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Hamburger Helper
The Wall Street Journal ^ | July 23, 2002 | Wall Street Journal OpEd

Posted on 07/24/2002 9:00:27 AM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi

Hamburger Helper

You can bet a lot of grills sat cold this weekend after the Department of Agriculture announced a nationwide recall of 19 million pounds of beef -- the second largest in history. With 19 people sick from E-coli contaminated meat, nobody felt much like a hamburger.

The truly unfortunate thing about the latest recall is that it didn't have to happen. We've long had the tools to cut back on foodborne illnesses, but government agencies, egged on by groups like Public Citizen, have made it difficult to safely enjoy that steak tartare.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, an estimated 76 million Americans get sick from foodborne pathogens each year, and 5,000 die as a result. The Agriculture Department estimates that just seven of these pathogens will result in medical costs and productivity losses of between $6.6 billion and $37.1 billion annually.

Scientists long ago figured out how to dramatically cut back on those statistics: food irradiation. Despite the word, irradiation has nothing to do with Chernobyl-like isotopes, but is a simple process where ordinary electricity is used to kill pathogens in food -- something akin to pasteurizing milk.

Irradiation is heartily endorsed by public health bodies ranging from the World Health Organization to the American Medical Association, and some 40 countries use it to keep food safe. It's also gained new importance as countries try to make food safe from bioterror.

The Food and Drug Administration itself approved irradiation of red meat in 1997, but at the prodding of activists also attached regulations guaranteed to keep consumers away. Packages undergoing the process had to carry warning-like labels that said "irradiation." They also had to exhibit the international "radura" symbol (which some say looks like an upside-down mushroom cloud).

This all thrills the Naderites at Public Citizen, which has banded with other liberal public-interest organizations to oppose irradiated food. The groups pour out Dr. Strangelovian descriptions of irradiation, and target restaurants and grocery stores that stock irradiated foods. As a result, the food industry has largely shied away from this simple safety procedure.

One high note is that the newly passed farm bill contains a measure allowing food companies to exchange the "irradiation" label for "pasteurization." That's a more honest description for consumers. The sooner people realize irradiation won't hurt them, the sooner we'll cut back on senseless food deaths.

Updated July 23, 2002 12:54 a.m. EDT



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: foodsafety; hamburger; irradiation
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19 million pounds is a lot of beef to recall. If each cow provides 500 lbs of beef (a stretch), that's 38,000 cows. Time to pasteurize the beef.
1 posted on 07/24/2002 9:00:27 AM PDT by Zuben Elgenubi
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To: Zuben Elgenubi
Irradiation of the mails, has made postal workers sick.
2 posted on 07/24/2002 9:02:45 AM PDT by First_Salute
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To: First_Salute
Clintonian cut backs on USDA oversight to squeeze out a few extra $$ for Arkansas chicken barons to be solved by radiating our food. That's our government!
3 posted on 07/24/2002 9:08:38 AM PDT by Shermy
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To: All
Went to my local market and had them grind a couple pounds of chuck for me (which is what I usually do anyways.)

Then I made sure it was cooked "well done" besides.

The recall didn't mean much since it is packed under various names and can't be tracked.

Sac

4 posted on 07/24/2002 9:09:50 AM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: Sacajaweau
Anyone who eats steak tartare ought to have his head examined.
5 posted on 07/24/2002 9:12:52 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: First_Salute
Different processes, unless the Postal Service is suddenly attempting to eradicate e coli and other bacteria from our packages.

In any case, it would be the way the procedure is handled, not the safety of the mail/meat produced that would be in question.
6 posted on 07/24/2002 9:12:56 AM PDT by Lizard_King
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To: Zuben Elgenubi; First_Salute
Here is the CDC's FAQ on food Irradiation...

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dbmd/diseaseinfo/foodirradiation.htm
7 posted on 07/24/2002 9:13:54 AM PDT by Gaston
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: Zuben Elgenubi
There is reason to believe, and perhaps there may be a trail to follow, that these series of contaminations of ground beef may not be only a failure in sanitary practices, but a deliberate sabotage. For one thing, it is always the same culture that contaminates the production. For another, it is almost always a major producer of market beef that is the source. A suspicion arises that the various eco-terrorist groups, or even a sleeper cell of some foreign terrorists, may have infiltrated the work force of several of these beef processors that have national distribution. This is a very vulnerable industry, and its importance to the economy is wide-reaching, right into your own supermarket.
9 posted on 07/24/2002 9:15:58 AM PDT by alloysteel
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Zuben Elgenubi
Cool screen name!
11 posted on 07/24/2002 9:24:04 AM PDT by OBAFGKM
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To: First_Salute
Irradiation of the mails, has made postal workers sick.

Totally and completely false.

There was never any basis of fact to link the irradiation of mail to any "perceived" illness suffered by any postal worker. After much investigation the USPS, CDC and the postal workers union all agreed.

12 posted on 07/24/2002 9:26:40 AM PDT by been_lurking
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To: BillinDenver
Irradiated beef may be just fine to consume. But if radiation kills bacteria, it also has an impact on the meat. Maybe it's harmless, maybe it's not. Don't use me as an unwitting guinea pig though.

I Agree with your point about the right to choose, however consider this, heat energy also kills bacteria, and yet we still eat cooked meat. Also, there is a large body of evidence that suggests that well cooked meat has numerous carcinogens...

Bottom line is, we choose our risks, and like you said, have a right to do so.

Funny story, originally, when you went to the hospital to get an "MRI", they called it an "NMR" (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance)... of course, it was decided that the word Nuclear was too much for a squeamish public, so the changed the name to Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

13 posted on 07/24/2002 9:29:50 AM PDT by Paradox
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To: First_Salute
Irradiation of the mails, has made postal workers sick.

Postal workers were sick long before the mail was irradiated.

14 posted on 07/24/2002 9:34:37 AM PDT by Willie Green
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To: been_lurking
I agree irradiated meat is safe, indeed it's the only process that can eliminate the problem of bacterial contamination. Irradiation also eliminates the problem in dairy products and produces a product that does not need refrigeration on the shelf. The problem is the Luddite belief that anything with "nuclear" in the name is dangerous.

There is no way conventional meatpacking processes can eliminate the risk of bacterial contamination, regardless of how much government inspection is used. Bacteria is present on the surface of meat, but is eliminated or destroyed by washing and cooking of steaks, roasts and chops. Grinding, however, mixes the surface bacteria into the interior of the product. The only way to eliminate bacteria from ground meat is cook it well done - or fuggetaboutit and take your chances.

15 posted on 07/24/2002 9:40:52 AM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: First_Salute
"Irradiation of the mails, has made postal workers sick."

Tell them to stop eating the mail.
16 posted on 07/24/2002 9:48:13 AM PDT by PsyOp
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To: PsyOp
"Tell them to stop eating the mail.'

So that's what happened to my check? LOL
17 posted on 07/24/2002 9:59:53 AM PDT by kitkat
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To: been_lurking
Maybe it should read "Irradiation of the mails, has made postal workers call in sick."
18 posted on 07/24/2002 10:02:24 AM PDT by CaptRon
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To: Zuben Elgenubi

WHAT'S WRONG WITH FOOD IRRADIATION

no-radura

revised February 2001

Irradiation damages the quality of food.
· Irradiation damages food by breaking up molecules and creating free radicals. The free radicals kill some bacteria, but they also bounce around in the food, damage vitamins and enzymes, and combine with existing chemicals (like pesticides) in the food to form new chemicals, called unique radiolytic products (URPs).
· Some of these URPs are known toxins (benzene, formaldehyde, lipid peroxides) and some are unique to irradiated foods. Scientists have not studied the long-term effect of these new chemicals in our diet. Therefore, we cannot assume they are safe.
· Irradiated foods can lose 5%-80% of many vitamins (A, C, E, K and B complex). The amount of loss depends on the dose of irradiation and the length of storage time.
· Most of the food in the American diet is already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for irradiation: beef, pork, lamb, poultry, wheat, wheat flour, vegetables, fruits, shell eggs, seeds for sprouting, spices, herb teas. (Dairy is already pasteurized). A food industry petition currently before the FDA asks for approval for luncheon meats, salad bar items, sprouts, fresh juices and frozen foods. Another petition before the USDA asks for approval for imported fruits and vegetables.
· Irradiation damages the natural digestive enzymes found in raw foods. This means the body has to work harder to digest them.
· If unlabeled, raw foods that have been irradiated look like fresh foods, but nutritionally they are like cooked foods, with decreased vitamins and enzymes. The FDA allows these foods to be labeled "fresh."
· Irradiated fats tend to become rancid.
· When high-energy electron beams are used, trace amounts of radioactivity may be created in the food.

Science has not proved that a long-term diet of irradiated foods is safe for human health.
· The longest human feeding study was 15 weeks. No one knows the long-term effects of a life-long diet that includes foods which will be frequently irradiated, such as meat, chicken, vegetables, fruits, salads, sprouts and juices.
· There are no studies on the effects of feeding babies or children diets containing irradiated foods, except a very small and controversial study from India that showed health effects.
· Studies on animals fed irradiated foods have shown increased tumors, reproductive failures and kidney damage. Some possible causes are: irradiation-induced vitamin deficiencies, the inactivity of enzymes in the food, DNA damage, and toxic radiolytic products in the food.
· The FDA based its approval of irradiation for poultry on only 5 of 441 animal-feeding studies. Marcia van Gemert, Ph.D., the toxicologist who chaired the FDA committee that approved irradiation, later said, "These studies reviewed in the 1982 literature from the FDA were not adequate by 1982 standards, and are even less accurate by 1993 standards to evaluate the safety of any product, especially a food product such as irradiated food." The 5 studies are not a good basis for approval of irradiation for humans, because they showed health effects on the animals or were conducted using irradiation at lower energies than those the FDA eventually approved.
· The FDA based its approval of irradiation for fruits and vegetables on a theoretical calculation of the amount of URPs in the diet from one 7.5 oz. serving/day of irradiated food. Considering the different kinds of foods approved for irradiation, this quantity is too small and the calculation is irrelevant.
· Even with current labeling requirements, people cannot avoid eating irradiated food. That means there is no control group, and epidemiologists will never be able to determine if irradiated food has any health effects.
· Science is always changing. The science of today is not the science of tomorrow. The science we have today is not adequate to prove the long-term safety of food irradiation.

Irradiation covers up problems that the meat and poultry industry should solve
· Irradiation covers up the increased fecal contamination that results from speeded up slaughter and decreased federal inspection, both of which allow meat and poultry to be produced more cheaply. Prodded by the industry, the USDA has allowed a transfer of inspection to company inspectors. Where government inspectors remain, they are not allowed to condemn meat and poultry now that they condemned 20 years ago.
· Because of this deregulation (continued under President Clinton, a protégé of Tyson Foods), the meat and poultry industry has recently lost money and suffered bad publicity from food-poisoning lawsuits and expensive product recalls. Irradiation is a "magic bullet" that will enable them to say that the product was "clean" when it left the packing plant. (Irradiation, however, does not sterilize food, and any bacteria that remain can grow to toxic proportions if the food is not properly stored and handled.)
· In 2000, seven meat industry associations submitted a petition to USDA to redefine key regulations relating to contamination. If accepted by USDA, this petition would permit unlimited fecal contamination during production, as long as irradiation was used afterwards.

Labeling is necessary to inform people so they can choose to avoid irradiated foods.
· Because irradiated foods have not been proven safe for human health in the long term, prominent, conspicuous and truthful labels are necessary for all irradiated foods. Consumers should be able to easily determine if their food has been irradiated. Labels should also be required for irradiated ingredients of compound foods, and for restaurant and institutional foods.
· Because irradiation can deplete vitamins, labels should state the amount of vitamin loss after irradiation, especially for fresh foods that are usually eaten fresh. Consumers have the right to know if they are buying nutritionally impaired foods.
· Current US labels are not sufficient to enable consumers to avoid irradiated food. Foods are labeled only to the first purchaser. Irradiated spices, herb teas and supplement ingredients, foods that are served in restaurants, schools, etc., or receive further processing, do not bear consumer labels. Consumer labels are required only for foods sold whole (like a piece of fruit) or irradiated in the package (like chicken breasts). The text with the declaration of irradiation can be as small as the type face on the ingredient label. The US Department of Agriculture requirements have one difference: irradiated meat or poultry that is part of another food (like a tv dinner) must be disclosed on the label.
· The US Food and Drug Administration is currently rewriting the regulation for minimum labeling, and will release it for public comment by early 2002. They may eliminate all required text labels. If they do retain the labels, Congress has told them to use a "friendly" euphemism instead of "irradiation."

Electron-beam irradiation today means nuclear irradiation tomorrow.
· The source of the irradiation is not listed on the label.
· The original sponsor of food irradiation in the US was the Department of Energy, which wanted to create a favorable image of nuclear power as well as dispose of radioactive waste. These goals have not changed. Cobalt-60, which is used for irradiation, must be manufaactured in a nuclear reactor.
· Many foods cannot be irradiated using electron beams. E-beams only penetrate 1-1.5 inches on each side, and are suitable only for flat, evenly sized foods like patties. Large fruits, foods in boxes, and irregularly shaped foods must be irradiated using x-rays or gamma rays from nuclear materials.
· Countries that lack a cheap and reliable source of electricity for e-beams use nuclear materials. Opening U.S. markets to irradiated food encourages the spread of nuclear irradiation worldwide.

Irradiation using radioactive materials is an environmental hazard.
· The more nuclear irradiators, the more likelihood of a serious accident in transport, operation or disposal of the nuclear materials.
· Food irradiation facilities have already contaminated the environment. For example, in the state of Georgia in 1988, radioactive water escaped from an irradiation facility. The taxpayers were stuck with $47 million in cleanup costs. Radioactivity was tracked into cars and homes. In Hawaii in 1967 and New Jersey in 1982, radioactive water was flushed into the public sewer system.
· Numerous worker exposures have occurred in food irradiation facilities worldwide.

Irradiation doesn't provide clean food.
· Because irradiation doesn't kill all the bacteria in a food, the ones that survive are by definition radiation-resistant. These bacteria will multiply and eventually work their way back to the 'animal factories'. Soon thereafter, the bacteria that contaminate the meat will no longer be killed by currently approved doses of irradiation. The technology will no longer be usable, while stronger bacteria contaminate our food supply.
· People may become more careless about sanitation if irradiation is widely used. Irradiation doesn't kill all the bacteria in a food. In a few hours at room temperature, the bacteria remaining in meat or poultry after irradiation can multiply to the level existing before irradiation.
· Some bacteria, like the one that causes botulism, as well as viruses and prions (which are believed to cause Mad Cow Disease) are not killed by current doses of irradiation.
· Irradiation encourages food producers to cut corners on sanitation, because they can 'clean up' the food just before it is shipped.

Irradiation does nothing to change the way food is grown and produced.
· Irradiated foods can have longer shelf lives than nonirradiated foods, which means they can be shipped further while appearing 'fresh.' Food grown by giant farms far away may last longer than nonirradiated, locally grown food, even if it is inferior in nutrition and taste. Thus, irradiation encourages centralization and hurts small farmers.
· The use of pesticides, antibiotics, hormones and other agrichemicals, as well as pollution and energy use, are not affected. Irradiation is applied by the packer after harvest or slaughter.
· Free-market economists say irradiation is 'efficient': it provides the cheapest possible food for the least possible risk. But these economists are not concerned about the impaired nutritional quality of the food. They are not considering the environmental effects of large-scale corporate farming, the social costs of centralization of agriculture and loss of family farms, the replacement of unionized, impartial government inspectors with company inspectors , the potential long-term damage to human health, and the possibility of irradiation-resistant super-bacteria. All of these developments should be (but are not) considered when regulators and public health officials evaluate the benefits of food irradiation.

Organic Consumers Association, <http://www.organicconsumers.org/irradlink.html>

Contact Irradiation Coordinator: danila@purefood.org
Office: 6101 Cliff Estate Rd, Little Marais, MN 55614
 218/226-4164, fax 218/ 226-4157

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19 posted on 07/24/2002 10:04:47 AM PDT by handk
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To: CaptRon
The Dem's have held the post office and its jobs as political plumbs since FDR.
20 posted on 07/24/2002 10:05:52 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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