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RE: Probiotics (was RE:Vascular flushing and antibiotics)

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" I don't think anyone can avoid antibiotics, even if they want

to. Every piece of meat you eat, unless its range fed, totally

organic (but then you still have to worry about the fact that the

animals might have eaten some pesticide laden leaves or grass), is

loaded with antibiotics -- mostly tetracyclines. So, even if you

don't take minocycline, you still do, albeit indirectly. And if

tetracyclines make cows and bigger and stronger, healthier with less

infections, then they must be good for me. I've never seen a pig

with rosacea or acne even though they're in the mud all day :) "

" And if

tetracyclines make cows and bigger and stronger, healthier with less

infections, then they must be good for me. I've never seen a pig

with rosacea or acne even though they're in the mud all day "

Please tell me you are joking...I can't believe you think this way.

WHY GRASSFED IS BEST.

Commercial cattle are raised on grass until they are from 6 to 18 months old.

Then they are rounded up and shipped hundreds of miles to a feedlot to be

" finished " for market. When these stressed animals arrive at the feedlot, they

are introduced to an entirely artificial diet. Grain is the primary ingredient

in their new rations because it speeds their growth and makes them fatter,

creating the marbled beef that consumers have come to expect.

With economy the overriding principle, their feed may contain any number of

unsavory ingredients, including " tankage " (the ground up flesh, hooves,

feathers, and bones of other animals, including cattle), chicken and cattle

manure, stale pastry (a good source of energy), and ground cardboard (for bulk).

To further stimulate the animals' growth, they are dosed with synthetic hormones

and antibiotics. This biotech combination of grain, by-product feedstuff,

antibiotics and hormones achieves it's goal: our feedlots produce vast

quantities of marbled USDA-approved meat at a reasonable cost.

We humans pay the price for this " affordable " meat. The 20 million pounds of

antibiotics fed to our livestock each year are spawning antibiotic-resistant

bacteria. Alarmingly, the percentage of Salmonella-resistant to 5 different

antibiotics has increased from less than 1% in 1980 to 34% in 1996. Much of this

increase is due to the routine use of feed antibiotics in the livestock

industry. Some believe it's only a matter of time before these superbugs cause

widespread health problems.

When ruminant animals (cattle or sheep) are fed large amounts of grain, their

meat and milk products are less desirable for human health. One of the most

significant drawbacks is that their meat has more of the " bad " fat that clogs

our arteries and less of the " good " fat that enhances our health.

Let's take a closer look at grainfed beef. When cattle have spent their

requisite 4 to 8 months in a feedlot, their meat has 4 to 6 times more total fat

than meat from grassfed cattle. It also had twice as much saturated fat. A diet

high in saturated fat has been linked with a higher risk of cardiovascular

disease and diabetes.

On the other hand, when cattle are allowed to remain on pasture, their meat has

about the same amount of meat as wild game or skinless chicken breast. When red

meat is this lean, it actually lowers your cholesterol levels. This means that

even people with high cholesterol levels can enjoy grassfed beef and lamb.

Feeding grain to cattle changes their meat in a less obvious but equally

important way: it diminishes its supply of a type of good fat called " omega-3

fatty acids. " Grassfed meat has from 2 to 6 times more omega-3s than grainfed

meat.

Omega-3s are not only good for your health; they are essential for normal growth

and development. Furthermore, you can't manufacture them in your body, so you

must get them from your diet. This is why omega-3 fatty acids are one of the few

fats to be classified as " essential fatty acids. "

New research reveals that every cell and system in the human body relies on

omega-3s. Your brain, for example, is largely composed of fat, and omega-3s are

the most important of these fats. If your diet has an adequate amount of these

nutrients, you have a lower risk of a host of mental disorders including

depression, aggressive behavior, attention-deficit disorder, schizophrenia, and

dementia.

Your cardiovascular system is equally dependent on omega-3s. People with diets

rich in omega-3s are less likely to develop high blood pressure or irregular

heart rhythms. Remarkably, they are half as likely to die from a heart attack or

stroke.

The disease-fighting properties of omega-3s take on more significance when you

realize that the American diet is really deficient in these fats. Only 40% of

Americans consume adequate levels. 20% have levels so low that they cannot be

detected.

Feeding grain to beef is one of the hidden reasons for the widespread omega-3

deficiency. Every day that an animal spends in the feedlot, its meat contains

fewer and fewer omega-3 fatty acids. By the time the animal is slaughtered,

there are almost no omega-3s. The reason for this is simple. Omega-3s are formed

in the green leaves of plants. When the animals graze on their natural diet of

greens, their diet is automatically rich in these essential fats. When the

animals are taken off fresh pasture and fed ingredients poor in omega-3s, their

tissues gradually lose their store of these potentially lifesaving fats.

When we look at today's chicken industry, the picture looks about as gruesome as

the beef industry. Today, our super-efficient laying hens are vaccinated,

medicated, debeaked, confined in cages, fed high-energy diets (including ground

up hens that no longer lay enough eggs), fed antibiotics and medications to

handle their stressing environment, and exposed to a carefully orchestrated

lighting environment.

A recent finding is that the antibiotics and medications routinely given to

commercial laying hens can linger in their eggs long after all traces are gone

from their blood. Little does the consumer know that when s/he buys a dozen eggs

from the supermarket, s/he might be getting a free dose of antibiotics as well.

Worse yet, those eggs may contain antibiotic resistant bacteria.

Meanwhile, a researcher has discovered that supermarket eggs don't have their

full allotment of omega-3 fatty acids. Artemis P. Simopoulos, M.D., chair of the

Nutrition Coordinating Committee of the National Institutes of Health found

that, when comparing free range eggs to factory eggs, free range eggs had almost

20 (yes, twenty) times more omega-3 fatty acids.

Benefits also exist when comparing pasture raised poultry to factory raised

poultry. A recent study funded by the U.S.D.A. Sustainable Agriculture and

Research Education Program (SARE) showed that free-range chickens had 21% less

total fat, 30% less saturated fat, and 28% fewer calories. The breast meat was

so lean that the U.S.D.A. could classify it as " fat free. " Yet the meat had 50%

more vitamin A and 100% more omega-3s. The S.A.R.E. study also compared eggs

from free range chickens with eggs from caged birds. Free range eggs had 10%

less fat, 40% more vitamin A, and 400% more omega-3 fatty acids. An unexpected

finding is that the eggs from free range chickens had 34% less cholesterol.

For decades, the term " grainfed meat " has been interpreted as an assurance of

quality. In reality, it should be a warning sign that the meat is going to be

less desirable for human health. For better health, look for chickens, beef,

lamb, pork, and eggs that are grass or pasture fed.

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I agree with this article. Meat animals should not be given

antibiotics. Antibiotics should be reserved for people. But what

are we going to do? We need to exert control over the farming types.

>

> New research reveals that every cell and system in the human body

relies on omega-3s. Your brain, for example, is largely composed of

fat, and omega-3s are the most important of these fats. If your diet

has an adequate amount of these nutrients, you have a lower risk of a

host of mental disorders including depression, aggressive behavior,

attention-deficit disorder, schizophrenia, and dementia.

Uhhh.. what was I going to say? I forgot. I think someone is after

me. They can strike at any time. Trust no one. I am prepared to

defend myself.

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Guest guest

I agree with this article. Meat animals should not be given

antibiotics. Antibiotics should be reserved for people. But what

are we going to do? We need to exert control over the farming types.

>

> New research reveals that every cell and system in the human body

relies on omega-3s. Your brain, for example, is largely composed of

fat, and omega-3s are the most important of these fats. If your diet

has an adequate amount of these nutrients, you have a lower risk of a

host of mental disorders including depression, aggressive behavior,

attention-deficit disorder, schizophrenia, and dementia.

Uhhh.. what was I going to say? I forgot. I think someone is after

me. They can strike at any time. Trust no one. I am prepared to

defend myself.

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