greg
Well-known member
"I Think Econ101 Has Driven You To The Brink Of Insanity".....Been there!!
Mike said:~SH~ said:Jason: "Here is where your pick and choose mentality fails for all to see. If packers are corrupt as you paint them, how can they be trusted with an issue like BSE?"
Or to properly ID meat without an enforceable traceback system on the cattle the beef came from???
Same damn hypocrisy!
~SH~
OK, NO "Cheerleaders" or "Tag Teams" allowed! :wink:
For informational uses only: Creekstone's plan was to use an in house screening process that utilized fully trained and USDA approved technicians and would be under the supervision of "Paid" USDA employees. All of Creekstone's cattle are "Source Verified" through "AngusSource", among other programs.
Creekstone also wanted to be able to ship cattle in from Canada for the BSE tested regimen.
Earlier in the week Creekstone officials confirmed to the press they have been training their staff on the proper sampling of cattle brain and stem tissue in anticipation of being allowed to conduct in-plant BSE testing. Creekstone also confirmed they recently sent a contingent to France to learn how they conduct testing for BSE and to also gain insight into the testing procedures already approved for use in that country. Creekstone plans on utilizing the same rapid-result BSE test that the French and Japanese use to test 100% of their animals. BioRad, a Hercules, California-based company, manufactures the test.
Jason said:Proposing that USDA trains technicians is far different than the USDA overseeing testing.
Jason said:Your the one that tried to say Creekstone was wanting USDA oversight... looks like you were wrong again.
Mike: "For informational uses only: Creekstone's plan was to use an in house screening process that utilized fully trained and USDA approved technicians and would be under the supervision of "Paid" USDA employees. All of Creekstone's cattle are "Source Verified" through "AngusSource", among other programs"
Creekstone: "Earlier in the week Creekstone officials confirmed to the press they have been training their staff on the proper sampling of cattle brain and stem tissue in anticipation of being allowed to conduct in-plant BSE testing. Creekstone also confirmed they recently sent a contingent to France to learn how they conduct testing for BSE and to also gain insight into the testing procedures already approved for use in that country. Creekstone plans on utilizing the same rapid-result BSE test that the French and Japanese use to test 100% of their animals. BioRad, a Hercules, California-based company, manufactures the test."
~SH~ said:Mike: "For informational uses only: Creekstone's plan was to use an in house screening process that utilized fully trained and USDA approved technicians and would be under the supervision of "Paid" USDA employees. All of Creekstone's cattle are "Source Verified" through "AngusSource", among other programs"
Creekstone: "Earlier in the week Creekstone officials confirmed to the press they have been training their staff on the proper sampling of cattle brain and stem tissue in anticipation of being allowed to conduct in-plant BSE testing. Creekstone also confirmed they recently sent a contingent to France to learn how they conduct testing for BSE and to also gain insight into the testing procedures already approved for use in that country. Creekstone plans on utilizing the same rapid-result BSE test that the French and Japanese use to test 100% of their animals. BioRad, a Hercules, California-based company, manufactures the test."
Mike, where did you get your information from and when were each of these statements made?
I see no mention of USDA oversight.
~SH~
~SH~ said:Mike,
A 2004 article?
Can't you find something more current?
~SH~
~SH~ said:Creekstone also admitted their tests would not reveal BSE prions in cattle under 24 months of age. They were selling an "ILLUSION OF SAFETY".
~SH~
Brought this to the top so you would see it.Mike said:~SH~ said:Creekstone also admitted their tests would not reveal BSE prions in cattle under 24 months of age. They were selling an "ILLUSION OF SAFETY".
~SH~
Scott, Could you please provide a quote from Creekstone where they actually said this? For the life of me I can't seem to find it. :???: :???:
Mike said:Brought this to the top so you would see it.Mike said:~SH~ said:Creekstone also admitted their tests would not reveal BSE prions in cattle under 24 months of age. They were selling an "ILLUSION OF SAFETY".
~SH~
Scott, Could you please provide a quote from Creekstone where they actually said this? For the life of me I can't seem to find it. :???: :???:
Time for bed.
Just for you MikeMike said:Mike said:Brought this to the top so you would see it.Mike said:Scott, Could you please provide a quote from Creekstone where they actually said this? For the life of me I can't seem to find it. :???: :???:
Time for bed.
Not wanting this to slide off the page. I asked pleasantly. I even said please.
Would you like to let it drop off now Mike. :wink:Satisfying the Japanese
USDA has sole control of the testing processes in meat plants. And its
officials say they have rejected Creekstone Farms' pleas because the
company's tests don't detect mad cow disease in animals younger than 30
months. Most U.S. beef comes from 12- to 18-month-old cows.
"The tests are not designed to detect BSE in younger animals," said Andrea
McNally, a spokeswoman for the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service. "So for Creekstone Farms to use the test to say its product is 100
percent BSE-free would be giving consumers a false sense of food safety, a
sense the test is not designed to give."
Creekstone's Pentz said the company knows that. But the issue, he said,
isn't whether the tests are effective, it's whether the federal government
should -- or can -- prevent a private business from meeting the legal
expectations of its customers. In this instance, the customers want the
testing.