animals to reduce bacterial count before slaughter. REST OF ARTICLE HERE:
 
Nice Chris that was a good post.

Guess I am lucky here in little old New Zealand because even our main market meat is still grass feed in fields like the good old days... but...

Even then I still eat certified organic to avoid any extra steroids and antibiotics that may have been used, however over here there are stiff restrictions on the use.
I am not sure in the Carbon monoxide technique is used over here but it would not surprise me with the supermarket chains. I get my meat from my local butcher who gets much of his product farm and slaughter house direct.

We do not have factory farms and when a company tried to start one here they got shot down in flames by the public... we don't want it here because our Dairy company's are bad enough on the local water ways etc due to effluent run off from the milk sheds and fields let alone the damage a factory beef farm would create. There are now restrictions on farmers to keep waterways fenced off from stock and to keep native wetland plants and wild life intact.

So not to sound like I am pushing NZ meat but if you see our Beef or Lamb in your supermarket I can assure you it is not pumped full of crap and is fairly safe to eat, also the product has been produced with as little impact to the local environment as is possible but in my opinion there is still much to do to keep the dairy and meat company's in check.

I guess in the end it comes down to the public not wanting to pay big money for that steak.

My personal choice is to pay that bit extra for organic meat so I know that what I am getting is as safe to eat as it can be.
 
Great post, Chris. As an aside, meat is one of the easiest vices to give up cold turkey. Furthermore, we weren't designed to ingest this stuff 24/7... every now and then, while the women were gathering and planting and keeping the community going, the lazy-arsed bastards like myself would get up, stop drinking for a few hours, and actually kill something and feed the community for a couple days.
 
:eek: This was a REALLY popular post, can't you tell? Ignorance is a blissful bag of BigMacs w/ a side of what they claim are French fries. Maybe is you chew fast the post will go away?
 
:eek: This was a REALLY popular post, can't you tell? Ignorance is a blissful bag of BigMacs w/ a side of what they claim are French fries. Maybe is you chew fast the post will go away?

Nice post.
The truth is Chris that people just don't want to have their beliefs tested and changed and fast food loyalty can almost be like that of religion in that respect.
My wife has hashimoto's thyroiditis so I have to read every ingredient of the food items we buy very carefully so as you can imagine fast foods are well off the menu but I feel much healthier for it.
This is not off topic but the thing that frightens us is the lobby to make food labeling non mandatory because how the hell are we then going to know if that item has gluten or soy in it let alone the carcinogenic crap the big food companies seem hell bent on feeding us.

Anyway keep posting info on how our food is being poisoned because I am listening and so is boomerang, but maybe others will join in at some point because this is a subject that is alarming and vital people wake up and get their shit sorted out on.

We need to stop giving these big poison food pushers money and power.

 
We need to stop giving these big poison food pushers money and power.

That's too difficult. To accomplish that, a person would need to establish an actual trust relationship between themselves and the person who grows their food, like in the olden days.

My wife and I spend at least one Saturday per month going out to the country to speak with the farmers who grow our food. It's a huge pain in the azz, and really cuts into our time in front of the television.

Besides being more convenient, factory food is also much cheaper because of the taxpayer provided subsidies Big Agra corporations like Monsanto and Archer Daniels Midland receive from the U.S. Congress.
 
That's too difficult. To accomplish that, a person would need to establish an actual trust relationship between themselves and the person who grows their food, like in the olden days.

My wife and I spend at least one Saturday per month going out to the country to speak with the farmers who grow our food. It's a huge pain in the azz, and really cuts into our time in front of the television.

Besides being more convenient, factory food is also much cheaper because of the taxpayer provided subsidies Big Agra corporations like Monsanto and Archer Daniels Midland receive from the U.S. Congress.

I think you missed the point and are now barking up the wrong tree.
 
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