Aside from that gripe, there is a whole lot of attention-grabbing things on the site.
In 1985, Carleton Gajdusek and his NIH colleagues described a correlation involving CJD and having a large amount of roast pork, ham, sizzling canine, and lamb, as well as uncommon meats and raw oysters.2 Yet they also acknowledged that the findings have been preliminary and that much more experiments have been required.
Then they only applied a partial feed ban on Aug. 4, 1997, but pigs, chickens, dogs, and cats, and humans ended up exempt from that ban. So they can still feed pigs and chickens all those most likely TSE tainted by-items, and then they can however feed people by-items back to the cows.
His combative, blunt, opinionated type often borders on obsessive ranting that earns praise from some of***ials and scientists but infuriates other folks-particularly when
free he She *** repeats his conviction that "the govt has lied to us, the feed sector has lied to us-all in excess of a buck." As evidence, Singeltary cites the USDA’s tests method, which targets downer cows and examined 19,900 of them in 2002.
To him, the USDA should really test one million cattle, since the incidence of BSE might be as very low as a single in a million, as it was in some European nations around the world.