Once again we read of strong-arm
tactics been applied to the few raw milk producers out there and shudder.
This article bears out an
important truth. Food safety is as good
as your weakest link. It follows that
the maximum vulnerability to the end product will were the end product is blended
and processed. In fact that interface
between the consumer and the primary producer loads all the risk on to the
processor who is a very picky buyer as far as the supplier is concerned.
This means in the case of the
dairy industry that the farmer is a skilled professional who never delivers bad
product. That may not have been true before
processing showed up but it is certainly true today. It is also true for all farmers today who
rely on the processor contract to unload the bulk of his crop.
Today any product bought directly
from the producer will be of high quality and sold by a chap who has serious
skin in sustaining his reputation.
That is not true at the
processing factory were spillage cab easily be shoveled back in the vat when no
one is looking by an employee who certainly hates the job and the wages and the
working conditions. The product is been
worked on by individuals who will never have any skin in the game.
Certainly not enough to pay too
much attention to the cleanliness of equipment were listeria can easily build
up on a blade spindle and the like.
We will be transitioning to a
hugely different food culture over the next generation in which craft
production will become dominant. It is
now easily brought to market and it provides a natural road back for retailers
displacing the big box markets and gives them a local edge.
People are paying more and the craft
producers have learned to become price setters rather than price takers.
All craft foods can be produced
on the farm with industrial grade equipment that is readily available today and
operated to the standards of the industry.
A friend operates a chicken and
turkey operation in which he runs six thousand birds at a time on six acres and
produces a prepackaged cut meat product and a line of sausages with his own
well equipped processing shed. His gross
approaches 200K. He needs skills as a
trained cuter but that is easily attained. This makes my point though. There is more effort involved to do it all
but the increase in gross easily pays for it.
Foodborne Illnesses in America
Complex Factory Foods pose the Highest Risk
By Rady Ananda
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=26017
A close look at the people behind the raw milk scare, and the actual
numbers of foodborne illness, reveals that politics more than science drives
the food safety agenda in the U.S.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack just appointed Susan Vaughn
Grooters to the National Advisory Committee on Microbiological Criteria for
Foods (NACMCF), which is also served by Dr. Wafa Birbari of junk food giant,
Sara Lee Corp.
Lacking a PhD, Grooters will serve her two-year term on NACMCF as a
“consumer representative.” She currently works with STOP Foodborne
Illness (formerly Safe Tables Our Priority), an organization that condemns
raw dairy and urges broad expansion of federal control over food.
Grooters hopes to federalize state reporting of contaminated food, as explained to Center for Science in the Public Interest:
“States’ systematic differences in response to foodborne illness case
reporting may also explain variations in rates,” said S.T.O.P’s public health
specialist, Susan Vaughn Grooters. “Time differences in surveying cases of
foodborne illness and lack of integrated data collection may also affect how
well states accurately capture data.” [1]
In a playful charade calling for stricter controls on food, she
recently tweeted:
“Really??? Really? I would beg to differ Sec. Vilsack! ..unless of
course you’re proposing a change to policies... ;-) http://usat.ly/kceLEY”
With these opinions, it’s almost a joke to say she represents consumers.
Though the Food Safety Modernization Act is characterized as
promoting “science-based” food control driven by “risk-based” analysis, [2]
instead, under FSMA authority, the FDA has claimed power to seize food
without evidence of contamination. [3]
Evidence is the foundation of science and law; removal and destruction
of evidence is anti-science and fraudulent. (See Victor Rawls’ well-argued
essay on this. [4])
Contrary to “risk-based” control, the FDA continues to seize and
destroy food that sickened no one, while knowingly allowing
tainted meat on the market and doing nothing about it until someone died,
as in Cargill’s 36-million-pound turkey recall.
Seizing food without evidence of contamination also violates the
Fourth Amendment.
RANKING FOODBORNE RISKS
Statistics tend to put people to sleep, but three important reports
were published this year
that deserve attention: one by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC),
[5] one by the University
of Florida (UF) to which
Grooters contributed, [6] and one by retired pathologist and raw milk drinker,
Dr. Ted Beals. [7]
Let’s agree that numbers can be massaged to prove just about
anything. However, when opponents of raw milk make outrageous claims about
its dangers, and when millions of state and federal dollars are spent
eliminating it as a food choice thru armed raids – and yet their own
statistics belie the stated risk – we ought to shout that from the
rooftop.
How Bad It Is(n’t)
As the Director of Research and Education, Grooters is responsible for
the STOP Foodborne Illness page, “Fact vs. Myth.” As if unable to
distinguish the two, SFI repeats unsubstantiated, fear mongering propaganda.
We’ll start with an easy one:
“There are no documented health benefits associated with ingestion of
unpasteurized milk or milk products.”
Quite the opposite is true. In 2006,
researchers reported the “competitive exclusion” effect of good
bacteria found in raw milk, observing that:
“Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis C-1-92 and Enterococcus
durans 152 ... are bactericidal to Listeria monocytogenes or
inhibit the growth of L. monocytogenes both in vitro and in
biofilms.” [8]
Listeria monocytogenes is responsible for 1,591 illnesses a year,
according to the 2011 CDC report (at Table 2). [5] That’s for all foods,
not just milk. Dr Beals described it this way:
“Listeria monocytogenes is the most serious and deadly of the
contemporary foodborne pathogens. Yet it is also ubiquitous in our
environment.” [7]
Based on Dept of Health and Human Services (DHS) data covering 1999
thru 2010, Dr Beals determined, “there have been no cases attributed to
drinking raw milk in the last twelve years.” [7]
On the other hand, Lactococcus lactis, a probiotic bacterium found
in raw milk of pastured cows, was legislated as Wisconsin ’s state microbe last
year. Microbiology professor Kenneth Todar explains that Lactococci
are associated with grasses, which pastured cows ingest, and which then show up
in their milk. [9]
Not only are Lactococcus deadly to pathogenic bacteria, but they are
vital to making certain cheeses and other fermented products. And, they have to
be added back in when starting with pasteurized milk.
Grooters also advises that:
“Pregnant women, young children, the elderly and those with weakened
immune systems should avoid unpasteurized products.”
It’s a wonder the human species survived 200,000 years before the food
police came along! We know for certain that humans have been drinking
unpasteurized animal milk for at least ten thousand years.
[10] Human population certainly hasn’t decreased since then.
The enzymes and “friendly” bacteria destroyed by pasteurization boost
our immunity. We know this based on the scientifically accepted
“competitive exclusion” principle – the more friendly bacteria you have, the
fewer pathogenic ones that survive. Friendly bacteria compose part of our
immune system, and competitive exclusion is what the entire probiotics food
industry is based on.
Pasteurized Milk Contaminations
Grooters also stated at the Myths and Facts page:
“Raw or unpasteurized milk can transmit many serious infectious
diseases to children.”
Then why doesn’t it? Statistics from the UF report to which
she contributed show dairy to be the safest of all foods, accounting
for 1/100th of a percent of all foodborne illnesses annually. (More on
this below.)
In fact, raw milk is much safer than pasteurized. According to Dr
Beals, in 2010, DHS reported 90,771 confirmed foodborne illnesses for
the period 1999 thru 2010. Based
on DHS data, Beals reports you are 35,000 times more likely to
get sick from any food other than raw milk. [7]
Beals calculated that 42 people become ill from contaminated raw milk
each year, a figure which includes “both ‘confirmed’ and ‘presumed’ cases.”
Yet, in a single case of contaminated pasteurized milk, over
16,000 people became ill in Illinois and
several other Midwest states. Later, up to 5
of them died. That 1985 calamity was called the “worst outbreak of Salmonella
food poisoning in U.S.
history.” [11] It even beats last year’s half-billion egg recall with just
over1,900 confirmed cases of salmonella poisoning.
In a 1983 Massachusetts
milk contamination case, 49 people became ill. Later, 14 of them
died. An inspection found the pasteurization process up to snuff,
leading scientists to question relying on pasteurization to kill listeria. [12]
70% of all foodborne illnesses come from factory foods; Dairy is safest
of all food
Here is where a political agenda drives scientific reporting. The 2011
UF report [6] sought to determine which pathogens and which foods pose the
highest risk. “Complex foods” (defined as non-meat factory foods with a
host of additives) accounts for a whopping 70% of the 3,861,128 annual
foodborne illnesses UF considered. (p.9)
Dairy, on the other hand, accounts for 434 illnesses. That’s about
1/100th of a percent, “almost all” of it “due to soft-ripened cheeses” – mostly
queso fresco, a soft cheese made from raw milk favored in the Hispanic
community. (p.43)
UF developed a ranking system based on various factors including
“quality of life,” a term used by DHS. This is where numbers can be massaged to
show an increased risk that wouldn’t be obvious from raw
numbers. This probably explains how UF ranked dairy risk #5 in a
field of 10, despite that factory foods sickened 2,689,877 people and dairy
sickened only 434.
Ignoring their qualitative factors and using just the UF numbers of
illness and death for each food category, the following charts show which foods
sicken or kill people the most:
From UF’s own data, dairy is the safest food on the market, with the
least number of illnesses – a number so small (1/100th of a percent of all
foodborne illnesses) that it can be ignored when talking about risky food.
Of the 3.8 million incidents of foodborne illnesses UF considered, only
765 people died. That’s one death per five thousand illnesses. You are more
likely to die in a car crash – a risk most of us take every single day of our
adult lives.
So, fully grasping the minute scale we’re zooming in on now, of the
eight food categories, dairy ranks #6 in risk of death. You’re twice as
likely to die from a foodborne illness traced to factory foods (18% of all
deaths) than you are from dairy (9%).
Keep in mind that “almost all” of those dairy deaths are from
soft-ripened cheese, not raw milk. Though made with raw milk, no one
knows where in the cheesemaking process the cheese became contaminated. It
could have occurred at any of several stages and have had nothing to do with
the milk itself.
It takes a pretty strong imagination to justify ranking dairy the fifth
riskiest food in the nation when it only accounts for 1/100th of a percent
of all foodborne illnesses. But that’s what UF did.
Given Grooters’ fear mongering against raw dairy despite CDC evidence
proving otherwise, she is not at all a surprising choice for Secretary Vilsack
to have made. But it is rather disingenuous to characterize her as representing
consumers, when, clearly, she represents corporate aims to shut down
natural dairy.
If Obama truly wanted to develop a science-based food safety policy
driven by risk-based analysis, raw dairies would be promoted rather than
criminalized. Instead, what we see is support for factory-processed foods
adulterated with genetically modified organisms, drugs, chemicals,
nanomaterials, rat droppings, and wood [22] – all permitted by the FDA.
Rady Ananda specializes in Natural Resources and administers the
sites, Food Freedom and COTO Report. To obtain a full copy of this report,
including Notes and Sources Used, click here.
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