Keep
in mind that the FDA wants to conduct this experiment on our food supply
to protect a small minority, only about 2500 people, who are made seriously
ill by this infection each year. The ill are mostly pregnant women, elderly
with compromised immunity, and small children. It would be a lot more
to the point if the FDA would simply warn such people that eating these
foods, due to their poor quality of production, may be dangerous. What
the FDA should really do is improve the quality of our food supply, the
true source of the problem. Why expose millions of Americans to an unproven
ingestion of live viruses for the benefit of so few?
The
FDA has failed miserably for the past century to protect the public from
the adulteration of our food supply by vested interests. This is just
one more insult added to a long list of injuries.
The
Tip of an Iceberg
Intralytix
has an agenda for the American food supply, as well as for healthcare
in general. This recent FDA ruling allows Intralytix and other similar
biotech companies to get their foot in a door that should be slammed shut
and bolted closed.
The
company is also seeking FDA approval for viral sprays to treat foods that
could be contaminated with E. coli and Salmonella, which means
that similar ?trained? viruses could end up in a majority of the protein
foods in our food supply.
Intralytix
sees financial opportunity. They have already licensed their now FDA-approved
viral spray to an undisclosed multi-national company for use around the
world. When
the CEO of Intralytix, John Vazzara, was recently asked about this partner
company, he
refused to disclose their name. The grand profit-driven biotech experiment
on the health and well being of all Americans is now in full swing.
John
Vazzara also owns
stock in, as well as provided seed money to start, SteelCloud Inc.
(formerly Dunn Computer Corporation). SteelCloud is a defense contractor
with lucrative deals with the Department
of Defense, recently landing
a 3.4 million dollar contract with the Department of Homeland Security.
Congress
should investigate the financial ties and backroom dealings that would
allow this bizarre food additive approval by the FDA.