As usual, rsomer, I agree with most of what you have said with one little exception.
Your comment:"Even within Japan there is not universal support for 100% testing as many point out the science does not support it and no test can detect BSE in under bovine animals under 24 months of age. Removal of SRMs provides the real food safety, not the test. A trading nation like Japan may someday rue the day that it undermined science-based trading rules." Although totally in line with the current OIE rules, removal of SRMs provide only the 'perception' of real food safety. I am totally unconvinced that one can remove all potentially infected nervous tissue, blood etc. from a carcass especially in an assembly line scenario. In particular, considering the suggestion that contaminated instruments, even though autoclaved, are believed to have infected surgical patients. However, until such time as the so-called science moves from hypothesis to proven science, we can only play with the cards we are dealt. The bottom line; the incidence of BSE in the North American herd is very, very, very low, even if we find another 200 cases.
Your comment:"Even within Japan there is not universal support for 100% testing as many point out the science does not support it and no test can detect BSE in under bovine animals under 24 months of age. Removal of SRMs provides the real food safety, not the test. A trading nation like Japan may someday rue the day that it undermined science-based trading rules." Although totally in line with the current OIE rules, removal of SRMs provide only the 'perception' of real food safety. I am totally unconvinced that one can remove all potentially infected nervous tissue, blood etc. from a carcass especially in an assembly line scenario. In particular, considering the suggestion that contaminated instruments, even though autoclaved, are believed to have infected surgical patients. However, until such time as the so-called science moves from hypothesis to proven science, we can only play with the cards we are dealt. The bottom line; the incidence of BSE in the North American herd is very, very, very low, even if we find another 200 cases.
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