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Life-Saving Testing Banned – Mad Cow Screening “Inconsistent” with U.S.D.A. Agenda Print E-mail
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Legal Outrage
Written by Tiffany Sanders   
Monday, 01 September 2008 04:19

mad cow disease

Back in 2006, a meatpacking company in Kansas had a great idea: it would test every cow for bovine spongiform encephalitis (BSE), commonly known as “mad cow disease”. It was a great idea because the U.S. Department of Agriculture (U.S.D.A.) tests only a very small percentage of cows for the disease, which can be fatal to humans who eat beef from infected cattle.

Creekstone Farms Premium Beef was willing to undertake the testing of every cow at its own expense. In fact, the company built a laboratory and sent its employees to France for training with the company whose test kits it intended to use. But then Creekstone ran into a problem: test kits for BSE could be sold only to laboratories approved by the U.S.D.A., and the U.S.D.A. said no to the testing.

In fact, although the division later sought to explain away the statement, a senior veterinarian with the U.S.D.A.’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) told a reporter that Creekstone could face criminal liability if it tested its animals for BSE.

Creekstone sued for the right to test its own cattle for the deadly disease, and won in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. U.S. District Court Judge James Robertson—the same judge who authored the District Court opinion in the groundbreaking Guantanamo case, Hamdam v. Rumsfeld, and resigned from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in apparent protest over President Bush’s decision to use wiretaps to gather information about U.S. citizens without first seeking court approval—ruled that the U.S.D.A. had exceeded its authority under the 1913 Virus-Serum-Toxin Act.

Robertson’s opinion made good sense, since that statute was intended to protect against substandard veterinary care, and the animals in question were being tested after they were dead. Creekstone did not propose to replace or interfere with U.S.D.A. testing of its beef. Rather, as a purely supplemental measure, it proposed to perform additional testing to ensure the safety of its beef.

The concern, rather, seemed to be that Creekstone might use the additional testing as a marketing point—it might, in short tell people that all of its beef had been tested. That, the U.S.D.A said, was “inconsistent with USDA's mandate to ensure effective, scientifically sound testing for significant animal diseases and maintain domestic and international confidence in U.S. cattle and beef products.” In other words, it might make the companies that didn’t choose to test every animal look bad, and consumers and other countries to which U.S. beef is exported might notice that Creekstone beef was safer than other U.S. beef.

Unfortunately, this past week the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia bought into that argument, and Creekstone (along with any other meatpacker that might get some crazy idea about making sure that its meat was safe for human consumption) is legally prohibited from testing its cattle.

So we might be at risk for “mad cow disease” and see our brains waste away, but at least we don’t have to worry about those big meat packing companies feeling pressured or anything, right?

 
Election 2008 - Buzzwords and Blurred Issues Print E-mail
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Political Outrage
Written by Shan-ul-Hai   
Friday, 29 August 2008 02:33

 

From the author of Globally Rational

2008 presidential election

We want a President who can make decisions that will benefit us all. We want somebody who promises actions rather than words. We want him to tell us what he will do and then we want him to do it. So how can somebody possibly have the audacity to face us with the crazy idea that he will make changes? How can he say that he will “change” Washington without reiterating all of his ideas in each of his speeches? Why are the most educated people in the country still siding with somebody who uses complex “plans” and unpopular “expert opinion” instead of just telling us that he’ll cut taxes and lower gas prices?

The McCain campaign has been quick to point out that Barack Obama repeatedly promises reform without repeatedly saying how to achieve that reform. But we really need him to repeat himself? He has a clear plan in place for the war, the economy, the energy problem, healthcare, and all of the other issues… but effective plans are rarely simple enough to explain in a one-minute segment of a ten-minute speech. He knows that offshore drilling will fuel our oil addiction faster than it fuels our cars; that doesn’t mean, as McCain says, that he doesn’t want to produce more energy. He knows that the gas tax holiday will create long-term economic problems as a consequence of its slight short-term relief; that doesn’t mean that he is against economic improvement. He knows that the Bush/McCain upper-class tax cut will only increase the budget deficit; that doesn’t mean that he wants to raise taxes for all Americans.

We like simple ideas. We would love to believe that we can reduce our dependence on oil by drilling for more oil. We would love to believe that we can keep our troops all over the world without having to pay for it in taxes. But in the real world, effective policies require intricate plans based on detailed economic analysis. Obama’s plans are well-known, but he can’t explain the policy analysis in every speech that he delivers; does that make him “vague”? We can have a President who just tells us what we want to hear… or we can have a President who actually does what we want him to do without much regard for whether or not we know that he’s doing it.

Any top Democrat will be able to tell you exactly what Obama’s stance is on any given issue. McCain, meanwhile, seems like he failed to effectively explain his “big ideas” even to Bobby Jindal, one of the frontrunners for his VP position. Instead, Jindal reverts to saying things that are obvious and popular; he was sure to mention, for instance, that McCain “understands that the energy crisis is [our] biggest economic obstacle.” Big-time Republicans like Mitt Romney and Mark Sanford also suffered the same fate as Jindal did. Does that mean that Jindal, Romney, and Sanford are all incompetent? Or does it just mean that they were all right to insinuate that the McCain energy policy, and the rest of his ideas, promise no improvement over the Bush administration?

The fact that the energy crisis is a big economic obstacle does not classify a “big idea”… I’d rather call it a “known fact.” Everybody understands our problems (except President Bush, who recently said that we don’t have any), but not everybody can understand the solution. Obama wants to let the expert number-crunchers figure out the details; McCain has been letting public opinion direct his course. Who do you think can make a better decision about the economy: your next-door neighbor or America’s top economists?

What is “vague”? Is Obama “vague” because the details are irrelevant to his speech? Or is McCain “vague” because the details are irrelevant to his plan?

At Rational Outrage, we're interested in facts and logical analysis--we're not here to promote a particular candidate. Have a conflicting view? Share it with us in the comments or, if you're so inclined, submit an article.

 
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Page 4 of 14

One Minute Outrage - Political

Issue: Nations around the world join forces to put an end to the use of cluster bombs because of the high incidence of civilian injury and death--sometimes long after the conflict is over. But the United States, like Russia, China and Israel, refuses to sign the treaty.

Impact: The United States further abdicates the role of world leader, while still clinging stubbornly to the title. The continued use of cluster bombs is bad enough, but far worse is the message to the world that force by any means necessary is the way to go--and the path to be chosen by the largest and most powerful nations on earth.

Read More: US Joins China and Russia in Rejecting Cluster Bomb Ban

One Minute Outrage - Earthly

Issue: A blind couple is prosecuted for employing a commonly accepted method of composting in their own garden.

Impact: Your tax dollars at work making life difficult for people with the audacity to grow vegetables--and an apparent legal preference for chemical fertilizers over organic matter that might actually help the environment.

Read More: Gardener Threatens Public Safety with Compost

One Minute Outrage - Legal

Issue: Police departments in major cities across the country aren't content to arrest self-made criminals, but have decided to hit the streets and see whether they can create some more.

Impact: Time and tax dollars poured into sting operations designed to test ordinary people and create crimes that would never have been; meanwhile, who's minding the store?  Hundreds of thousands of unserved felony warrants lie inactive across the country while police experiment in subways, department stores and on streetcorners.

Read More:  Make Your Own Criminal – It's So Much Easier than Chasing the Real Ones


One Minute Outrage - Cultural

Issue: A disabled child is left to die by a negligent mother, and the people charged with her protection stand by and let it happen; sadly, Danieal Kelly is only one example of the wide-ranging failure of the systems that are supposed to keep our children safe.

Impact: The impact on this particular child was a slow and painful death, and she is not alone. Right now, as you're reading this, other children are living in similar circumstances; other parents and caseworkers are ignoring their needs and waiting for someone else to do something. The most helpless among us will not survive unless we all step up and do our part--and insist that others do theirs.

Read More: Disabled Child Left to Die by Mother, Social Workers


Sex Offender Registration / Residency Restrictions Do More Harm than Good


sex offender registration

Fifteen years ago, the mother of a kidnapping victim had a good idea--an idea that made a lot of sense. That idea involved the creation of a registry for use by law enforcement to track child molesters. Soon other states got on the bandwagon, and the classes of crime included in the registries mushroomed. Then those registries were shared with the public, voluntarily or under legal mandate. And then the public found out that there were sex offenders down the block (never mind that those "sex offenders" might have urinated outdoors after too much to drink late one night or had sexual relationships with girlfriends just a few years younger than themselves after they'd crossed the line into adulthood), and we didn't like it. New state laws cropped up across the country restricting where convicted sex offenders could live, and now, we're finally seeing the fruits of those frantic efforts. States are spending tens of millions of dollars to attempt to keep convicted sex offenders in stable places where they can be tracked, and losing the battled. Homelessness has skyrocketed among convicted sex offenders, and with it, the rate of recidivism.

Read More: Sex Offender Registration is Stupid






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