Superbugs. An alarming story in this week's The New Yorker focuses on man-made new diseases that cannot be eradicated with conventional antibiotics, even inside hospitals. The writer quotes Michael Pollan to explain the connection to your local meat factory:
"Seventy per cent of the antibiotics administered in America end up in agriculture," Michael Pollan, a professor of journalism at Berkeley and the author of "In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto," told [the writer]. "The drugs are not used to cure sick animals but to prevent them from getting sick, because we crowd them together under filthy circumstances. We have created the perfect environment in which to breed superbugs that are antibiotic-resistant. We've created a petri dish in our factory farms for the evolution of dangerous pathogens."
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caniscandida Posted 8:24 pm
08 Aug 2008
Of course, when we talk about the abolition of CAFOs as a great evil, the human-health issue is of secondary importance.
Practically, though, it may move those people who are otherwise blind/insensate to the ethically primary issue. So by all means, let us hear more from Kit Stolz and Dr. Jerome Groopman.
Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.
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amazingdrx Posted 1:50 am
09 Aug 2008
Get food from a system based on cruelty for bottomline efficiency and reap the superbugs. Remember "War Of The Worlds"? The viruses finally killed the alien invaders.
Has our culture turned into an alien invasion of earth? I think so. We have alienated ourselves from the symbiotic natural system from which we sprung.
http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin
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javaearth Posted 6:59 am
09 Aug 2008
People do not care about their own health nor that of the creatures they share the world with,,,, so if a superbug is the reason many people died, do you think people will care? NO. People will continue to eat the sick and innocent animals, because humans have got so resistant to change that they would rather die than change!
Our society does not care about finding a cure, but rather "put a patch on the problem".
The really sad thing about this superbug is that some company somewhere is cashing in on the medical research to find a "cure" and some CEO is probably happy that there will be a need for the drug that kills the super bug.
I only have this one life, so I am going to try my very best to make a positive change.
--- The Happy & Healthy Vegan ---
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Wolverine Posted 7:52 am
09 Aug 2008
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caniscandida Posted 6:16 pm
09 Aug 2008
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Places_in_The_Hitchhiker%27s ...
It has been too too long since I read those books, and it seems high time to get them down from the shelf.
I recall being disappointed that the "intelligent shade of the color blue" never became a major character.
Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.
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amazingdrx Posted 3:25 am
10 Aug 2008
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panspermia
This suggests that maybe the DNA information is transferred to a planet in spores, then evolution begins. Exogenesis wiki calls it.
What if the spores are DNA designed to root in the basic organic elements existing before life comes on the scene? It kind of makes our spaceship earth seem that much more inspired by some eternal natural life force, no hand of god needed.
Do spores go through black holes intact? they are extremely tough.
http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin
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