Cow Antibiotic Causes Human Kidney Disease
The National Institutes of Health (NIH)
estimates that 26 million Americans have
chronic kidney damage.
Today's Subject:
The overuse of antibiotics in cows can
cause kidney damage in dairy consumers.
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"Associated Press
November 22, 2009
MINNEAPOLIS — Federal officials have sent
warning letters to two Central Minnesota
dairy farms for allegedly using high
levels of antibiotics in cows. J&L Dairy
in Clarissa sent a cow to slaughter in
March that was drugged with 129 times
the amount of penicillin allowed.
"The U.S. Department of Agriculture Food
Safety and Inspection Service had tested
a cow he sent to slaughter on Sept. 16,
2008, and found high levels of the
antibiotic neomycin."
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Neomycin is an antibiotic which is used as
a topical cream to treat mastitis in cows.
Neomycin is also used as a topical antibiotic
for humans, commonly used as Neosporin.
Nephratic damage (kidney disease)
Neomycin is never given to humans intravenously
because it can cause nephratic damage. Neomycin
can be taken orally because in theory,
digestive processes break down the antibiotic
before it does any kidney damage. See:
http://www.drugs.com/cdi/neomycin.html
Here's where Mother Nature kicks in.
Homogenization is an artificial process by
which man has micronized naturally occurring
fat molecules in milk so that the fat molecules
become evenly dispersed throughout the milk.
One pint of homogenized milk contains more
than a trillion tiny fat molecules. These
fat vehicles encapsulate and protect
neomycin molecules from degradation in
much the same way that milk's naturally
occurring protein growth hormones (such
as IGF-I) survive digestive processes.
Why is it that cows are overdosed with
antibiotics and the milk is not rejected
by the drivers who are mandated to test
each truckload or the milk processors?
Why is it that the milk gets consumed,
but when the meat from cows gets tested
in slaughterhouses, their flesh contains
unsafe levels of antibiotics?
The truth will expose an unsafe food
delivery system which has resulted in
new strains of antibiotic-resistant
bacteria in our food supply.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Is Math a Requirement for Vermont's Dairy Majors?
Students at the University of Vermont recognize
that the dairy industry is hurting, so they've
acted in a most altruistic manner. Milk prices
have been at an all-time low, so the cost for
a 14-ounce containers of milk sold in the
student cafeteria was scheduled to decrease
by ten cents per container.
Instead of accepting the price resudtion,
students held a campus-wide vote to keep
the prices the same, and kick back the ten
cent difference to Vermont's dairy farmers.
What got me was this quote from somebody
who works at the University of Vermont
dining service:
"We can sell anywhere from 40,000 to 60,000
bottles of 14-ounce milk, so we're looking
at anywhere from $3,000 to $5,000 potentially
each year."
If one multiplies 40,000 to 60,000 units
by ten cents, wouldn't that add up to
$4,000 to $6,000?
Let's do some additional math, shall we?
Approximately 5,000 students live on campus
in 39 separate residence halls at the University
of Vermont. One would assume that 5,000 students
eat (at least) 15,000 meals per day. That's
450,000 meals per month. In a nine month year
(allowing for vacations), University of Vermont
cafeterias serve over 4 million meals per year.
Are we expected to believe that only one out
of a hundred diners purchases a 14-ounce
container of milk with his (or her) meal?
Are we expected to believe that they sell
only 40,000 containers of milk each year?
Fuggetabout the dairy majors. They're clueless.
If I was an economics major at the University
of Vermont, I'd want to know the true numbers
and investigate just who's handling the milk
money. Those dimes add up!
WCAX bills itself as "Vermont's trusted news
source for 55 years." The original story
appeared on the WCAX website on Monday,
November 16, 2009. See:
http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?S=11515587
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Time Out for My Vomit Break
This one's no gag. Actually, I'm gagging.
The Senate leaves me needing to heave;
to regurgitate the acid in my stomach
and the bad taste in my mouth for what
they have schemed to do late this evening
while America sleeps.
The bill will be passed Saturday night
away from the glare of media lights,
avoiding reporters ability to dissect the
details of political machinations and deal
making in the Sunday editions of our
nation's newspapers.
Will America's new health care bill cover
the costs of my nausea treatment after 10
hours of continuous projectile vomiting?
Here's what I read on the Internet:
____________________________________
####################################
ABC News' Jonathan Karl reports:
What does it take to get a wavering
senator to vote for health care reform?
Here's a case study.
On page 432 of the Reid bill, there is
a section increasing federal Medicaid
subsidies for "certain states recovering
from a major disaster."
The section spends two pages defining
which "states" would qualify, saying,
among other things, that it would be
states that "during the preceding 7
fiscal years" have been declared a
"major disaster area."
I am told the section applies to exactly
one state: Louisiana, the home of moderate
Democrat Mary Landrieu, who has been
playing hard to get on the health care bill.
In other words, the bill spends two pages
describing would could be written with a
single world: Louisiana. (This may also
help explain why the bill is long.)
Senator Harry Reid, who drafted the bill,
cannot pass it without the support of
Louisiana's Mary Landrieu.
How much does it cost? According to the
Congressional Budget Office: $100 million.
Here's the incredibly complicated language:
SEC. 2006. SPECIAL ADJUSTMENT TO FMAP
DETERMINATION FOR CERTAIN STATES RECOVERING
FROM A MAJOR DISASTER.
Section 1905 of the Social Security Act
(42 U.S.C. 1396d), as amended by sections
2001(a)(3) and 2001(b)(2), is amended—
(1) in subsection (b), in the first sentence,
by striking ''subsection (y)'' and
inserting ''subsections (y) and (aa)''and
(2) by adding at the end the following
new subsection:
''a)(1) Notwithstanding subsection (b),
beginning January 1, 2011, the Federal
medical assistance percentage for a fiscal
year for a disaster-recovery FMAP
adjustment State shall be equal to the
following:
'A) In the case of the first fiscal year
(or part of a fiscal year) for which this
subsection applies to the State, the Federal
medical assistance percentage determined
for the fiscal year without regard to this
subsection and subsection (y), increased
by 50 percent of the number of percentage
points by which the Federal medical
assistance percentage determined for the
State for the fiscal year without regard
to this subsection and subsection (y), is
less than the Federal medical assistance
percentage determined for the State for
the preceding fiscal year after the
application of only subsection (a) of
section 5001 of Public Law 111–5 (if
applicable to the preceding fiscal year)
and without regard to this subsection,
subsection (y), and subsections (b) and
(c) of section 5001 of Public Law 111–5.
'') In the case of the second or any
succeeding fiscal year for which this
subsection applies to the State, the
Federal medical assistance percentage
determined for the preceding fiscal year
under this subsection for the State,
increased by 25 percent of the number
of percentage points by which the Federal
medical assistance percentage determined
for the State for the fiscal year without
regard to this subsection and subsection
(y), is less than the Federal medical
assistance percentage determined for the
State for the preceding fiscal year under
this subsection.
'') In this subsection, the term 'disaster-
recovery FMAP adjustment State'means a
State that is one of the 50 States or the
District of Columbia, for which, at any
time during the preceding 7 fiscal years,
the President has declared a major
disaster under section 401 of the Robert
T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act and determined as a result
of such disaster that every county or
parish in the State warrant individual
and public assistance or public assistance
from the Federal Government under such Act
and for which— ''(A) in the case of the
first fiscal year (or part of a fiscal
year) for which this subsection applies
to the State, the Federal medical
assistance percentage determined for the
State for the fiscal year without regard
to this subsection and subsection (y), is
less than the Federal medical assistance
percentage determined for the State for
the preceding fiscal year after the
application of only subsection (a) of
section 5001 of Public Law 111–5 (if
applicable to the preceding fiscal year)
and without regard to this subsection,
subsection (y), and subsections (b)
and (c) of section 5001 of Public Law
111–5, by at least 3 percentage points;
and ''(B) in the case of the second or
any succeeding fiscal year for which this
subsection applies to the State, the Federal
medical assistance percentage determined
for the State for the fiscal year without
regard to this subsection and subsection
(y), is less than the Federal medical
assistance percentage determined for the
State for the preceding fiscal year under
this subsection by at least 3 percentage
points.
''(3) The Federal medical assistance
percentage determined for a disaster-
recovery FMAP adjustment State under
paragraph (1) shall apply for purposes
of this title (other than with respect
to disproportionate share hospital payments
described in section 1923 and payments
under this title that are based on the
enhanced FMAP described in 2105(b)) and
shall not apply with respect to payments
under title IV (other than under part E
of title IV) or payments under title XXI.''.
____________________________________
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Got it?
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Elsie in the Sky With Diamonds
"Picture yourself in a boat on a river,
With tangerine trees and marmalade skies
Somebody calls you, you answer quite slowly,
A cow with kaleidoscope eyes."
- With apologies to Lennon & McCartney
Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds was the Beatles
1967 song in which the titled initials (L.S.D.)
described a place where rocking horse people
viewed plasticine porters and ate marshmallow
pies while drifting past flowers.
In the late 1940s, citizens of a French
town ate rye bread baked with moldy grain.
Actually, the grain contained a fungus called
ergot (Claviceps purpurea). Historians record
similar incidents of mass hysteria due to
hallucinations caused by LSD ingestion. Some
suggest that the Salem Witch Trials had
their etiology with this same grain fungus.
When the black growth on rye is refined
(process #25) it produces a chemical
hallucinogen known as LSD-25...which
brings us to November 20, 2009.
Dairy farmers have suffered through more than
their fair share of low prices, hardships,
and calamities. Add one more potential
problem to their 2009 curse.
Due to unusual and unprecedented weather,
many dairy farm operators experienced a
relatively cool and rainy summer which
set back harvest time three weeks later
than traditional harvest times. Many corn
and grain growers had to deal with early
frosts and lost a good part of their crop.
The frost added moisture to their corn
and other grains which caused mold and
fungus growth. The grains have been
harvested and stored, and therein is the
problem.
Some of those molds and/or fungus growths
could be toxic to cows or to the humans
who drink the milk or eat the cheese from
those cows who have ingested such toxins.
Mooo, man!
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
MAP of Your Irritable Bowels,
Ulcerative Colitis,
or Crohn's Disease
A newly published study has shocking
implications for every individual who
drinks milk or eats cheese. The subject
of the study is an infections agent
gastroenterologists call MAP.
The Study was published in the November
13, 2009 issue of Foodborne Pathogens
and Disease.
More than 40 million Americans have
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Ulcerative
Colitis, or Crohn's Disease. These conditions
been proven to be caused by a bacterium,
mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis (MAP).
Sixty-five percent of America's dairy herds
have cows infected with this bacterium. Cows
pass the disease on to humans who drink
infected milk. One hundred percent of people
with Crohn's disease carry MAP bacteria.
Five years ago, researchers discovered that MAP
survives in the human bloodstream. (The Lancet,
Volume 364, Issue 9439, Pages 1039 - 1044,
18 September 2004.)
These bacteria can take many years to culture
into a new colony, and when they do, Crohn's
Disease symptoms return with a vengeance by
invading previously unaffected human tissues.
_________________________________________
In the new study, scientists (Favila-Humara LC,
et. al.) investigated the presence of MAP
in bulk milk samples taken from cow and goat
milk. Their results:
"MAP DNA was detected in 100% of the bulk
tank milk samples of 14 bovine herds and
3 caprine flocks..."
The researchers concluded:
"...Raw milk ingestion represents a potential
risk of Map infection."
The researchers erred by assuming that only
raw milk was a health risk. Previous studies
have shown that MAP survives pasteurization.
Link to that research and additional MAP info:
http://www.notmilk.com/c.html
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Vegan Thanksgiving for the Anti-cook
For every Auguste Escoffier-like individual
who is capable of whipping up a vegan
Mousseline or Perigordine sauce, there
exists an Elmer Fudd-like character who
is incable of the culinary skills required
to boil a cup of water.
For every culinary genius who loves cooking
for friends and family at Thanksgiving time,
there is a terrified anti-gourmet who dreads
the task of chopping, dicing, cooking, and
serving up a multi-course dinner consisting
of bland overcooked food. Limp veggies.
Undercooked pies. Oversweetened cranberry
sauce. Overspiced stuffing.
There is an instant solution for those
wishing to serve the perfect vegan meal.
I pride myself on being a gourmet, and am
appreciative when I find great food. I've got
a discerning palate and my favorite television
show is anything on the Food Channel.
So, without further ado, let me state with
the self-appointed authority within me that
I've found the most highly skilled gourmet
vegan food provider in North America:
The Veggie Brothers
http://www.veggiebrothers.com
Toll Free Tel: 877-VEGAN-55 (877-834-2655)
I began my experience with the Veggie Brothers
a few months ago by ordering nine dishes which
turned out to be enough to easily serve and
satisfy four meat eaters with plenty of
leftovers for my dog. I ordered:
Charcoal grilled flank steak au jus
Salisbury steak with mushroom gravy
Grilled soy chicken cutlet w/garlic lemon sauce
Vegan chicken noodle soup
Grilled Mahi Mahi fish steaks
Meatballs in marinara sauce
Hot & spicy soy chicken buffalo wings
Hamburger
Soy chicken cacciatore
The range of tastes and textures were unbelievably
true to the essence of the meat-dish equivalent.
The presentation (appearance) of each dish was a
pleasant surprise. Before the package of foods
arrived at my home I anticipated a disaster. Each
dish was plastic-sealed in its own package and
the entire box was shipped with dry ice. Grill marks
appeared on the chicken cutlet and mahi-mahi and
perfect large sprigs of fresh rosemary accompanied
the faux fish dish which actually came with a
whiff of the ocean's bouquet. How do they do that,
I wonder?
Do your taste buds cream out for Southern-style
ribs and spicy buffalo chicken drumsticks?
Call Veggie Brothers and they'll arrive in dried
ice, ready for heating.
From soup to dessert, the one thing veggie
brothers cannot prepare is a real turkey.
Sorry! It's against their philosophy to prepare
anything but magnificent gourmet vegan foods!
Place your order today for next week's
Thanksgiving meal.
http://www.veggiebrothers.com
Toll Free Tel: 877-VEGAN-55 (877-834-2655)
Even if you're cooking for just one, your
Thanksgiving experience will be well worth
the cost.
NOTE: NOTMILK 'NEVER' solicits nor accepts
payment to promote a vegan product. We do so
in order to spread joy of a plant-based diet.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
A Perfect Cow
"You don't understand. I coulda had
class. I coulda been a contender.
I coulda been somebody, instead of a
bum, which is what I am, let's face it."
- Marlon Brando (as Terry Malloy)
On The Waterfront, 1954
What is a perfect cow, and what is her value?
If I was walking the streets of Delhi, I
could not tell the difference between a
perfect cow and a near-perfect cow but
somebody paid $1.2 million dollars for
the "perfect cow" last week at the Royal
Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto.
My second reaction to this story was to
wonder: Was the second place finisher an
imperfect cow and is she now somebody's
hamburger?
My first reaction to the above is to alert
my Canadian neighbors that Winter begins
some time in December, not November, and
that their event should have been called
the Agricultural Autumnal Fair in Toronto,
but I've heard that north of the border
where ice hockey is played 12 months per
year there are just two seasons, July 1st
(Canadian Independence Day) and winter.
Independence from what, you might ask?
Nobody in Canada actually remembers, but
I believe that it has something to do with
Lord Stanley's Cup and Canada's secession
from America's Union in 1867.
So, Canadians celebrate Winter in the Fall,
and Spring in the Summer, and still take
pride in the fact that Pierre Trudeau stole
away Bianca Jagger from Mick, demonstating
that a Rolling Stone gathers no more.
That's about all I know regarding Canada,
America's Winter wonderland.
I understand winter's beginning to mean the
very instant when the sun's position in the
sky is at its greatest angular distance on
the other side of the equatorial plane from
the observer's hemisphere...OK, I cheated.
That's really Wikipedia's definition...
This year, Winter actually begins in New York
on December 22 at 1:07 AM, but my calendar
claims it begins in 33 days on the 21st.
Where's global warming when it is most needed?
According to Toronto Winter fair organizers,
Missy, raised by Morsan farms in Alberta,
was rated according to the bovine genetic
index.
I wonder. Is there a human genetic index?
Are human females ranked according to the
size of their udders, and if so, does a
perfect female human have sized 80 centimeter,
90 cm, or 100 cm udders? My idea of the perfect
human might differ from yours, but I'd score
perfection closer to the 80 than the 100...
but who am I to judge?
For more information, call the spokesperson
for MTC (Missy, The Cow). Tiffany Fisher's
cell phone: (416) 456-7650.
After unsuccessfully searching google for a
definition of the bovine genetic index, I
gave in and left a message for Tiffany on
Monday (11/16) at 9:02 A.M.
Since Tiffany did not return my phone call,
you'll have to make do with a transcript
of my imaginary conversation.
ME: Hello, Tiffany. Is it really winter
in Toronto?
TIFFANY: No. We only call it that because
the Maple Leafs are the worst team in the
National Hockey Leage and have won only
3 of its first 18 games.
ME: That's really awful.
TIFFANY: I've followed your Knicks and Nets--
ME: (Cutting off Tiffany) Enough said!
ME: Who paid $1.2 million for the cow?
TIFFANY: I cannot say.
ME: What exactly is the bovine genetic test?
TIFFANY: I'm not exactly sure.
ME: Since cows have genetics, and people have
genetics, is there a human genetic test?
TIFFANY: Why would you want to know that?
ME: I'm am looking for the perfect woman.
TIFFANY: It could be me. Got $1.2 million?
ME: Is that American or Canadian dollars?
TIFFANY: Either/or.
ME: No, sorry, I'm a little short this week.
TIFFANY: Too bad. You coulda been a contender.
I still have no idea how to identify the
perfect cow, but I would imagine that she:
1) Keeps the horns on her head and the tail
on her rear end for her entire life and is
not mutilated like every American cow;
2) Is not kept pregnant in order to be milked
for the majority of her adult life;
3) Does not end her life with a man's knife
severing her carotid artery and jugular vein;
4) Never takes bull from the male of her
species.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Snack Time!
"If the poor overweight jogger only knew how far
he had to run to work off the calories in a crust
of bread he might find it better in terms of pound
per mile to go to a massage parlor."
-Dr. Christiaan Barnard
Snack Time!
This is the time of year for indoor stationary
biking, but yesterday's weather provided a rare
treat.
It's the week before Thanksgiving and it's
beautiful outside. My roses are still in bloom
and the lettuce and parsley plants are still
producing. It hit 70 degrees yesterday, and
I pumped up my bicycle tires to 90 pounds of
pressure, took my bicycle gloves and racing
shoes out of storage, and enjoyed a summer-like
ride.
Let's assume you weigh 150 pounds (don't you wish?)
Let's assume you like to exercise on your bicycle.
(more wishful thinking!)
Assuming you exercise at a moderate rate (ten miles
per hour), you will burn about 280 calories per hour.
Consider how long it would take to burn the calories
after munching on the following hearty snacks:
1 pint raw celery: 7 minutes
1 pint raw watermelon: 20 minutes
1 pint raw carrot: 22 minutes
1 pint raw strawberry: 24 minutes
1 pint sliced raw apple: 35 minutes
2 slices pizza: 1 hour and 57 minutes
1 pint cheddar cheese: 2 hours and 53 minutes
1 pint rich vanilla ice cream: 3 hours and 48 minutes
Which snack makes the most sense to you?
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Milking $tarbuck$
The United States Centers for Disease Control
publishes a journal which name speaks for itself:
Preventing Chronic Disease
The October 6, 2009 issue (Prev Chronic Dis. 2009
Oct;6(4):A118) reports:
Researchers from New York's Department of Health
(Huang C, Dumanovsky T, et. al.) investigated the
number of calories in beverages from 42 Starbucks and
73 Dunkin' Donuts outlets in New York City.
Their findings:
"We included 1,127 beverage purchases at Starbucks
and 1,830 at Dunkin' Donuts in our analyses. Brewed
coffee or tea averaged 63 kcal, and blended coffee
beverages averaged 239 kcal. Approximately two-thirds
of purchases at Starbucks and one-fourth of purchases
at Dunkin' Donuts were blended coffee beverages."
Researcher's conclusion:
"Calories in blended coffee beverages are high; on
average, customers bought 12% (of their daily
caloric intake in one portion of coffee) of a
2,000-kcal diet."
Researcher's explained that their analyses of caloric
content was based upon cash register receipts.
What they did not make record of was the number
of patrons who paid for their purchases and then
dosed their beverages with high calorie Half & Half
and/or extra helpings of sugar at a side counter.
Starbucks uses over 2 billion pounds of fluid milk
in their coffee drinks.
Starbucks also uses about 3.7 million pounds of whey
protein in their banana chocolate, orange mango, and
strawberry banana Vivanno smoothies.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Are Americans Consuming More Beef?
The United States Department of Agriculture's
May 22, 2009 Economic Research report reveals:
2007 beef cow slaughter: 31.7 million animals
2008 beef cow slaughter: 35.9 million animals
Are Americans consuming more beef?
Unless companion dogs and cats raid refrigerators
while their companion humans sleep, the thirteen
percent increase in cattle slaughter suggests
that people are eating more beef.
Coming next: An investigation into why animal rights
groups promoting animal welfare increased their
cash flow donations from 2007 to 2008 by a factor
of thirteen percent. Is there a connection, or is
it a coincidence that the number of slaughtered
animals and the public's meat consumption increases
directly proportional to the increase in spending
by animal welfarists?
The public's perception that farm animals are now
living gentler lives due to new laws and regulations
appears to be appeasing the conscience of meat eaters
and the end result is that more meat is being consumed
guilt-free.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
You Cut Her Up in Pieces, Like Livestock!
Yesterday morning, I was putting the finishing
touches on a writing project. WFAN, New York's
sports talk radio station, was on as background
noise. Boomer (Esiason) & (Craig) Carton went
to a commercial at 9 AM. The show aired a
commercial for the prime time hit television
show, C.S.I.
A.M. radio is "white noise" for me, but
occasionally a word or phrase causes me to
turn my full attention from my work to the
radio's subject matter. This excerpt from
last night's show (Friday, November 12)
jolted me.
"You cut her up in pieces, like livestock!"
There must be a word to describe phrases
which compare horrendous ways sadistic mass
murderers treat their fellow humans while
routinely accepting the methods men use to
slaughter livestock as "normal". Can we
refer to a slaughtered cow as deadstock?
Can you watch just one episode of reality
and walk away unchanged?
http://veg-tv.info/Earthlings
Is cutting up a cow or pig or lamb or chicken
normal behavior? The last time I witnessed a
live animal being slaughtered, I was the one
holding the knife, and the experience haunts
me.
The most remarkable aspect of that commercial
is that the CSI producers understood that
human slaughter sells. They cut "her" up.
They correctly reason that television viewers
wanted to tune into that episode and watch
a woman suffer "like livestock." My bet is
thatg the the female victim was under 35 and
beautiful. Such an appeal to the worst within
man will boost ratings and sell more fast food
hamburgers.
If and when all Americans come to terms with
pain and torture of killing innocent humans
and completely reject the lascivious and
lustful nature of such actions, only then
will man come to terms with the horrors we
inflict upon ten billion sentient "livestock"
each year.
They just played the commercial again, and
the moment after the line was delivered, I
could hear the sound of a woman gagging.
"You Cut Her Up in Pieces, Like Livestock!"
Today, pieces of 27 million livestock will
be served to American consumers.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
New Food from an Old Friend
"I do not like broccoli. And I haven't liked it
since I was a little kid and my mother made me
eat it. And I'm President of the United States
and I'm not going to eat any more broccoli."
George H. W. Bush
**********
Broccoli is one of my favorite vegetables and
I could probably offer you dozens of ways to
prepare it, but today I am offering (many of
you) something new.
(***At the conclusion of today's column, I
offer you an O.M.G. culinary broccoli moment,
guaranteed to thrill most meat eaters!)
In the past, I would use half of the broccoli,
cutting off and eating the lovely florets while
discarding the not-so-wonderful stalk. What a
mistake!
If you've done the same, try this. Cut off the
stalks as you've done in the past and peel them.
They peel easier than carrots, and I use a
paring knife in place of a vegetable peeler.
What remains are delicious crunchy stalks, softer
than the florets. The pithiness is gone, and
what remains is something which does not contain
the usual broccoli bouquet. Instead, you'll discover
a clean crisp taste with a mild hint of horseradish.
I suppose these delectables would be delicious dipped
in hummus, but I like 'em plain. I've munched on
carrots and celery stalks, but this kicks the taste
buds up a notch. Not only are the stalks a quick low
calorie snack (28 calories per 100 gram/3 1/2 ounce
portion), but I've found that broccoli stalks act as
an appetite suppressor. After eating a few pieces,
any hunger that I have disappears for hours.
Broccoli is loaded with Vitamins A and C and contains
isoflavones and phytochemicals which have been said to
prevent and shrink cancers. I suspect that there exist
yet-to-be discovered substances within the stalk which
make it a perfect food and medicine.
After two weeks in my refrigerator...
The carrots would have wilted.
The celery would have dried.
An entire bunch of broccoli would
now smell like someone died.
BUT...the peeled broccoli stalks were stored in a
plastic container and suffered no ill effects. They
maintained their crispiness and the taste was as if
they were just cut fresh from the ground.
What magic plant chemicals are responsible
for this natural preservation?
***A special Broccoli dish Invented by the Notmilkman
INGREDIENTS
1 head broccoli
1-tsp red Thai curry paste
2-tsp maple syrup or agave
3-tsp soy sauce (I use Tamari)
Grated zest from 1 lime
METHOD
Cut broccoli into bite-sized pieces
and steam broccoli until al dente
Mix all other ingredients
Add broccoli to pan with sauce and
heat until sauce coats broccoli
ADDITIONAL INGREDIENT
1 Lb firm Tofu
Above Sauce
METHOD
Cut tofu into 3/4 inch pieces (around 48)
Coat tofu with sauce and gently mix
Put tofu on aluminum-foil-lined sheet pan
Broil each of six sides one minute each,
turning after each minute
NOTE: Raw foodists can skip the heat and
use the sauce for dipping.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Notmilkman Guarantees 20% Investment Return
Many investors speculated on higher than
normal market returns by placing their
dollars in the hands of Bernie Madoff.
While banks return 2-3 percent interest on
savings accounts and somebody guarantees ten
percent, run the other way.
Some very known very well-heeled inheritors
even invested their not-so-hard-earned dollars
with Madoff and got caught with their pants down.
Well, this is an opportunity for you to make
a guaranteed 20 percent or more on your money,
and all you've got to do is follow my advice.
Who guarantees it? Me!
You can do so by investing in commodities.
Not corn futures or pork bellies (poor
piggies!) The commodities you purchase at your
local supermarket.
Here's how the Notmilkan scheme works. Let's
say that you have $5,000 to invest. Loan it
to your bank and if you're lucky enough to
get a 3 % return, at the end of one year
you'll be $150 richer before paying taxes.
I'll show you how to earn that same $200 with
just $1000.
Let's imagine that your weekly supermarket bill
is $100. At that rate, you'll spend $5,000 on
food this year.
In reality, you might buy hundreds of different
items over the course of a month's shopping,
so the following is for illustration purposes.
Let's just examine the following nine items:
1) canned beans
2) dried beans
3) dried fruits
4) nuts
5) pasta
6) canned olives
7) rice
8) canned tomatoes
9) marinara sauce in jars
Item#1 - I am distressed that the price of
canned beans has crept up from last year's
33 cents per can to this year's 67 cents or
greater. Once or twice each year a market
will run a '3 cans for a dollar' sale.
That's the time to stock up.
Item #2 - One pound bags of dried beans were
usually less than $1 last year, and this year
they've also crept into the $1.19 per pound
range. These items also go on sale, but if
you buy in bulk, you'll save 50% or more
with each purchase.
Item #3 - It pays to invest in a de-hydrator,
but if that's not your first choice, go
online and buy directly from the grower or
producer. Even with shipping, you'll find
better products at sub-supermarket prices.
Item #4 - Ignore any advice put out by the
dairy or meat folk.
Item # 5 - Last week, I purchased over 100
bags of imported (egg-free) Italian semolina
pasta at 50 cents each per pound. Supermarkets
run their sales. Wait for 'em.
Item #6 - My local Shop Rite's price for a
standard can of pitted black olives (delicious
in salads) is $1.19. Once every two months or
so, they run a special for 99 cents. This is
the time for to purchase 100 cans. Do the math
and you'll find a $20 savings from a $99
purchase. That's a 20.2 % investment return.
Item #7 - Rice has gone up this year, and my
family eats plenty. Uncle Bens. Risotto.
Kohinor's Basmati. California Kokuho sushi
rice. The economics of rice buying best
illustrate the potential savings. A one
pound box can cost $4.00. A two pound box
can cost $7. A five pound bag can run you
$11 while the ten pound bag is $17. Go
for the 20 pound bag at $22. Over the
course of a year, the savings are enormous.
Buying in bulk is like putting money
in the bank at Madoff-like returns.
Item #8 - I still have three cans of
2 Lb-3-Oz Tutteroso tomatoes which I paid
59 cents each for last fall. I bought
about fifteen cases. I'll do the same
soon, because the harvest is over and
warehouses are filled with canned tomatoes.
Watch for sales. This past year, I've seen
1 Lb-12 Oz cans of Tutteroso tomatoes
selling for more than $2 each. Do the math.
Item #9 - I usually make (and freeze) my
own. However, it's always nice to have a j
ar of sauce ready for an emergency (such
as coating the bottoms of sheets of cheeseless
eggplant parm which I make when my daughter's
friends show up unannounced for an impromtu
Saturday night party. Jars of sauce run in
the $2 range, but supermarkets often
offer the same jars (as loss leaders) for
$1 each.
Shop wisely. It's like putting money in the
bank and realizing greater than market returns!
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Where Cows Fly Into Hell
The November 9, 2009 issue of the Global Post
tells the story of how cows are loaded and
unloaded by crane to and from ferry boats
which supply 90 small Taiwanese islands with
livestock.
http://tinyurl.com/yfn6hmxhttp://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/china-and-its-neighbors/091106/taiwan-where-c\
ows-fly
The article is humorously presented, but people
of conscience would find nothing funny about
the abuse these cows are subjected to. They
are roughly transported and "kicked."
The short article is accompanied by photos.
Counting from the left side, photos 9 and
10 show a suffering animal with a raw and
bleeding hernia or tumor...or was it a kick
that created the oozing wound?
You've got the ability to ZOOM and view the
photos with great clarity, but the closer one
gets to the point of injury, the less one
desires to see the pain.
Many people wonder why there are "misguided"
animal rights activists (like me) raising
their voices in protest to such treatment.
It is because we continue to be cursed by
images of animal suffering...
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Butter Inflation Continues and Few are Aware
On Friday, November 6, 2009, the wholesale
price at which butter traded on Chicago's
Mercantile commodity exchange closed at
$1.50 per pound.
On September 11, 2009, less than two
months ago, butter was trading at $1.17
per pound. A Notmilk column predicted:
"...wholesale price increases will be so
rapid and dramatic that processors will
react with overnight price increases."
"The economic illness that America is
about to experience and the suffering
which follows will be unprecedented..."
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/notmilk/message/3385
The wholesale price for butter has
increased 33 cents, or 28 percent in
just 67 days. That's equivalent to
a yearly increase of 153.6 percent.
Why is it that nobody in the news media
seems to have yet noticed the "I" word
when it comes to the higher prices consumers
are now paying for processed supermaket
foods?
Why is it that the "I" word was not a part
of any politician's political platform during
last week's elections?
Why is it that every shopper who keeps
track of supermarket prices and weekly
increases is painfully aware that Inflation
applies to just about everything except
for weekly take home pay?
I paid 49 cents per pound for bananas at
my local supermarket yesterday (ShopRite,
Emerson, NJ). I paid 59 cents per pound
for apples and 99 cents for a head of
Romaine at my local produce store.
It takes no butter to produce apples
or lettuce. Another argument for eating
a plant-based diet during these challenging
economic times!
Robert Cohen
i4crob@...
Average 2009 Florida Dairy Farm Loss
"Charity creates a multitude of sins."
- Oscar Wilde
Jacksonville Observer, October 3, 2009
"The state's already shrinking dairy industry
is getting pummeled by the recession, with a
Senate report released Thursday showing each
farmer will lose an average $709,000 this year."
*************
There are 140 dairy farms in Florida. Next week,
each will get a share of an emergency ration
thanks to American taxpayers. An unprecedented
gift of $290 million will be doled to dairymen.
Merry early Christmas and a happy new era!
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Scoring Points by Cutting off Animal's Heads
In The Godfather film, Don Corleone makes his
point by having a Hollywood film producer wake
up in a blood-soaked bed with the severed head
of a champion race horse. See:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkwYuT0hA_8&NR=1
Dairy farmers throughout the world are suffering
from historically low milk prices and have tried
to gain subsidies from legislative bodies. In
the new socialist America, dairymen have gained
success with enormous government subsidies which
have kept the dairy industry alive, but similar
worldwide efforts have been in vain.
What lengths have European dairy farmers gone
to make their point?
On Thursday, November 6, 2009, Hungarian dairy
farmers protested low milk prices by placing
the severed heads of one dozen cows in front
of the Agriculture Ministry building. They also
poured hundreds of liters of milk and truckloads
of cow manure and imported milk powder next to
those heads.
Hungarian authorities are punishing the dairymen
by charging them with "defacing public spaces."
What's next? Perhaps harsher penalties such
as fines for littering and protesting without
a permit.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Sacrebleu; Look Who Blew it!
We vegans have historically assumed that truth was
on our side when we made pesticides a part of our
no-meat argument. Peer-reviewed research has
provided a shocking wake-up call resulting from a
new French study contradicting previous vegetarian
representations.
When it comes to limiting the amount of toxic chemicals
in our bodies, those eating a plant-based diet often
make the claim that people eating the standard American
diet consumed many more doses of pesticides from meat
and dairy products then vegetarians did from fruits and
veggies.
A study published in a food journal (Food Addit. Contam.
Part A Chem Anal Control Expo Risk Assess. 2009 Aug
17:1-17) contradicts that long held assumption.
TITLE OF STUDY:
Impact of food consumption habits on the pesticide
dietary intake: Comparison between a French vegetarian
and the general population.
AUTHORS:
Van Audenhaege M, Heraud F, Menard C, Bouyrie J,
Morois S, Calamassi-Tran G, Lesterle S, Volatier JL,
Leblanc JC. Agroparistech, Paris, France.
STUDY GOAL:
"This study aims to compare the pesticide residue dietary
intake of the French general population and the vegetarian
population, separated into five specific diets:
omnivorous (OMN)
lacto-vegetarian (LV)
ovo-lacto-vegetarian (OLV)
pesco-lacto-vegetarian (PLV)
and vegan (VG)
STUDY METHOD
"Theoretical Maximum Daily Intakes (TMDIs) based on
Maximum Residue Levels (MRLs) were calculated as a
percentage of the Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI).
"Among the 421 pesticides studied, only 48 had TMDI
above ADI for at least one population subgroup. An
excessive exposure was noticed for 44, 43, 42, 41
and 30 pesticides in the OLV, VG, OMN, LV and PLV
groups, respectively, versus 29 in the general population.
"Meat and egg products consumption was responsible
for higher intakes of organochlorine pesticides in the
general population than in the vegetarian population
(TMDI = 348% versus 146-183% ADI for aldrin).
"However, as the limited consumption of animal-origin
commodities was largely offset by a higher fruit,
vegetable and cereal intake in the vegetarian diets,
vegetarians appear to be preferentially exposed to
pesticides, for which fruit, vegetables and cereals
are the main contributors, such as tri-allate,
chlorpyrifos-methyl and diazinon.
STUDY CONCLUSION:
"The vegetarian population may be more exposed to
pesticide residues than the general population due to
specific dietary habits. Thus, this population should
be considered for risk assessment of pesticide residues."
**************************
All the more reason to do one of two things.
Buy organic.
Become a breatharian.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Terrified New World
"Yes, and civilization is sterilization."
- Aldous Huxley (Brave New World)
Two years ago before the 2008 Presidential
election, Islam Siddiqui donated $1,300
to "Barack Obama's Victory Fund" and $1,000
to Barack Obama's "Obama for America" fund.
Last week Islam Siddiqui was the Vice President
of science and regulatory affairs at CropLife,
a biotechnology trade group which lobbies
members of congress so that genetically
engineered crops, chemical pesticides,
chemical herbicides, and chemical fertilizers
receive "favored product treatment" by those
federal agencies empowered to protect the
health and safety of American consumers.
This week, Islam Siddiqui was nominated
to head the post of the United State's
Chief Agricultural Negotiator.
A few years ago, Roger Beachy was a professor
of plant science and biotechnology at
Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.
Monsanto's corporate home is in St. Louis.
Dr. Beachy soon went to work for Monsanto
and his research led to the development of
Monsanto's first genetically modified food
crop, a variety of tomato that was genetically
engineered to be resistant to viral diseases.
Last week Roger Beachy was the Director of
Monsanto's nonprofit research group, Danford
Plant Science.
This week, Roger Beachy was named the Director
of the United States Department of Agriculture's
National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA).
As Director of this new sub-agency, Beachy will
oversee a $500 million budget to promote
genetically engineered foods.
Beachy and Siddiqui are just two more Monsanto-
connected men who have insidiously been placed
into positions in which they wield enormous
regulatory power in the Obama administration.
On February 17, 2009, I warned that Monsanto's
powerful ex-attorney would be appointed to a
key position in the Obama Administration. See:
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/notmilk/message/3176
Five months later (July 8, 2009) Taylor was
appointed to a newly created key position at
FDA which was not subject to congressional
oversight or review.
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/notmilk/message/3319
When it comes to biotechnology, Obama is immune
from media scrutiny so the key appointments
continue. America has now become financially,
morally, and spiritually bankrupt. I weep for
the future of our children.
"What man has joined, nature is
powerless to put asunder."
- Aldous Huxley (Brave New World)
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Billion Dollar Dairy Companies
Part of the dairy industry's marketing plan
is to have American consumers believe that
milk comes directly from family farms in
which cows roam free to eat grass. The
reality is that the majority of today's
cows live on factory farms spending most
of their lives confined while standing
and sleeping on concrete floors.
Today's dairy operations have become billion
dollar corporations in which government
subsidies reward connected businessmen who
make contributions to the right congressional
insiders.
On September 11, 2009, the NOTMILK letter
warned that the cost of dairy products will
fuel an upward inflationary spiral. On that
day, the wholesale price of butter was $1.17
per pound. Yesterday (November 3, 2009),
just 53 days after the NOTMILK prediction,
butter was trading at $1.41 per pound, an
astonishing seventeen percent (17%) increase.
How many North American dairy distributors did
more than $1 billion annual business in 2008?
The answer surprised even me, and there is no
greater dairy conspiracy theorist in America
than yours truly.
Twenty-nine dairy companies each did over
$1 billion in business during 2008.
Number-one on the list was Dean Foods. On Monday
(November 2, 2009), Dean Foods announced that
their third quarter profit increased by a factor
of 32 percent.
Dean Foods also owns the largest soymilk
companies including White Wave, maker of Silk.
Last year, Dean Foods enjoyed nearly $12.5
billion in sales. Second was Kraft at $4.8
billion, while Saputo came in third at $4.4
billion.
The top ten dairy distributors had combined sales
exceeding $42 billion. The next ten distributors
enjoyed gross sales of nearly $20 billion.
The United States federal government is currently
undertaking an audit of Dean Foods and other milk
industry giants due to hundreds of whistleblower
complaints regarding illegal business activities
including antitrust violations and numerous
unethical business practices. Stay tuned to this
station for updates...
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
"Of course the truth is that the congresspersons
are too busy raising campaign money to read the
laws they pass. The laws are written by staff tax
nerds who can put pretty much any wording they
want in there. I bet that if you actually read the
entire vastness of the U.S. Tax Code, you'd find
at least one sex scene ("'Yes, yes, YES!' moaned
Vanessa as Lance, his taut body moist with
moisture, again and again depreciated her adjusted
gross rate of annualized fiscal debenture").
- Dave Barry
H.R. 3524 (the Family Farm Preservation and
Conservation Estate Tax Act, has been assigned
to the House Ways and Means Committee.
The bill was introduced by two Democrats, Mike
Thompson (California) and John Salazar (Colorado).
The proposed new tax law would allow farm assets
including real estate and cash on hand to pass onto
family members without the obligation of having to
pay estate taxes as all other Americans are required
to do.
"All animals are equal, but some are more equal
than others...No one believes more firmly than
Comrade Napoleon that all animals are equal.
He would be only too happy to let you make
your decisions for yourselves. But sometimes
you might make the wrong decisions, comrades,
and then where should we be?"
- George Orwell, Animal Farm
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Trickle Down Ag Ec
Trickle Down Agriculture Economics
"Government 'help' to business is just
as disastrous as government persecution...
the only way a government can be of service
to national prosperity is by keeping its
hands off."
- Ayn Rand
It's not just dairy. All of agriculture is
hurting. When farmers have no money to spend
on new equipment, they use masking tape and
paper clips to patch together old equipment.
A reflection of the economic slump can be
expressed by new tractor sales.
For the month ending August 31, 2009,
two-wheel-drive farm tractor sales were down
27.5% over the same period in 2008. Year to
date, tractor sales are down 22.3% over 2009.
What will the government think of next? Perhaps
a clunker stimulus program such as the recent
unsuccessful clunker car promotion.
Over 700,000 cars were sold as a result of
the cash for clunker sale. The same stimulus
plan for tractor buyers would be a powerful
fertilizer for America's farmers.
I've got my clunker tractor ready to turn in for
a new model. Getting it to my local John Deere
dealer will be a challenge, but I suppose I can
get it there by hitching it up to my ass...
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
If Girl Cows Make Milk, What Do Boy Cows Make?
It is quite easy to brainwash an impressionable
six-year-old mind. Send trained propagandists
into the classrooms of America and any agenda
can be sold to first graders. There should be a law.
***************************
Alabama's Huntsville Times
October 14, 2009
Students got milk and had a cow over it
By Pat Ammons
pat.newcomb@...
Daisy and her mobile dairy drop by University Place
for a lesson in nutrition
Where does milk come from? A lot of kids will tell
you the grocery store.
That's why Principal Towana Davis jumped at the
chance to have the Alabama Dairy Farmers Mobile
Dairy Classroom visit University Place Elementary
School.
"I wanted the babies to see how milk gets from the
cow to the grocery store," said Davis as the school's
kindergarten, first- and second-graders filed out to
meet Daisy the dairy cow.
Amanda Griffith, the mobile classroom instructor who
drives Daisy around the state, told the students that
Daisy is a Jersey cow, is 4 years old and weighs 750
pounds.
"Whoa," the students said in chorus.
Griffith, who has a degree in animal and dairy science
from Auburn University, gives a lesson on nutrition
to the children who visit the mobile classroom at
schools, fairs and community events.
They learn milk and other dairy products have nine
nutrients vital to good health.
"You need three to four servings of dairy products
each and every day," Griffith told the University Place
students.
She also tells them about the different kinds of dairy
cows, including the largest, the black-and-white Holstein,
better known these days as the Chik-Fil-A cow.
Then it was time to show them how milk really gets
from the cow to the cafeteria.
"In the old days, they milked cows by hand," Griffith
said, grabbing Daisy's udder and shooting milk out
toward the children.
"Open your mouths," she said, joking.
Today, most people milk cows with a machine that
works "kind of like a vacuum cleaner." She
demonstrated by placing the milking hoses on Daisy,
quickly drawing foamy white milk into a clear container
on the side of the mobile classroom.
Like many of the children Griffith meets, University
Place first-grader Esperanza Yobo-Dasse had never
seen a real cow.
"I learned how cows make milk," said Esperanza,
who thought Daisy was pretty.
Before meeting Daisy, first-grader Lataurus Oliver
declared he did not drink milk, but he had changed his
mind - for the moment - after listening to Griffith.
"It's good for you," he said. "I like milk."
Griffith gets lots of questions when she visits young
children with the mobile classroom. Some ask if Daisy
is a horse.
"You name it, they'll ask it," said Griffith. "They're
pretty curious."
Like one University Place student who asked her
first-grade teacher what Principal Davis called the
question of the day:
"If girl cows make milk, what do boy cows make"?
***************************
That's easy to answer. Osso Bucco. Veal Chops.
Rocky Mountain Oysters. Wanna watch the slaughter
movies, kiddies?
How about a film of the calf being separated
from his or her mother?
"Hey, mom! A lady named Ingrid Newkirk came to
school today. Guess what I learned?"
"What did you learn, sweetheart?"
"The truth!"
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Today White America Gets Pleasure from Black Slave Labor
"Consenting to slavery is a sacrilegious
breach of trust, as offensive in the sight
of God as it is derogatory from our own
honor or interest of happiness."
- John Adams
Tonight we forget Lincoln and his Emancipation
Proclamation and the 13th Amendment to the
Constitution and ignore Martin Luther King by
playing an enormous trick on the world's
black children.
There are many injustices in this world, but
none greater than that of kidnapped boys and
girls who have become slaves in the nation of
Ivory Coast working on chocolate plantations
to produce America's chocolate treats.
Eat that chocolate and you are the slave master.
Your next sip of chocolate milk, even soy
chocolate milk, may represent the blood,
sweat, and tears of those with no future.
Hershey, Nestle, and Mars candy bar lovers
have got to come to terms with this one. If
you support these companies by eating their
milk chocolate candies, then you are not
part of the solution. You are the problem.
Trick or treat? Today, kids will bring home
bags of milk chocolate and those children
not already addicted to milk hormones will
soon become casomorphin addicts. Three pounds
of milk are required to produce one pound
of milk chocolate, and a naturally occurring
opiate, similar to morphine will become the
trick of all tricks to America's trick or
treaters. Dr. Robert Cade (University of
Florida) attibutes attention deficit disorder
to the consumption of casomorphin from milk
and dairy products.
Physical addiction? ADD? That's part of the
slavery issue regarding milk chocolate for
all consumers, but there is another powerful
issue of slavery that must be examined
regarding chocolate producers.
Eat American chocolate and consent to
African slavery.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Cost of Producing Milk
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
has calculated the average cost of producing milk
through their division of Economic Research for
"key states" as of August 31, 2009. USDA's raw data
costs are calculated per 100 pounds. The Notmilkman
converted USDA's data to reflect prices per gallon.
Here is a representative list of 10 key states.
The following prices reflect the total costs to dairy
farmers to produce milk. They do not include additional
costs incurred after milk leaves the farm. That would
include trucking, pasteurization, homogenization,
packaging, handling, marketing costs, and markups.
DAIRY FARMER'S COST TO PRODUCE ONE GALLON OF MILK
(One gallon of whole milk weighs 8.6 pounds)
California - $2.26
Wisconsin - $2.42
Florida - $2.74
Ohio - $2.85
New York - $2.92
Minnesota - $2.95
Pennsylvania - $3.20
Kentucky - $3.86
Maine - $3.91
Tennessee - $4.22
**********************************
American dairy farmers were paid an
average of $1.37 for each gallon of
milk they produced in August, 2009.
Compare that number to above costs.
**********************************
The average supermarket sold 1 gallon of
whole milk in the United States during
August of 2009 for $2.96.
Supermarkets are making a profit selling milk
and dairy products.
Distributors are making a profit selling milk
and cheese to supermarkets.
Dairy processors make profits selling milk
and cheese and ice cream to distributors.
Who's getting the short end of the
mozzarella shtick?
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
The Clear
America first learned about athlete's use of "The Clear"
(tetrahydrogestrinone or THG) during Congressional
hearings into steroid hormone use by athletes.
Marion Jones used "The Clear" to win Olympic gold
and then lied to a congressional committee regarding
her illegal use of steroid hormones. Barry Bonds used
"The Clear" to set home run records. Jason Giambi
used "The Clear" to insure $18 million yearly contracts
with the New York Yankees and developed Pituitary
Cancer. FDA banned "The Clear" recognizing that
clear liquids sometimes disguise the presence of
potentially harmful ingredients.
Today, America has been introduced to a new "Clear."
Fronterra is the largest exporter of dairy products in the
world and represents 11,000 New Zealand dairy farmers.
Fronterra operates a food testing laboratory in the
United States. Their Chicago food scientists are now
developing new food additives with their own version
of "The Clear."
The new "Clear" is a crystal-clear milk protein which will
soon be added to children's drinks. One example of this
heavily promoted pre-production drink is a clear apple
juice with the addition of 5 grams of whey protein per
serving.
Fronterra is excited about their new potentially billion
dollar food additive. Their American spokesman, Martin
Bates had this to say:
"We're the tip of the iceberg here. We've got
the world's best scientists there."
Correct me if I am wrong, but wasn't there once an
unsinkable boat tragedy whose passengers admired
the tip of an iceberg while ignoring a clear and
present danger?
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Letter From a Notmilk Reader
Bill Minnick wrote: Bill.Minnick@...
Dear Robert,
Kudos on your recent article highlighting the new
developments in high quality, good tasting vegan
cheeses. Please add my personal experience on this
topic (outlined below) to your Notmilk Knowledge base.
On 9/11/09. my wife Joann and I had lunch with
Dr. Michael Greger at a place he suggested:
Sticky Fingers: http://www.stickyfingersbakery.com
1370 Park Rd. NW, Washington, DC 20010
We had met that day to discuss ideas to help broaden
distribution of his "Latest Nutrition Science DVDs.
When the topic of lunch came up, Joann said she
wished she could have an old fashioned tasted cheese
sandwich; Dr. Greger immediately suggested we go to
Sticky Fingers Cafe to get Joann a cheese sandwich
(a vegan version) for lunch - - so we did; and I got
their Chicken Quesadilla (with vegan chicken, cheese
and sour cream).
Joann and I were both amazed at the taste and feel
qualities of the meals we ate that day, The vegan
cheese sandwich looked, felt and tasted just like the
cow-milk-based dairy cheese - - and no cow's milk
components were used in these menu items.
Because I was suffering a bout of disbelief, I grilled
the staff at Sticky Fingers for more details on the
products they used to make our lunch. The fellow
behind the counter was happy to fill me in on the
products used and their sources. Here is the list:
Vegan Chicken from Gardein, a Canadian Company
http://gardein.com
Vegan Sour Cream from Tofutti
http://www.tofutti.com/ss.shtml
Vegan (meltable) cheeses, from Daiya, a Canadian Company
http://www.daiyafoods.com
In summary, we ate meals made with these products
and loved them!!! We strongly recommend you get
and try these products anywhere you can find
them - - to add some unexpected taste and enjoyment
to your vegan meals. These products are a great
advancement for informed people who want to make
the diet changes needed to avoid cancer and most
other age-onset diseases - - while achieving meal
taste once enjoyed only with animal protein-based foods.
Warm Personal Regards,
Bill Minnick
***********************************************
Great letter, yes?
Both Bill & Dr. Greger have websites worth visiting:
Bill: http://www.EndCancerNow.org
Dr. Greger: http://www.DrGreger.org
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
1934 Milk Marketing YouTube Film
http://tinyurl.com/y9slmt2
In 2009, the average dairy cow produces 25 quarts
of milk each day. In 1934, the average American
dairy cow produced only 6 quarts of milk per day.
When watching the 10-minute YouTube video, take
note of the size of cow's udders. These days they
are two-three times larger. Also take note that
every single cow still had horns in 1934. In the
21st century, highly innervated horn buds are
painfully cut from calves.
And then there's Vitamin G!
Last but not least, there's the representation that
Babe Ruth's "pep" was due to milk consumption. Perhaps
that's what caused the Babe's famous stomach ache which
kept the Sultan of Swat out of the Yankee lineup for
much of the 1925 season resulting in a 69-85 won-lost
record. Perhaps that's what ultimately claimed the
Babe's life from stomach cancer at the very premature
age of 53...
Enjoy this film depicting life in America 75 years ago!
Thanks to Osher Bachrach for sharing the link!
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com
Notmilk Lobbying Efforts (Dollars Spent)
By law, Notmilk is required to have a licensed accountant
prepare a detailed report regarding Notmilk's lobbying
efforts for each quarter of the fiscal year.
How much money did Notmilk spend trying to get
legislation passed? How many dollars were invested
lobbying federal agencies which determine nutrition
policy, dairy product pricing, and other issues?
The next report must be filed with the House of
Representative's House Clerk Office by October 31,
2009. Here is the breakdown for the July 31, 2009
(second quarter) report:
Dollars Spent Lobbying:
Congress - $0
USDA - $0
FDA - $0
U.S. Trade Representative - $0
Other Agencies - $0
I have not yet received an itemized breakdown of the
dairy industry's lobbying effort for the second quarter,
but I have learned that the International Dairy Foods
Association (IDFA) spent $247,000 to lobby on nutrition
policy, dairy pricing and other issues, according to
their recent disclosure report.
Dairy farmers contribute 15 cents for every hundred
pounds of milk they produce to contribute to that
lobbying effort, so 165 million pounds of milk were
required to pay for this recent lobbying effort.
Each Notmilk reader contribute 0 cents for each
Notmilk letter received by email. Ninety-one Notmilk
letters were written during the second quarter. That
adds up to $0. The remaining dollars were used to
pay my salary and fund my retirement package.
Robert Cohen
http://www.notmilk.com