Chucaro, I have visited the Con Agra plant in Sydney and seen the process of making Macdonalds beef patties in Australia.ccording to Oliver, the fatty parts of beef are "washed" in ammonium hydroxide
and used in the filling of the burger. He says, "Basically, we're taking a
product that would be sold in the cheapest way for dogs, and after this process,
is being given to human beings."
I can assure you that when I visited there was no pink slime used. Clean Fat was added to the lean meat to attain the required fat content while mixing for extrusion.
What I am trying to get across here is that Australia is not the USA or a South American country. We generally have much stricter rules. I have to say that IMHO this post follows many other similar ones where you throw up some scenario which is really a "straw man" . Oh well it makes good and lively discussion I guess and feeds paranoia .
BTW, I was thinking about your comment about using old footage of aerial and orchard spraying. The clips because of their age became a gross exaggeration.
In Australia a crop duster would be out of business in one day if they did that. For many years there have been VERY tight laws about the amount of wind speed allowed, buffer zones, testing of any livestock in the vicinity and mandatory warning to neighbours ( as a result of trace organophosphate being found in cattle by routine and regular testing) .In addition modern crop dusters have micro spray nozzles and give a positive charge to the nozzles so that the spray is attracted to the ground.
I also have to wonder about your comments about Roundup destroying micro organisms. I have been on many many farms and the weed growth after one season can sometimes be wondrous to behold. Roundup never seems to fully kill my Privet trees and they come back after a couple of years.
I guess the most powerful argument is that if you live to 60 now the odds are you will live to mid 80s. Tell that to some peasant using Neem 500 years ago if you can talk to them before they die at 40-50. Even in Germany in the late 19th century , the life expectancy was 65 and so the pension was set at 65.
Regards Philip A
.



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