Incompetent Civil Servants are wrecking agriculture again! Sowing unfounded suspicion that Canadian cattlemen could have been illegally using bovine meat meals in farm-mixed feed for cattle, is nothing short of sabotage to the industry.
B A C K G R O U N D E R / Morris W. Dorosh
It doesn't sound like anybody at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has been reading AGRIWEEK much lately. Otherwise the mad-cow crises could not have been so grossly mishandled. They must be reading comic books.
A high official of the agency appeared on CBC television the other day looking confused and befuddled, with no sign that he is in the middle of an emergency. The same languid attitude seemed to pervade the whole establishment, with vague, vacant assurances as to health and safety. There was none of the impression that, yes, this is a disaster but we are up to the challenge, we have the resources and have a handle on it. Drastic events call for drastic responses and this is what we are doing.
This is not an animal or human health or food safety issue. It is not even so much a trade or economic issue. It is a public image issue in which poorly-informed people at home and abroad have to be impressed and reassured.
There were 1,900 head of cattle on the 17 farms that had been quarantined as of last week. This is what should have happened. On the same day that any possible connection was discovered, all the cattle on the farm should have been rounded up and destroyed. Kill now and ask questions later. TV cameras should have been called and would have taken close-ups of dreamy faces of cows about to be liquidated. The impression would have been sent around the world of decisive, aggressive, ruthless, all-stops-out responses in Canada. Government officials should have been on TV promising that they were prepared to kill all the cattle in Canada if that's what it took. Information given the media should have been decisive and precise, even on days when it was not possible to be precise. It should have looked like someone is in charge.
Destroying 1,900 cattle would have cost the government about as much in compensation as beef producers are losing every two days that the export embargo remains. It would have made no practical difference in terms of food safety; the chances of a person contracting a disease from a BSE cow are about the same as being killed by a falling meteor
Instead, some government official put out the preposterous notion that some Canadian cattlemen could have been illegally using bovine meat meals in farm-mixed feed for cattle, a practice outlawed in 1997. There is absolutely no reason to suspect that this was happening or in fact that it could happen. No farmer would buy expensive chicken and hog feed to feed to cattle. The thing about cattle is that they thrive, through the magic of the ruminant digestive system, on low-grade feeds. Very little protein supplement is fed to beef cattle because it is not needed and not effective. But Ottawa announced that 200 farms would be randomly checked to see if they were using illegal feed and to enquire into their other practices. It was a blame-the-farmer diversionary game by civil servants to deflect heat from themselves. The result is the impression that the problem could be vastly bigger than one sick cow and that it is rooted in sloppy production practices and lawbreaking by cattle produce.
Then there is that amazing delay in performing the test which first identified the disease. It is not even possible to imagine in what kind of disease-tracking system a sample would be left lying around for over three months before being tested. That was a gift to such as the Canada-hating, Canada-baiting Democratic senator from North Dakota Byron Dorgan, who will not rest until the last Canadian export to his country is stopped.
BSE has been identified in at least 26 countries, and the reason the number is only 26 is that effective testing has not been done elsewhere. There are 100 million head of cattle in the U,S. and since BSE turns up spontaneously in a certain percentage of cases, the statistical possibility that not even one America animal is infected is zero. Sooner or later it will be discovered and that might be the beginning of a more rational attitude to this disease. There is no issue of food safety here. Whether or not BSE can be transmitted to humans is a matter of medical controversy. If it can be transmitted, rudimentary precautions are sufficient to stop it. The worldwide mad-cow scare could not have happened but for the voodoo science that has become so fashionable and the relentless exertions of the media to thoroughly sensationalize everything it touches.
B A C K G R O U N D E R / Morris W. Dorosh
It doesn't sound like anybody at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has been reading AGRIWEEK much lately. Otherwise the mad-cow crises could not have been so grossly mishandled. They must be reading comic books.
A high official of the agency appeared on CBC television the other day looking confused and befuddled, with no sign that he is in the middle of an emergency. The same languid attitude seemed to pervade the whole establishment, with vague, vacant assurances as to health and safety. There was none of the impression that, yes, this is a disaster but we are up to the challenge, we have the resources and have a handle on it. Drastic events call for drastic responses and this is what we are doing.
This is not an animal or human health or food safety issue. It is not even so much a trade or economic issue. It is a public image issue in which poorly-informed people at home and abroad have to be impressed and reassured.
There were 1,900 head of cattle on the 17 farms that had been quarantined as of last week. This is what should have happened. On the same day that any possible connection was discovered, all the cattle on the farm should have been rounded up and destroyed. Kill now and ask questions later. TV cameras should have been called and would have taken close-ups of dreamy faces of cows about to be liquidated. The impression would have been sent around the world of decisive, aggressive, ruthless, all-stops-out responses in Canada. Government officials should have been on TV promising that they were prepared to kill all the cattle in Canada if that's what it took. Information given the media should have been decisive and precise, even on days when it was not possible to be precise. It should have looked like someone is in charge.
Destroying 1,900 cattle would have cost the government about as much in compensation as beef producers are losing every two days that the export embargo remains. It would have made no practical difference in terms of food safety; the chances of a person contracting a disease from a BSE cow are about the same as being killed by a falling meteor
Instead, some government official put out the preposterous notion that some Canadian cattlemen could have been illegally using bovine meat meals in farm-mixed feed for cattle, a practice outlawed in 1997. There is absolutely no reason to suspect that this was happening or in fact that it could happen. No farmer would buy expensive chicken and hog feed to feed to cattle. The thing about cattle is that they thrive, through the magic of the ruminant digestive system, on low-grade feeds. Very little protein supplement is fed to beef cattle because it is not needed and not effective. But Ottawa announced that 200 farms would be randomly checked to see if they were using illegal feed and to enquire into their other practices. It was a blame-the-farmer diversionary game by civil servants to deflect heat from themselves. The result is the impression that the problem could be vastly bigger than one sick cow and that it is rooted in sloppy production practices and lawbreaking by cattle produce.
Then there is that amazing delay in performing the test which first identified the disease. It is not even possible to imagine in what kind of disease-tracking system a sample would be left lying around for over three months before being tested. That was a gift to such as the Canada-hating, Canada-baiting Democratic senator from North Dakota Byron Dorgan, who will not rest until the last Canadian export to his country is stopped.
BSE has been identified in at least 26 countries, and the reason the number is only 26 is that effective testing has not been done elsewhere. There are 100 million head of cattle in the U,S. and since BSE turns up spontaneously in a certain percentage of cases, the statistical possibility that not even one America animal is infected is zero. Sooner or later it will be discovered and that might be the beginning of a more rational attitude to this disease. There is no issue of food safety here. Whether or not BSE can be transmitted to humans is a matter of medical controversy. If it can be transmitted, rudimentary precautions are sufficient to stop it. The worldwide mad-cow scare could not have happened but for the voodoo science that has become so fashionable and the relentless exertions of the media to thoroughly sensationalize everything it touches.
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