Friday, April 13, 2007

Mad Cow Disease


Recently an expert in BSE, Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (or Mad Cow Disease) came to speak to my class. I learnt a lot, specifically when discussing the economics and science behind the rendering process with her. It was during this time that it clicked for me how stunned the whole the cause of the national spread of this disease was.


The spread was caused by feeding ruminants to ruminants ( the meat of herbivores to herbivores). In my opinion this was possibly the single more stunned thing livestock operations has ever put in practice.

A Ruminant is a hoofed animal that chews cud. (any cud-chewing hoofed mammal with an even number of toes and a stomach with multiple chambers, e.g. cattle, camels, and giraffes.)
(Microsoft® Encarta® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.)

Basically in the 1990's the government and people in the agriculture industry asked themselves how they could be less wasteful of left over parts of cattle (ie bone meal and left over organs that North Americans aren't accustom to eating and there for won't buy), and provide cattle with more protein. Their solution? To feed their cattle other cattle! Bones and organs from other deceased ruminants were taken and rendered. (Rendering : heating animals remains to extract fat : the process of separating fat from meat or animal remains by slow heating.)(Microsoft® Encarta® 2006. © 1993-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.) The rendered material was compressed into pellets and mixed with animal feed.

At the time livestock producers were worried about their animals not getting enough plant protein because grain was "poor quality". By feeding cattle the cooked remains of other animals they could provide animal protein.

You would think this would raise a red flag since the animals were herbivores. You'd think there would be tests done to make sure it was safe but it doesn't seem like there were any test done and if they were they were ignored or at least unreported. This process was considered an economic way for the industry to dispose of unwanted waste and farmers to cheaply supplement cattle with protein.

In 1993 Canada had it's first out break of BSE, Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, commonly known as Mad Cow disease. This was caused by livestock eating unnaturally. Livestock were consuming other cattle that had BSE and there for spreading the disease.

There were many outcomes because of this. MANY MANY cows had to be slaughtered, those with the disease, those in their blood line etc... truck loads and truck loads of cattle had to be incinerated.

The US closed it's border for Canadian meat trade. Canada lost about11 million a day just from loss of exports .

A complete feed ban was put into practice in Canada, and it was made illegal for ruminants to be feed to other ruminants. Any cow over 30 months is now tagged and checked, and SRM (specific risk material) for BSE (materials such as cattle brain, spinal cord or small intestine) are incinerated and then buried. The only place that SRM ruminants can be used as of now is in pet food (which also seems inappropriate) but as of July 12 2007 that too will be banned.

Canada's BSE cases have decreases drastically. Our last case was this year (2007) in Alberta and did not spread.

Additional to the loss of export earnings there was added costs of farmer compensation , and sanitation/inspection/ new system for limiting BSE outbreaks.

It's almost sickly funny to think that the whole idea behind feeding ruminants to ruminants was economics (to save money). It's ironic that the process ended up costing Canada billions of dollars. The meat industry will never be economically efficient and that's all that's too it.

Goals

  1. live life to the fullest

  2. Be less shy

  3. Take Western riding lessons

  4. be comfortable in my own skin

  5. remember to breathe

  6. die before the world ends

  7. get fit

  8. manage my time better

  9. Find faith in something

  10. Be confident and sexy

  11. Get as far away from the capitalist life style as I possibly can

  12. become more spiritual

  13. read manga

  14. Go on a road trip

  15. drink 8 glasses of water a day

  16. become more informed about animal rights
  17. help save the environment

  18. socialize more

  19. volenteer at a homeless shelter
  20. learn how to read barcodes

  21. be a big sister at 'big sisters, big brothers' some day

  22. go to India

  23. complain less

  24. Use less toliet paper!

  25. Give blood 1861 people

  26. Learn to drive a standard 21 people

  27. Go humpback whale watching

  28. canoe in a rainforest

  29. complete a marathon

  30. help in a developing country

  31. buy a saree to wear to prom

  32. volunteer at a homeless shelter

  33. be an opinionated columnist
  34. become fluent in sign language

  35. Take a train across Canada

  36. practice spiritually at a buddhist temple
  37. be more friendly

  38. Fall in love

  39. Learn to knit

  40. make vegan cookies

  41. stay in a hostel

  42. learn to meditate

  43. keep track of my finances

  44. go snowshoeing

  45. go camping in a real wilderness

  46. SPEED DATE (JUST ONCE IT SEEMS FUN)

  47. make a toothbrush bracelet

  48. go to a poetry reading

  49. Have a conversation with a homeless person

  50. learn to eat with chopsticks

  51. see Conor Oberst live
52. make pottery

53.
own a horse

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Real TV, Real People.

Ever get sick of the same fake encounters, fake people, fake smiles in your life and then come home to fake TV? It's absolutely overdone yet there is still a demand for these sugarcoated TV lives. Good TV to me is hardship, struggle and quirky, screwed up people. I like to see real people who have experience indifference and pain, telling their real, unfabricated, uncensored stories. I want to see an artists smoking dope and people who haven't showered in three days talking about the time they met an eccentric guy at the super market, or hitchhiked to California.

"Camp Hollywood" is one of those great movies. Low budget and real. Steve Markle a young producer/director/comedian that filmed the entire movie with what looked like a home movie camera and a tripod. In this two hour show Steve stays in legendary hotel in Hollywood where he meets and interviews struggling actors, musicians and porn stars. These people have
personality. This movie has character. This is a real reality show, I guarantee you whilst watching Steve's footage you will feel like you are part of the tenents large dysfunctional family yourself.

However with all low budget, independent movies/shows you will scarcely find them on the air waves. You'll be lucky if you get the chance to watch many, and sometimes equally fortunate if you even find anything about the actors/producers/and movie content online. When googleing Steve Markle I couldn't find any info other then " Steve Markle is a young producer/director/comedian who filmed and produced 'Camp Hollywood'.. " etc on the web. Not surprisingly the only picture I could find of this man of sparkling potential was the one I have posted.

What a crying shame that the best movies and TV shows are so hard to find on a regular televistion channel and are so under appreciated when watched. People these days are too impatient to watch anything that doesn't have constant make out sences and scripted gibberish talk. Falcon Beach is not good quality TV people!