We've Created A Monster (In More Places Than Frankenstein, Missouri)


It's Alive... IT'S ALIVE!!!

So, I refrained from passing this latest news on to you during the Holidays. I was trying to follow my "No Bad News" declaration. So, forgive me if you've already read about it. But, if you've been paying attention, this really shouldn't be all that shocking.

You're probably quite aware of how I feel about the American food supply:

Junk In More Than Just The Trunk (Or I Can't Believe Our Cows Eat Twinkies - Part Moo)

Don't Eat These Foods, Bishes!


Well, here's the latest:

Pressure rises to stop antibiotics in agriculture

FRANKENSTEIN, Mo. (appropriately, "Frankenstein") – The mystery started the day farmer Russ Kremer got between a jealous boar and a sow in heat.

The boar gored Kremer in the knee with a razor-sharp tusk. The burly pig farmer shrugged it off, figuring: "You pour the blood out of your boot and go on."

But Kremer's red-hot leg ballooned to double its size. A strep infection spread, threatening his life and baffling doctors. Two months of multiple antibiotics did virtually nothing.

The answer was flowing in the veins of the boar. The animal had been fed low doses of penicillin, spawning a strain of strep that was resistant to other antibiotics. That drug-resistant germ passed to Kremer.

Like Kremer, more and more Americans — many of them living far from barns and pastures — are at risk from the widespread practice of feeding livestock antibiotics. These animals grow faster, but they can also develop drug-resistant infections that are passed on to people. The issue is now gaining attention because of interest from a new White House administration and a flurry of new research tying antibiotic use in animals to drug resistance in people.

Researchers say the overuse of antibiotics in humans and animals has led to a plague of drug-resistant infections that killed more than 65,000 people in the U.S. last year — more than prostate and breast cancer combined. - MORE THAN PROSTATE AND BREAST CANCER COMBINED. And in a nation that used about 35 million pounds of antibiotics last year, 70 percent of the drugs went to pigs, chickens and cows. Worldwide, it's 50 percent.

"This is a living breathing problem, it's the big bad wolf and it's knocking at our door," said Dr. Vance Fowler, an infectious disease specialist at Duke University. "It's here. It's arrived."


This July 10, 2009 photo shows a sow nursing her piglets in a farrowing crate in an Elite Pork Partnership hog confinement building in Carroll, Iowa (AP photo)

She can't even fucking nuzzle them, nor turn around... She's pinned in a pen. Factory farming isn't human. It's demonic.


I WISH they had that much room and were eating grass...

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