By
Byron J. Richards, CCN
August
24, 2006
NewsWithViews.com
On Friday,
August 18, 2006, the FDA
approved a viral cocktail to be sprayed on foods we eat. This is the
first time viruses have been approved for use as food additives. The FDA
wants you to believe it will be safe to consume these viruses every day
for the rest of your life with no adverse health effects. This is a monumental
announcement by the FDA, indicating they are throwing all caution to the
wind regarding the safety of our food supply.
Are
you willing to stand in line for a virus-laden sandwich? How do you like
the idea of buying virus-infested food for your family? The first virally
contaminated foods entering our food supply with the blessings of the
FDA will be luncheon
meat and poultry. Live viruses will be sprayed on foods such as cold
cuts, sausages, hot dogs, sliced turkey, and chicken.
At issue
is the very real problem of a poor quality FDA-approved food supply that
is already full of diseased and sickly animals, many of them imported
from other countries. The use of antibiotics during growth and radiation
during food processing is required by the fast-food animal farms owned
by multi-national companies to cover up the horrendous health of the animals
they wish to feed to Americans. Animals in poor health are a friendly
place for bacteria to grow and prosper, especially after such meat goes
to market. Rather than address the source of the problem, the FDA wants
to add another adulteration into our food supply.
The
stated goal of the new FDA-approved viruses is to kill a rare bacterium
known as Listeria monocytogenes. This bacterium is killed by cooking;
however, it poses a problem in meats that are cooked during processing
and not cooked again prior to consumption, so it can readily infect foods
such as deli meats.
Yes,
the FDA plans to use one infectious organism to fight another. The carnage
of battle will end up in your digestive tract along with the victorious
live viruses, which the FDA assures us will not attack human cells. However,
they cannot possibly be certain the viruses will not attack the friendly
bacteria that make up the lining of your digestive tract. The FDA approval
was based on scant human testing, mostly from unrelated medical experiments.
Such safety data is woefully inadequate to determine safe ingestion of
a specific product by humans over the course of a lifetime.