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Arsenic in your chicken: Guess who is defending its use?

Thursday, May 24, 2012 by: Craig Stellpflug

http://www.naturalnews.com/035960_arsenic_chicken_Pfizer.html#ixzz1vngDvL00

(NaturalNews) Arsenic in our food supply has a very rich ally and that ally

is Pfizer. You see, arsenic is routinely fed to poultry because it increases

the growth of the chicken and makes the flesh an appetizing shade of pink (a

side effect of burst blood vessels). Of course arsenic could eventually kill

the hapless chicken but usually not before the slaughterhouse gets them. All

arsenic compounds have mutagenic potential and are known carcinogens. About

9 out of 10 broiler chickens in the United States had been fed arsenic,

according to a 2011 industry estimate.

According to Dr. Greger, MD, the NIH, and the USDA's Food Safety

Inspection Service, there are " alarmingly high levels of arsenic

contamination in the flesh of broiler chickens, " exceeding the EPA upper

limit for arsenic in water by 6 - 9 times. Arsenic has no place in our food

chain, much less on the dinner table. But thanks to the Pfizer drug

Roxarsone, it's in our chicken and pig feed, along with the resulting

fertilizer, and is bound to end up on your plate one way or another. The

European Union banned Roxarsone in 1999, recognizing the public health risks

of the drug. So, why is it still used in the USA?

Follow the money

A hard-fought land Senate bill banning Roxarsone recently had a two year

battle facing opposition by the well-paid Pfizer lobbyists working with the

poultry industry representatives vying to prevent the bill's passage. They

didn't have your health in mind though when Pfizer employed Tim , who

made a cool million last year during a 90-day session of the legislature in

polis. Big Pharma and Big Ag are interested in the bottom line: fatter,

tastier chickens, quicker.

Pfizer's stand is that Roxarsone contains harmless organic arsenic. But

scientific evidence suggests that the industry's beloved arsenic transforms

into inorganic arsenic and ends ups in human tissue.

Other " stuff " found in the feathers of chickens (only one way they got into

the feathers folks) are:

a.. The super-bug causing, illegal class of antibiotics called

fluoroquinolones

b.. An antihistamine that is the active ingredient of Benadryl

c.. Acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol

d.. The antidepressant Prozac

e.. Caffeine

Why don't the growers just stop feeding arsenic?

Arsenic has been fed to chickens to promote growth since 1944. Old habits

are hard to break, but most poultry farmers haven't a clue because they

receive the chemical laced feeds from the Big Ag industry that contracted

them to raise the chickens. This practice was pioneered by Tyson, who found

that feeding the same formula to all of the chickens, no matter who the

farmer is, makes for a consistent product. Each Big AG chicken plant has

their own secret " proprietary feed mix " that is supplied to the contractors

growing the chickens.

But profits dive when chickens die in the unnatural conditions of factory

farming, bringing infestations of gut-eating parasites that stunt their

growth. Chickens were never meant to be raised " Tyson style " - by the

thousands in overcrowded conditions. These unhappy creatures are fed

recycled feed from dead chicken carcasses, discarded offal (guts and pieces

from rendering), chicken manure, and a multiplicity of chemicals and drugs.

Can these chickens even be healthy? How about the human who eats them?

Chicken soup: good for what ails you

Chicken soup is good for what ails you and even helps the body's immune

system. Dr. Rennard and a team at the University of Nebraska Medical

Center found anti-inflammatory properties in chicken soup that soothes sore

throats and eases the misery of colds and flu. That is, in the chicken soup

that grandma used to make...Grandma walked out to the chicken yard to

hand-pick her free-range, organic chicken to serve up for a healthy

carnivorous meal. Now with arsenic found in the store-bought chicken, you

could find yourself facing one of 20 known cancers caused by arsenic.

If you know what's good for you, you will find an organic source of chicken.

USDA standards do not allow arsenic in organic-chicken feed.

Sources for this article:

http://www.washingtonpost.com

http://www.nytimes.com

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22244353

http://www.washingtonspectator.org

http://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_m/m-112/welcome.html

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