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Latest Mad Cow Was Born in Texas
June 30, 2005
The U.S. Agriculture Department says it has tracked the latest confirmed case of "mad cow" disease to a 12-year-old animal born in Texas. The agency said the cow was slaughtered last November for use in pet food and did not enter the human food supply. Mad Cow Disease ? Latest Mad Cow Was Born in Texas, USDA Confirms ? Humane Society Wants Ban on Slaughtering Downer Animals ? British Tests Confirm U.S. Animal Had Mad Cow Disease ? Consumers Union Asks USDA to Test All Cattle for Mad Cow Disease ? Consumers Union Calls for More Testing of Cattle ? Another Possible Mad Cow Case Reported in U.S. ? Cattlemen Beef About New Meat Rules ? Former USDA Inspector Questions Mad Cow Testing ? USDA Proposes Animal Tracking System ? Who's Watching the Food Safety Watchdogs ? USDA Investigating Possible Case of Mad Cow Disease ? Dog Food May Carry BSE --- ? About Creutzfeldt-Jakob ("Mad Cow") Disease It is the second confirmed case of the devastating disease in the U.S., the first involving a domestically-bred cow. The first case, discovered in Washington state in December 2003, involved a cow imported from Canada. "The source herd is now under a hold order as we identify animals of interest within that herd," said USDA chief veterinarian Dr. John Clifford. "Animals of interest would include any animals that were born the same year as this animal, as well as any born the year before or the year after," he said. In a statement on the USDA Website, Clifford said the safety of the human food supply was never in doubt. Given the age of the animal, Clifford said it is reasonable to believe it became infected before the 1997 ban against the use of cattle parts in animal feed. The disease is not spread through contact. Only by consuming infected issue from other cattle do animals contract the disease. Clifford said the safety of Texas beef is not in question, but he said the agency could remain "vigilant." USDA failed to diagnose the infection the first two times tissue from the infected animal was studied. It was only after the department's Inspector General intervened that the tissue was tested a third time and found positive for the disease. Mad cow disease -- or bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) -- is an invariably-fatal degenerative brain disease spread through infected meat. Cattle can be infected by eating protein supplements made with the ground-up remains of other animals, a practice now outlawed in most countries. this article and all links at: http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news0...d_cow_tx2.html Wake up America if they don't kill you with a terroist attack or on the battlefield, they'll kill you with your food. Doc Urb
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'In a time of universal deceit, telling the "truth" is a revolutionary act.' -George Orwell 'Time does not heal all wounds but forgiveness will heal all time.'-"The Disappearence Of The Universe" |
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#2
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I can't say i am scared. Have had beef all but two days the past week. Guess i'll stay asleep!
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