Are We Being Poisoned??.. 98.7% of our Food NOT Being Inspected by the FDA
@whiteheather39 (24403)
United States
April 16, 2007 9:27am CST
The FDA has stated it does not have enough resources to ensure our food is safe. WHY NOT? We should stop spending our money on illegal aliens, political issues (war?) and other fundings which are of no foreseeable benefit to our population.
Imported Food Rarely Inspected
WASHINGTON — Just 1.3 percent of imported fish, vegetables, fruit and other foods are inspected -- yet those government inspections regularly reveal food unfit for human consumption.
Frozen catfish from China, beans from Belgium, jalapenos from Peru, blackberries from Guatemala, baked goods from Canada, India and the Philippines -- the list of tainted food detained at the border by the Food and Drug Administration stretches on.
Add to that the contaminated Chinese wheat gluten that poisoned cats and dogs nationwide and led to a massive pet food recall, and you've got a real international pickle. Does the United States have the wherewithal to ensure the food it imports is safe?Food safety experts say no.
With only a minuscule percentage of shipments inspected, they say the nation is vulnerable to harm from abroad, where rules and regulations governing food production are often more lax than they are at home.***"FDA doesn't have enough resources or control over this situation presently," said Mike Doyle, director of the University of Georgia's Center for Food Safety, which works with industry to improve safety.***Last month alone, FDA detained nearly 850 shipments of grains, fish, vegetables, nuts, spice, oils and other imported foods for issues ranging from filth to unsafe food coloring to contamination with pesticides to salmonella.
And that's with just 1.3 percent of the imports inspected. As for the other 98.7 percent, it's not inspected, much less detained, and goes to feed the nation's growing appetite for imported foods.
Each year, the average American eats about 260 pounds of imported foods, including processed, ready-to-eat products and single ingredients. Imports account for about 13 percent of the annual diet.
FDA inspections focus on foods known to be at risk for contamination, including fish, shellfish, fruit and vegetables. Food from countries or producers previously shown to be problematic also are flagged for a closer look.
Consider this list of Chinese products detained by the FDA just in the last month: frozen catfish tainted with illegal veterinary drugs, fresh ginger polluted with pesticides, melon seeds contaminated with a cancer-causing toxin and filthy dried dates.
Even so, the FDA can't say for sure whether the ingredient used in the pet foods was inspected after it arrived from China. And if the wheat gluten was, officials said, it wouldn't have been tested for melamine. Even though the chemical isn't allowed in food for pets or people, in any quantity, it previously wasn't believed toxic.
How did the melamine wind up in the wheat gluten? Investigators still don't know. Meanwhile, China is struggling to overhaul its food system and improve safety standards, but still faces major hurdles.
Farmers use pesticides and chemical fertilizers to build produce yields and antibiotics are used on seafood and livestock. Heavy metals also can be introduced into the food chain by widespread industrial pollution.
Increasingly, those foods are sold in a now global marketplace.
While the European Union, Canada and Mexico still top the list of food exporters to the U.S., China is coming up fast. Since 1997, the value of Chinese food imports, including commodities like wheat gluten, has more than tripled, to $2.1 billion from $644 million, according to Agriculture Department statistics. It accounts for 3.3 percent of the total food the U.S. buys abroad.
For suspect imported products -- and wheat gluten is now one of them -- the FDA issues alerts to its inspectors. The FDA flags Chinese food and other imported products it regulates, like cosmetics, for that extra scrutiny more than any other country except Mexico.
How do you know the origin of the food you eat? The 2002 Farm Act called for fish, fruit and vegetable imports to be labeled by country of origin, though implementation for the latter two foods has been delayed.
Meanwhile, the U.S. imports more and more, though the increase in value is partially due to the weaker dollar.
About one-quarter of our fruit, both fresh and frozen, is imported. For tree nuts, it's about half. And for fish and shellfish, more than two-thirds come from overseas.
Even as the amount of imported food increased, the percentage of FDA inspections declined -- from 1.8 percent in 2003 to 1.3 percent this year to an expected 1.1 percent next year."Inspections have a very important role but they're not the solution. They are the verification," FDA commissioner Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach said.
The FDA and the USDA have adopted a "risk-based" inspection philosophy, focusing on specific foods, sources or producers that they believe represent the largest potential risk to the public's health."Whenever they say 'risk-based approach,' it often means they don't have enough staff to actually do the job. They're doing triage. They're trying to hit what's most important to inspect but they're missing a lot," DeWaal said.
Groups lobbying to increase the FDA's budget say its spending on food safety has languished, despite the agency's outsized role in ensuring the safety of the nation's food supply.
Unlike the FDA, the USDA requires foreign inspection certificates to accompany all products it regulates, which include meat and poultry. Those imports are then reinspected at each port of entry before they are allowed into this country -- something that doesn't happen to all FDA-regulated imports.
Under the Bioterrorism Act of 2002, anyone importing food into the United States is required to notify the FDA of the shipment before it arrives by land, air or sea. That allows the FDA to intercept contaminated products before they reach the marketplace, though agency officials acknowledge it doesn't always work that way.
Doyle, of the University of Georgia, warned the contaminated pet food could be an unsavory taste of what's to come."This is not the first and will not be the last but it certainly is a wakeup call for the public to get a better appreciation for where this country is going with imports and imported foods," Doyle said.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/politics/wire/sns-ap-imported-food-safety,1,4836191,print.story?coll=sns-ap-politics-headlines&ctrack=3&cset=true
6 people like this
13 responses
@wmg2006 (5381)
• United States
16 Apr 07
I think we probably are being poisened to some degree. Think of all the times you were told you had a stomach virus or you just had a stomach problem for the day. I have read many times in the Bible and other articles where there will come a time when everyone will need to grow their own food. I think it may that time right for all of us to learn a little farming to ensure what we eat is good for us. I have been thinking for many years on planting some small rows of veggies for me and my family. I think now is the right time to get serious for me and everyone else. I work in imports and am always amazed at how many containers get through customs. They only pull 1 out of about 200 of our containers for a spot check. Right after 911 they were inspecting almost all of our imported containers, which gave us the importers fits. It needs to go back to that today, especially with commodities. I guess there will have to be another trajic happening before the government will decide we need more security on our imports. Hopefully they will see the light soon.
@whiteheather39 (24403)
• United States
16 Apr 07
So glad a response from someone who know how serious it is, thanks wmg!
2 people like this
@whiteheather39 (24403)
• United States
16 Apr 07
Very clever Lakota "a lot to SWALLOW" ha ha!!. You have brought up a very viable point why import what we are exporting?
2 people like this
@crazynurse (7482)
• United States
17 Apr 07
Wow Lakota, was the pun intended! I know that I surely got a good chuckle from it!
1 person likes this
@creativedreamweaver (7297)
• United States
16 Apr 07
Thanks for such an informative post. I knew things were getting bad in the FDA/USDA, but I had no idea that it was that bad. Part of the reason I decided to do a garden and get back into my own veggies this year, is because of all the contaminates that have been found in our produce. I do believe we are being poisoned to some degree, and I think we need to get a handle on our imports as a nation. We need to become as self reliant as possible, here in the US. It's pretty scary. And now we can't even trust the mouthwash, that kills all germs, to rinse out the poisoned food. ARgg. Thanks again whiteheather...great post.
3 people like this
@lonewolfnan (4366)
• Canada
16 Apr 07
Over the last hundred years,the consumption by humans has changed drastically.Our bodies are now loaded with chemicals etc. that never existed unti mankind decided to find new,cheaper ways to improve the "quality" of our food sources.To increase profit,we would use the cheapest(and less safe) method possible.We polluted our streams and rivers and oceans with all sorts of chemicals which make their way into our food chain.With chemically-enhanced meat and vegetables filtering thru our bodies we are a walking bio-chem disaster.
@eaforeman6 (8979)
• United States
17 Apr 07
I think the inspections should be increased and then someone should also inspect the inspectors. This has to be changed because the people deserve to feel safe. I think we are paying top dollar for everything now. We shouldnt have to be afraid of what we purchase or take health risks because of it.
we should not be our own worst enemies and there is no reason for these things to be happening.
@crazynurse (7482)
• United States
17 Apr 07
This is just another wonderful illustration for my point that we in this country have our priorities misaligned. We are spending millions of dollars for professional athletes salaries and college coaches, yet we eat uninspected food because we dont' have enough money in our government to assure that all is inspected. I for one would rather see the professional athletes paid less and the college coaches earning MUCH less and put some of these dollars to better use! Why is it that a college coach makes over a million a year and yet the professors at the same college who are creating the minds of tomorrow are making less than one hundred thousand and we are all eating food that has not been inspected.
2 people like this
@claudia413 (4280)
• United States
19 Apr 07
Whiteheather, once again you've given us something to think about. It's enough to almost make you stop eating. I know a couple of times either my husband or I have had a "stomach virus" that lasted a day or so, and we wondered if it was from something we ate. It's really scary when you actually stop and think about it. It is definitely a wakeup call for us.
@mari61960 (4893)
• United States
17 Apr 07
I just think it's disgusting. I'm thinking of getting one of those machines that sucks the air out of the bags so I can grow more veggies and freeze them. Canning is just too much. I don't want to do all that. I don't know how we are supposed to be safe buying anything these days...it's just so rediculous.
@jennybianca (12912)
• Australia
17 Apr 07
It was hard to read this article because it streched too far accross the screen, but I got the gist of it.
This FDA inspection sounds so complicated & unrelaible, that if people want to be 100% sure of what they eat, they only have one choice.
That is, stick to a totally natural diet.. no tins, frozen foods & nothing exported. I imagine in the US you have organic products available? It is posible to eat an organic diet only, maybe grow some of your own veges & fruit. There are even organic buthchers that get their meat locally.
This may seem a bit extreem but I know people who do this, & eat very healthily.
@sumofalltears (3988)
• United States
16 Apr 07
This is really disgraceful, and we have no way of knowing if we have tainted food or not. It does prove that we have our priorities wrong. We should be spending a lot more of our resources to looking after the homeland. It seems like the more technology we invent and use the less we time we spend taking care of ourselves. Maybe this is the way it goes...Everybody thought that somebody was going to do what anybody could have done, and as a result nobody did anything.
@prashantrjp (275)
• India
17 Apr 07
see ...perhaps ...i am not from us...but ur not being poisoned...its just like everyone takes daily toxins and poisons in small amounts or else one would never get sick...it is only that when u get consious of some thing u start seeing it...just like mind making things change...relax ....
@efftee (11)
• Malaysia
19 Apr 07
The answer that there is not enough resources is not a canned answer, is not a cop-out, it is a very plausible explanation. Tons of foodstuffs enter your country daily. Is it possible to inspect each and every morsel? And it does have to be each and every morsel. You can't just inspect only one container and pull out only one box in that container, and out of that box, pull out only one packet and check only that. So that packet passes inspection. Does that mean that the other packets pass inspection? What about the other boxes? Suppose it is a shipment of sugar. They come in 50-kilogram bags. What are you going to do? Open one bag and test the sugar? But there is 50kg of that stuff! You take 10 grams from the top of the bag and test it. One person could do it with a test kit. It takes a few minutes. The FDA has to pay for the kit plus the few minutes' wage of the tester. And that is only for a small 10 gram sample of sugar from the top of the 50-kg bag. What about the bottom part? Is the sugar there safe? What about the other 199 bags? Are we going to puncture each and every one of them and test a small sample of sugar from each and every one of them? How long as you willing to wait for your LOCALLY MADE foodstuff that contains sugar that is imported? And we're just in this one container. What about the other containers containing other foodstuffs. Are you going to check each and every cashew nut? It's entirely possible that in any one container of cashews, one box may test fine while another box may contain contaminated nuts. How are you going to check for THAT???
In order to fully appreciate the enormity of the task, let's put all of America to work. Let each and every household inspect their own food. You buy the food, take it home, and examine it. If you're checking meat you'll need a microscope, or if you have the time you can grow a culture in a petri dish. Of course, this assumes you are not going to cook the meat anytime soon since it takes hours for bacteria to show up in your culture. And don't forget about the peanuts that you're going to make peanut butter with. Be sure to check each and every nut for mold and pesticides and whatever else that's not supposed to be on peanuts. And of course you'll need to check every other foodstuff too once you're done with the meat and the peanuts and the milk and the sugar and the salt....
Imagine that everyday task, and multiply that by the how-many-million households from sea to shining sea.
Oh, but i hear you say, "we don't need to inspect ALL our food, just the imported ones."
Oh really?
But even if you inspect only the imported foods, it's still a gargantuan task. No, actually it's an impossible task. Unless of course we have Captain Kirk to help us by using the sophisticated instruments and sensors on board his starship Enterprise to scan all the foodstuffs for unfriendly matter. But until that day comes, checking each and every bit of food that comes into your shores remains an impossible task.
1 person likes this
@myworld2 (106)
•
11 May 07
i dont know about your imports that does sound really bad. but from what we hear here you have enough concerns that there are masses of GM crops and you dont know what food they are in. that to me sounds just as scary and your own animals/milk has so many different problems if that is ALLOWED AND NORMAL to happen to you why would they even bother about what is coming in the country. i am really sorry for you and pray it doesnt come our way any time to soon - it will eventually i suspect.